4A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, November 21, 2005 OPINION (Tbe Sirbiiatt 43u lg JASON Z. PESICK Editor in Chief SUHAEL MOMIN SAM SINGER Editorial Page Editors ALISON GO Managing Editor EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN SINCE 1890 420 MAYNARD STREET ANN ARBOR, MI 48109 tothedaily@michigandaily.com NOTABLE QUOTABLE We wanted this one bad. It just didn't go our way." - Michigan quarterback Chad Henne, commenting after Saturday's 21-25 loss to Ohio State, as reported yesterday by The Detroit News. MICHELLE BIEN Ti. BEAN t:CVE 0 A lACI Ab b ! Ca M A E V PU L (I C UT OF TIllS ISTci&UO4- \tIPTYH~jI /MONE I.SN'T .KAMY ~ PTY 1'"STIL z T IT>A TA -Ot! lrTht' D 1JON , bTEx 1g ~ ,0 Calling a crisis a crisis CHRISTOPHER ZBROZEK BORN N TH°E US.A. Ma r y a n n Keller, a h.< longtime auto industry analyst, criticized General Motors's leadership at an economic luncheon last week for failing to acknowledge the crisis facing the com- pany. According to the Detroit Free Press, she argued that facing a cri- sis publicly allows a company to better address it: "The thing about a crisis," Keller said, "is that it becomes clear that something needs to be done immediately." I read that and wondered when our state's leaders will apply the same nugget of wisdom to Michigan as a whole. It seems that no one in Lansing is willing to admit that the state's ailing manufacturing sector just might be terminally ill. Increased automation in factories, outsourcing and com- panies' failure to adapt to foreign competition have combined to slash the number of factory workers in the state. Since 2001 alone, one in four manufacturing jobs in the state has van- ished, and Michigan has had the highest unem- ployment rate in the nation for a good chunk of this year. These job losses will continue; GM and its bankrupt supplier, Delphi, are each look- ing to shed about 25,000 blue-collar jobs, many of which will come from plants in Michigan. Delphi also provides a hint of what the man- ufacturing jobs that remain will look like. Like other auto suppliers, Delphi is being pushed to meet the "China price." That effectively means an end to the union wages that built Michigan's once-solid middle class; Delphi somehow expects the United Auto Workers to accept wage and benefit cuts of about 60 percent. Maybe Delphi workers will strike, hoping to maintain their dignity if not their jobs. Maybe they won't. Either way, the next round of con- tract negotiations between the automakers and the UAW in 2007 doesn't look good for those, hourly employees - like my father - who depend directly on the automakers to support their families. People used to say that what's good for GM is good for America. With Michigan's econ- omy so heavily dependent on the auto indus- try, that saying's always had more significance here. Now, however, guessing the probability that GM will declare bankruptcy seems to be the new parlor game on Wall Street. The way around Michigan's increasing inability to compete in the manufacturing sphere, according to the new conventional wis- dom, is the High-Tech Knowledge Economy. By attracting, building and retaining a creative and highly educated workforce in scientific and service fields, the theory goes, the state can thrive again in the age of globalization. I have my own problems with this model - I don't see how this knowledge economy will ever support a broad middle class like industrial unionism once did - but my econ major friends tell me this is right, so we'll go with it. The problem is that, as far as I can tell, no one in the state is doing much to build this High-Tech Knowledge Economy. Take the Life Sciences Corridor, for instance. In conjunction with the University's Life Sciences Initiative, the LSC was supposed to build off the state's research universities to attract biotechnology firms. Silicon Valley is to Stanford as life sciences were to be to our state universities, I guess. Except the funding for the LSC was cut and then split between research in the life sciences, homeland security and automotive engineer- ing. Meanwhile, Michigan still has some of the most restrictive laws governing stem-cell research in the country. Gov. Jennifer Granholm often appears to understand what needs to be done. She name- drops "The World Is Flat" author Thomas Friedman when discussing globalization, and she recognized Richard Florida's idea that the knowledge economy depends on the so-called creative class with her Cool Cities Initiative. But she also keeps proposing cuts to higher education funding, heedless of the need to build a smarter workforce. Her idea to issue $2 billion in bonds to attract high-tech firms was dead on arrival in a Republican-controlled Legislature obsessed with tax cuts. And will the Cool Cities grant for a "microcinema" at the Michigan The- atre make Ann Arbor any more (or less) cool? Truth be told, though, Michigan's future might not concern many readers of this paper. Generally speaking, those who are able to go to college aren't exactly in the market for assembly line jobs. And even if it is true that all sectors of Michigan's economy will be hurt as the-manufacturing sector shrinks and Mich- iganders have less disposable income - well, statistically speaking, you won't stick around to watch the state choke anyway. The speed with which college grads take their highly educated, creative minds and flee Michigan after getting their diplomas gives our state the distinction of being 47th out of 50 states in the proportion of young people with postsecond- ary degrees. Call it a brain drain, call it the flight of the creative class - whatever it is, it makes any effort to revitalize Michigan that much harder. So, to recap: The manufacturing sector is dying, the state's leaders aren't serious about building a replacement for it and the state's best and brightest young adults are heading for greener economic pastures. That sounds like a crisis to me, and it's time our leaders started treating it like one. Zbrozek can be reached at zbro@umich.edu. VIEWPOINT A case against MSA political parties 6 BY JESSE FORESTER The recent election sweep by Students for Michigan came as no surprise. A single party has dominated our student government for well over a year. In the weeks leading up to the election it seemed as though everyone was content with this situation - no new parties emerged to challenge S4M, and the e-mails that crowded my inbox led me to believe that maybe these were just the best people for the job. In the weeks since the election however, it has become obvious that many are rather upset with the current state of campus politics. The problem has been characterized in terms of student apathy and a lack of voter options. Although these are credible concerns, they are misguided. If elections are to be more worth- while in the future, the solution is to eliminate political parties from campus politics. Student governments serve an important purpose on college campuses. Student gov- ernments act as liaisons between students and administrators. Student governments organize social events on campus, provide services and generally work to promote the interests of stu- dents. Unfortunately, these responsibilities are not always fulfilled or appreciated. In a recent letter to the editor ('U' not unique in its apa- thy toward student government, 11/14/2005), David Swedler points out two unavoidable facts: First, students are going to be somewhat apathetic about campus elections and second, many people run for student office for purely selfish reasons: resume boosts, the girls, etc. While these problems are inevitable, they are certainly not a reason to abandon student gov- ernment all together. Instead of throwing our hands up in the air as Swedler would like, we should work to make our student government better. The current problems with the campus political scene stem from an overwhelming disincentive for anybody to do anything. There is one party, and more or less, students don't have to prove that they are competent or even motivated to do anything after being elected. Students run for office because they want a title, not because they want to make change. The most obvious issue is that of voter apathy. The electorate at our University has quite lit- erally regressed into the friends of candidates who don't have something better to do on the election days. In order to correct these problems, some have argued that we should actually increase the number of parties. This possible solution is problematic for a couple of reasons. Initially, a new party would need the opportunity to form and expand; the current stronghold of S4M makes this emergence exceedingly unlikely. Additionally, our most recent try at a multipar- ty system - Students First versus the Univer- sity Party - proved this approach is doomed. Competition between the two only lasted for a single election cycle. If elections are to become meaningful and issue focused, we need to do away with these parties all together. The only good that parties do at this univer- sity is give a couple kids an excuse to design a T-shirt. Eliminating parties from the cam- pus political structure would put the focus of campaigns back on the ideas. If students are competing against students, instead of par- ties competing (or sometimes not competing) against each other, the candidates running would actually have to prove why they should be elected and commit to doing something. Similarly, voters would have some incentive to actually listen to what different candidates are saying and more importantly, reason to vote because they actually wouldn't already know who's going to win. Ultimately, our student government isn't large enough to operate without the constraints of party labels, there's no reason our student assembly shouldn't be able to as well. Forester is an LSA junior and member of the Daily's editorial board. a a LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Despite spin, Ludacris show an unqualified failure To THE DAILY: I am sure everyone was struck by how Michigan Student Assembly managed to lose $20,000 in one night, but I was particularly shocked that MSA President Jesse Levine called an event with such a staggering loss an "unqualified success." No matter how you look at it, $20,000 is a lot what Levine might say, a $20,000 dollar loss is never a success. It is an unqualified failure - and one that I believe warrants an apology. Walter Nowinski LSA junior The letter writer was an at-large representative to MSA's Budget Priorities Committee Appeals Board. Fed-up student to create alternative MSA party the University: the Abolish MSA Spending Party. This is no joke. In the next MSA election, I, along with anyone who will join me, will be running for student government on the platform of decreasing funding and controlling spending with the end goal of eliminating MSA discretionary spending. I hope to make it so that MSA will never be able to screw up again like it did with this last concert and to let students keep their own money. I hope this party will transcend traditional political affili- ations, bringing together all students who want Editorial Board Members: Amy Anspach, Reggie Brown, Gabrielle D'Angelo, John Davis, Whitney Dibo, Milly Dick, Sara Eber, Jesse Forester, Mara Gay, Jared Goldberg, Ashwin Jagannathan, Theresa Kennelly, Mark Kuehn, Will Kerridge, Kirsty McNamara, Rajiv Prab- I