4 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, January 25, 2006 OPINION Cite firtic4toan otdIll 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 'Those who would sacrifice liberty for security deserve neither." - Benjamin Franklin, as quoted on a sign held by hooded protesters attending a speech by Attorney General Alberto Gonzales on wiretap- ping, as reported yesterday on CNN.com. ALEXANDER HONKALA iiLvn~ CRUMIThCKET ' 9< N N,"' a' ~ N,' ' "4" 4''' '4' 'N' 'N 4 4 Nt' .4 4' .4 ~, ,'N ' 4N A ~4" - ,~''C N~N ~'' ' "' " ', N '.' 1" ~'' ~ '.4 A~,' 4' -. '4 " ' '4' 4' 44 '4' ' , ',' 'N "'4 ' ' ............44 N 4 .~' ' 4 N, N' 44,~N'~ '4N 4' '4 ' ' 4tN \ 'N N,' 4' N '4' "A '< '4 N' "~'Z' N' '44444~~~ ' "Ny .4~....< N' N N' N '4", N ' 'N 'V 4 C 4'N I V 4'- /13'' Unsigned editorials reflect the official position of the Daily's editorial board. All other signed articles and illustrations represent solely the views of their author. 6 6 6 Bearing witness behind bars JEFF CRAVENS JAYlAWK BiES When I inter- viewed last winter for William Buzz Alexan- der's English 319, a class that centered on theater workshops in urban high schools, juvenile facilities and adult pris- ons, I was asked why I wanted to work with people whom society deems criminals, misfits, scum of the earth. I gave a vague answer at the time, but now, as I begin my fourth creative workshop at a juve- nile facility and my first workshop at an adult prison, I have a better answer. Most marginalized populations are repre- sented in jails, prisons and juvenile facilities. These places, given the nation's growing incar- ceration rate - already the highest in the world - have often become warehouses for the poor, uneducated, underserved, disabled and home- less populations that the government doesn't seem to care about until they break the law. Going into these places allows one to notice the cracks in our social and economic systems and to bear witness to those who have fallen through. Bearing witness is especially crucial given the invisibility of prisoners and the lack of accountability for criminal justice practices and abuses in this country. (Writ of habeas corpus, torture, due process - what?) My point is not to victimize incarcerated populations, although many of their stories are utterly heartbreaking, One of the goals of this column, as with the workshops, is to humanize people who have been reduced to animals by this country's sensationalist media and draco- nian justice system. The young men and women I worked with last semester wrote about people they cared about: their parents, their grandparents, their spouses, their children and their friends. They looked at their lives critically, exploring times when they struggled or perhaps made a regrettable decision. They remembered times when they were happy - for example, shar- ing a blanket with a younger sister or smelling coffee and omelettes in Grandma's kitchen. And some of their writing was wonderfully creative: a Blake-like myth about metaphori- cal beasts and heroes, a story about a haunted house and an off-the-wall limerick. In these workshops, my partner and I tried not to be typical teachers, authorities who lecture and instruct. We tried to create a safe space where everyone could explore their lives and interests through the craft of writing, and we participated in this process. In the workshop with teenage boys in Detroit this fall, I shared a piece about my own insecurities as a child, describing my poor self-esteem, my perceived otherness from some of my peers and my sensitivity. After I read my piece, the guys were silent. After a few seconds, one guy asked, "Was that true?" I told him it was, and he said that he didn't think I would have shared all of that with them. Although I was nervous, I thought it was important to show the guys that one of their writing "teachers" (as some of them still called us) had experienced his own difficulties as a child, and that, in some way, our stories over- lapped. Nevertheless, I was fully aware that I got to go home at the end of workshops while they stayed there. I often asked myself why this was - what was the essential difference between them and me? If we had switched neighborhoods grow- ing up, would I have joined a gang and they a club that met in a hollowed-out bush overlooking the golf course? If I had been abused repeatedly, would I have developed a drug habit to escape the pain? If I had attended a public school in Detroit instead of one in Lawrence, Kan., would I be at the University right now, writing this column? In these workshops, there were no black-and- white answers (unless you mean the nine black guys and one white guy in my Detroit workshop this fall), no clear-cut victims and perpetrators, no good guys and bad guys. The fact that I had never been incarcerated did not make me categorically better or more human than the other guys in the room. As one workshop participant wrote: "We all got problems, you ain't gotta pretend." Unfortunately, many of us at the University have spent the first part of our lives pretending: pretending that because we have, we deserve; and because others don't have, they don't deserve. Pretending that because we are free, we deserve to be free; and because others are locked up, they deserve to be locked up. These dichotomies have been deliberately maintained by prison walls, and until we break through these barriers and bear witness to those on the other side, we will continue living in a world of black and white. Cravens can be reached at jjcrave@umich.edu. 0 VIEWPOINT Defeat with dignity BY JOHN STIGLICH 11 Samuel Alito escaped his confirmation hearings without Democrats inflicting signifi- cant damage to his reputation. Now Alito's fate lies within the Democratic Party leadership as it must choose between appeasing its left- wing base clamoring for blood and the pivotal independent voters who approve of the Alito nomination. Had Alito been nominated in an off year, the filibuster would be the strategy du jour of senate Democrats, but with aspirations of a congressional takeover this fall, Demo- crats cannot risk embarrassment. What, then, are their options? First, they could act boldly and filibuster the Alito nomination. As of this writing, Ben Nel- son of Nebraska holds the distinction of being the sole Democratic senator supporting Alito's nomination. Mathematically, Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) must assume he has 44 no-votes in his pocket - a four-vote insurance policy for the filibuster. However, if Reid invokes a filibuster, Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist (R-Tenn.) will exercise the "nuclear" option by eliminating the use of the filibuster for all judicial nominations. No member of the infamous "Gang of 14" is on record suggesting Alito meets the "extreme circumstances" clause of their agreement and must support Frist's "constitutional" option when considered. Therefore, invoking the fili- buster would equate to the elimination of the parliamentary tactic on judicial nominees, loss of popularity amongst the American public and a huge political win for the Republicans. Second, it is a reelection year, and the Demo- crats could pick up the votes of enough embat- tled Republicans to defeat Alito's nomination on an up-or-down vote. With Nelson allied with the Republicans, Democrats must con- vince seven senators to jump the Republican ship. I would target any seven of the follow- ing eight senators: Lincoln Chaffee of Rhode Island, Susan Collins and Olympia Snowe of Maine, Mike DeWine and George Voinovich of Ohio, Gordon Smith of Oregon and John Sununu or Judd Gregg of New Hampshire. All eight of these senators are either pro-choice, reside in a blue state or have bucked Bush on more than one salient occasion. However, if the Democrats cannot swing enough GOP senators into their camp, at least four more Democrats should vote with Nel- son. Chief Justice John Roberts earned his seat on the bench despite more than 20 votes against his nomination. If Nelson remains the only pro-Alito Democrat, Alito will earn con- firmation with at least 44 votes against him. I cannot imagine the Democratic grassroots accepting a confirmation vote where the total opposition exceeded the filibuster line and yet no filibuster ensued. In this regard, the Dem- ocratic leadership should quietly convince Senators Jay Rockefeller and Robert Byrd of West Virginia, Mark Dayton of Minnesota, Paul Sarbanes of Maryland and Joe Lieber- man of Connecticut to vote for Alito's confir- mation. Rockefeller and Byrd hold safe seats in red states, and their support for Alito will not diminish their political operations. Dayton and Sarbanes are retiring at the end of this term, so their votes are perfectly expendable to the Democratic leadership. Liebermana magenta Democrat from a blue state, is running for re- election against relatively weak competition. His recent comments in support of the Bush administration's Iraq policy mean a pro-Alito vote would cement his place at the bottom of the Democratic National Committee's depend- ability list. I suspect if those five senators take a dive for the Democrats, Senators Bill Pryor and Blanche Lincoln of Arkansas and Mary Landrieu of Louisiana will not be far behind. Stiglich is an LSA junior and a former member of the Daily's editorial board. He is a part-time intern this semester with the Senate Permanent Subcomittee for Special Investigations. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Group wants to hold BAMN accountable TO THE DAILY: In response to Michael Kan's clearly biased news reporting (Group out to destroy BAMN, 01/23/2006), we would just like to clarify a few points. Both Students Supporting Affirmative Action and the Ann Arbor chapter of the NAACP were contacted to join the organization. Both que- ries were ignored. However, we still have active members from both College Democrats and SSAA as well as numerous other organizations. We still extend the invitation to these groups if they wish to join. Our group is not about promoting or condemn- only encourages them. What parent wants to turn on the news, believing his child is in school, only to see his child being put in the back of a police car on an "academic field trip?" If we truly want to advocate non-violence, we must actively pursue BAMN and, hold it responsible for its actions. Katherine Miller LSA junior Dan Shuster Rackham Heather Wittaniemi Engineering freshman The letter writers are members of The Coali- tion to Stop BAMN, By Any Legal Means. Miller is the secretary of the College Republicans. two of us don't agree on most political issues, I have never said any derogatory comments to him about being a Republican. However, after this article was published, Brian informed me he had received numerous hate mails. All of these messages were from people who didn't even know him, and yet they all felt the need to call him every anti-conservative name they could think of. To the people who wrote these awful things to my future roommate: You should truly be ashamed of yourselves. Even if you don't share someone's beliefs, you should at least have the common decency to respect him for coming out into the open and declaring them. If you people have nothing better to do with your time, you should really consider finding other hobbies to Editorial Board Members: Amy Anspach, Andrew Bielak, 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, Frank Man- lev, Kirsty McNamara, Rajiv Prabhakar, Matt Rose, David Russell, Katherine Seid, Brian I