4A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, September 21, 2006 i 'cZl e lCir 'cg m ttilg OPINION DONN M. FRESARD Editor in Chief EMILY BEAM J CHRISTOPHER ZBROZEK JEFFREY BLOOMER Editorial Page Editors Managing Editor EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN SINCE 1890 413 E. HURON ANN ARBOR, MI 48104 tothedaily@michigandaily.com NOTABLE QUOTABLE The devil came here yesterday. And it still smells like sulfur today." - Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, referring to President Bush during a speech before the U.N. General Assembly, as reported yesterday by CNN.com. Lacking a legacy JOHN STIGLICH A wo reporters from the San Fran- cisco Chronicle were subpoenaed earlier this year to testify before a grand jury regarding their sources in a story that connected high-profile ath- letes with steroid use. This week, the reporters face a final decision: expose their confidential sources or face jail time. What's at stake in this case is the First Amendment and its vital protection of a free press that can hold the govern- ment accountable. Journalists have a' responsibility to inform the public - a responsibility that journalists can con- tinue to uphold only if they can protect their sources, and a federal shield law would help ensure that. In the past year, the work of two Chronicle reporters, Lance Williams and Mark Fainaru-Wada, has been instrumental in connecting athletes, including Barry Bonds and Jose Can- seco, to steroid use. Their work has also brought national attention to the preva- lence of performance-enhancing drugs in professional sports. In order to obtain information for their reports, these jour- nalists had to promise confidentiality to their sources. By promising confidenti- ality, reporters are able to gather infor- mation from sources who otherwise would be reluctant to talk. Investigative reporting of this kind is a crucial role of the free press, and by jailing reporters who refuse to reveal their sources, the government encourages a watered-down media. Although the reporters' promises of confidentiality are perfectly legal, their sources violated grand jury secrecy laws in sharing information. In a last-ditch effort to expose the whistleblowers, the grand jury subpoenaed Williams and Fainaru-Wada to reveal their sources, even though the case doesn't involve national security concerns - an emo- Times was nelo in contempt or court for refusing to identify a source in connec- tion with the exposure of CIA officer Valerie Plame. Each case illustrates how the reporter, rather than the source, is unfairly burdened with the responsibil- ity of choosing between integrity and imprisonment. American media organizations, dominated by corporate owners more concerned with turning a profit than the traditional journalistic role of hold- ing truth to power, already carry out pitifully little investigative reporting. The federal prosecutors, in overstep- ping their authority, have unleashed a further chilling effect on the media. Certainly, all journalists cannot be expected risk jail time to uphold their values, so the likely consequence is a more complacent media that shies away from truly investigative reporting for less risky stories. With a weakened media, Americans are left uninformed and wrongdoers stand less of a chance of being exposed. To foster the solid journalism need- ed for a functioning democracy, Con- gress needs to pass a shield law similar to those already in effect in 31 states, which protect news-gatherers from sub- poenas seeking their notes and sources.- Unfortunately, many of these laws are inconsistent with one another and have vague descriptions about who falls under their jurisdiction. The federal government has an obligation to protect the First Amendment and to enact a lay that can uniformly protect journalists from being forced to reveal confidential information. ABC's con- tro- v e r s i a l miniseries, "The Path to 9/11," raised many ques- tions about our govern- ment's abil- ity to protect its citizens. While the show did not intend to direct blame at any one person, senior Clinton administration officials - particularly former National Security Director Sandy Berger - certainly took exception to the miniseries's version of his- tory. Even Bill Clinton - in an ironic call to honesty - chal- lenged ABC President Robert Iger to "tell the truth" in the miniseries. Why would Clinton, Hollywood's best friend, be so hot under the collar about five hours of television? Because despite all the scene-cutting and disclaimers ABC extended him, Clinton is astute enough to realize that his presidency is still search- ing for its legacy. When historians look back at Clinton's tenure, what is there to remember outside of the Lewinsky scandal? Surely, the one positive development they have to mention is the performance of the econ- omy during his watch. America experienced an economic boom during the '90s thanks to some of the policies implemented by the Clintonistas. But supervising a booming economy didn't enhance Calvin Coolidge's legacy, did it? What about legislative achieve- ments? Clinton loves to claim credit for balancing the budget for the first time in decades and "end- ing welfare as we know it," but a fair analysis would have to give the Republican-controlled Con- gress credit for pushing Clinton toward those worthwhile goals. Even if Clinton received full cred- it for balancing the budget and reforming welfare, he still would not have a monumental legisla- tive accomplishment in the same league as FDR's New Deal or Johnson's Great Society. Clinton pinned his legacy as a diplomat on mediating an agree- ment between the Palestinian Lib- eration Organization and Israel. During Clinton's eight years in office, no foreign official visited the White House more than Yas- ser Arafat. In the end, after being offered nearly all of what he said he wanted, Arafat left the bargain- ing table with nothing to show for Clinton's alleged diplomatic tal- ents. Washington, Lincoln, Wilson, FDR and Truman earned gran- diose legacies by successfully guiding our nation through war. Clinton's tenure as commander in chief saw no significant use of military force - but rather a focus on using the military as a means of social experimentation. "Don't ask, don't tell" became part of the American lexicon because Clin- ton's one goal for the military was to make its culture more accept- ing of alternative lifestyles. Additionally, Osama bin Laden cites Clinton's removal of U.S. forces from Somalia after the infa- mous "Black Hawk Down" inci- dent as a rallying point for radical Muslims. Bin Laden discovered that America has a weak stomach for casualties on television - a weakness he and his cadre con- tinue to exploit today. However, what Clinton's reac- tion to the miniseries tells us most clearly about his perception of his presidency is that he's terrified of being labeled asleep at the wheel. According to the 9/11 Commis- sion report, from the first World Trade Center attack, occurring just weeks into the Clinton presi- dency, until the attack on the USS Cole - the last al-Qaida attack during the Clinton administra- tion - al-Qaida attacked Ameri- can interests six times, expanded operations fromregional to world- wide and formed a safe haven in conjunction with the Taliban gov- ernment in Afghanistan. Not an impressive resume for a president who claims to have done all he could to combat terrorism. Clinton knows the importance of the visual. Visual images - particularly movies - can change our perceptions on any given topic. Following the release of Oliver Stone's "JFK," Ameri- cans flooded their elected rep- resentatives with requests to re-open the investigation into the Kennedy assassination. Michael Moore released "Fahrenheit 911" to persuade Americans not to vote for President Bush. Both films have questionable fidelity to the truth and their goals were the same - changing the public's perception of history. President Clinton left office as a mediocre.president with approval numbers in the low sixties. At the time, the American public did not blame him for the rise of al-Qaida as a global terrorist network. Those who viewed "The Path to 9/11" had their perceptions of his legacy change in that regard. The miniseries portrayed an administration that covered our protectors in the FBI and CIA with red tape. The Clintonistas viewed global terrorism as a law-enforce- ment issue unworthy of military operations. Due to concerns that bombings would negatively affect our world image, the administra- tion passed on numerous oppor- tunities to bomb al-Qaida training camps and to hit high-ranking leaders. As a result, bin Laden lived, al-Qaida grew and America slept through the threat escalation. This was the bridge that President Clinton built to the 21st century. Stiglich can bf reached atjcsgolf.umich.edu. VIEWPOINT Big Brother is yelling at you VIEWPOINT Young, and it doesn't show By BEN CALECA Imagine you are walking down the sidewalk and decide to jaywalk to make it to class a bit faster. Now imagine that as you do that, a voice from a loudspeaker tells you to turn around and use the crosswalk. This is already the case in the English town of Middlesbrough, which has installed several speakers to its extensive CCTV public surveillance system in order to help keep the public in check. This scheme, no matter how well-intentioned, is nothing more than an affront to civil liberties. This is the latest idea in a series of surveil- lance systems Britain has installed to try to curb its crime problems. Big Brother now doesn't just watch what you are doing, but he can now pub- licly embarrass you to enforce the law. Barry Coppinger of the Middlesbrough Council, who devised this scheme, brags: "It is like public humiliation in a way." But is humiliation for such high crimes as littering really anything more than another infringement on personal privacy? Trying to guilt people into obedience by embarrassing them is not a new idea. I used to go to a Catholic school that had a two-way loud- speaker that could listen in on children's con- versations. The voice of the head nun screaming "Shut up, Paul" (it was always Paul) to embar- rass him still rings in my ears. George Orwell's "1984" was meant to warn us about the dangers of enacting such surveillance. Orwell is surely spinning in his grave now that his own country is ignoring his advice. However, surveillance at a private institution or in fiction is quite different from snooping in public areas such as busy intersections and pla- zas with high pedestrian concentrations. Gov- ernments have no right to observe a person's movement without good reason, such as if a warrant is issued based on other information. No government agency has the right to public- ly humiliate people for any reason. It is absurd to believe that a police force and local govern- ment would resort to infantile tactics like this to enforce the law and curb disobedience. Keep in mind also that the operators of these cameras are still human - and hardly impar- tial. Although the proponents of the system say there are restrictions to prevent operators from saying anything insulting, that's hardly a guar- antee that the system will not be abused. It is inevitable someone will try to point those cam- eras into people's bedrooms. In addition, opera- tors will surely be inclined to let their friends off the hook while making sure to single out those they dislike. The costs of this system also make it an abuse of government resources. The cameras alone cost nearly $100,000 a piece to install. Combine that with the cost of technicians and the operators behind the camera system and you are diverting a considerable amount of money that could have funded more police - who can stop real crimes rather than simply yell at people committing minor abuses from a distance. London has arguably the most impressive sur- veillance system of any city, able to track tens of thousands of people at a time via face recog- nition among other techniques. Although these cameras do not yell at residents, they are meant to cut into London's crime rate. The success of such cameras, however, has been lackluster - London still has a crime rate seven times higher than New York. Though the system was able to identify some of the London bombing terrorists last summer, it also made false matches to others. This shows one critical fault of cameras: While it can catch criminals on film (along with innocent citizens), a camera cannot arrest a criminal, and a camera cannot prevent a crime. While to some the idea of such a system ever being installed in the United States seems unlikely, several urban areas are trying to copy Britain by more closely monitoring the public. Chicago, for example, has been creating an ever- larger public surveillance system aimed at stop- ping crime. We must remember, though, that the benefits of such a system come at a far greater cost - our right to privacy. Caleca is an Engineering freshman. BY RAFI MARTINA TROY - The "Eric Gregory Campaign Chili Cook-Off" - an event to "heat up" the campaign of the Democratic candidate for 41st District state representative - seems a standard affair. The attendees are more of a custom- ary set than a melange of ages and ethnicities. In this Detroit suburb, the crowd reflects the demo- graphic: middle-aged to senior, white, solidly middle-class and certainly not the provocateurs emblematic of the putative "New Democratic Party" of Howard Dean and Ned Lamont. No shout- ing college students deriding Bush's War on Terrorism; no goa- teed Birkenstockers sipping their fair-trade coffee from Nalgene bottles here. This is the meat- and-potatoes Democratic crowd often obscured by today's New Party. Gregory, the candidate for whom this event is being hosted, is joined by two of his politi- cal peers - state rep candidate Andy Levin and (running against Joe Knollenberg) Nancy Skinner - for a rah-rah event that was supposed to be attended by Mich- igan's U.S. Sen. Debbie Stabenow, who for whatever reason wasn't able to attend. But the one feature of Gregory (and his candidacy, for that matter) that stands out most conspicuously from his political profile is the fact that Eric Gregory is 20 years old. And notan "almost-21" 20. He won't shed his minor status until months after the campaign is finished. What's more surprising about Gregory rests in the phenomena - and the teeming paradoxes - of his youthful- campaign. Those wondering if there's something to this campaign beyond the obvious novelty of having a college student run for office haven't met this col- lege student. Despite his youth, it's an undeniably well-run campaign. The impressive website, the volun- teer network, the events attendedby notable politicians are all enough to surprise the casual detractor unimpressed with yet another 20- year-old's stillborn schemes. But for all its merits, the crusade comes off as unwaveringly preco- cious: Its organization, stellar as it may be, no doubt reflects a lurching ambition of similarly stellar degree. The candidate is so polished by the surfeit of similarly ambitious (and exceptionally brainy) handlers that his success is a blemishto his alleged sincerity and humble approach. Dressed in a button-down shirt and standard campaign patterned tie over standard khakis, Gregory comes across as every bit the typical middle-aged candidate. For a self-proclaimed outsider, Gregory brandishes all the set- pieces and artillery typical of battle-tested politicos. The talking points, the banner, the campaign logo - all these are readily appar- ent. It's truly a campaign to scale, a living replica of the polished cam- paigns of his mature peers and rival down to every detail. Speak- ing before an audience, Gregory What does a 20- year-old Candidate have to do to seem Credible? contends passionately that the word this 'political-theory major' once most closely associated with government was "disillusionment," which is pretty standard Gen-Y, Daily Show material. Yeah, we get it - apathetic youth displeased with the unscrupulous adult gov- ernmental machine, right? Totally wrong. Gregory extends his word-association into a use- ful conceit: His campaign message - reached, we assume, through tra- ditional politico-messianic epiphany - is "hope." His platform? "Bring- ing a real change to government" Creating a "positive role for govern- ment" with a "message of hope." Standard political material. All these elements display a keen attention to strategy and detail for an ostensibly fledgling candidate. Perhaps this reflects an ardent com- mitment to winning - an accep- tance of the political prerequisites with an. eye towards keeping his campaign credible and yet intrin- sically doe-eyed and fresh. In this regard, the campaign never falters into the naive quixotism of campus radicals; it is, by any visible mea- sure, an able and qualified endeav- or absent of any and all naivete or misplaced idealism. Gregory is no firebrand bomb-thrower, and by all appearances, he has no interest in that role. Ironically, however, it's the absence of these qualities - the shrill voice of a committed, agi- tator, the persistent and novel approaches of young politically- minded students, the true outsider profile which Gregory at times tries to invoke - that most serious- ly discomfit Gregory's appeal. That Gregory fails to fit the youthful ste- reotype of a body-pierced, aspiring young agitator - that he is instead staid and insightful - perhaps hurts his image. His demeanor and dress isn't the least bit distinct from that of his opponent - or any tra- ditional candidate, for that matter. I want to take a candidate seri- ously, and for this reason I'd never vote for the standard University st- dent running as a socialist for Ann Arbor City Council - or state rep- resentative, for that matter. Those kids are jokes. (Take Matt Erard, the socialist candidate running for the 52nd District state representa- tive seat from Ann Arbor. Living in East Quad with him for two years, the guy came across as the second- biggest jerk in the building, behind me of course.) But aside from the discomfort of voting for a candidate my own age, there's an additional discomfort in voting for a candidate like Gregory, who, despite being my own age, acts like my father, or at least my father's politician. Perhaps I have an urge to want it both ways: to dismiss the inexperi- enced and bombastic young idealist forimmaturity,whilemistrustingthe apparently bona fide young political ingenue (Gregory) for his palpable ambition. Nevertheless, it's a duality reflected in the candidate himself, who claims outsider status while wielding and calling plays from the strategy book of traditional party warfare. Perhaps appropriately, it was an official in the Michigan Democratic Party who proposed and first supported Gregory's candidacy. Is Gregory grappling for the reins or riding in the chariot along with the party's top brass? Would we actu- ally want him to be the disaffected young agitator we expect any young candidate to be? Martina is an LSA senior. I I I I I