4 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, October 10, 2006 l E oirtcFC~tga1% DPINION DONN M. FRESARD Editor in Chief EMILY BEAM CHRISTOPHER ZBROZEK Editorial Page Editors JEFFREY BLOOMER Managing Editor EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN SINCE 1890 ' n { r413 E. HURON ANN ARBOR, MI 48104 tothedaily@michigandaily.com 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. FiWM THE DAILY Blocked again Adverse court rulings hinder gay marriage NOTABLE QUOTABLE He clearly has used his position, but who hasn't?" - A former Congressional page who says he had consensual sex at age 21 with former Rep. Mark Foley (R-Fla.), speaking on condition of anonymity, as reported yesterday by latimes.com. KATIE GARLINGHOUSE 1>U1 E ARt5 C L} K The DeVos con game TOBY MITCHELL Gay marriage advocates in Cali- fornia were disappointed yet' again Thursday with the rever- sal of a San Francisco judge's ruling against the state's ban on same-sex marriage. The ruling by the state 1st District Court of Appeals reflected the mentality of many gay-marriage oppo- nents, stating that it was up to the state Legislature, not the judiciary, to deter- mine the definition of marriage. Left to public opinion, however, it seems that legalizing same-sex marriage is a long.way off. Given current trends and the success of state ballot initia- tives, it's clear that much of America isn't "ready" for same-sex marriage. But waiting the necessary decades for public opinion to come around, as the court alluded to, isn't acceptable so long as a group of citizens are denied not only the right to marry, but equal protection under the law as well. In last week's decision, the court argued: "The time may come when Cali- fornia chooses to expand the definition of marriage to encompass same-sex unions. That change must come from democratic processes, however, not by judicial fiat." In giving unjustified credence to the unsubstantiated claim that many judges engage in "judicial activism," the court handed the power to determine who is granted equal protection under state law to the people of California. But one has to question how "democratic" the demo- cratic processes the court promotes truly are. Ballot proposals, which spawned the gay marriage bans in the first place, are frequently misleading. The gay marriage ban in Michigan was also fraught with misleading statements and ads. Inishort, sometimes the democratic processes gay- marriage opponents urge their counter- parts to pursue are less than perfectly fair. Even if such ballot initiatives were a true gauge of majority public opinion, that should not mean that in this case the majority should rule. Prohibiting a group of citizens from receiving the legal, social and personal benefits of marriage appears on its face to violate their right to equal protection under the 14th Amendment. Until the U.S. Supreme Court rules that to be the case, however, challenges to gay-mar- riage bans may continue to be shot down in state and federal courts. Because California has a domes- tic partner law that provides most of the same rights to gay couples as to married heterosexual couples, the marriage ban was ruled non-discrimi- natory. But this is not the case in other states where similar bans have passed - including Michigan, where repeat- ed attempts to amend the state's civil rights law to prohibit discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation have died in committee. Even in California, gay couples are still denied at least one right: the ability to marry as hetero- sexual couples do. The California ruling is a self-admit- ted postponement of the inevitable, and the California Supreme Court would be more true to the Constitution if it overturns the ban. As it stands right now, gays in California and across the country are denied equal rights and equal protection. While millions of Americans wait for the general public and its representatives to come around without a legal avenue to prevent dis- crimination, it is up to activists to keep the momentum going in the fight for equal rights. Y ou're walk- ing down the streetwhen a man catches your atten- tion. He says you can dou- ble your money if'you beat him at a sim- ple game. He puts a pea under a shell and starts shuffling. Just as he really gets moving he points and shouts: "Look! Queers get- ting married!" Sound familiar? I just described the Michigan Republican electoral strategy. Republican gubernatorial can- didate Dick DeVos has tried to hard to appear moderate, and sometimes it's difficult to tell him and Democratic Gov. Jennifer Granholm apart. They both want to diversify the economy, they both want jobs for Michigan, and so on. But he's been pretty slip- pery when it comes to the cultural issues that rile up the Republican base. A closer look shows why. The DeVos family gave $100,000 to the ballot initia- tive to ban gay marriage, gave $125,000 to a group that opposes abortion even in cases of rape or incest and publicly backed "intel- ligent design." DeVos may not personally believe in these posi- tions, but his interest in them is a classic campaign gimmick: Dis- tract the electorate with cutesy cultural issues and never address the real ones. A headline in the satirical newspaper The Onion summed up the way it works: "Nation's poor win election for nation's rich." The GOP needs to appeal to working-class cultural con- servatives to win elections, but when it comes to meeting their demands or improving their lives, they're ignored. As long as you can aim working people's VIEWPOINT C{ resentment at scapegoats, they may never notice that you're far more responsible for their misery than are freeloading minorities or marryin' queers. Of course, this is an over- simplification; the GOP also relies on the vanity and greed of pompous, pseudo-intellectual upper-crust conservatives. They provide rhetorical and monetary support for regressive initiatives like anti-union "right to work" laws and the elimination of the estate tax - and they're the ones who stand to benefit most from a DeVos win. Do we really want the same social circle that ran the Big Three into the ground in charge of our state? Michigan's econ- omy is tanking thanks to the incestuous, overly conservative management of the Companies Formerly Known as the Big Three. Former Chrysler chief Lee Iacocca endorsed DeVos, as if the support of the executive who presided over Chrysler's near-bankruptcy is a good thing. Iacocca's involvement illustrates the nasty entitlement mental- ity of Michigan's conservatives; when he couldn't fix Chrysler, he had Reagan bail them out on the taxpayers' dime. Do we really want a gover- nor who made his millions with a disingenuous sales scheme that appeals to the frustration of working people? Michigan Republicans believes he's well- qualified for the job. They sold the gay marriage ban by appeal- ing to homophobia and are try- ing to sell a ban on affirmative action with bit of con-artist fast talk that it somehow actually supports civil rights. They're exploiting Michigan's exciting history of race relations, as a letter published in the Escanaba Daily Press from Brian Panne- becker, a co-chair of the Macomb County MCRI organization, illustrates. After discussing "the University of Michigan's use of racial preferences and quotas in its admissions policy that pre- vented (MCRI Chair Jennifer Gratz) from being admitted to U. of M. because she is white," Pan- nebecker states: "The result is that we still have a state policy that discriminates against more qualified appli- cants in favor of less qualified Blacks." Don't worry about losing your job at an auto company while its leadership's failure is rewarded with multi-million-dollar sever- ance packages - a black could take your kid's place at college! If you care whether your kid attends college or not, that is: A survey conducted by the Detroit News showed only 27 percent of Michiganders believe a college education is essential for success, and nearly half don't care if their kids go to college. This is good for Michigan Republicans; they need Michigan's undereducated goobers to stay ignorant enough to vote for them. In this, they're not so different from the national Republican Party. The state desperately needs to diversify its economy, and it needs to get together and fix the post-apocalyptic hellscape we call Detroit without the stupid racial blame-shifting. Initiatives like the gay marriage ban and MCRI only serve to reinforce the message that our redneck prejudices are more important to us than the diverse young professionals who might other- wise want to live here and help grow our economy. If we're seri- ous about getting back into the game, we need to stop falling for this con job and stand up for candidates who won't take us for fools. I think Michigan deserves it; I just hope Michigan feels the same way. Mitchell can be reached at toami@umich.edu. 4 LETTERS TO THE EDITOR t"Send aall letts to the ditor to LETTES TOTHE EITOR tothedily@michigandaly.com-. 4 Some at Daily were aware of facts months before story ran TO THE DAILY: I find it odd that the Daily needed to rely on Andrew Yahkind and Michael Brooks to inform its writer about Brooks's involvement with Mich- igamua when the Daily's editor in chief has had that information for months. Jason Pesick Alum The letter writer is aformer editor in chief of The Michigan Daily. Detainees' Just a euphemism for enemy combatants TO THE DAILY: I read Gary Graca's viewpoint (An open let- ter to Senator Stabenow, 10/05/2006), and I feel the need to address some words he used. Graca repeatedly refers to the people at Guantinamo as "detainees," "prisoners," "soldiers" - and in one sentence even went as far to call them "innocent civilians." This is simply amazing. Graca seems to explicitly go out of his way to call the people in Gitmo anything but what they rightfully are. The administration uses the warm-sounding, politically correct term "enemy combatants" for those that I and many other Americans like to call terrorists. Jeremy Holtsclaw Rackham Viewpoint misguided about Stabenow's motives for vote TO THE DAILY: In his viewpoint An Open Letter to Sena- tor Stabenow, (10/05/2006) Gary Graca gross- ly mischaracterized Sen. Debbie Stabenow's (D-Mich.) vote for the Military Commissions Act of 2006. I certainly will not argue that the Military Commissions Act is a perfect piece of legislation - hardly any law coming from this Republican Congress is. However, this new law deserves to be acknowledged for its many merits. What Graca neglected to mention in his piece is that this act codifies procedures that President Bush's military commissions must now follow. These measures govern pretrial and trial proceedings, rules of evidence and sentencing requirements. Given that Bush's military commissions are already constitution- ally suspect, enumerated procedures can only be seen as a welcome improvement. But let's look at the even larger picture. We shouldn't point the finger at Stabenow. Instead, we should again note that the Republicans, by playing partisan politics, forced this coun- try between a rock and a constitutional crisis. Stabenow's numerous votes in favor of amend- ing this bill displayed her honest commitment to upholding the Constitution and basic human rights. Republicans, on the other hand, have failed to show strong leadership in the areas of civil liberties and human rights. We can change this, though, when we go to the polls on Nov. 7. Let's re-elect Stabenow, a Democrat who has dedicated her life to the residents of Michigan. In doing so, not only do we show our support for progressive poli- cies, but we also send a message to Republicans that national office is not the place for playing games with basic American freedoms - it's for making improvements. Samuel Harper LSA junior The letter writer is the chair of Students for Stabenow. University less committed to diversity than it might appear TO THE DAILY: While recent writers in The Michigan Daily certainly don't agree in their opinions on the Michigan Civil Rights Initiative, they certainly do all base their arguments on some confused notion that the University as it is now (or as it was eight years ago) supports the affirmative action movement. I'm curious as to how this mis- conception came about, given that the University seems fairly uninterested in ethnic and gender equality. This is most evident in the University's spe- cial programs. While the University states its support of affirmative action, it actively accepts an unfortunately bland group of applicants for, say, its Honors Program. From a fairly unaffect- ed standpoint, I have to say, it's pretty clear that the University cares more about the funding that racial and gender politics provide and less about actively solving institutional racism and sexism in the world today. The University can talk about the fairness of its admissions standards all it wants, but until it applies the same philosophy to the Residential College, the Lloyd Hall Scholars Program, the Honors Program, etc., I'm not going to buy a word of it. And no matter where you stand on the issue, you can at least see where the University really stands: wherever the money is. Becca Sonday Engineering sophomore Traditions, like people, ontinue to learn and grow BY MICHAEL BROOKS Two years ago, I was approached by the orga- nization formerly known as Michigamua to serve as its advisor with the title Honorary Angell. I thought they said "Honorary Angel" and was some- what chagrined to learn that the Angell in question was the third president of the University and not a divine emissary. I would not ordinarily submit an opinion piece to The Michigan Daily - I have only done so once in the past 25 years - but there is pain in our com- munity that needs to be addressed. First there is the understandable pain of members of our community who have seen their own traditions - and in some measure their identities - disrespected by some of the past practices of this organization. There is also the pain of some students who have found them- selves disrespected for affiliating with an organiza- tion whose members have worked so long and hard to move beyond that piece of its history. When I was first asked to become an advisor and honorary member I declined, largely because of what I had heard about the controversy surround- ing the organization. I would have shunned contact with any group connected in any way with racist practices, and all the more so if they demeaned Native Americans. I grew up in Spokane, Wash- ington, and spent a lot of time on the reservation there. Indeed, it was the example of the Spokane Indians - their pride in who they were and their rich traditions - that helped to inspire my lifelong commitment to my own people and their tradi- tions. I was troubled by what I had heard about the organization's use of faux-Indian rituals and both understood and shared the discomfort others felt about it. Before the members of the group renewed their invitation to me a year later, I had taken time to learn ERIN RUSSELL JOY IrO EW LAI$ 'HAT THE MICHIGC NCL fr AME' AS MEANT PICHT$ LAW$ rrT SK TO., OSUH more about them. I expressed my concerns to them and was assured that those practices had been repudiated and abandoned a generation ago. I was surprised to learn that some of the members were students I knew well enough to be certain that they also would not be associated with some of the organization's practices in years past. They also told me that the organization was committed to concluding a process of having a transparent membership, selecting a new name and more clearly articulating and embracing its historic mission of humble service to the University, and that they very much wanted my guidance in that process. The 24 members of this organization do not con- sider themselves the best campus leaders or the only ones worthy of membership. When last year's seniors devoted several weeks to selecting the class of '07, I was powerfully struck by the scores of names they considered for membership - students who had demonstrated exemplary leadership in a broad array of organizations - and was equally impressed by their consideration of ethnic, racial, gender and religious diversity along with demon- strated leadership skills. It is difficult for me to reconcile some of the charges of racism still lev- eled at a student organization that is arguably one of the most diverse on campus. While I did not fully appreciate the time com- mitment involved when I accepted the group's invi- tation, I am honored to have been able to play a role in this ongoing process. President James B. Angell probably could not have imagined the transforma- tion of the group he helped found 104 years ago, but I have no doubt that he would recognize their continued passionate commitment to service to the University, and I believe that he would be honored as well. Brooks is the executive director of University of Michigan Hillel. V I A