4A - Monday, November 27, 2006 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com ' L74C iC igan B3al Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan since 1890 413 E. Huron St. Ann Arbor, MI 48104 tothedaily@umich.edu ALEXANDER HONKALA {{y DONN M. FRESARD EDITOR IN CHIEF EMILY BEAM CHRISTOPHER ZBROZEK EDITORIAL PAGE EDITORS JEFFREY BLOOMER MANAGING EDITOR Unsigned editorials reflect the official position of the Daily's editorial board. All other signed articles and illustrations represent solely the views of their authors. Bring back LRV Instant runoff voting would improve city politics While some voters may have stayed home from the polls earlier this month due to the blustery weather, lackluster candidates stopped a lot more citizens from voting. In the 2004 presidential elections and this year's gubernatorial elections, many felt indifferent toward or even dis- gusted by both major party candidates. We don't want really a fight with the president. What we want to do is to prove we can govern for the next two years." - Rep. CHARLES RANGEL (D-N.Y.), talking about the plans of Houne Democrats for the upcoming Congress, an reported yesterday by Reuters. Wet Hot American Christmas Reforming the electoral process on a national and state level may be long process - but on a local level, Ann Arbor residents can take action now to fix their voting system. Instant runoff vot- ing can provide residents with the chance to vote for third party candidates without fear of throwing away their vote, making local elections more competitive and the outcome more democratic. IRV allows voters to rank their preferred candidates in single-winner races. Voters' first-choice candidates are tallied first. In the event no candidate has a majority, the last-place candidate is dropped, and his votes are redistributed to his voters' second choice. The process is repeated until one candidate holds the majority. This method is currently used in Australia and Fiji, as well as in San Francisco's local races. Here in Ann Arbor, voters approved IRV for local races in 1974. Then, IRV was a solution to problems caused by a grow- ing third party, the Human Rights Party, whose success took away Democratic votes and led to the election of Republican Mayor James Stephenson in 1971 with 47 percent of the vote. With IRV in place, Stephen- son lost his 1975 re-election campaign to his Democratic challenger. IRV did cause some problems in its inaugural run, namely delays in tallying votes due to paper ballots and confusion among pollworkers - hardly insurmountable difficulties. But a Republi- can-led petition drive and unusually high Republican turnout in the 1976 election led to the repeal of IRV. Today it is not the strength of a third party, but the lack of even a second party that makes IRV's return necessary. All ten of Ann Arbor's City Council members are Democrats, though two originally ran as Republicans before realizing that elector- al success here is much easier with a "D" next to your name on the ballot. Single- party dominance has meant that Council members are selected in August prima- ries. In this month's general election, only one of the five ward races was contested at all, by a Green Party candidate who earned 16 percent of the vote in Ward 3. IRV would make races more competitive by allowing voters to choose third-party candidates without fear of throwing away their votes. The Green Party could be strong in Ann Arbor, but without experienced candidates, it will remain on the outskirts of main- stream local politics. Greens and members of other alternative parties could gainexpe- rience and legitimacy if the voting system allowed citizens to support them without worrying their vote wouldn't count. Support for IRV is growing, with a local group, the Ann Arbor Fair Vote Coalition, advancing the issue. Washtenaw County Clerk Larry Kestenbaum supports IRV, and Ann Arbor Mayor John Hieftje said he would back IRV if he was convinced resi- dents understood it and wanted it. The voting system certainlyisn't the only problem plaguing our democracy - but it is one thing that can be easily addressed at the local level. IRV can mean more competitive elections and increased civic participation in Ann Arbor. Local groups must continue their efforts to spark interest among resi- dents and to educate them in order to avoid the confusion that marred IRV's 1975 run. Student groups, too, have the opportunity to mobilize campus behind. By joining up with other IRV supporters, students can contribute to a larger movement to make our local elections more democratic. The Thanksgiving turkey had bare- ly been picked clean off the serv- ing tray when my aunt turned to my brother and I and asked us the inevi- table question: "So what do you boys want for Christmas?" That was it. Thanksgiving was over, mugged of its reverence and cast aside for the prima donna of all holidays - Christmas. _ No matter what religion one subscribes to, the rampant commercialism of the holiday season is ines- capable. It is the zenith of our American capi- SAM talist systemtheB Super Bowl for BUTLER retailers across the country. After all, when you are swip- ing your credit card for Jesus, you don't shy away from making purchases. My brother, a socially savvy high school student, expressed his need to shop at Urban Outfitters for his girlfriend. Ah, Urban - a favorite for high school and college students alike. Selling pseu- do-ironic T-shirts, velvety Jesus statu- ettes and Chubby Checker coffee table books, Urban Outfitters is an amazing place where students can not only buy the perfect dorm room adornment but also purchase a defining sense of character. A mediocre person who buys that oh-so- clever screen-printed T-shirt suddenly becomes a part of a youth culture, while simultaneously showing off his sense of humor and strong personality. "My name is Tom, but it says 'Earl' on my blue-collar shirt - how crazy is that?" By buying useless pieces of kitsch and subversive articles of clothing, the sen- timent is that one is undermining mass consumerism. Normal people don't spend good money on Cat Lady action figures. I don't mean to only single out patrons of Urban Outfitters, though. These obser- vations apply to all people who take their material possessions as signifiers of their superiority - but especially to the kids who gag at brands like Nike and Adidas but froth at the mouth over a pair of high- top sneakers. "Because I bought my retro suit jacket and hooded sweatshirt at a vintage store, I am obviously more intel- ligent, politically aware and just generally cooler than you." These mass-produced knick-knacks are sold to us so we can display our indi- viduality, an individuality that becomes only more sought after as global con- sumerism homogenizes our culture. But marketers, of course, have figured out how to package individuality. Rebellion against mainstream commercialism manifests itself as merely a superficial market preference. More ironic than any of the T-shirts sold in stores is the fact that so many "hip" people believe that purchasing these types of goods is an actual form of protest against com- mercial society. Instead of hipsters avoiding and subverting capitalism, the economic system has evolved to encom- pass its would-be dissenters. Thisthought echoesthe claims Thom- as Frank makes in his book, "The Con- quest of Cool." Although he focuses on the 1960s, his points are only truer today. Business culture subsumes the counter- culture, and now any form of opposition is co-opted. Through advertising, capitalism has appropriated all of our forms of dissent. Marketers placate us using the rhetoric of feminists, environmentalists and iber- cool hipsters. Subverting the capitalist system becomes just another ploy used to sell you a product. Think of any com- mercial that advocates breaking away, jumping off the beaten path or escaping the mundane. There is no way for mem- bers of the counterculture to express their disdain for the status quo that hasn't been branded and sold in stories. Or at least this is what I thought until I learned ofa new way to rebel against the powers that be: sex. Veteran peace activists Donna Shee- han and Paul Reffell have partnered with scientists at Princeton University in call- ing for people all over the world to have an orgasm sometime, somewhereonDec.22. Backed by pseudoscientific theories, they hope that the mass ecstasy will create an energy and global consciousness to help bring about world peace. When I first heard about the Global Orgasm for Peace, I thoughtwe had finally discovered an incorruptible form of mass protest. Its impactmaybequestionable,but I was pleased to see an organized protest void of cheesy merchandise or requests for donations and which used a method that seemedto lack ego. Even orgasms have been corrupted by capitalism. ThenI went to their website and found a plug for Sheehan and Reffell's new book onromance and sexualfreedom. Thebook was given as background information and as certification that these people have the authority to launch a major worldwide protest. How sad that financial success" validates peace activists these days. But I should probably get off my high and sanctimonious horse. Who am I to judge, when last year my aunt gave me an Abercrombie & Fitch sweater that I still hesitate to wear because of my vain hipster-esqe reservations - and all these people want for Christmas is peace on earth? Sam Butler can be reached at butlers@umich.edu SHIMAA ABDELFADEEL A flawed democracy Since late June, Israelhas killed 400 Palestin- ians in Gaza. In the morning hours of November 8, 2006, in the village of Beit Hanoun, Israeli tanks repeatedly fired shells on a house, killing 18 members of the same extended family. Other attacks earlier in the month were launched against peaceful protesters in Gaza. In break- ing the months-long cease-fire that Hamas had agreed to this summer, this invasion collec- tively punished innocent people in the name of Israeli security. Promoters of Zionism tout its democracy, which offers legal protection to all. There exists, however, a gap between theory and practice that has bred racial apartheid within Israeli society and between Israel and its occu- pied populations in Palestine. In a state that asserts the dominance of one religious persua- sion, democracy cannot really flourish. By fail- ing to protect a plurality of ethnic and religious groups, the Israeli government exposes non- Jewish populations to persecution in a variety of ways. Israeli political leaders like Avigdor Lieberman, who was recently promoted deputy prime minister, explicitly support the ethnic cleansing of Arab populations as a way of pre- serving the Jewish majority in Israel. Immigration law under the Israeli democra- cy is another site of exclusion. Israel's "Law of Return" offers citizenship to anyone of the Jew- ish faith from anywhere in the world, yet Pales- tinian refugees are denied the right to return to their homes and become citizens. These refu- gees are numbered in the millions and were displaced from their homes at various points during the last 60 years. In 1948, Israeli inde- pendence came in conjunction with the forced removal of 750,000 Palestinians from their land. Through the years, Israel has conquered and occupied more Palestinian land by war, a violation of the United Nations Charter. During these wars, millions more were displaced from their homes in Israel/Palestine. Despite UN Resolution 194, Israel refuses to grant refugees the right to return home because this would threaten the demographic majority in Israel. In its obsession with maintaining this major- ity, Israeli policy has led to the removal and marginalization of another people and culture, instead of upholding the values of inclusion and equality that democracies promise to foster. Arabs living in Israel as citizens compose the lowest socioeconomic classes. They cannot purchase land owned by the Jewish National Fund, an organization that administers a large proportion of Israel's land and only sells real estate to its Jewish citizens. In occupied Pales- tine, Israeli military rule does not even pretend to uphold democratic values. Nor does it adhere to the Fourth Geneva Convention, which bars the settlement of Israelis on land that is under Israeli military occupation. Not only did Israel transplant 12,000 new settlers into the West Bank after its formal withdrawal from Gaza in 2005, but it also maintained a military siege on the strip, controlling the flow of people and goods in and out and violating Palestinian air- space and ports. In the name of security, Israel has laid waste to the Palestinian economy and turned Gaza into an open-air prison. To enforce an illegalsettlementprojectinthe territories, the Israeli military implements policies that degrade their democratic ideal further, as witnessed by the tragedy in Beit Hanoun weeks ago. Israelis and Palestinians are using peaceful resistance against Israeli policy. Hundreds of Palestinians assembled at a Gazan home, forc- ing the Israeli militaryto call off its planned air attack. In defiance of their government's occu- pation, Israeli activists seized control of tanks at a Gaza border crossing. This cross-national struggle desires a peace that only justice can nourish. The end of Israeli occupation and an overhaul of Israel's exclusionary state are pre- requisites to a just solution. The UN General Assembly recently condemned the attacks in Gaza, but the United States vetoed a similar res- olution in the Security Council, thus exerting American power to excuse its ally's atrocities. But massive American military aid also facili- tates Israeli crimes. Our university is complicit too through its investments in arms companies that provide Israel its arsenal. Divesting from these companies would allow our campus to invest in just outcomes rooted in equality and lasting security for Israelis and Palestinians. Shimaa Abdelfadeel is an LSA senior and a co-chair of Students Allied for Freedom and Equality. ICers outplayed, outclassed over Thanksgiving break TO THE DAILY: I attended Saturday night's Michigan-Minnesota hock- ey game with a good friend who is a University alumnus. I understand that the result of the game was quite disap- pointing to the Wolverine hockey team. However, even more disappointing to the 10,000 fans in attendance and to the Minnesota players and coaches was the poor sports- manship displayed by the Michigan players and coaches. After the game, as the players lined up for the custom- ary handshake, the coaches shook hands. The Minnesota coaches, as is customary, stayed on the ice to shake hands with the Michigan players, but the Michigan coaches left the ice, refusing to shake hands with the Minnesota play- ers - six of whom played for the Ann Arbor-based U.S. National Development Team. To add insult to injury, only one Michigan player shook hands with the Minnesota coaches. After the Michigan players and coaches had deserted the ice, the Minnesota- Michigan traveling trophy was presented to the victorious Golden Gophers. The previous night, Michigan State Uni- versity coaches and players had the class to shake hands with the Minnesota coaches and players after a loss and stayed on the ice for the presentation of the Minnesota- Michigan State traveling trophy to the Gophers. What a lost weekend for the Wolverines; they were out- played by the Gophers and outclassed by the Spartans. David O'Hara Coleman's focus on diversity is grounded in fallacy TO THE DAILY: Last Tuesday, I received a second e-mail from Univer- sity President Mary Sue Coleman deriding the passage of Proposal 2. I am troubled that President Coleman still considers that diversity, "particularly with respect to race, ethnicity, gender and national origin," is one of the foun- dations of a great university. Universities aren't created to solve "vexing societal issues." They are created to educate people who will then solve the societal issues of the day. I believe that the continued focus on diversity as a means of achieving a better university is grounded in fallacy. I work for the University Hospital, and the other day, two other white males and I were together in a room. I JOHN OQUIST | SEND LETTERS TO: TOTHEDAILY@UMICH.EDU am a Mormon, one other person was Jewish and the other was pretty much atheist. I have a family and children; the others do not. There was more diversity in that gathering due to our backgrounds and religious beliefs than there could ever be by simply focusing on race. Just because we are all white males doesn't make us less diverse than the three young female nurses of different racial backgrounds I saw gathered in the break room talking about growing up in the same neighborhood. The sad thing is that I only noticed their race because it was the day after the election and they were discussing their political views, which hap- pened to be pretty much the same. The Civil Rights Movement was important because it took racism from the legal and accepted institution of "separate but equal" and instead recognized equality before the law. To say that racist people don't exist today is naive, but to insist that race should be the focus of Uni- versity policy is misguided. I find it ironic that our president insists on spreading her views of diversity so strongly that she uses her influence to try to negate the overwhelming choice of voters. Perhaps she should take a page from Hillsdale College, whichbelieves so firmly in promoting equality that it turns downfederalfunds that would require it to ask about the race of its students. Coleman should realize that her job is to help the University teach and educate, not to promote an ideological agenda. Adam Meziani University hospital employee Letters Policy All readers are encouraged to submit letters to the Daily. Letters should include the writer's name, college and class standing or other University affiliation. Letters should be no longer than 300 words. The Michigan Daily reserves the right to edit for length, clarity and accuracy. Submitted letters become the property of The Michigan Daily. Letters will be run according to timeliness, order received and the amount of space available. Letters should be sent to tothedaily@umich.edu. Edi- tors can be reached at editpage.editors@umich.edu. A Do you spontaneously write 700-word essays on ... life? You should apply for an opinion column. E-mail galad@umich.edu. Editorial Board Members: Reggie Brown, Kevin Bunkley, Amanda Burns, Sam Butler, Ben Caleca, Devika Daga, Milly Dick, James David Dickson, Jesse Forester, Gary Graca, Jared Goldberg, Jessi Holler, Rafi Martina, Toby Mitchell, Rajiv Prabhakar, David Russell, Katherine Seid, Elizabeth Stanley, John Stiglich, Neil Tambe, Rachel Wagner. HEY DID YOU HEAR? THAT GUY YEAH! IT WAS N-BOMBS LEFT WHO PLAYtD KRAMER ON AND RIGHT, HE WAS DROPPING YOU DON'T KNOW WHAT AN SENFELD WENT OFF ON SOME THEM LIKE IT WAS GOING OUT N-BOMB IS, DO YOU. I....DON'T .. KNC HECKLERS THE OTHER DAY! HE OF STYLE! I DON'T THINK THERE WAS DROPPING N-BOMBS LIKE WERE MANY CASUALTIES, CRAZY! N-BOMBS ALL OVER THOUGH... THE PLACEI 0 I AA 9