4A - Monday, December 4, 2006 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com C IC 74c M4t Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan since 1890 413 E. Huron St. Ann Arbor, MI 48104 tothedaily@umich.edu JOHN OQUIST I MAYOR BLOOMBERG, HOW CAN YOU JUSTIFY THE SHOOTING OF UNARMED SEAN SELL BY NYPD OFFICERS, OR ASSURE US THAT IT WAS NOT SIMPLY A RACIALLY MOTIVATED ATTACK? -r UNLIKE IN THE SHOOTING OF AMADOU DIALLO SEVERAL YEARS AGO, THE OFFICERS IN QUESTION HERE ARE NOT JUST WHITE, BUT SLACK AND HISPANIC, TOO. SO IT CAN'T BE RACIALLY MOTIVATED. AS YOU CAN SEE, PEOPLE OF ALL COLORS CAN COME TOGETHER AND FIRE FIFTY SHOTS AT UNARMED BLACK MEN, AND HERE IN NEW YORK, WE LIKE TO CALL THAT 'PROGRESS.- DONN M. FRESARD EDITOR IN CHIEF EMILY BEAM CHRISTOPHER ZBROZEK EDITORIAL PAGE EDITORS JEFFREY BLOOMER MANAGING EDITOR £ Unsigned editorials reflect the official position oftthe Daily's editorial board. All other signed articles and illustrations represent solely the views ofttheir authors. The moral high ground State should allow medicinal marijuana use The fight to reverse Michigan's ban on medicinal mari- juana is understandable given that the drug has been used as such for thousands of years. Eleven states have already legalized its use for the treatment of serious medical con- ditions - and with good reason. The myth of liberalism It is widely accepted that marijuana may pre- vent blindness in glaucoma patients and can ease appetite loss among patients suffering from AIDS or undergoing chemotherapy. It is also a cheap, safe and risk-free painkiller. The state and federal governments need to recognize what many already do - medicinal marijuana can be a legitimate alternative to more addictive and risky drugs. It is disappointingthat a recent bill proposing to legalize the use of marijuana in Michigan by those with debilitating medical conditions failed in a state House committee. Despite its lack of mainstream acceptance, there is no reason to criminalize marijuana use for chronically ill patients seeking pain. How can the state govern- ment callously deny it to elderly cancer patients? How can the state deny patients a drug that can lessen the effects of chemotherapy and diminish the violent nausea that some pills can induce? Marijuana is hardly different from the vast number of legally prescribed drugs, like mor- phine and Vicodin, that are routinely abused. It is time for our state government to look past the stigma surrounding marijuana and recognize its possibilities. The Food and Drug Administration argues that there is no sound evidence to support the safety and effectiveness of medicinal marijua- na. But the lack of scientific studies is the fault of strict federal guidelines that force research- ers to jump through years of hurdles to obtain ,a small amount of marijuana from the one legal marijuana farm in the country for research. And it's not even good marijuana - a 2005 New York Times guest editorial piece described it as "notoriously weak and poorly manicured." It is no surprise that conducting research is so hard. A victory for medicinal marijuana would look like a loss for the federal government's mis- guided war on drugs. And more important, it would deal a blow to the pharmaceutical com- panies that are no doubt pressuring the federal and state governments against legalization. But don't be misled. These drug companies aren't taking the moral high ground; they're respond- ing to a real fear that if medicinal marijuana is legalized, their profit margins could fall as patiens and doctors flock to the cheaper and safer alternative. The U.S. Supreme Court ruled last year that Congress can supersede state governments to enforce the federal ban on marijuana. However, legalizing medicinal marijuana on the state level will undoubtedly lower the priority placed on medicinal marijuana by local law enforcement and legitimize its use as a medical treatment for the sick. In addition, as more states legalize the medicinal use of marijuana, the federal gov- ernment would be forced to review its position - and maybe even more generally its costly and counterproductive war on drugs. Come Janu- ary, the state Legislature should re-examine this issue and lift the ban. f you believe even half of the shrieks coming from right-wing media outlets, American college campuses are dangerous places to be. Apparently, the moment you set foot on your average state university campus, you'llbe brain- _ washed by the crazy liberal establishment that rules all r colleges, every- where. You'll start hating white people, you'll join a group to brain- IMRAN storm ways to overthrow the SYED government - and - as if that weren't enough - you'll give up meat for nonsense like arti- chokes, soy milk and some substance they call "tofurky." Sure, all of that is crazy talk, but it's crazy in more ways than you'd think. Not only does the average col- lege student not hate white people or American capitalism, but the aver- age student isn't really liberal either. As hard as this idea may be to accept, true ideological liberalism is rare in our society and at the University. A statement like that requires an explanation, so here it goes: I do believe that most University students support certain progressive causes, like gay rights and universal health care. But I think they do so out of cir- cumstance as opposed to ideology, and that is a very important distinc- tion. Liberalism isn't characterized by stances on issues, because issues change. Rather, liberalism is a way of thinking. Basic political science character- izes conservatives as those who favor the status quo and liberals as those who seek progress that they believe will make the world a better place. Thanks to their support for certain political causes, average college stu- dents empirically would appear to fall into the latter category, but that isn't so. Most college students and people in our nation at large, whether call- ing themselves liberals or conserva- tives, believe they know what is right. College students support a higher minimum wage and a flagrantly pro- gressive income tax system because they know that there can be no other correct way. No ifs, ands or buts about it; there is only a wrong way and a right way. Leftist or rightist, we think we know the right way. But such rigidity in judgment undermines ideological liberalism. The (progressive) policy stances we take are ingrained into us rather being a product of our own struggle over the best course. Sure, we're often on the right side of the issue and end up supporting progressive sociopolitical causes, but that isn't enough to make us progressive or liberal. We may vote to support gay marriage pr amnesty for immigrants, but our liberalism is limited to the issue and doesn't extend into ideology. So what would a truly liberal person look like? To be honest, he would be a troubled person, constantly question- ing and struggling with his stances on the issues. He'd feel uncomfortable among both Republicans and Demo- crats; their carved-in-stone party platforms would result in restlessness and an unquenchable desire to poke holes into both sides of the argument. A liberal would, by definition, have to be open-minded and willing to change his position should a convinc- ing enough argument come along. So the ideological liberal is basi- cally a flip-flopper? Not exactly. Con- stantly debating and questioning the merits of one's policy positions doesn't necessarily mean changing stances every time. In fact, the effort that has gone into formulating the position of a true liberal would generally make that position tough to defeat. But an ideological liberal will never be 100- percent convinced he is right, and in every debate he will listen to chal- lenges to his position and change his stance if necessary. How many of the supposed liber- als on campus are willing to do that? Very few, and that's not unusual. His- torically speaking, ideological liberals are rare. They're the leaders of pro- gressive movements, and those who follow them do so only for the issues. That should explain why older gener- ations have always tended to be more conservative than younger ones: They were issue-liberals in their youth, but Issues change, but the approach of a true liberal doesn't. their liberalism faded as the issues changed. That happens to every gen- eration as new issues come along. We gave blacks the right to vote in the 1860s, but that generation of issue-liberals wasn't ready to do so for women. Subsequent generations granted women the vote and defend- ed the civil rights of blacks, but not until our generation were they ready to defend the constitutional rights of gays. Our generation will accom- plish that feat, but as we age, the liberal agenda will pass most of us by. Accounting for the differences in issues and times, in old age we'll be as conservative as our parents and grandparents. The progressive causes of tomor- row will always seem insane today. The stances that are liberal today will be conservative tomorrow, and most of us won't evolve with the issues. Ideological liberalism never domi- nates, and that's why the struggle for progress can never end. Imran Syed is a Daily associate editorial page editor. He can be reached at galad@umich.edu. KATIE GARLINGHOUSEf Send letters to tothedaily@umich.edu. understanding of country music. Willie, the father of And on the eighth day, God sa d, the Texas-based Outlaw country genre, is anything but .. , a straight-edged mass-produced Nashville star. Willie Let there be legalized mariJuana. in Nashville is like Snoop in Brooklyn. TO THE DAILY: Michael Eber As a Christian from Colorado, I voted to allow citi- LSA junior zens to use the God-given plant cannabis (Light one upfor Michigan, 11/30/2006). I am confident it was the g right thing to do. Columnist grossly underestimates One reason to stop imprisoning citizens for using cannabis that isn't often mentioned is the Bible's Iran's threat to U.S.,free world approval of the drug. Christ God Our Father indicates He created all the seed-bearing plants, saying they are TO THE DAILY: all good, on literally the first page of the Bible (Genesis I nearly ate my hat after reading Jared Goldberg's col- 1:11-12 and 29-30). The only Biblical restriction placed umn (What we can learnfrom the Iraq War, 12/01/2006). on cannabis is that it is to be accepted with thankful- Goldberg grossly misunderstands the war on terrorism, ness (1 Timothy 4:1-5). especially when discussing Iran policy. He claims remov- It is time to re-legalize what God says is good. ing the war option from the table is smart. Although war should always be the last option, the idea should not be Stan White thrown out completely. Iran is a terrorist state. It has been Dillon, Colorado financing and providing logistical support to Islamic ter- rorist organizations for years. It is led by a lunatic Holo- caust denier, who, according to The Jerusalem Post, has A deadly connection: more money said: "Anyone who recognizes Israel will burn in the fire of the Islamic nation's fury." should be spent on HIV and TB For its own survival and for that of the free world, the NOAH LINK, BLASE KEARNEY AND NEAL SARDANA HunSry for justice On Nov. 16, Purdue University students marched into their administration's office and refused to leave until the administration adopted the Designated Suppliers Program. They chained themselves together at the neck with bicycle U-locks to prevent the police from moving them. Later that afternoon, the admin- istration threatened to suspend all the students involved for the remainder of this semester and the next. The students left the president's office and began a peaceful protest their admin- istration could not punish them for: a hunger strike. That was 17 days ago. What could be so important for these students to refuse food for 17 days? The Designated Suppliers Program is an ini- tiative to end the use of sweatshop labor in the manufacturing of university apparel. Universi- ties like Purdue and the University of Michigan require the companies that produce their cloth- ingto uphold basic standards for workingcondi- tions. The problem, as universities well know, is that these codes of conduct are not enforced. University President Mary Sue Coleman herself has acknowledged the ineffectiveness of the University's codes. Companies are free to "cut and run" from compliant factories in a race to find the cheapest possible production. The DSP goes to the root of the problem by requiring companies to pay their factories the actual cost of operation in compliance with labor standards. It lists many factories already in compliance - ones that pay decent wages and allow the formation of unions. Instead of signing a code of conduct, clothing companies are required to use designated factories. Thirty schools across the country have adopted the DSP. Schools like the University of Wisconsin at Madison, Georgetown, Duke, Cornell and Columbia (whose president is for- mer University of Michigan President Lee Bol- linger) - not to mention the entire University of California system - have acknowledged that their codes of conduct do not do enough to stop sweatshop labor. As more and more schools sign on, the power they have to affect condi- tions in the garment industry rises exponen- tially. As one of the nation's largest licensers of university apparel, the University has a crucial role to play in this movement. Purdue's hunger-striking students are part of a national campaign to enact the DSP by United Students Against Sweatshops. The University's affiliate, Students Organizing for Labor and Economic Equality, has been pressuring the administration to sign on for almost a year and a half. During this time DSP has been stalled, ignored and discreditedby the President's Advi- sory Committee on Labor Standards and Human Rights. A similar committee was created at Pur- due, also to stall and divert attention away from the DSP. Many of the Purdue students' actions, including the occupation of their president's office, were a result of the committee's refusal to seriously consider the DSP. It is university presidents like Coleman who have the power to put an end to sweat- shop labor in the manufacturing of university apparel and to protect hundreds of thousands of workers worldwide from exploitation and abuse. You can support the students who are putting their lives at risk at Purdue by visiting www.purduehungerstrike.org. You can also join SOLE and students at the University of Califor- nia in fasting all day Tuesday in solidarity with the students at Purdue. Stop by our table in Angell Hall to learn more about the DSP here and around the nation. Noah Link is an LSA senior. Blase Kearney is an LSA sophomore. Neal Sardana is a Public Policy-Public Health graduate student. The viewpoint authors are members of Students Organizing for Labor and Economic Equality. United States can TO THE DAILY: ons. Unlike the fo Many University students as well as millions of people They will use ther around the world spent Friday gathered in remembrance of people" and even, those who have lost their lives to HIV/AIDS. The crowds at The Michigan I also raised public awareness about the deadly connection So I invite you between tuberculosis and HIV, as well as the increasing Chamberlain frie. rates of TB in many parts of the world. TB is still the leading thing they have is killer among HIV-positive people. About one-third of the Gabriel's speecht more than 40 million people with HIV/AIDS are co-infect- rium C. You'll get ed with TB, and up to half of people living with HIV/AIDS develop TB. However, this year witnessed an escalation Ryan Fantuzzi in this sinister relationship between the world's two most LSA junior deadly infectious diseases, especially in Africa, where the concentration of TB and HIV/AIDS is the highest. A virtually incurable strain of extremely drug-resistant Cartoon b TB, known as XDR-TB, recently broke out in KwaZulu- Natal, South Africa, killing 52 of 53 patients, half within Chefs on C6 25 days. Of those who died and knew their HIV/AIDS sta- tus, all were in the advanced stages of AIDS and many had TO THE DAILY: no prior treatment for TB, suggesting that the resistant John Oquist'sc strain was passed on to them from someone else. Worries featured two stu abound that this is not an isolated case, but rather a pre- show. I was ext: view of what is to come. attitude of the co The good news is that we know what to do, and we know comic strip that how to do it. The President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Oquist's blith Relief must increase its meager contributions to fighting ment of "Top Ch TB and TB-HIV across all of its target countries and espe- seen "Top Chef,' cially in Africa. Congress must deliver our full fair share know that the cb for the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and Malaria by professionals. appropriating $1.2 billion to the fund for 2007. At a bare The second is: minimum, Congress should approve at least the $700 mil- grouping of stud lion for 2007 that the Senate is currently planning. to cook. This tyf never allow Iran to have nuclear weap- ormer Soviet Union, Iran will use them. m on the "Saturday people," the "Sunday the secular knee-jerk liberals who work Daily. , Goldberg, and the rest of your Neville nds - Toby Mitchell included (The only fear, 09/11/2006) - to come to Brigitte tonight at 8p.m. in Angell Hall Audito- an education. lithely offends creative 7mpus cartoon (Live on yourfeet, 12/01/2006) dents watching a competitive cooking remely offended by the utterly blithe mic. There are so many aspects of this showcase Oquist's culinary naivete. e juvenility is first seen in his assess- ef" and similar shows. Now, I have not 'but it doesn't take a regular viewer to hefs on those shows are highly trained sue I wish to discuss is Oquist's blithe dents, implying that we are all unable pe of naivete is exactly what is wrong ay. I am quite the chef, if I do say so h like the character in Oquist's comic, rimented with different ingredients. ne with peanut butter is unbelievable. h with peanut butter, in fact, that they e George Washington Carver. rtoon had discussed the sociological today's cooking shows, that would be ver, it seems Oquist is more interested ding for the sake of offending than pro- tened discussion. a 4 Emily Craig LSA junior Daily music editor is obviously a country music novice with society tod myself. And muc I too have expe The work I've do I've done so muc call me the whit If Oquist's ca ramifications of one thing. Howe a a I TO THE DAILY: in blithely offend In his music review, Lloyd Cargo personified his voking an enligh point that people identify Willie Nelson for his role as an icon and not for his musical talent. By classifying Philip Opaleski Willie as a "Nashville hippie," Cargo shows his lack of Engineeringjunior A i