4A - Monday, March 22, 2010 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com E-MAILSIMONAT SIMKAL@UMICH.EDU C f C 1 1,6p 3a,1M1 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan since 1890. 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 tothedaily@umich.edu SIMON BORST Keeping the war close to home JACOB SMILOVITZ EDITOR IN CHIEF RACHEL VAN GILDER EDITORIAL PAGE EDITOR MATT AARONSON 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. Back to the draing ar City Council should repeal anti-graffiti ordinance f you've been noticing less graffiti colorfully sprayed on Ann Arbor buildings lately, it's because the Ann Arbor City Council has taken it upon itself to force local business owners to clean it up. City Council passed an ordinance last year in an effort to keep Ann Arbor businesses clean of graffiti. Instead, it wrongly punish- es property owners by making them pay for the removal someone else's graffiti. The future of the city's anti-graffiti ordinance will be uncertain as the city council reviews the policy in the coming months. Because this ordinance unfairly punishes business owners and could damage the city's urban character, City Council must take the upcoming opportunity to repeal it. This weekend, the seven-year anniversary of the start of the Iraq War passed with- out fanfare. U.S. involvement in Afghanistan will reach its ninth birthday this fall. The reces- sion has causeda the wars to fadea from our national consciousness. But they're still PATRICK out there. They O'MAHEN have ramifica- tions for millions of people in Iraq and Afghanistan, as well as for U.S. troops - many of whom are ourclass- mates. As we go about our everyday busi- ness here in Ann Arbor, it would do us well to remember these stakes in human life. I needed a stark reminder of this and got one last November. I was working in my office when a knock on the door brought a distant war to my doorstep. I answered it, and found a tall, well-built man standing there. He had a military bearing and looked vaguely familiar. "Hi, I don't know if you remember me, but ... " And then I remembered him. His name was Oliver. He had been in a section I taught on contem- porary issues in American politics in 2007. He was in ROTC at the time and brought serious gravity to the discus- sions the class had on U.S. Iraqpolicy. He had thought he would be going to Iraq when he graduated. He'd impressed me with his honesty and intellectual rigor during discussion. Recognizing that your life, your fel- low soldiers' lives and the lives of the civilians you interact with depend on getting things right does tend to influence one's thoughts. He gradu- ated in 2009 and shipped off to Fort Sill in Oklahoma to learn the fine art of using 155 mm field howitzers. Then, shifting foreign policy emphasis sped up a withdrawal from Iraq and increased troop levels in Afghanistan. Care to guess where Oliver is going later this spring? "I spent all that time learning about Iraq in college, and now I'm going to Afghanistan," he chuckled dryly. He came to ask for help. "I don't know much about Afghanistan," he said, adding that he was looking for scholarly work on Central Asia so he would be prepared for the culture he was going to face on the ground and more aware of Afghanistan's history and politics. He told me that his comrades at Fort Sill had a much higher aptitude for the mathemati- cal aspects of artillery than he did, but he figured as a political science graduate, he could provide the unit with useful knowledge of the politi- cal context. I was flattered. A former student respected me enough to return to me and seek my counsel ina serious situ- ation. The only problem was that I didn't know anything about Afghani- stan either. That's when the weight of the world deposited itself squarely on my shoulders. Fortunately, being a graduate stu- dent means that I know people who have more information than me in a variety of topics. One of my col- leagues, Megan Reif, happens to know a lot about democratization, elections and violence in Central Asia and has traveled extensively in Afghanistan and Pakistan. I intro- duced Oliver to her, and she gave him some authors and her e-mail address. I think (I hope) that it was useful. But I still worry about Oliver. I'm a politically active person. I'm so interested in politics and public policy that I study them for a living. But there are only so many things I can pay attention to. I study media EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS: and public opinion. I'm an educator and a union member, so I have a deep interest in education and labor issues. And, based on some of my own wor- ries about insurance, the fact that my mother and girlfriend work as a nurse and doctor and having seen some of my own students with serious chronic health problems, I have spent a lot of time reading about health care reform. Remember the stakes in Iraq and Afghanistan. In contrast, Afghanistan is far away from me geographically, emo- tionally and intellectually. Although I study political science and know plenty about elections and democra- tization, I don't specialize in security studies, civil wars or international relations. Nor do I know much about Central Asia, beyond the limited amount of information I glean from the news or in conversation with col- leagues like Megan. But with Oliver's visit last Novem- ber, Afghanistan became just a little bit more personal for me. That's prob- ably a good thing. Wars have conse- quences, so it's useful for all of us to have some personal skin in the game - whether in increased tax dollars, ourselves or family and friends who might be in harm's way - to focus our thoughts on their importance. Oliver, take care of your command, help as many Afghanis as possible, do the best job you can in a messy situ- ation and please come home in one piece. -Patrick O'Mahen can be reached at pomahen@umich.edu. The anti-graffiti ordinance was passed by City Council in January of 2009 and went into effect in May. The ordinance calls for Ann Arbor property owners to remove graffiti from their facilities using their own time and resources. After receiv- ing notification from the city, business owners are required to remove the graf- fiti from their property within nine days. Property owners who fail to comply with the city's request in the designated time are required to pay for the city to remove the graffiti. A report on the effectiveness of the ordinance will be available in the coming months, at which point City Coun- cil will review the policy to determine its effectiveness. The anti-graffiti ordinance's enforce- ment is irrational - it punishes property owners for something they didn't do. Prop- erty owners shouldn't be held accountable for the fact that their property has been tagged with graffiti. Yet, this ordinance treats them like they were holding the can of spray-paint. If the city considers graffiti a form of vandalism, then this ordinance punishes the victims of a crime. Property owners shouldn't have to pay to remove graffiti they didn't create. In fact, City Council shouldn't force any- one to get rid of graffiti if they don't want to. Graffiti shouldn't have to be removed just because the city has labeled it as unsightly. For many, graffiti is a unique form of urban art that adds to Ann Arbor's modern character. Graffiti is part of the urban landscape and residents shouldn't have to remove it if they find the art attrac- tive. This is exemplified in Graffiti Alley, located on East Liberty Street next to The Michigan Theater, which is an enormous collection of graffiti artwork. Even Ann Arbor councilmembers have recognized Graffiti Alley as a landmark. But graffiti can be art no matter where it's tagged, and property owners shouldn't have to scrub it away if they deem it art on the same level as the graffiti in Graffiti Alley. And this ordinance is unnecessary because, contrary to the perception of City Council, graffiti isn't an overwhelm- ing concern in Ann Arbor. Occurrences of graffiti in the city are limited and usually confined to areas like Graffiti Alley. The ordinance makes it seem like Ann Arbor is coated in layers of spray-paint - but it's not. The anti-graffiti ordinance wastes prop- erty owners' time and money to solve a problem that doesn't exist. Graffiti isn't a mess - it's art. City Council should realize this, and stop its antagonism of expression. Nina Amilineni, Jordan Birnholtz, William Butler, Nicholas Clift, Michelle DeWitt, Brian Flaherty, Jeremy Levy, Erika Mayer, Edward McPhee, Emily Orley, Harsha Panduranga, Alex Schiff, Asa Smith, Brittany Smith, Robert Soave, Radhika Upadhyaya, Laura Veith A break rom tradition LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Readers are encouraged to submit letters to the editor. Letters should be fewer than 300 words and must include the writer's full name and University affiliation. All submissions become property of the Daily. We do not print anonymous letters. Send letters to tothedaily@umich.edu. MSA reps are working for Sat. night dining hall option TO THE DAILY: The two of us can't wait for Tuesday. Why, one might ask? Is there a two-hour special of "American Idol"? What is so significant about Tuesday, Mar. 23? Students have long been asking for Saturday night dining. Thankfully, MSA is already work- ing on this issue. We have made great strides to set up a meeting about Saturday Night Din- ing with Director of University Housing Linda Newman and Residential Dining Services Director Mike Lee this Tuesday, Mar. 23. Over the course of the winter semester, we have been working long and hard as MSA rep- resentatives to draft a formal proposal advo- cating for the implementation of Saturday night dining. The proposal includes favorable results from a survey conducted by Elias Samu- els of the Housing Research Office last winter, resolutions passed in support of Saturday night dining by the Michigan Student Assembly and BELLA SHAH SEND LETTERS TO: TOTHEDAILY@UMICH.EDU the Residence Hall Association and detailed research on Saturday night dining offerings at comparable universities (Michigan State University and Ohio State University have Sat- urday night dining and the University of Mich- igan does not). With all the work we have put in, it's obvious why we are disappointed that with an article in the Daily last week that failed to reference our ongoing efforts (MForward looks to revive push for Sat, night dining, 03/18/2010). It's great that MForward provided a free meal to students in the residence halls on a single Saturday night. However, ourwork will havea much more sub- stantial and long-term impact. While MForward hasn't even left the start line on the issue of Saturday night dining, the two of us are rounding the bend and sprinting towards the finish line. Rather than discount- ing our work and starting from scratch, we invite MForward and anyone else interested to support our efforts for Saturday night dining to the meeting on Tuesday. Nathan Hamilton and Shreya Singh LSA representatives to MSA E-MAIL BELLA AT BELLZ a UMICH.EDU Hardly a week goes by without at least one person asking me why I chose to leave sunny Florida for gray, cold and snowy Michigan. I typi- cally go through a long list of reasons - I hated the hot weather, alliga- I tors are scary, no 4 one has any ambi- . ; tion, there are giant pictures of ALEX fetuses on the side SCEiFF of the highway and intolerant reli- gious zealots hold way too much influence in the state's government and society at large. I finally stumbled upon an article in The Palm Beach Post to which I can direct people when they ask me why I came here. Summarizing my frus- tration with Florida in one headline, it is entitled, "Florida bill to reward 'family-friendly' films is derided as 1950s-style moral censorship." According to Florida law, "family- friendly" films are currently eligible to receive a tax credit worth two percent of their production costs. The incentive program is designed to bring filmmakers to the state and create jobs all the while promoting a "wholesome" society. Florida state Rep. Stephen Precourt (R-Orlando) - whose district includes Walt Dis- ney World - is leading the push to expand the credit to five percent and exclude productions that exhibit "nontraditional family values." Ques- tioned about his motives, Precourt said, "think of it as like Mayberry," referring to the fictional setting "The Andy Griffith Show" in which minorities were seen, not heard - if they were even portrayed at all - and all women embodied stereotypical homemaker roles. The broader point of the tax credit is to portray "nontraditional" fam- ily values - any family without one mother and one father - as some sort of immoral affront to society that must be excluded from the ben- efits that "traditional" families are entitled to. This is, at its core, just another attempt by the religious right to engineer society according to its own moral sentiments. To put this in perspective, the movie "Confessions of a Shopaholic" was deemed too vio- lent for the "family-friendly" credit because two women fought over a pair of shoes. Discrimination, as you all know, isn't limited to the South. People who don't uphold the "traditional val- ues" are treated as less than human by society's self-appointed morality police, who hold a disproportionate influence over government policy. Last semester, I wrote a viewpoint for the Daily as an open letter to the president of the American Family Association of Michigan, Gary Glenn. (AFA has extreme views onfamily val- ues, 10/27/2009) I responded to his assertion that the Daily's editorial staff was "so far left and so intracta- bly intolerant of those with a diver- sity of opinion on this issue that they really do think anyone who dares disagree with them... really are just a bunch of hatemongers." This is an organization that boycotted Disney because it provided health care for gay employees' partners and that encourages members to shop only at stores that say "Merry Christmas" and not those that say "Happy Holi- days." An organization "so intracta- bly intolerant" exists in this state and it, along with its "pro-family" allies, have been influential in upholding - and extending - the institutional discrimination consistently faced by members of the LGBT community across the country. Some of these groups' antics border so closely to the insane that they even appear comical at times. But discrimi- nation must be eliminated - and there is no shortage of it to be rooted out. The most egregious example is the Mar- riage Protection Amendment tacked on to Michigan's constitution in 2004. This barred same-sex couples from the 1,138 rights, privileges and benefits of marriage, according to a 2004 report by the U.S. Government Accountabil- ity Office. The amendment has engen- dered several problems stemmingfrom the lack of legal structure that comes with marriage. For example, when two partners raisea child together, there is no recourse for the non-biological par- ent to assert custody even if he or she played an equal role in the child's life since his or her birth. This was exactly what happened to Michigan's own Renee Harmon, who must now go to court to fight for the right to see the children she had raised for a decade. Tax policies shouldn't aid discrimination. It doesn't stop there. Discrimina- tionagainstgay peopleis soengrained that they are prevented from openly serving in the armed forces to pro- tect a country that actively denies them equal treatment. And yet, still many serve, hiding their sexual ori- entations from those around them to protect those who call their lifestyle immoral and wrong. Tax policies shouldn't be used as an arm of the "pro-family" movement to indoctrinate children via films and re-engineer our culture based on its concept of "traditional" values. Instead of accepting the treatment of members of the LBGT community as second-class citizens, it is imperative that we shun arbitrary definitions of "traditional" and "pro-family" values and see them for what they are: dis- crimination in disguise. - Alex Schiff is an assistant editorial page editor. He can be reached at aschiff@umich.edu. 0 v IMEP, "qmmw- K, SSW' t-t-'t-%Y E ~ Z ,; . ..vAt ed V adtr sit T ~ved ~ ~ E~~j Q\ ~ -wit- Es \~R cat-s St-Vt&s.t 02 1 'I .d, 3.PE . 0 I I I N , pt'id t LL 1Z The Daily is looking for diverse, passionate, strong student writers to join the Editorial Board. Editorial Board members are responsible for discussing and writing the editorials that appear on the left side of the opinion page. E-MAIL RACHEL VAN GILDER AT RACHELVG@UMICH.EDU FOR MORE INFORMATION. 0 ANN&.&