4A - Monday, October 4, 2010 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com i 4 it igal ialigm Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan since 1890. 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 tothedaily@umich.edu ELAINE MORTON E-MAIL ELAINE AT EMORT@UMICH.EDU 9 4RoC~A WWIT ~iIG~, ':0IDE-4TS?~$ ~ 9- ~ s - lvsi0 I 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. Dismiss Shirvell * After unbecoming conduct, Cox must fire asst. AG Politics isn't business as usual The University is a diverse place of many opinions and backgrounds. But on one issue, we are united. Support for Michigan Student Assembly President Chris Armstrong following attacks on Armstrong by Andrew Shirvell, a University alum and Michigan assistant attorney general, has been inspiring. Shirvell, who took a voluntary leave of absence on Thursday, is now facing a personal protection order from Armstrong and is subject to a disciplinary hearing from his boss, Attorney General Mike Cox. Also on Thursday, Cox admitted to The Detroit News that he "made a mistake" by supporting Shirvell. But overdue apologies aren't enough. Cox shouldn't have hesitated to dismiss an employee who clearly doesn't represent the people of Michigan. Cox should remove Shirvell from his post in the attorney general's office. Shirvell started his blog to comment about Armstrong in late April. His initial post criticized Armstrong and what Shirvell called his "radical homosexual agenda." Subsequent posts went on to rage against Armstrong with unsubstantiated claims and labels. On Thursday, the blog was limited to invited readers only. According to an Oct. 1 Daily article, the University's Department of Public Safety issued Shirvell a trespass warning on Sept. 14, which bans Shirvell from campus. Armstrong filed for a personal protection order against Shirvell on Sept. 13. The hearing will be held today. In mid-September, The Michigan Daily first reported on Shirvell's blog, noting its offensive language and unsubstanti- ated claims. This was shortly followed by a report on WXYZ, Detroit's ABC affiliate. The story gained national attention when it was picked up by CNN's Anderson Cooper last week and was then picked up by news outlets across the nation. The resulting public outrage was overwhelming. As the Daily predicted in its Sept. 16 edi- torial condemning Shirvell's hatred, the campus community has seen Shirvell's blog for what it is: the rants of a bigot. But no one could have predicted the strength of the support that the campus community has shown. The Spectrum Center has created shirts sporting the phrase, "Elected by us; Respected by us." And on today's page 3A, you'll see a advertisement supporting Arm- strong signed by dozens of campus organi- zations. Addtionally, the Facebook group "We Support Chris Armstrong" has more than 14,000 members as of Sunday - and it's only one of several groups backing Arm- strong and condemning Shirvell. At their Sept. 16 meeting, the University Board of Regents announced its support of Armstrong, stating that "When one mem- ber of our community is targeted, we are all targeted." And last week, several Univer- sity officials, including University President Mary Sue Coleman, voiced their support for Armstrong. The unity that campus has shown is inspiring. Our community has been strengthened with a shared value of respect. Armstrong deserves praise for the dig- nity with which he's handled the affair. At the Sept. 27 MSA meeting, Armstrong stat- ed that he "will not back down" from these types of attacks, according to a Sept.28 Daily article. The strength of character that Arm- strong has displayed is admirable. Attorney General Mike Cox's char- acter has not been so commendable. Despite public outrage, Cox has failed to properly respond to Shirvell's actions. Cox has argued that Shirvell's words are protected by the First Amendment and the state's civil service laws and that he therefore can't dismiss him. But Cox does have the authority to dismiss Shirvell on the grounds that his behavior qualifies as "conduct unbecoming a state employee." There is no doubt that Shirvell's behavior is unbecoming - as Cox admitted when he appeared on "Anderson Cooper 360" on Wednesday. Though the blog is run on Shirvell's free time, as a member of the attorney general's office, he represents the people of Michigan even when he's not on duty. And his actions have made many people doubt the integrity of the attorney general's office. During Cox's interview with Cooper, Cox said that he would consider sending Shirvell to an "employee assistance pro- gram" in the event that Armstrong filed for a personal protection order and it was granted. But the kind of hatred that Shirvell harbors for members of the LGBT community can't be countered by an assis- tance program. Regardless of the outcome of today's hearing, Cox must take action. The attorney general has been indecisive for too long. His comments to The Detroit News don't make up for his delay in remov- ing Shirvell from his post. When Shirvell returns from his leave of absence, Cox should not hesitate to dismiss him. Every time I go out for a run, I can't help but see all those goofy yard signs that say we should "hire" Rick Snyder to be our - next governor. Frankly, I don't' want to "hire" any one for governor - I want to elect someone. So can we please stop this whole nonsense that running a suc- PATRICK cessful business gives you special O'MAHEN insights into how to govern that non- business people lack? During his run for governor, Snyder has been touting his business experi- ence at Gateway as a key qualification for his ability to be governor. In doing so, Snyder joins a long line of entrepre- neurs that have run for elected office on the basis of their business lead- ership. In this election cycle alone, former Hewlett Packard CEO Carly Fiorina is the Republican nominee for the U.S. Senate seat in California while ex-eBay CEO Meg Whitman is vying for the governor's mansion there. For- mer CEOs have made similar bids in Florida with Democrat Jeff Greene unsuccessfully challenging for the open Senate seat and while for CEO Republican Rick Scott winning his party's nomination for governor. The flip side to touting your candi- date's CEOexperience isthe demoniza- tion of your opponent asa professional politician. For example, last week the Republican Governor's Association aired an advertisement denouncing Democratic candidate Virgil Bernero as a career politician. And the implica- tion of the advertisement was simple: Businessmen are out in the real world creating jobs and making the economy work and have the ability to clean up the wasteful government that the incompetent "politicians" created in pursuit of an ego trip. The first problem is that some of these business people running for office aren't all that competent at business, let alone at government. Take Fiorina for example. She's famous for her rocky tenure as the head of Hewlett-Packard, during which she forced through a disas- trous merger with Compaq Comput- er, presided over a 50-percent drop in HP's share price and left the company with a $42 million severance package. Based on that record alone, I'd have seriously considered voting for her primary opponent Tom Campbell or incumbent Democrat Barbara Boxer - both career politicians. Scott's business expertise con- sisted of founding and running Columbia/HCA, the nation's largest for-profit hospital chain. The com- pany grew quite profitable, in part because it engaged in rampant fraud. HCA overbilled Medicare - a taxpay- er-funded program - so egregiously that the company agreed to pay a $1.7 billion fine to the government in 2001, a dubious record that still stands today. Scott's primary oppo- nent, Florida Attorney General Bill McCollum, might have been a career politician, but at least he sent crimi- nals to jail instead of installing them in the executive boardroom. But I don't merely wish to keep incompetent business people out of political office (nor to hint that Sny- der is incompetent - all indications are that he's quite the opposite), but rather to question the idea that busi- ness experience somehow provides brilliant insight into running a gov- ernment that the rest of us mere mor- tals don't have. Atits core, the goal ofbusiness is to make profits. The goal of democratic government is to provide for the com- mon good with the consent and input of the governed. There's a difference there. Often the profit incentive does line up with the common good. A background as a business executive can help efficiently manage public resources. But a business background is neither necessary nor sufficient to be a good financial manager. Nor is efficiency the only crite- rion of good democratic government. Academics often get derided for not living in the real world. But they gen- erally have a superior grasp of broad policy problems from taxation and health care to infrastructure and ecol- ogy. Though many entrepreneurs have experience in these issues, it's often only in the narrow context of running their business. Yet you never hear a groundswell of support to get more professors into elected offices. Being a CEO doesn't qualify someone for office. The point is that business people do bring some relevant skills and knowl- edge that are useful to governing and some might be quite capable in office - but so do people inother professions like teaching, social work, medicine, law, economics and the arts. That brings me to my final point that power can corrupt anyone - and CEO's are just as vulnerable as the rest of us. Whitman by most accounts did an exemplary job running eBay, but numerous allegations of shady stock dealings involving Goldman- Sachs and abuse of employees dog her record. Similar problems followed Greene into his unsuccessful race. That's a sobering point for Snyder to think about as he contemplates his likely victory in November. He cer- tainly has plenty of skills as a busi- nessman that might translate into a successful governorship. But he can drastically increase his effectiveness if he remembers that he doesn't know everything and incorporates the skill sets of people from outside of the business world as well. - Patrick O'Mahen can be reached at pomahen@umich.edu. Italian-European-American AIDA ALIl I Muslim misconceptions When Florida pastor Terry Jones announced his plans to burn the Quran on the ninth anni- versary of the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks, he sparked worldwide protests and indignation. All that this threat of burning the Quran made me real- ize was that the world still had much growing up to do. Let's start at the root of the problem - Osama Bin Laden. Bin Laden today represents someone who is pure evil, is in possession of unknown power, has been able to avoid capture for 9 years and is a Muslim. He was responsible for the hijacked planes that crashed into the World Trade Center and Pentagon. He killed thousands and claimed he did it in the name of religion. But that isn't true. Islam doesn't preach vio- lence. Since the beginning of the war on terror, Islamic practices have been misunderstood. The original teachings are blurred because of the impression that these militants give and the per- ception of the people affected by this violence. It isn't the teachings of their religion that lead these men to war. It's simply the unsound- ness of their minds that make them this way. There are always extremists in every religion and in every aspect of the society. The general public doesn't agree with these extremists, but there are some who do. And the more you tell any extremist that he is wrong, the more deter- mined he will become to prove his relevance. Take some poverty-ridden, uneducated civil- ians with religion as their only crutch, throw in a bunch of malicious, heartless men who are thirsty for power and you get a team of brain- washed militants who fight for a cause only they understand and believe in. If only we had stayed united and not discriminated against each other on the basis of religious differences at a time when the world was blaming Islam, things might have been better in the present. But now that so many years have passed, can we really still not understand the core of the problem? Are we still pointing fingers and raising guns against each other because of the Gods we believe in? The threat to burn the Quran didn't so much hurt me as disgust me. To think that burning a holy book could solve any problems is fool- ish. Even though the Quran burning didn't take place, there were several copycat incidents. One such incident was in East Lansing, where the remains of a burnt Quran were found in front of the Islamic Center near Michigan State University. This incident sparked inter- national outrage and resulted in an attack on a church in India. Does anyone else see a pattern here? This is just a ridiculous cycle of events in which nobody is right and nobody wins. This religious war has been going on for a while, but it's time we realize that religion is only a front. We are educated, smart people who understand the capabilities of the human mind and the human thirst for power. With the current situation, it's like when the bad guy forces people who could collectively defeat him into fighting against each other instead. Park51, the proposed mosque and Islamic Center a few blocks from ground zero, might do good in bringing the community together. It will perhaps create acceptance and respect amongst the common American toward the Muslim faith. And there is definitely no reason for it to be offending anyone. The final thing that I have to mention is ste- reotyping. How many people reading this view- point have really known a Muslim person in their everyday life? The chances are pretty good with Michigan being one of the largest Muslim- populated states in the U.S. But for many others, the only Muslims they know are the ones they see on TV holding guns and creating war. That is simply awful. There are over1 billion Muslims in the world. A mere fraction of them are set- ting the image for the rest. The bottom line is that it's not the religion that is to be condemned. Let this be the end of the 'International Burn a Koran Day' idea - which was absolutely absurd to begin with. Let us understand the reasons behind terror and resolve existing issues instead of creating new ones. Aida Ali is an LSA sophomore. This Thursday morning - at the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services office in Detroit - I will take the Natu- ralization Test in order to become an American citi- zen. And, barring an unprecedented and unforeseen' mental break- down, I expect to pass. After all, the TOMMASO questions askedP during the test are PAVONE along the lines of "Who is our cur- rent president?" And so by the late morning on Thursday, there is a 99-percent prob- ability that I will be an American cit- izen. That is, in addition to being an Italian citizen. Oh, and also a citizen of the European Union. In essence, I will technically be a tri-citizen - a citizen of two nations and of a supranational polity. That should make me a very confused indi- vidual and some might ask where my loyalties lie. This raises a fairly existential ques- tion: Is citizenship simply a loyalty pledge or does it represent something greater and more meaningful? My experience seems to suggest the latter; that citizenship is representative of my individual and cultural identity. As an Italian citizen, I know full well that citizenship isn't about blind loyalty - I find myself criticizing Italy just as often as I praise it and I don't consider this being disloyal. After all, when I criticize the Italian party system, Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi or the Italian judicial sys- tem, I'm doing so because I feel that constructive criticism engenders progress. In this light, loyalty and criticism often operate in harmony. When I reflect back on my Italian citizenship, I think about my child- hood, my family and my culture. I think back to our chaotic Christmas family reunions where dozens of fam- ily members would squeeze into a little bourgeois apartment in Rome, greeted by copious amounts of food and des- serts, laughing and gesticulating wild- ly while discussing politics and family issues. often, the red glow from the burning tips of a few cigarettes would dance around the apartment like fire- flies, diffusing a light haze that made the experience feel even more dream- like. And there I was, a child of no more than four or five, watching this play-like drama unfolding before me, soaking up its vitality as I ate some of the best food of my life. When I move to consider my Euro- pean Union citizenship, I think back to my time in Brussels, Belgium, which is the de-facto capital of the EU. I remember my experience attending a private British elementary school. For the first time, I was in the minor- ity. I was no longer surrounded by native Italian Catholic students. Rather, my peers came from all over the world - they looked different, spoke different languages and held different social and cultural identi- ties. The whole experience reminds me of the ideals encompassed in the EU motto, "United in Diversity." We often didn't appreciate the opportu- nities inherent in our differences - rather, we frequently argued, made fun of each other and formed cliques. Europe is more diverse now than ever and, just as with my elementary school experience, Europeans have yet to fully understand, accept and celebrate this diversification. So I'm left to wonder what my American citizenship will end up representing. Just as it has taken me time to understand what being "Ital- ian" and being "European" means to me, I'm sure that it will take me years to begin to recognize the significance of being "American." National identities aren't mutually exclusive. 0 One thing I've learned, however, is that the identities symbolized in citi- zenship status aren't mutually exclu- sive. By this I mean that my identity as a European is largely influenced by my Italian cultural perspective. And, just as I process my experience living in the United States through the lens of being a European immigrant, liv- ing abroad has allowed me to better understand what it means to be a citi- zen of Italy and of Europe. I consider becoming a tri-citizen to be another step forward in this jour- ney. It's a geographic journey that has allowed me to live in three separate countries and five different cities. It's a legal and political journey that has granted me the rights and privileges that accompany citizenship status. And it's also been a personal jour- ney, one that has forced me to better define myself as an individual and as aglobal citizen. Thinking about it this way, I couldn't be more grateful for what I've experi- enced. And it's not over - on Thursday, everything will change again. - Tommaso Pavone can be reached at tpavone@umich.edu. EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS: Aida Ali, Jordan Birnholtz, Adrianna Bojrab, Will Butler, Eaghan Davis, Michelle DeWitt, Ashley Griesshammer, Will Grundler, Jeremy Levy, Erika Mayer, Harsha Nahata Emily Orley, Harsha Panduranga, Tommaso Pavone, Leah Potkin, Asa Smith, Laura Veith