4A - Monday; February 14, 2011 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 4A - Monday, February 14, 2011 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom 01 aloe Michigan 3at*lv DANIEL GOLD E-MAIL DANIELAT DWGOLD@UMICH.EDU I Edited and managed by students at the University of.Michigan since 1890. 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 tothedaily@michigandaily.com The US invading Iraq, one trillion In war spending, and S. p-v over three thousand dead American Facebook. troops -What did it take to pry you from power?1 ! }I N jMRAK STEPHANIE STEINBERG EDITOR IN CHIEF MICHELLE DEWITT and EMILY ORLEY EDITORIAL PAGE EDITORS KYLE SWANSON 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. S-marter standards Michigan needs to raise "cut-scores" for tests n recent years, standardized test scores for students in Michi- gan - including scores on the Michigan Educational Assessment Program and Michigan Merit Exam - have fallen. Last Tuesday, the state's Board of Education approved a proposal to raise the per- centage of questions students must answer correctly in order to pass these exams. Increasing the amount of points required to pass will encourage schools to make sure they are educating their students to the highest standards. Elevating proficiency standards will better prepare Michigan students for success, and the board should contin- ue to improve the state's education system. America's man in Cairo According to a Feb. 9 Freep.com article, raising the "cut scores" will better prepare students for their future. The cut scores are the lowest scores a student can get to dem- onstrate basic knowledge in a given subject. A 24/7 Wall St. article reported that the cut scores are lagging in most states - especially Michigan - where eighth graders have scored significantly lower on reading and math por- tions of the tests in recent years. The plan to raise cut scores is an impor- tant decision that recognizes the changes that need to be made in Michigan public schools. The current standards aren't doing enough to ensure that educators are adequately prepar- ing students for their futures. The proposal reaffirms Michigan's commitment to educat- ing its students to the highest standards and helping them to compete nationally and inter- nationally. one of the biggest concerns with Michi- gan's current testing system isthe gap between scores on state tests and scores on national tests. Accordingto Amber Arellano, the execu- tive director of the Midwest office of the Edu- cation Trust, while 84 percent of Michigan fourthgraders are passing state reading exams, only 30 percent are meeting standards on the National Assessment of Educational Prog- ress, a federal exam. The disparity between these two exams is drastic. If Michigan wants its students to succeed, legislators must stop sugarcoating the academic rigor required for students to achieve proficiency. By raising the cut scores on standardized exams, the Board of Education can give stu- dents, parents and educators the opportunity to see where students actually place on the pro- ficiency scale and what areas need improve- ment. While opponents of this plan argue that significant drops in students' test scores may worry parents, it's important that scores actually reflect students' knowledge. Without recognizing the flaws in the state's education system, Michigan students may never be ade- quately prepared for higher education in com- parisonto national standards. Students need to be challenged to succeed, and this plan - likely to be implemented in the 2011-2012 school year - gives Michigan schools the opportunity to properly test students. Michigan should move forward with this plan and continue its commitment to students. and education. Without high testing stan- dards, studentswill not be prepared for higher education, and they will not achieve greater professional success. If educators want to stop the cycle and keep Michigan "smart," the state should continue to renovate the educa- tion system. n 1946, a junior U. S. State Department diplomat named George Kennan wrote a 5,500- word essay about the evolution of communist thought in Rus- sia from the mid- 19th Century to the (then) pres- ent. The essay, "The Sources of Soviet Stra- NEILL tegic Conduct," MOHAMMAD was remarkable for two reasons. First, it was correct about almost all aspects of Soviet politics, including the often misunderstood connection between the Soviet system and the Tsarist feudalism it replaced. The second was that after it was pub- lished, a year later under a pseud- onym in Foreign Affairs magazine, it became the cornerstone of the next 60 years of American foreign policy. Kennan's insight - that the Soviet system was inherently unsustain- able because it required leaders to invent an endless series of threats in order to justify a totalitarian police state - was the basis of "contain- ment," or the idea that the Western powers should seal communism behind its current borders and let the march of time do the rest. In the long term, this worked; the USSR collapsed, and did so for largely the set of reasons that Kennan had iden- tified. Containment of communism, however, required a separate and darker "containment" of its own: the elimination of any and all domestic political oppositionwithin Amer- ica's anti-communist allies. And just like Soviet leadership had to invent horror stories about capitalist encirclement to legitimize their rule, American clients invented similar claims about the chaos and barba- rism that would ensue if they were ever forced from power. Containment meant at best the tolerance and at worst the outright endorsement of some of the world's worst crimes. America's man in Santiago, Augusto Pinochet, "dis- appeared" political dissidents by packing them into cargo planes and dumping them over the Pacific Ocean. America's men in Johannes- burg, the National Party, did their best to suppress "instability" - bet- ter-known as Nelson Mandela, who was finally imprisoned at Robben Island for 26 years thanks to a tip passed along by the CIA - in their own country. America's men (and one woman) in Islamabad have been a grim succession of military juntas or kleptocrats, each increas- ingly indistinguishable from the last. The current president of Paki- stan, Asif Ali Zardari, is so corrupt that he's widely known as "Mr. Ten Percent", referencing the kickbacks he allegedly received. And when he's out of the way, he'll do his best to pass power to his son. Contain- ment didn't just delay democrati- zation in many parts of the world, but actually encouraged monarchy instead. This brings us to Egypt. Con- tainment - having contorted itself to address transnational terrorism rather than international commu- nism - required that Obama, Sec- retary of State Hillary Clinton and every other American official in the public eye, line up immediately in support of our man in Cairo, Former Egypt president Hosni Mubarak. When that didn't work, the admin- istration pivoted to the next best option, Omar Suleiman. Suleiman, 74, was the head; of Egypt's spy agency, and in that capacity he was an important supporter of America's "extraordinary rendition" program. He has overseen countless tortures, including that of an al-Qaeda opera- tive who gave a false confession about links between Saddam Hus- sein and Osama bin Laden. As you might expect of someone who has been in government nearly as long as Mubarak himself, Suleiman is uni- versally reviled by the public he is meant to lead. But containment - particularly in the Middle East - has never been challengedbyagrass-roots, non-vio- lent uprising of the sheer scale that we've now seen in Egypt and Tuni- sia. Spurred on by cheap technology, which helped protesters not only organize themselves but also to see how their own story was being told by international media, the writing may be on the wall for the future of containment. Egypt exposes uncertain future of containment. 9 Repressive governments need to be able to lie to their own people about the wider world in order to keep them pliant and cooperative. * The democracies that work hand-in- glove with such regimes need to be able to believe their own lies about the danger of seeing the world inany other way. Neither of these are ten- able when everyone with an Inter- net connection can get an intimate, unblinking picture of the revolu- tion as it plays out: Organized, non- violent, serious about democratic change and unwilling to take no for an answer. Suleiman conceded on Friday when he told Egyptians to turn off their satellite televisions because they were enemies of the state. Too little, too late: Egyptians don't seem to have any use for our new man in Cairo. Neither should we. -Neill Mohammad can be reached at neilla@umich.edu. 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. We do not print anonymous letters. Send letters to tothedaily@michigandaily.com EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS: Aida Ali, Will Butler, Michelle DeWitt, Ashley Griesshammer, Melanie Kruvelis, Erika Mayer, Harsha Nahata, Emily Orley, Harsha Panduranga, Teddy Papes, Asa Smith, Seth Soderborg, Andrew Weiner EMILY BASHAM AND ALEX BILES1 Acknowledge the War on Drugs *I SEND LETTERS TO: TOTHEDAILY@MICHIGANDAILY.COM Some University students depend on Bridge Cards this program. Being a student is difficult both academically and financially, and some of us truly need our Bridge Cards. I sincerely hope that legislators will not choose to take this help away from me and my fellow students. TO THE DAILY: While I'm sure there are students tak- Nora Stone ing fraudulent advantage of the Bridge Card LSA junior program, I hope the state Legislature and The Michigan Daily (A whole in the 'Bridge', 02/09/2011) keep in mind that there is a sig- -e nificant number of students with a legitimate The University can easily need for this assistance. deter fire alarm I am one of those students. My parents pay neither my rent, nor any of my other bills, and contribute only minimally to my tuition. I TO THE DAILY: don't ask for more because I know they can't Aida Ali is absolutely right in declaring, afford it. Without my Bridge Card, I'd be tak- "University Housing officials have to find a ing out additional loans just to pay for food way to solve this problem," in her viewpoint and lodging, and I don't believe I should have (Alarming frequency, 2/11/2011). Fortunate- go into debt to feed myself. Or I'd be eating ly there is a quick, easy and cheap solution. Ramen five days a week. While that makes for Decades ago the New York City subway sys- a good joke about college life, it does nothing tem was plagued with people repeatedly pull- to improve my physical and mental health, ing the emergency break in each car, which at and thereby my contribution to the University the time wassjust a wire with a handle. To rem- community. edy the problem, each emergency break was Ifthe state needs to save money on the Bridge individually placed so that everyone in the car Card program, what about restricting what would see and react to the perpetrator. As a benefit recipients are allowedto buy? New York direct result the problem is now non-existent. City is considering banning soda purchases The Residence Hall Association should set a with food assistance money. A similar measure timer on each individual alarm box in Univer- in Michigan could save money and improve the sity Housing, perhaps on a five second delay so health of our residents (we are ranked 10th in that in order to pull the alarm one would have the nation in adult obesity), while also prevent- to physically stand next to it for five seconds ing people from abusing the system by buying as a localized, shrieking alarm goes off. There soda solely to return the bottles for cash. would be no consequence in a real fire - after I believe the simplicity of the Department of all, it's just five seconds. But it would serve as Human Services application is an advantage. a forceful deterrent to any would-be alarm It should be easy for people who need help to puller who would be terrified of not just being obtain help. I agree that changing the defini- caught (and potentially fined or imprisoned) tion of "who needs help," or adding another by Housing staff but also by hoards of angry round of checks to the application process may students enraged aboutgoing into the cold, for be necessary to prevent waste and abuse, but the third time that night for a false alarm. please, let's keep in mind that not all students here at the University fit into the upper mid- David Seidman dle-class bracket, and not all of us are abusing LSA freshman Many people will spend today exchanging roses, chocolates, Hallmark cards and their fair share of saliva, as is tradition in our country. Others take a more apa- thetic approach toward the holiday, while a small minor- ity will wallow in heartbreak, consumed in a state of proverbial obsolescence. For the citizens of Ciudad Juarez and other cities in Mexico that have been ravaged by drug-related violence, this notion of heartbreak hits much closer to home. According to Mexican officials, 34,612 people have died in drug-related violence since Mexican President Felipe Calderon declared a war against drug cartels in 2007. And in 2010 alone, these killings reached their highest level, with a total of 15,273 deaths. To put this in per- spective, the Iraqi occupation caused 4,436 American troop casualties since 2003. The recent surge in violence has undoubtedly been a byproduct of United States and Mexican drug laws, par- ticularly the militaristic approach that has character- ized enforcement of the latter. With drug prohibition, a black market is created in which individuals are unable_ to settle conflicts through the legal system. Thus, drug cartels resort to violence to settle disputes. Mainstream news coverage and attention given to this atrocity by our federal government has been negli- gible. Between the two of them, President Barack Obama and Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) produced thousands of sound bites during the heated 2008 presidential elec- tion. Yet, they seldom mentioned the rampant violence that has overtaken the U.S.-Mexico border, let alone addressed the issue in detail. Rather than come to a stop, the violence associated with the Mexican Drug War has increased at an alarming rate. Not only has the Mexican War on Drugs placed the security of our southern neighbor in jeopardy, violence associated with the illicit drug trade has spilled over into the U.S., especially around border cities. ABC News reported that Phoenix, Ariz. has become the new kid- napping capital of the United States. In response to the egregious absence of news cov- erage by mainstream outlets regarding the increasing violence that is consuming Mexico, a coalition of Uni- versity student groups has convened to enhance aware- ness about the atrocity taking place south of our border. Students for Sensible Drug Policy, the University's chapter of College Libertarians, Latin@ Social Work Coalition, the University's chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union, Human Rights Through Educa- tion and Students Organizing for Labor & Economic Equality have named Feb. 14 as a day of awareness about the Mexican Drug War. A daylong campaign will take place to reach out to the campus community, including distribution of informational flyers and an artistic exhibition of drug- related violence. These efforts will culminate at 6 p.m. at Rackham Amphitheatre, with three renowned speak- ers providing their insight on the drug-related violence in Mexico and offering solutions to this underreported tragedy. This event is free, and the campus community is encouraged to attend. Emily Basham is the executive director of Students for Sensible Drug Policy. Alex Biles is the vice president of the College Libertarians. 0 0 THE DAILY IS TAKING ON THE LANTERN IN A FACEBOOK WAR. 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