4A - Monday, April 4, 2011 The Michigan Daily - michigandaify.com 4A - Monday, April 4, 2011 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan since 1890. 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 tothedaily@michigandaily.com DANIEL GOLD E-MAIL DANIELAT DWGOLD@UMICH.EDU THE MICHIGAN LOOK Female Version noun Smart Phone, North Face jacket, leggings & Uggs { THE MICHIGAN LOOK Male Version verb To stare at legging covered rear of female STEPHANIE STEINBERG EDITOR IN CHIEF MICHELLE DEWITT and EMILY ORLEY EDITORIAL PAGE EDITORS KYLE SWANSON MANAGING EDITOR 6 6 6 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. Simply a scare tactic FOIA shouldn't be abused for political motives Arecent Freedom of Information Act request from the Mackinac Center for Public Policy solicited e-mails regarding the union isputeinWisconsinfromprofessorsatthreepublicuniversities in Michigan. Filed last week, the non-profit, nonpartisan research institute's request seeks faculty e-mails from the labor departments at the University of Michigan, Michigan State University and Wayne State University that contain the words "Wisconsin," "Scott Walker" or "Maddow." Though the state's sunshine laws technically give the organization the right to ask for the messages, the universities involved shouldn't feel pressured to release faculty e-mails. The Mackinac Center's request is simply a scare tactic that aims to intimidate pro- labor professors and suppress academic freedom. Public enemy number one This isn't the first time FOIA has been used to intimidate and stifle criticism. On March 17, the Wisconsin Republican Party demand- ed the release of e-mails from University of Wisconsin-Madison Prof. William Cronon, an open critic of Wisconsin Republican Gov. Scott Walker. Though the GOP claimed the request was filed in order to determine whether or not Cronon had violated a Wisconsin law that stipulates state-funded resources - like work e-mail - cannot be used for political purpos- es, it's clear that Wisconsin's GOP was using bureaucratic means to intimidate those who oppose its actions. Now the political witch-hunt has crossed Michigan's borders. While the Mackinac Cen- ter claims that the call for faculty e-mail is sim- ply for apolitical analysis, the fact that the think tank only solicited e-mails from the three uni- versities' labor departments suggeststhere may be more political motives behind the request. If the organization wanted an unbiased analysis of professors' responses to iheIabor protests in Wisconsin, it could have requested informa- tion from a number of other departments that may address the dispute. Only requesting the e-mails from the labor departments suggests that the center aims to intimidate and suppress the voice of one group - labor. The FOIA request infringes on something more important than e-mail privacy: academic freedom. While it may not be appropriate for university staff members to openly engage in partisan politics, expressing judgments on the actions of the government via personal e-mails is well within their rights. Professors and stu- dents alike should be able to question policy- makers even if they're affiliated with a public university. The issue of whether certain staff members violated policies by sending personal, political e-mails fromtheiruniversitye-mail accounts is the business of the universities, not the Macki- nac Center. The think tank is trying to expose which staff members at which universities are pro-labor in order to present skewed informa- tion about the political leanings of different universities. The University of Michigan has yet to respond to the FOIA request, and the administration have a right to do what they can to protect the privacy of their employees. While the release of information under FOIA is an important tool in making public information public, sifting through the e-mails of university staff members is an absurd mea- sure. The Mackinac Center's request is sense- less and an attempt to intimidate and stifle dissenting opinions. Michigan, it seems, has become a dumping ground for Wisconsin's leftovers. Just as Repub- lican Gov. Rick Snyder has fol- lowed the lead of Wisconsin's Republican Gov. Scott Walker in scapegoat- NEILL ing public sector MOHAMAD employee unions and gutting edu- cation spend- ing in order to pay for corporate tax breaks, the Mackinac Center for Pub- lic Policy- anon-partisan, non-profit organization - has followed Wiscon- sin's Republican Party in using spu- rious Freedom of Information Act requests to demand access to the e-mail accounts of University faculty. In Wisconsin, the Republicans' bete noire is Bill Cronon, a prominent professor of history at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. On March 13, Cronon drafted an op-ed for The New York Times that framed Walk- er's assault on public sector unions against the progressive tradition of Wisconsin Republicans like former Wisconsin Gov. Robert LaFollette. In other words, he was practicing his profession. On March 15, he started a blog and wrote his first post about the American Legislative Exchange Council, a low-profile conservative group which likely wrote Wiscon- sin's anti-union legislation and then handed it to Republican state legisla- tors. And on March17, the Wisconsin GOP demanded any e-mail Cronon may have written from his univer- sity'e-mail account that includes the names of any prominent Wiscon- sin conservatives. At the end of last week, the Mackinac Center followed suit by submitting FOIA requests for any e-mail sentby various labor stud- ies professors at Wayne State Univer- sity, Michigan State University and here at the University of Michigan that includes the words "Wisconsin," "Scott Walker" and MSNBC host "Rachel Maddow." One thing is immediately clear: There's no place in the entire world where university professors have more power and influence than in conservatives' own minds. To critics, academicfacultyaretheSupermenof a new era - leaping tall buildings in a single bound, and producing a new generation of radical Marxists and secretly preparing to ban apple pie and put us all in prison camps where we'll be forced to receive socialized health care and Spanish lessons. As a fellow social scientist in a related field, this is an unending source of comedy to me. Just last fall, I attend- ed the annual meeting of the Ameri- can Political Science Association, where the unofficial, but still wildly depressing, theme of the weekend was whether political science could ever make any contribution to our daily lives. Other than, perhaps, the economists, researchers in the other social sciences rarely have the oppor- tunity to use their expertise to guide the public policy debates of the day. Many ofus sometimes doubt whether students remember anything about our courses at all after final exams are turned in. And yet, here we are. He may be our nation's preeminent authority on early 20th century Midwestern economic development, but up until two ago, I wouldn't have recognized Cronon if I ran him over with my car. Now he's a bona fide public enemy, with the Wisconsin GOP rummag- ing through his digital trash, hunting for an inevitably out-of-context quote to pit'hindown as the new boogey- man of a vast liberal conspiracy, somewhere between Bill Ayers and whoever first decided to start putting fluoride in water. It would be bad enough if Wiscon- sin Republicans' fixation on Cronon, or the copy-cat Mackinac Center, simply reflected an unhealthy obses- sion with the academy. But it's not just that; it's a feint, and one more step into a briar patch where billion- aires like David and Charles Koch, who helped bankroll Walker's elec- tion in Wisconsin, are viewed with equal suspicion as modest professors like Cronon, or City University of New York Prof. Frances Fox Piven, who somehow found herself the tar- get of death threats from Glenn Beck viewers over a book she wrote in the late 1960s. When no one is beyond suspicion, everyone is a suspect, and the most immediate consequence is that the wealthiest and most pow- erful political lobbies will be less scrutinized than ever before. It's most assuredly not an accident that this development comes only a year after Citizens United v. Federal Elec- tion Commission, the Supreme Court decision that effectively eliminated even modest limits on campaign spending. GOP's fixation on Cronon reflects an obsession. Speaking of political donations - where does the Mackinac Center get its support? Predictably, it's never made any of its donor lists public. But you can work out at least some of the largest donors based on their own income tax filings. The list includes the heirs to Sam Walton's Wal-Mart fortune, Amway founder gnd Michi- gan Senate Republican candidate Dick DeVos and - drumroll,'please - Charles and David Koch. But hey, at least we're cracking down on this Bill Cronon loser. -Neill Mohammad can be reached at neilla@umich.edu. a EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS: Aida Ali, Will Butler, Ellie Chessen, Michelle DeWitt, Ashley Griesshammer, Melanie Kruvelis, Patrick Maillet, Erika Mayer, Harsha Nahata, Emily Orley, Harsha Panduranga, Teddy Papes, Timothy Rabb, Asa Smith, Seth Soderborg, Andrew Weiner LET TERS T 1 SEND LETTERS TO: TOTHEDAILY@MICHIGANDAILY.COM th e The Complete Spectrum: Chris Dyer discusses what he believes are the criteria for a hate group. p Ud m Go to michigandaily.com/blogs/The Podium 6 Planned Parenthood should lose its federalfunding TO THE DAILY: As members of the University of Michigan Students for Life and counter demonstrators at the March 26 Planned Parenthood rally and Walk for Choice, we would like to elabo- rate upon our reasons for attending. One of the Planned Parenthood supporters quoted in a Michigan Daily article (Planned Parenthood supporters protest proposed slash to funding, 03/28/2010) said abortion only comprises 3 percent of Planned Parenthood's services. However, this statistic is misleading. Planned Parenthood performed 305,310 abortions in 2007, according to its 2008 annual report (contrast this with 4,912 referrals to outside adoption agencies). The Kagen's blog was too hard on First Lady's charitable acts TO THE DAILY: I'm disappointed that The Michigan Daily chose to publish Kylie Kagen's ugly and unnecessary attack on First Lady Michelle Obama (Seeing Red: Give it a rest, Michelle, 3/29/2011). It is a tradition for the first lady to have a charitable focus during her hus- band's presidency. Both Laura and Barbara Bush helped combat illiteracy. Nancy Reagan started the "Just Say No" anti-drug cam- average abortion costs between $400 and $450. This means that Planned Parent- hood's total income from abortions is at least $122,124,000. The total health center income is listed as $374,700,000 in the same annu- al report. Therefore, abortion accounts for about 30.6 percent of Planned Parenthood's income. We are not interested in taking away health care services for women and children. Rather, we want the public to be aware of these facts in order to realize why defund- ing Planned Parenthood is so crucial. There are many truly non-profit organizations, like our local ArborVitae Women's Center, which deserve a greater degree of public support. This letter was written by LSA sophomore Anna Paone, LSA junior Elise Aikman, LSA freshman Joseph Lipa and LSA sophomore Carmen Allen on behalf of Students for Life. paign. Lady Bird Johnson focused on beauti- fying our highways. Yet I doubt Kagen would be so quick to insult any of these women. The sole reason people are so upset with Michelle Obama's continuation of this tradi- tion is because they disagree with her hus- band. This serves no purpose other than an attempt to slander Michelle Obama and her husband. Kagen claims that the Obama administration is run through propaganda, but I think she needs to take a look in the mirror. Ross Warman LSA freshman SCOTT KURASHIGE I Glover is continuing MLK's legacy The internationally acclaimed actor Danny Glover is coming to campus today at 4 p.m., and it's important to understand the reason why. Our region has been uplifted by a surge in Hollywood celebrity sightings because of the film industry tax that may soon expire. This visit, however, isn't motivated by quick eco- nomic incentives. Beyond the Hollywood spotlight, Glover has devoted countless hours to the cause of social justice, garnering numerous awards for his humanitarian efforts. Today, he will honor the unique spirit of community building and creative organizing emerging from Michigan, especially the grassroots activist movements rising out of abandonment and destruction in post-industrial Detroit. Glover emphasizes these points in his foreword to "The Next American Revolution: Sustainable Activ- ism for the Twenty-First Century", the new book by Grace Lee Boggs that I helped to produce. "What does it mean to develop the life-affirming relationship that we must have not only for our own survival as a human species but also for the survival of the planet itself?" he challenges us to answer. "How do we bring out of these ashes the ideas, the motivation and the spirit of this particular moment and take it to the next step?" Boggs is a 95-year-old philosopher and activist with seven decades of community organizing expe- rience, including the last 58 years in Detroit. Baits Residence Hall has named a lounge after her, and she received an honorary doctorate from the University in 2009. As University President Mary Sue Coleman then remarked, "By nurturing Detroit as a city of Hope, (Boggs has) brought optimism and inspiration to our state and country." Together, Glover and Boggs embody a vision of humanism and global citizenship that carries on the legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. On this date in 1967, King gave one of the most important and cou- rageous speeches in his life when he declared it was "time to break silence" by denouncing the Vietnam War. The urban rebellions of the 1960s had convinced him that local and international pursuits of nonvio- lence needed to be connected. "A nation that continues year after year to spend more money on military defense than on programs of social uplift is approaching spiritual death," King pro- claimed. What our society needed was a "revolution of values" against the "giant triplets of racism, militarism and materialism." Exactly one year later, April 4, 1968, King was assassinated. We have all inherited King's unfinished agenda. With American troops engaged all over the planet, education systems in crisis and economic hardship crippling household and government budgets, his pro- phetic words ring as true today as they did 43 years ago. Because the problems we face often seem so over- whelming, students often ask, "What can I do to make a difference?" There is no easy answer. We can start by taking the time to reflect on how we came to this point as individuals, as a nation and as a society. The next step is to educate ourselves about the struggles for social change from the bottom up that are already in motion in Detroit and places around the world. Today, we have a unique opportunity to learn from Glover, Boggs and two award-winning scholars of Afri- can American history, Robin D. G. Kelley and Gwendo- lyn Midlo Hall. Professor Stephen Ward, who has played a pivotal role in connecting students to Detroit, will moderate this historic discussion, "Sustainable Activ- ism for the 21st Century: A Forum in Honor of MLK." Join them from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. this afternoon in the Modern Languages Building Auditorium 3. Scott Kurashige is director of the Asian/Pacific Islander American Studies Program and associate professor of American Culture and History. I 6 6 6 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