0 4A - Thursday, September 8, 2011 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 4A - Thursday, September 8, 2011 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom eiiigan 4alhj Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan since 1890. 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 tothedaily@michigandaily.com BRUNO STORTINI E-MAIL BRUNO AT BRUNORS@UMICH.EDU GOPison the wrong track STEPHANIE STEINBERG EDITOR IN CHIEF MICHELLE DEWITT and EMILY ORLEY EDITORIAL PAGE EDITORS NICK SPAR MANAGING EDITOR Unsigned editorials reflect the official positionoftthe Daily's editorialboard. All other signed articles and illustrations represent solely the views of their authors. Enforcement one awry Unjust rulings call for clearer drug policy Though Michigan voters approved medicinal marijuana as a legal prescription for prescribed individuals nearly three years ago, patients and caregivers have faced an ongoing battle in trying to obtain and provide the substance. The issue became even more severe in late August when Lansing dispensa- ries - at least 20 of them - were ruled to be a violation of the 2008 ballot initiative and were forced to close their doors. Patients who use marijuana for symptom relief were also ruled against last week when an appeals court determined that they must wait at least 30 days after registering for a state mari- juana card before beginning to grow plants. This means that Lansing residents who have a prescription for medical marijuana will poten- tially have to wait a month before beginning the process of providing their own prescription. It seems that Michigan law makers and law enforcement are refusing to accept the legal- ity of medical marijuana - regardless of voter approval - and are treating patients as crimi- nals. And the troubles facing Lansing dispen- sary owners are far from being outside the norm. Since the laws passage, dispensaries and compassion clinics have been raided, and lawmakers and law enforcement officials have been interpreting the laws in a way that makes obtaining the legal prescription as difficult as possible. Lansing dispensary owners and their sup- porters justifiably fought back yesterday at a rally seeking to raise money to support their cause. They plan to either appeal the court deci- sion right away or ask for an emergency staying of the ruling. Either way, they will fightefortheir legal right to continue to provide a service that many Lansing residents urgently need. While many government officials think of marijuana strictly in terms of itsgeneral illegal- ity, medical marijuana is an important drugthat helps many people who suffer from painful dis- eases. Many residents throughout the state rely on it for relief from symptoms like chronic pain or nausea associated with chemotherapy. Peo- ple enduring such treatments - some of which are induced by prescribed, legal medicines - should be able to usea substance that will help ease their discomfort. Ann Arbor City Council members recently discussed the Michigan Court of Appeals rul- ing and expressed uncertainty about how to proceed with the city's new medical marijua- na dispensary licensing board. Without an immediate change in Lan- sing, these people will either be forced to go without the medicinal marijuana they need, or obtain it through illegal means. If the dis- pensaries are not operating in the proper way, then that needs to be addressed. But forcing all of them to close their doors addresses the issue at the expense of patients. The court system needs to realize the suffering that this shut down can cause and grant the stay until the dispensary owners are able to take legal action on their own behalf. There is no doubt that the current law pertaining to medical marijuana is unclear. However, that doesn't mean that state offi- cials have the right to enforce it as they see fit. Michigan lawmakers need to come together and create a unified, statewide solution to the conflicts over medical marijuana. They need to form policy that is clear and comprehensive to make it simple for caregivers and patients to provide and obtain medical marijuana within the bounds of the law. f you are a liberal and you debate politics with your coun- terparts from the political right, you have prob- ably taken a beat- ing these past few months. You have heard all, the anti-Obama talking points already as your conservative friends try to DAR-WEI convinceyouthat CHEN the president and his party are undermining the country with liber- alism. They might cite President Barack Obama's latest disapproval rating of 55 percent, according to the Sept. 5 Rasmussen Reports (even though a significant number of those people disapprove probably because they think Obama is not liberal enough). Another item they could bring up is Obama's re-election prospects against a generic Republican presi- dential candidate, which show the president down 39 to 47 percent, according to a Gallup poll conduct- ed this summer (of course, "generic Republican presidential candidate" does not have Texas Gov. Rick Per- ry's anti-evolution problem or former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney's "corporations are people" problem). They might even try to indict the whole Democratic Party by pointing out the disapproval ratings of Con- gressional Democrats, which sat at 68 percent in mid-August according to the Associated Press (Republican Congressmen polled even worse, however, at 75 percent disapproval). Perhaps the most damning statis- tic, the old "right direction or wrong track" question as posed by Reuters, shows that a whopping 73 percent of Americans think the country is on the wrong track. The overarching point, your conservative friends may say, is that Obama and the Democrats are making things worse in this country by pursuing extreme left-wing policy. Therefore, the Dems will eventually get hammered for it because the pub- lic agrees with Republicans. But let's dive deeper into the "wrong track" statistic because a) conservative pundits and politicians love to use it to attack the president's liberal views and b) I poked holes in the other talking points already. The implication of the statistic is that if the country ison the wrong track, the president (and by extension, liberal policy) must be at fault because he is the highest-ranking official in the land - or as former President George W. Bush puts it, the "decider." Of course, that inference makes sense - if you try not to think too much. The leap that conservatives like to make is from "the country is on the wrong track, and Obama is leading the country" to "conservative policy is therefore the right way to go, and Obama's agenda is not popular." And what a leap it is. Presumably, when the "right direction or wrong track" question is asked by pollsters, people have in mind a"right direction" for thecoun- try. Therefore, figuring out what that direction is would be informa- tive when trying to determine who to blame for America being on the wrong track. Let's use the economy as an example because it seems to be the most important issue heading into the 2012 elections. What do Americans think is a good way forward for the economy? According to a CNN poll in August, 63 percent of Americans want high- er-income earners and corporations to pay higher taxes, a decidedly lib- eral view preached by Obama that pours cold water on Republicans trying to create an economically populist message. Currently, taxes on the wealthy and businesses are at the lowest levels in decades, and big business profits are at historic highs (a conservative utopia, right?). How about solving the nation's long-term I debt problem? An average of 23 polls over the past eight months show that 65 percent of Americans want a balanced approach consisting of spending cuts and revenue increases. Again, this approach is something that Obama has advocated for repeat- edly, while the GOP has stubbornly insisted on reducingthe deficitsolely through spending cuts. By the way, the GOP plan is whatthe countrygot in the recent debt deal. What do citizens think is the best way forward? I After taking a look at these poll numbers, what Americans want is clear: liberal economic policy. Even if we don't talk about what econo- mists say - the stimulus should have been larger, for example - the Republicans cannot claim that the public is on their side. Perhaps Obama has been ineffective in leg- islating his ideas in the face of his- torically intransigent opposition, leading to disappointment in the country's direction. However, con- flating that disappointment with the notion that people are turning away from liberal policies would be a mistake. People are still buying Obama's hope and change. When people say the country is on the wrong track, many believe Republi- cans are the drivers. -Dar-Wei Chen can be reached at chendw@umich.edu. EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS: Aida Ali, Michelle DeWitt, Ashley Griesshammer, Patrick Maillet, Erika Mayer, Harsha Nahata; Emily Orley, Teddy Papes, Timothy Rabb, Seth Soderborg, Andrew Weiner BEN BROWN | Law school's broken system I Itspartially about us In the last year, The Michigan Daily pub- lished two columns about the economics of law school, one on its opinion page and one in its weekly magazine, The Statement. Both pieces alert prospective law students to the challenge caused by the combination of the high cost of law school tuition and the fierce competitive- ness of the legal job market. The Daily's cover- age of this issue is part of a larger trend: After years of silence on the issue, The New York Times published three articles on the cost of law school between January and July of this year, all in either its Sunday Business or Busi- ness Day section. Among other things, these articles comment on the fact that many law schools are not forthright about their students' job prospects. There are about 100 active members of the University's chapter of the pre-law fraternity Kappa Alpha Pi, according to LSA senior The- resa Munaco, the chapter's president. Munaco said the number typically rises to about 140 students by the winter semester, but then decreases when students graduate in May. This group, probably, encompasses just a fraction of all the students at the Uiversity who are interested in going to law school. Hopefully, the journalistic attention paid to the economic challenges faced by law school students will provide interested University students more of the information they deserve and allow them to take into account the true advantages, disad- vantages and costs of law school. While the cost of law school (relative to the economic opportunities a legal educatidn is likely to provide) is a worthwhile concern, prospective students should also be aware of another, related pathology affecting the law school system. The educational methods used by law schools to teach students are broken. Law schools inadequately evaluate students and emphasize grades and other competitive distinctions more than real learning. Intheory, a legal education is an intellectual experience that enriches a person's whole life, regardless of career. But law schools don't provide stu- dents the full intellectual opportunities they deserve. Law schools as institutions fail to focus on teaching. This problem manifests itself in very la'ge class sizes. According to data collected by the American Bar Association, the typical first-year class at the University's Law School has 93 students. Almost all law school courses are taught using the Socratic method, in which a professor teaches by questioning students instead of lecturing. The Socratic method works by engaging students, but in classes of 80 to 100 students, sustained participation by an individual student is impossible. It might seem logical to think that the style of student evaluation used in undergraduate courses - multiple written assignments or exams in every course - would be used again in law school. While this system would work well in law school, it is not used. Most law school courses are graded on the basis of single, comprehensive final examinations. A deficiency in this method of evaluation is that students are given no feedback while a course is ongoing. For most lawschool courses, faculty members only look at students' work when grading their exams after the course is over. In consequence, students waste their time by using study methods that don't work, or by misunderstanding concepts without real- izing it. The lack of evaluation is especially harmful because beginning law students, who are learning to do legal analysis for the first time, badly need feedback in order to learn and improve. Finally, the competitive legal job market has intensified both students' and employers' focus on grades. Students also compete for other credentials like law review membership. This focus on competitive distinctions has perverse effects. A student might sign up for a course she's not interested in because the prospects of a good grade are higher than for other courses, or a student might pursue law review member- ship for credentialing purposes even though he doesn't have a natural interest in editorial work and would learn more by concentrating on coursework. The teaching and learning that goes on in law school is hobbled by large course sizes, the practice of providing students no feedback other than final exam grades and a focus on competitive distinctions. In particular, large class sizes and the lack of evaluation serve no educational purpose, harm students and usu- ally go unquestioned by law school adminis- trators, faculty and even students. The only advantage of these practices is their low cost. Law school could be done better, and should be, for the sake of current and prospective students. Ben Brown is a third-year student at the University of Michigan School of Law. arlier this summer, New 'York Times columnist David Brooks sent an unfamiliar message to col- lege graduates: "It's not about you." This is in great contrast with commence- ment speakers who often urge students to never settle, display individuality and "march to the beat of your own drum." ERIK TORENBERG As graduation looms for the class of 2012, my graduation class, I've been thinking: Brooks's message is only partially true. In a past column titled "The Sum- moned Self," Brooks wrote about a successful businessman who, during his college years, spent an hour every night contemplating his future plans and solidifying his life purpose. This approach is rare, Brooks notes: "Most successful young people don't look inside and then plan a life. They look outside and find a problem, which summons their life." Yet, Brooks claims college students are still being told to focus inward - to figure out what they want and then to live their life - exactly at a time when they need to start thinking about things bigger than themselves. "The successfulyoung adult is begin- ning to make sacred commitments - to a spouse, a community and call- ing - yet mostly hears about freedom and autonomy," he wrote. However, such commitments are a lot to ask for. How can we choose a definite career path when we've only held two part-time jobs? And where to live, if we've onlylived at home and at college? Or to even contemplate marriage, when we've had one major relationship, and our parents have been divorced twice? Universities don't require students to choose their majors immediately, since they obviously haven't taken enough courses yet to know what they like and what they don't. How can we be expected to make deci- sions that will affect the rest of our lives when we haven't had enough experience to know what we want and what we don't? We can't. It's more likely that Brooks is suggesting that we start to think about these important deci- sions, not that we rush them. It's more likely he believes the terms "finding yourself" and "gaining experience" should refer to experi- menting and tinkering with relation- ships, jobs and lifestyle niches with the intent to learn what's out there and what we want, instead of merely checking items off our eyer-growing bucket lists. I don't want my commencement speaker to tell me that it's all about me. or that it has nothing to do with me. I'd prefer she speaks about not only how we can help others, but also, how we can help ourselves. I'd prefer she acknowledges that it's at least partially about us. She would recognize Brooks's main point: We should construct our identity through interacting with the real world, realizing and acting upon where we can make the most positive impact and not stay isolated in our rooms, or in the desert of a foreign country. She would call the businessman's actions mentioned in the beginning of this column potentially imprudent because the time he spent planning his life in advance may have cost him other opportunities he couldn't have planned for that could have altered his life plans for the better. She would add: Think about most of the important decisions you've ever made. Most likely, they weren't planned years in advance. It's more likely they came about through a combination of diligent preparation and taking advantage of unexpected opportunities. On the other hand, she'd also emphasize how imprudent it would be to avoid internal reflection. She'd criticize the person who reacts to his every whim, never examines if he feels fulfilled by his activities and never corrects patterns in his mis- takes. She'd say it's best to do both. Look inside: Think about what you want, what you can do and plan according- ly. But also know that life will prob- ably force those plans to change. Be open to opportunities, to experienc- ing things you didn't plan for. Then go back to the drawing board: reflect, tinker. Students should look at the big picture. She'd make the following anal- ogy: Let things hit you like a bruise. Embrace a person, an experience, an ideology, live it, and reflect after- wards. Did you like the bruise? Nid it identify with everything you wantto represent? If it didn't, don't let it hit you again. I'd like my commencement speak- er to close with the following: Today's commencement speakers often tell you students to help yourselves, and Brooks tells us that by helping others, you'llhelp yourself. I agree with him. But I also believe that by helping yourself - through pursuing your passions, maximizing-your talents and achieving self-contentment - you will be helping others too. -Erik Torenberg can be reached at erikto@umich.edu. ,I 'I 0