4 =- Tuesday, February 21, 2012 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 4 - uesayFebuary21,201 Th Miciga Daly micigadaiyco Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan since 1890. 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 tothedaily@nmichigandaily.com ASHLEY GRIESSHAMMER JOSEPH LICHTERMAN and ANDREW WEINER JOSH HEALY EDITOR IN CHIEF EDITORIAL PAGE EDITORS 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. Imran Syed is the public editor. He can be reached at publiceditorwmichigandaily.com. Trust the legal process Civilian courts are effective in terrorist cases mar Farouk Abdulmutallab, the convicted terrorist referred to as the "Underwear Bomber," has been sentenced to life in a U.S. federal prison. The 25-year-old Nigerian who attempted to detonate explosives hidden in his undergarments on a flight from Amsterdam to Detroit on Christmas Day 2009 was sentenced to four consecutive life sentences and an additional 50 years in prison by a federal judge. The sentencing comes after Abdulmutallab pleaded guilty in October to charges including conspiracy to commit an act of terrorism and attempted use of a weapon of mass destruction. Free prenatal testing ends up in more abortions, and therefore less care that has to be done. - Republican presidential candidate Rick Santorum said about health care legislation mandating insurance fully cover amniocentesis and other prenatal tests, according to CNN. A warmer winter T his winter's cloudless skies and snowless sidewalks were pleasant surprises for just about every student on campus. I honestly can't cite a single time this semester I have heard some- one say, "Man, I hope it snows soon. I'm so sick of all this effort- less walking to class, not to men- tion the warm JOE SUGIYAMA The processing and subsequent sentencing of Abdulmutallab adds to the ever-growing body of evidence indicating that the Ameri- can legal system can be, and has been, an effective way to prosecute accused terrorists. The U.S. shouldn't have to resort to extrale- gal or constitutionally questionable methods such as indefinite detentions to combat ter- rorism. Instead, individuals caught plan- ning or executing domestic terrorist attacks should be granted the full due process of law on American soil. Abdulmutallab's is one in a series of cases that have seen similar outcomes. Other ter- rorist suspects tried in civilian courts include the would-be Times Square bomber Faisal Shahzad, "Shoe Bomber" Richard Reid, Jose Padilla, Ali al-Marri and more than a dozen others. As of April 2011, the conviction rate in civilian courts for Jihadi-related crimes, including those in which the government dropped the charges or a judge dismissed them, has been 87 percent, with an average prison term of 14 years, according to The Center on Law and Security at the New York University School of Law. In the same time frame, military tribunals had produced five convictions and far more lenient sentences. The argument that civilian courts don't allow for effective intelligence gathering is specious. In fact, the prosecution has more tools at its disposal within a legal framework to ensure that valuable information is gained from terror suspects. For instance, prosecu- tors may be able to offer plea deals in the form of a shorter sentence or better living condi- tions in exchange for intelligence that is veri- fiably accurate. In two major cases, Abdulmutallab and Mansour Arbabsiar - the man accused of plotting to assassinate the Saudi Arabian ambassador to the U.S. in Washington, D.C. on behalf of Iran - were read their Miranda rights but still provided a wealth of infor- mation about Al Qaeda and Iranian opera- tions. Furthermore, American law permits a "national security exception," which allows law enforcement to withhold the reading of Miranda rights until relevant information is extracted from the suspect, ostensibly to combat immediate threats to public safety. The United States needs to combat terror- ism with a strategy that reflects a moral back- bone and coheres with what are often called American values - freedom, integrity and fairness. These values must be at the fore- front of our discussion on national security, not merely considered as an aside or evoked when convenient. As cases like Abdulmutal- lab's have shown, America does not have to compromise human dignity or due process for security. sensation in my hands. I mean, what is this? Florida?" Aha! Al Gore's "Inconvenient Truth" strikes again! Not quite. To those proponents of global warming who view this winter as irrefutable evidence of the theory, pump the brakes. Though a global climate shift has certainly affected the weather in recent months, it's not the whole story. The main reason behind this year's balmy winter is related to weather patterns in the North Pole. The North Atlantic Oscillation is a weather current that hasn't swooped down into the U.S. like it normally does. This current of arctic air typi- cally reaches the U.S. during the win- ter months and causes temperatures to drop. It simply hasn't moved far enough south to affect the weather here, and therefore, the tempera- ture's stayed warm. Anyone who's been followingthe weather trends in Europe over the past month will have noted that the country is experiencing one of the worst winters in modern history. Parts of Russia have actually record- ed temperatures dropping to minus 63 degrees. The cold has caused the deaths of more than 600 people in the past weeks, msainly those without homes. The root of Europe's record- breakitg winterwis the diametric opposite of the warm U.S. winter. The Arctic Oscillation current has turned to a negative phase, which has forced frigid arctic air from the North Pole into Europe. The weather patterns in the U.S. and Europe are naturally occurring phenomena, and coupled with other weather currents, they're respon- sible for the extreme climates this winter. Though both can be viewed as anomalous situations, there does seem to be a correlation with global warming here. Some scientists think that glacial melt has released warmer air in the Arctic, causing a shift in the aforementioned weather patterns which led to the extreme climates. Whatever the cause is, certain parts of the country must cope with the after-effects of the warm tem- peratures. The obvious casualties of such a mild winter are those who rely on the snow to do business. Ski resorts are struggling to tread snow right now because the warm tem- peratures are affecting their ability to draw customers and even main- tain man-made snow. In Michigan, about $4 billion in tourism revenue depends on the winter months to flourish. The warm temperatures and lack of snow have put a serious strain on the more than 40 ski slopes and resorts in the state and have hurt their profits during their short time- frame of operation. Snow-related businesses may be suffering right now, and come har- vest season,.consumers will be in for a rude awakening. The warm weath- er has prematurely launched blos- soming fruit trees into spring mode. The blossoms of these trees are temperature-sensitive and a few cold weeks toward the end of the winter could spell disaster for the industry. The early bloom may even cause food shortages across the country and drive up prices. C'onsum ers might be able to make up for these increased food prices with the money they're currently saving onsheating bills. Natural gas futures are currently trading at about $2.50 per million British thermal units and are expected to achieve a low of at about $1.80 per share. Com- pare this to the $15 per share seen back in 2005, and it's clear that hives- tors may be a little distraught by such a stark decrease in price. But inves- tors aside, the low trading values are good news on two fronts: the cost of heating a home is cheaper and less natural gas is burned, which means less carbon emission. Global warming is only part of the story. Perhaps the best news to come out of this whole ordeal is the direct, pos- itive impact that the warmer weather"' has on students. I don't know about you, but I sure can enjoy a winter dusting a little bit more knowing it'll be gone in a couple days. Last week, I went to the Nichols Arboretum in shorts and sneakers, for God's sake. This winter is a reminder that the climate of the earth is shifting and extreme conditions, whether balmy or frigid, are inevitable. So enjoy it while it lasts - who's to say that our situation won't be flip-flopped with Europe's next winter? - Joe Sugiyama can be reached at jmsugi aiumich.edu. Follow him on Twitter at .JoeSugiyama. EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS: Aida Ali, Laura Argintar, Kaan Avdan, Ashley Griesshammer, Nirbhay Jain, Jesse Klein, Patrick Maillet, Erika Mayer, Harsha Nahata, Harsha Panduranga, Timothy Rabb, Adrienne Roberts, Vanessa Rychlinski, Sarah Skaluba, Seth Soderborg, Caroline Syms, Andrew Weiner CONTRIBUTE TO THE CONVERSATION Readers are encouraged to submit letters to the editor and viewpoints. Letters should be fewer than 300 words while viewpoints should be 550-850 words. Both must include the writer's full name and University affiliation. Send submissions to tothedaily@michigandaily.com. POUYA ALIMAGHAM I .Stop false depictions of Iran @Midterms Really? Really? #fourmoredays [ -@michdailyopedj NOAH HALPERN, ALEX KULICK AND CASSIE STANZLER I Ban the box The Michigan Daily published a viewpoint by Caroline Syms on Jan. 31. "Do the crime, pay the time" argued against banning the box, or removing the box on job applications that requires an applicant to check whether or not they have been convicted of a crime. The author argues that those who've already served their sentences should continue to face penalties after doing so. We see this as blatant employment discrimination that perpetuates social and economic inequality and does noth- ing to make our communities safer. Syms mis- represents an already marginalized group and misstates important facts about the objectives of the Ban the Box campaign. The Fair Chance Coalition's Ban the Box campaign seeks to remove inquiries into fel- ony and misdemeanor conviction status from public job applications. The previous article suggested that banning the box would limit employers' access to applicants' criminal his- tory, but this is untrue. Banning the box won't bar employers from asking about applicants' conviction statuses or performing background checks. Rather, it would allow applicants to be judged on their qualifications before their criminal history is taken into account. This will allow former convicts to obtain employ- ment and thereby mitigate what has become a revolving door in and out of the prison sys- tem. Michigan currently has a recidivism rate of about 31 percent, according to Pew Center on the States, largely due to a lack of legitimate opportunities for ex-offenders. Syms also overlooks the racial and class implications of the box. Since the 1980s, the ongoing War on Drugs and "tough on crime" rhetoric has created a system that dispropor- tionately targets African American and His- panic communities. In a recent report, the Justice Policy Institute found "while African Americans and whites use and sell drugs at similar rates, African Americans are ten times more likely than whites to be imprisoned for drug offenses." The systematic racism sur- rounding criminal justice policies contributes not only to a de facto caste system, but also one that is distinctly racial. Those who oppose the ban claim that the box safeguards our workplaces against the threat of ex-offenders and that these individu- als still pose a threat to society, even after com- pleting their prison sentences. There are major flaws in our criminal justice system as it exists today, but we must respond to this ineffective- ness proactively by organizing communities and legislation around the root causes of crime. We must not respond reactively with further barriers for ex-offenders as they attempt to re- enter society by'impairing their ability to find secure employment.We agree with Syms when she writes, "Convicted felons should have a fair chance to explain themselves and their history in greater detail." However, we also believe that banning the box is the first step in provid- ing ex-offenders that opportunity. To learn more about on-campus efforts to support the Ban the Box campaign and other prison-related issues, contact soap.lead@ umich.edu to get involved with Students Orga- nizing Against Prisons. Noah Halpern is an LSA sophomore. Alex Kulick and Cassie Stanzler are LSA juniors. As the ideological groundwork for military strikes on Iran is laid by certain media outlets and hawks in Wash- ington, D.C. and Tel Aviv, there are a wide array of par- allels to be drawn between the disastrous past and the contentious present. One underlying presumption that constantly recurs, however, warrants special attention as it's a key impetus for intervention - that leaders in much of the developing world, particularly in Iran, are emo- tional, unpredictable and, most importantly, do not cal- culate in the same rational manner that Western leaders do. Consequently, they can't be left to their own devices. In the 1950s, Time magazine, one of the most influen- tial publications in the United States at the time, did not merely parrot the arguments uttered in the corridors of power in Washington, D.C. to overthrow Iran's nascent but burgeoning democracy, but seriously affected the contours of the debate. Indeed, Time made the case for intervention and lobbied for it by effectively, yet errone- ously, portrayingIranian Premier Mohammad Mossadeq as a "demagogic, emotional, child-like fanatic" who can easily be duped by communism. The central idea was that Iran's leaders could not be trusted to govern their own country simply because they were too immature to be trusted'during the Cold War to safeguard vital Western interests - access to the resources that fueled the capi- talist West's economic superiority, namely oil and gas. Thus, such portrayals and logic rendered Iran an accept- able area for the exercise of U.S. power and that the Unit- ed States knew better than Iran how the Middle Eastern country should be governed. This racism was not limited to Western depictions of Iran's leadership. During the Cold War, much of the developing world was targeted for intervention under a similar rubric of rationality, or lack thereof. In the case of the Congo, for instance, Congolese independence leader Patrice Lumumba was depicted much in-the same vein as Iran's leadership had been cast, according to historian Odd Arn Westad. "While most U.S. political leaders up to the early 1960s "had thought of Africans as children who were destined to remain children, the Kennedy administration began seeing Africans as adolescents, in the process of growing up, as witnessed by the creation of new states and politi- cal movements. The anti-Communist argument was no longer that socialism did not fit 'the African tribal men- tality'... but the fear that Communists might seduce ado- lescent African leaders." Like Iran's Mossadeq, Lumumba was judged to be fickle and immature, and thus unfit to rule such. a resource-rich country vital to Western Cold War strate- gic interests. As a result, armed right-wing allies backed by the West overthrew and summarily executed him. Unfortunately, after decades of interaction with Iran, this arrogant demeanor has not only persisted, but wors- ened. More than 20 years after the end of the Cold War and almost 60 years after the U.S.-British overthrow of Iran's "child-like fanatic" Mossadeq, Iran continues to be portrayed as emotional, irrational and, worse yet, is also presumed to be "suicidal" because of its Islamic culture. Expatriate Iranians are equally guilty of such depictions. Last year, a journalist of Iranian descent at The Los Angeles Times referred to Iran, a country of more than 75 million, as "steeped in a culture of Shiite Muslim martyrdom." Such labels erroneously cast Iran and its leadership as unpredictable irrational, and, consequently, unfit to be ,trusted with affairs such as developing its own nuclear energy - a legal right to all signatories of the Nucle- ar Non-Proliferation Treaty that Iran joined in 1968. Should "child-like" Iran be "allowed" to continue to develop nuclear technology, the anachronistic argument goes, the world would be threatened with the possibil- ity of a nuclear-armed Iran that would not be governed with the Mutual Assured Destruction doctrine that kept the "peace" between the U.S. and the Soviet Union during the Cold War. Iran would not abide by the doc- trine because it is seemingly "suicidal" and "steeped in a culture of Shiite Muslim martyrdom," and could use a nuclear device on its adversaries even if it guaranteed its own destruction. Thus, Iran, scrutinized under such racist and grossly inaccurate categorizations, warrants intervention in 2012, as it did in 1953. Until the media and Western leaders break with such depictions that justified, indeed demanded, ruinous intervention in the developing world in general, and Iran in 1953 in particular, the contours of the debate will con- tinue to be guided in a direction that will make future military conflict unavoidable, and possibly even more disastrous than in the past. Pouya Alimagham is a Ph.D. student in the Rackham School of Graduate Studies. p A A4 4