4A- Monday, February 11, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 4A- Monday, February 11, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom aloe firichinan l + MAGGIE MILLER E-MAIL MAGGIE AT MAGATHOR@UMICH.EDU MAGGIE MILLER E-MAIL MAGOTEAT MAGATHOR@UMICH.EDU Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan since 1890. 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 tothedaily@michigandaily.com MELANIE KRUVELIS and ADRIENNE ROBERTS MATT SLOVIN EDITORIAL PAGE EDITORS MANAGING EDITOR SICKNESS COMING ANDREW WEINER EDITOR IN CHIEF If 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. FROM ThE DAIY Breaking down the budget Snyder's proposal has potential, but some funding is misplaced n Feb. 7, Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder released his proposed budget for the 2014 fiscal year. Though Snyder made some positive recommendations like health care expansion, his proposal fell flat in its suggested funding for the Michigan State Police and Department of Corrections. Instead of focusing on correctional facility spending, the governor should look to crime prevention and criminal rehabilitation as a solution. While the proposed funding for mental health courts is a positive step for Michigan, the 10.5-percent increase in funding for MSP is misplaced. Our executive and legislative branches should focus on local law enforcement rather than state law enforcement. While Snyder's budget proposal effectively moves beyond party lines, his proposals suggest misplaced funding for correctional facilities and MSP and ignores many of Michigan's pressing problems. I I i ; Stigmatized style* Snyder's budget recommends $8.7 bil- lion for medical services and $2.4 billion - a 1.1-percent increase - for the long-term care programthat's partof Medicaid. Over the next 10 years, the state of Michigan is expected to save more than $1 billion under the Afford- able Care Act. This proposal could potentially reduce the number of uninsured individuals in the state of Michigan by 46 percent. It also calls for $3 million in health innovation grants for the Department of Community Health. Snyder's proposal for health care expansion is a positive recommendation, and Michigan's legislation should take control of the federally funded ACA. On the other hand, Snyder's resolution to continue funding Michigan's. correctional facilities with approximately $2 billion per year is illogical. Our state currently incarcer- ates 43,000 prisoners. The number of inmates and amount of funding for a "secure prison system",remains practically unchanged from the currentfiscalyear. Michigan'sgovernment should use crime prevention and other more effective methods of rehabilitation, instead of condemning nonviolent criminals, like drug offenders, to penitentiaries. Rather than housing and releasing criminals without ade- quately looking into the root of the problem, the state should implement proactive solutions such as therapy and recovery programs. In the proposedbudget, Snyder also recom- mends an additional $33.5 million in funding for MSP. The funding is supposedly going to benefit MSP core programs such as road patrol, motor carrier enforcement, investiga- tive services, etc. While it's usually advanta- geous to have more patrolmen on our streets, the government needs to focus its spending on local law enforcement agencies rather than MSP. Michigan is home to two of the most vio- lent cities in the nation, Flint and Detroit. In order to reduce the number of violent crimes in these cities specifically, local law enforce- ment needs to be strengthened with financial help from the state government. Snyder also proposes funding for state troopers to provide enforcement services at Belle Isle Park. This is irrational considering the city of Detroit recently turned down the state's offer to take over Belle Isle. Snyder's recommendation for the upcom- ingbudget is constructive, with approximate- ly 75 percent of the funding going toward education, human services and community health. The governor seeks to expand health care across the state, potentially insuring 320,000 more residents in the first year alone. However, Michigan's executive and legis- lative branches should seek to reorganize spending toward our correctional facilities and state police. ast week, Katie Steen wrote a great column about the difficul- ties women face due to the clothes they wear, whether as professionals in the workplace or students conforming to a school dress JAMES code. However, BRENNAN I did take issue when she start- ed talking about men. Don't get me wrong, most men do have a much easier time getting through the whole clothing issue than women. But, the black community espe- cially deals with a quite damaging stigma surrounding dress choice. The way our society defines proper attire is not just sexist, but also inherently racist. Black youth have been associated with fashion choices such as sagging their pants and wearing backwards baseball caps. In passing dress codes that forbid these style choices, schools have effectively instructed young men and women that the popular styles in their demographic are wrong, while "white" fashion is right. All this amounts to is a codi- fied decision that one culture is inherently better than another. Young black men are told that the fashion trends popular in their community are not allowed - that sagging pants and backwards hats equate to the uniform of a crimi- nal. This simply isn't true. Movies and television may have us believe that certain types of dress are syn- onymous with thugs, but clothing is nothing more than personal style - a point made clear in my interview with Harwood McClerking, an assistant professor of political sci- ence at Ohio State University. He's a visiting scholar at the Center for Political Studies here at Michigan and specializes in black politics. McClerking - typically dressed in track pants, a long sleeve t-shirt and baseball cap - is an embodi- ment of the very concept that clothes don't make the man. We talked extensively about differ- ent issues surrounding dress codes and cultural perceptions of dress, drawing on McClerking's experi- ence as a police officer in Colum- bus, Miss. He explained to me that in the beginning of his career,tthe gang film "Colors" came out and several of his colleagues began identifying gang members by their clothing choices. Despite a huge absence of major gang activity in Mississippi at this time, pop cul- ture socially constructed an idea in officers' minds about the existence of gangs and how to identify them. Sadly, he explained, kids took cues from these movies too. Baggy clothes, big coats; low pants and all-black outfits were the rage, but also the target of police profiling. This has, of course, translated into school dress codes, where parents and administrators have banned certain styles as a way to combat "gangs" and "crime." I can remem- ber my sixth grade social studies teacher explaining that sagging pants were banned because "certain groups of people do that to keep their guns there." When I was in middle school, all of my friends rocked the sag- ging pants. We did it just because it looked "cool" at the time. Some of my friends still do it. Our fashion rights were trampled on just the same as black kids, but as whites, we had our own cultural style that was accepted. Black kids are told that the fashion they choose is inferior to mine. Sure, I'll admit that walk- ing into a workplace in jeans, a white tee and Jordans would be frowned upon, but it's not like a student of any race shouldn't be able to wear this outfit to class. If schools required a jacket and tie, maybe this argument would be made, but dress codes tell kids that one type of casual fashion is higher on the social ladder than another - it has absolutely nothing to do with workplace clothing. Race is a social construction, and so is fashion. I was always taught to dress well and dress conservatively - not for me, but for whoever I may end up meeting. Looking "like a thug" would make people draw unfair conclusions about me, resulting in lost opportunities. However, I was also taught in school not to judge others based on how they looked. We saw a lot of pictures of people in hijabs, sombreros and other "ethnic clothes." But dress codes imply the exact opposite. Whether it's label- ing a girl with short shorts as a slut or telling a black kid with baggy pants that he looks. like a crimi- nal, judging on appearance alone goes against all the things school taught us. about diversity. Race is a social construction, and so is fashion. How we appear is noth- ing more than our personal style. If our schools and society plan on teaching real acceptance and toler- ance, then it's time we start to actu- ally accept and tolerate everyone. - James Brennan can be reached at jmbthree@umich.edu. 6 I I I EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS Kaan Avdan, Sharik Bashir, Barry Belmont, Eli Cahan, Jesse Klein, Melanie Kruvelis, Maura Levine, Patrick Maillet, Aarica Marsh, Megan McDonald, Jasmine McNenny, Harsha Nahata, Adrienne Roberts, Paul Sherman, Sarah Skaluba, Michael Spaeth, Luchen Wang, Derek Wolfe ELI CAHAN| Invest li 1776 Cap ital-T true' The Wall Street Journal published a rivet- ing piece last Monday called "Thomas Jeffer- son, Investment Guru" by Romain Hatchuel. Hatchuel states the need for old-school style investing - like, really old school. He claims that at their core, people have a remarkable sense of patriotism. He observes that life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness are at the essence of market movements. Citing the recession as an example, consumption was bound to the things we can touch and feel - commodities have always been a classic hedge against the bear market. "Life" was manifested in the resilience of the housing market. "Liberty" was represent- ed in the immediate need for credit reform. "The pursuit of happiness" was indicated by market outperformance during the past five years in the soda, entertainment and restau- rant sectors. It's not impossible to beat the market - we just get ourselves into trouble when we look beyond the basic desires of humanity itself. So the status of the economy boils down to people. While we get lost in the acronyms - CMBSs, LBOs and CDOs - we can attribute some portion of the recession to neglect of human interest. It seems too convenient that such oversight came in the midst of the tech era. The information age has driven us so far down the side streets of knowledge that we get lost in our own neighborhood. It's our genera- tion's prerogative to right the ship. But let's put our money where our mouth is. The first step toward the rediscovery of people is investing in ourselves. That requires an intimate understanding of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. We must be daring enough to reflect upon what really makes us happy, as opposed to what we think should make us happy. We must be brave enough to pursue anything and everything that makes life worth living. The pursuit of happiness was never intended to be passive, nor easy. To liberate ourselves, we need to take a step forward before we can step back and admire. Initiative is the force that breaks us out of the social current. The University of Michi- gan embraces that more than any place: The resources are everywhere around you, but no one's going to beg you to take advantage. "Declaring" should not be about the idea of declaring - it's a lot more intimate than that. We declare for us, not for them. Living the life we want comes from havingthe liberty to pur- sue our own happiness. The second step in the process regards investing in others. To support humanity in all of its life, liberty and happiness is to expand outward. We must be open to gaining perspec- tive and to building relationships. David Wes- sel wrote about the role of trust in the market. As "credit" is in essence a valuation of trust, it follows that the lending crisis was as much a betrayal of trust as anything else. The reces- sion, he claims, was a true exhibition of the disconnect between people: Relationships fell apart. And, without any inclination to the "worth" oftrustingeach other, people receded into their shells. Lending and borrowing is the fiscal means of empowerment. Supporting one another is but good business. I would hope that we all try to kick it a little more old school. Value people for who they are, not how they appear. In order to best benefit ourselves, each other and the communities in which we live, our focuses must be human. We all benefit when we do exactly what we please and are open to others who do the same. So invest like it's 1776. Care enough aboutyourself to never settle. Care enough about others to create community, relationships and networks. Invest like it's 1776 - and who knows, maybe you'll make some money while you're at it. Eli Cahan is a Business sophomore. elcome Week 2.0 has come and gone. And now like most Univer- sity of Michigan students, all my work has man- aged to pile up, and the stress has too. It's sad to say, but I experienced, shortness of ZOE breath as I walked to the STAHL Law Library this morning. I kept repeating, "Woe is me!" in my head as I braced myself for the upcoming week. And this isn't my attempt at some Woody Allen schtick - some kind of blind neu- roticism. It's the truth, pure and simple. So before I sat down to write this, I attempted to snap out of this dis- gustingly self-indulgent state and took 25 minutes out of my work- filled Sunday to listen to David Fos- ter Wallace's commencement speech at Kenyon College from May 2005. Unlike many other commencement speeches, Wallace managed to go beyond the usual graduation cli- ches. Instead, he reminded the audi- ence how hard and important it is to "(get) free of (our) natural, hard- wired default setting, which is to be deeply and literally self-centered" so that we have the mental space to actually "care about other people." Crazy thought, eh? And you know what - to my high-school self, it sure was. I remember reading Wal- lace's speech at my dad's suggestion. But as a stressed student with limit- ed perspective (things don't seem to change), I don't think I really picked up on the lessons my dad (or Wal- lace) was tryingto teach me. I read it again for the second time this past fall, but I've been putting off writing or even thinking about it. I've been afraid that my musings would never be appropriately intel- ligent or thoughtful, but this fear has only delayed the need to fully process it. His speech has defined my year. After reading Wallace's words this fall, I listened to his delivery on YouTube. Afterward, I began read- ing up on Wallace - articles about his personal life, work and his even- tual suicide. However, my involve- ment went beyond basic Internet research; Wallace now seems to creep up everywhere (and not just in some blog's suggestion to be the ghost of Wallace for Halloween). When I attended a meditation ses- sion, Wallace's words were re-iter- ated - the importance of not letting experiences out of your control upset you. As I washed dishes with my roommate with whom I shared the speech, we discussed the impor- tance of context in understanding individuals. Having used his own instructions about understanding and appreciation in our perception of him, we applauded ourselves on being "so DFW!" (Having read, lis- tened to and experienced the speech as many times as I now have, I feel that we're on an initials-basis.) But, why now? Why did his advice that "(deciding) how you're gonna try to see it ... so that it will actually be within your power to experience a crowded, hot, slowtype situation as not only meaningful, but sacred ... " resonate now? I've read his speech before, but only now did I internal- ize it. Partly, it was the realization that Wallace makes brilliant ideas accessible. He was not "presenting himself as the wise, older fish." He personalized these struggles. A little humor and self-mockery can go a long way. Butmainly,myinternalizingofhis speech was a testament to the power of humor. I laughed at his delivery of "What the hell is water?" and at the punch line to the story about the atheist and the believer. Laughing made his speech more palatable. By not taking himself too seriously, his messages did not become what he calls "banal platitudes." Wallace's speech, packed with intellectual ideas, clever observations and valu- able lessons, can feel dense at times. However, these moments - these pauses - provide the time and space needed to fully digest his (at times preachy, but enlightening) advice. His delivery also took the bit- terness out of the descriptions of the "soul-killing muzak" in the supermarket or the cash register's "have a nice day" as the "absolute voice of death" and injected them with humor. On the page, his cri- tiques can appear angry, limiting the potential contagion of these compelling ideas. However, once infused with humor, these con- cepts, no longer dampened by anger,ringthat much more "capital- T True." Only to prove and remind me that a little laughter, a little self-mockery and little less self- importance can go along, long way. - Zoe Stahl can be reached at zoestahl@umich.edu. I I I I A