4 - Tuesday, March 25, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 4 - Tuesday, March 25, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom f iiigan Batil Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan since 1890. 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 tothedaily@michigandaily.com MEGAN MCDONALD PETER SHAHIN and DANIEL WANG KATIE BURKE 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. A presumptuous policy The state legislature should focus on employment rather than drug testing Last Thursday, the Republican-controlled state Senate passed House Bill 4118, which allows for suspicion-based drug testing of welfare recipients as a pilot program in three counties. The Department of Human Services is set to be in charge of the drug testing and will be endowed with $500,000 to cover testing expenses. Welfare recipients are slated to lose their benefits if they test positive or refuse to test. Gov. Rick Snyder should reject the bill because welfare-based drug testing is ineffective and discriminates against lower socioeconomic classes. Snyder should focus on helping welfare recipients find reliable employment instead. Programming education for our reality O recent day t the library, Iasked my friends to humor me with a little bit of word association about different college majors. This proved to be an enlightening exercise in a number of ways, but among all r the stereotypes and jokes, JULIA misperceptions ZARINA about one distinct major stuck out: computer programming. The responses I received ranged from hilarious to inaccurate, but the message was clear. To most people, computer science is still inaccessible, intimidating and the realm of white, possibly un-showered male hackers who haven't seen the sun or interacted with another human in a non-Dungeons and Dragons scenario in months. In the United States and many other countries around the world, there is a distinct mismatch between our perceptions and attitudes towards computer programming and our society's need for it. The reality is that nearly all of us interact with and rely on computers, phones and other machines that require software on a daily basis, but very few of us con- sider ourselves to be "programmer material" at even the most basic level. We tweet, make Excel charts and shop online without even a fun- damental understanding of how the pictures on our screens came to be or how the words we type are used as inputs in any form we fill out, pass- word we type or application we use Beyond our personal lives, computer programming is an even more relevant and important field. Projections show that 1.4 million programming jobs will be necessary in the upcoming decade, but current estimates predict that there will only be 400,000 graduates in the field over that time. These numbers reflect some discouraging trends in both primary and secondary education in the United States. Despite our shift toward an information-based economy, computer science is the only subject that has declined in popularity in U.S. schools in the last decade. In 2012 only 1.4 percent of high school AP students took the computer science exam, compared with nearly 40 percent of the same group that took exams in English. It's time for us to change that. We don't live in an analog world schools, and increasing participation anymore. From social interactions, by women and underrepresented to literature, to our economy, students of color." Today, a number of a large portion of our lives are free online courses exist to promote on the computer or online. Our the idea that anybody, from children reality is virtual but our education to senior citizens of any gender and systems have not adapted to help background, can and should code. us understand it. In high school, While these online programs pro- a favorite teacher of mine once vide an accessible and innovative eloquently explained his take on why platform to learn programming for we all study math when we won't all anyone who is interested, they are become mathematicians, and history not enough. Research shows that when very few of us will ever go on to the popularity of free online classes become experts in Cold War policy. such as those at Code.org and other "Language, literature and history massive open online classes offered teach you that no problem is truly through colleges and universities, unique. People have been fighting is rising, but fails to show that these and compromising and breaking courses are as effective as traditional each other's hearts since the dawn of education. Nearly 90 percent of all civilization. We learn from the past people enrolled in MOOCs fail to to help guide our future. In the same complete them and students report way, we study math and physics to feeling unmotivated, confused or help us form expectations about the uninterested at much higher rates outcomes of everyday events. Every than students learning in traditional subject you study in school provides classroom settings. you with a new way to understand Around the world, other countries the reality of the world around you." are bringing their education systems Coding is no exception. Even the up to speed. This September, new mostbasic C++ class teaches students curriculum requirements across concepts more profound than just England will take affect that the syntax needed to execute a line will make coding and computing of code. The logic required to write classes mandatory in all primary a program is - and secondary unique, but its public schools. applications Our reality is virtual in the United are numerous: States however, students learn but our education only nine states how to solve currentlyrequire problems by systems have not computer breaking them adapted to help us science classes down to their as a graduation core components understand it. prerequisite, and and analyzing many schools which functions do not offer are required to make each of them computer programming classes of work. These problem-solving skills any kind. are crucial to a basic understanding In both education and mainstream of many of the processes that make society, a culture that accepts and our digital world work, just as a basic promotes computer programming understanding of physics concepts is necessary to adapt to and remain is crucial to understanding how and competitive in our changing world. why everyday events in our physical If we are to truly embrace such a world occur. culture, we need more coding teach- In the past few years, a number ers and programs in schools at every of initiatives have been successful level of the education system. From in helping to introduce coding to kindergarten to college, we need to popular culture. In a viral video provide the resources necessary to that circulated the web last spring, change the perception that computer a somewhat unlikely alliance of programming is inaccessible. We celebrities - among them, Bill Gates, all know that you don't need to be a Mark Zuckerberg, will.i.am and Chris Nobel prize nomineeto win a science Bosh discussed their experiences fair, nordoyou need tobe apublished with computer programming and author to enjoy writing. It's time to encouraged students of all ages to get throw out the computer program- involved in the field. The short film ming stereotypes as well. was an advertisement for Code.org, a So get out there. Get coding. non-profit organization "dedicated to expanding participation in computer - Julia Zarina can be reached science by making itavailable in more at jumilton@umich.edu. House Bill 4118 was passed by the Michigan House in May 2013 but will return for the approval of Senate amendments. The bill is different from its legal precedents due to a clause that only allows drug testing with reasonable suspicion. Supporters of the bill argue that the program is addressed to protect the children of welfare recipients whose parents potentially spend benefits - $394 per month - on illegal drugs. If a recipient tests positive, they will be referred to a substance abuse agency for intervention and ordered to pay for their drug tests. Failure of a second drug test may result in the suspension of benefits. Medical marijuana and prescription drugs will not be considered a violation of the law. There are about 31,400 people who will be affected by the bill. People who continually test positive and are taken off welfare benefits are expected to save the state $4,700 per year. However, a similar program in Florida turned out to be ineffective. The implementation of the program ended up being more expensive than cost-saving with only 2.6 percent of the people testing positive. Similarly, Arizona tested 87,000 people between 2009 and 2012 with only one person testing positive. Programs such as these have proven costly and difficult to execute. In 1999 and 2003, similar Michigan bills were deemed unconstitutional by a federal judge and were struck down as unreasonable forms of search. Legal precedent shows that these laws aren't in accordance with individual rights. While it's admirable that legislators are ostensibly looking for ways to protect children, a discriminatory procedure that's been proven ineffective numerous times isn't a logical solution. The legislature should look for a better way to address the issue. It's especially concerning that the drafting of the law allows room for discrimination due to the level of ambiguity. There aren't sufficient regulations to prevent racist or other biased suspicions. In addition, under the law, if welfare recipients who test positive for the drug test have children, there will be a determined payee through whom the children will continue to receive Family Independence Program benefits. Such an implementation will potentially put a lot of pressure on children, as they will become the only ones in the household to receive benefits. This may further deteriorate familial relations and only worsen the problem. EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS Barry Belmont, Edvinas Berzanskis, Nivedita Karki, Jacob Karafa, Jordyn Kay, Aarica Marsh, Megan McDonald, Victoria Noble, Michael Schramm, Matthew Seligman, Paul Sherman, Allison Raeck, Linh Vu, Daniel Wang, Derek Wolfe GABI KIRK, JEWISH VOICE FOR PEACE I A reasonable demand ELENA POTEKI Taking a look at the bigger picture To the Assembly of the University of Michigan Central Student Government: We write to endorse the divestment resolution proposed by Students Allied for Freedom and Equality, and supported at last week's meeting by 300 students and 36 student organizations, including groups representing a broad spectrum of students of color, human rights and social interests. The resolution calls on the University to divest from four named U.S. corporations and all others that directly "profit from and facilitate the Israeli occupation and siege of Palestinian land in violation of international law and human rights." It is explicitly offered that "it is the opinion of the authors that ethical divestment fits with UM's deeply held principles of justice and equality for all people." In calling for divestment from companies that profit from and enable the commission of egregious human rights violations, this resolution follows the model of nonviolent economic resistance against the Jim Crow laws of the American South and South African apartheid. The resolution honors the Palestinians' own call for global nonviolent economic resistance. The Israeli occupation destroys Palestinian homes; depletes aquifers essential to family farming in a fragile ecosystem; seizes sleeping children from their beds in the middle of the night for throwing stones at armor-plated bulldozers that rip their centuries-old olive trees from their family orchards before their eyes; and has forced women in labor to give birth on the ground at checkpoints, even in winter, causing the deaths of women and infants, in arbitrary exercises of total power and control over a captive population. Victims of South African apartheid, including former Archbishop Desmond Tutu, after seeing it with their own eyes, have called the Israeli occupation "apartheid." Growing numbers of Jews reject such brutality and say instead: "Not in our names!" We believe that the only path to peace and security for Israeli Jews and Palestinians alike follows justice, fairness and equality. Israel, as all other nations, must adhere to universally accepted standards of human behavior and international law, and we join with others in applying nonviolent economic pressure to persuade Israel to do so. It is not anti-Semitic for Palestinians to demand equal rights, just as it was not anti-white for African-Americans and South Africans to demand equal rights, and just as it is not bigotry against Chinese people to demand a change in official policy and practices toward Tibetans. The resolution that should be before the Assembly seeks equality and fairness and is neither racist nor discriminatory; it is a demand for an end to oppression. The target is not the "Jewish people," but official misconduct by the State of Israel. In all struggles for equality, those holding advantaged positions will be reluctant to relinquishthe personalbenefits ofinequality, oppression, exploitation and slavery. When Black South Africa turned to nonviolent boycott and divestment campaigns to seek equality, and when civil rights activists in the United States tried nonviolently to enforce the civil rights of Black Americans in the 1960s and '70s, it was not their nonviolent pressures that caused turmoil. They were responding to oppression in ways now universally recognized as appropriate. The turmoil' was caused by the underlying injustices and the repressive reactions to peaceful efforts to end them. Fears of heated debate on campus in response to peaceful efforts to vindicate human rights provide no justification for suppressing or abandoning the struggle for justice. The divestment resolution is strongly protected free speech. The rights to petition for and engage in boycotts and divestment in the name of human rights and the rule of law are afforded the highest degree of legal protection under theFirst Amendment ofthe Constitution, and such advocacy and related action do not lose their protected character simply because they may embarrass or vex others. Please stand proudly in solidarity with the courageous proponents of this resolution, and make us proud of the student government of this great University. It is the right and just decision. Gabi Kirk is the campus liaison for the Jewish Voice for Peace National. I'm tired. Tired of spewing facts that fall into empty places, hearing statistics from the "other side" that can be easily contested with facts of my own. It is not a game, this back and forth, and it needs to end. I have spenttoday, the day after the Boycott, Divestment and Sanction bill went before Central Student Government, wondering what this movement is all about. What are those in the pro-Palestinian community at the University trying to accomplish? The recent pro-Palestinian activities on campus, the mock eviction as well as the divestment campaign, have created an environment that dehumanizes the Israeli narrative and allows for no middle ground. I am pro-Israel, meaning I believe Israel as a country has a right to exist. But still I have many deeply felt problems with its government and its laws. These movements have made it hard for me to come forward and admit that, without fearing I will look like I am demonizing the country I love. Why is that? Because these movements, very intentionally, create no space for those on both sides to come together in conversation, ask questions and try to understand the issues more deeply. Some people in the pro- Palestine community on campus have said they will not talk to us, those in the pro-Israel community, because we are oppressors. I want justice and peace for Palestinians and Israelis. I don't believe that those are values an oppressor possesses. I cannot take away the title that I am given by others, that is in their power alone. ButI do ask that those in the pro-Palestinian community who say or believe these things, to think about what you are making me into when you deny me the right to tell my story and when I ask to hear yours. I am sad that it has come to this. I do not want to have to play this game, to share my story of hurt in such an impersonal way, in order to try and balance the sides. Comparing battle wounds for the eternity of our lives, showing our pain and the blood of our brothers and sisters to one another doesn't do any justice to them, this dire situation or us. But the conversation on campus has been so terribly biased and one-sided that I feel I have no place to share a story, the narrative of a close friend who was on the Israeli side. This is a small attempt at showing that there are two sides, both of which deserve to be listened to and heard. Growing up my family had very little connection to Israel. We were good friends with only one family that lived in the land. In 2001 the husband and father of that family was shot and murdered by a Palestinian sniper while driving his car down the highway. Let me add, it was a highway within what is agreed upon as Israel, not theWest Bank or Gaza Strip. He kissed his wife that morning, maybe he even forgot, and just like that he was gone. This man was pro-peace, pro-two- state solution and was against the settlements in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. It may seem like a sad coincidence that the only family we knew in Israel was affected by this war, but unfortunately that is not the case for either side. I'm not trying to get even. The stories we tell, the experiences we've all had, are just snippets of the immense pain that this warfare has brought to both sides. Justice is not about getting even. If we are killing and continuing this war in the hope that there will be a time when both sides feel that they have found justice through bloodshed, that time will never come. But if this is about peace then let us hear those stories, to humanize one another, feel pain together and begin to understand. Those shared experiences will help us make change together. If both sides are really searching for peace, then there is no need for two sides, no need for those who are "pro" and "anti" to make their claim before CSG. Peace is something that can bring us all together - it is not polarizing. For many, joining the BDS movement or mock eviction campaign was done not because of a personal connection to the land or its people but through a dedication to social justice and human rights. But, social justice can only come about through hearing both sides and by believing in and valuing peace. The recent pro-Palestinian movements on campus do not share those same values. The BDS campaign is not trying to see the humanity in all other human beings but rather to erase the humanity of one very specific group of people, those on the pro-Israel side. If there were a pro-peace movement on campus that brought together people from both sides to join in conversation, to really talk, to honestly admit wrongs as well as hopes for the future, then that is a movement I would support. I would like to believe, I need to believe, that I, along with Zionists and Palestinians alike, do not want to walk the land of Israel, or Palestine, and wonder how many flowers growing here are thriving because the blood of both peoples have nourished its roots. I don't want to see trees and ask them what horrors they have witnessed, look up at the sun and see it shining down on a place that is hopeless and filled with hate. If we want peace, truly want peace, let us show it in our actions by coming together, not apart, making space for one another, understanding that it takes sacrificing a bit of ourselves and our land to allow both peoples to live in their space. For me, it is about loving Israel and believing I can accept anyone that loves that same land too. It won't be easy for either side, but it is the only hope I have. This is why I will never support a movement that pretends to be about human rights when really all it does is continue to show that it is okay to hate rather than to try to come together and understand. Elena Potek is an SA sophomore. a I I I &