4A - Monday, March 24, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 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. Investing in the environment The University should consider proposal to divest from fossil fuels Jn a presentation to the University's Board of Regents Thursday, the Law Students for Responsible Divestment from FossilFuelsurged the regents to reduce the amount of the University's endowment that's invested in the fossil fuel industry. Specifically, LSRD is calling for a divestment from "coal and oil equity and debt instruments," which it estimates represent one percent of the University's total endowment. The organization claims that the University's investments in the fossil fuel industry are antithetical to its stated core value of sustainability. Since fossil fuels are one of the primary causes climate change, the industry shouldn't be supported by the University's investments. LSRD has campaigned for divestment from fossil fuels in the past without action from the University. Since the group has proposed a new, viable plan for divestment, the University should seriously consider the plan in order to bring its endowment investments more in line with its core values. Gr8 expectations ollege students preen themselves across America, fearing their eventual undoing by way of reality. This is the time when they are most alive, most star- speckled and comfortable in their skin suits. Skipping class SOPHIA to smoke blunts USOW and kiss the soft spots behind each other's ears, they are relaxed in their age range, their movie theater discounts. Its easy to be nervous and alive when there's still time for them to figure things out. It's easy for them to sleep in late when they consider the 9-to-5 sunrise-sunsets on their horizon. The last guy I dated was two years older and drove away from my house on football Saturdays with nostalgic contempt. He broke up with me because the trek from Ann Arbor to outside Detroit was too costly and made it hard for us to casually wake up side by side and whisper breakfast plans. He broke up with me because he had already spent wasted mornings under cotton comforters complaining about fast-approaching paper deadlines and the cons ofsweet sugar alcohol. He broke up with me because he had student loans to pay and a beautiful boxer-husky mix named Rockafeller to feed. I understood all this and even when I went through the five stages of grief (denial, anger, bargaining, crying in my friend's Elantra and binge- watching My Strange Addiction on TLC) I did so knowingthat if I really cared about him I would throw him up in the air like a wee little birdie and let him spread his wings. You've all seen the embroidered wall plaque: if you love somebody, set them free. Hopefully, then they will eventually forget all the time and inexplicably sw dates and remembe to be rememberec at The Kroll Show,f intact, perpetually Seasons-quality he "Right now, I ne What a wonderful, say. As unromantic sometimes we do n sometimes it's agoo needs higher than t or friends because' losing opportunity sense of self. Whati Rose: listen, right no ish.IsitcoolifItryt a yard or so to the rS er large piece of wo the one you've got? perature is not reall would have been a whole different movie! Maybe a little less suc- cessful at the box office, but who's to say? Give Jack a chance, for fucks sake. He could have been a very successful artist. Us college stu- dents are selfish in ways every day. Th Ann Arbor student Is this a crosswalk? that a moving vehic hits me I'll buy a k insurance money! and so am I! We s, fast maturity for la hoping that the in for ourselves and. us like a lightningb moment that the kicks in or the "ch speak, between Me ty-something year not locate Delawar s you were gassy on the East Coast ... somewhere...). veaty after dinner My ex would often say before r you as you wish he left my house for work: I waited d: snort-laughing too long to grow up and now I'm eyeliner perfectly paying the consequences. As I edge giving them Four towards the precipice of gradua- ad scratches. tion I think about his words a lot. eed to be selfish." They're indicative of the classic horrible thing to college-educated millennial con- c as it may seem, tradiction that is engrained within seed to be selfish, so many of us: the desire to uphold d idea to place our the child-like Disney idealism on hose of our lovers which we were raised while we otherwise we risk gain all the hard learned lessons and even our own that come with becoming an adult. if Jack had said to We have watched Peanuts without w Ineed to be self- facing the possibility we might one to likeswim maybe day become the parents, faceless ght andfind anoth- legs who communicate in trom- sod to rest on, like bone tones. We're still looking from This water tem- the perspective of Charlie Brown, y doing it for me. It frightened faces staring up at men- acing 1950s-era calves. Sometimes we do And maybe, in some sense, need to be selfish, we will always be the kid in sometimes it's a good the yellow idea to place our needs shirt. I wish my ex the best higher than others. of luck work- ing towards his grow-up goal, sports broad- a million different casting (which he will undoubtedly ink about the way tackle with the unwavering pas- s cross the street. sion and excitement of a sugar-high 'No? Now it is! Is Little Leaguer meeting Derek Jeter le? Yes? Well, if it for the first time). I wish all of us egerator with the the courage and self-awareness to Life is beautiful be selfish and pay the consequences ave up our stead- whenever they come, so that we may ter down the line, move towards our grown-up goals stinct to provide with whatever dignity our Face- others will strike book history allows. In the interim, bolt from Zeus the lets enjoy our last month or so as prenatal cellulite students. Let's willfully deny what's tord is cut," so to about to come. Let's have fun. According to the Divest and Invest Campaign, about $1.04 billion of the $9.16 billion University endowment was categorized as fossil fuel investments in June 2012. LSRD's proposal indicatesthat divesting only from coal and oil equities wouldn't have any noticeable effect on the endowment's volatility. The plan provides a gradual and reasonable way for the University to reduce its financial support of an environmentally detrimental industry. The University's mission statement states that the school is dedicated to sustainability. In accordance with this statement, University President Mary Sue Coleman began an initiative in September 2011 for the investment of $14 million in environmental sustainability projects, which has materialized in the form of new hybrid cars, buses and solar panel fields. The Program in the Environment major, sustainability minor and the Planet Blue campaign further not just the University's commitment to sustainable practices, but emphasizes the importance of environmental responsibility to students as well. Continued investment in fossil fuels is in direct conflict with this mission statement as well as the academic and social work that many University students are committed to. In the past, the University has divested from industries deemed socially irresponsible and in conflict with its core values. The University divested from the tobacco industry in 2000 and South African firms during the country's apartheid era. The divestment from tobacco represented less than 0.8 percent of the endowment at the time, according to LSRD, making the current proposed divestment similar in scope. Just as apartheid and tobacco meet the qualifications for divestment consideration, today's current issue of climate change also warrants appropriate action by the regents. Climate change is one of the most pressing issues of our generation. The University has been at the forefront of promoting environmental responsibility in many respects, but its endowment investments have not followed this trend. It's time for the regents to seriously consider the proposal put forth by LSRD and divest from fossil fuels. eemaw and twen- old tot who can- e on the map (it's - Sophia Usow can be reached at sophiaus@umich.edu. EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS Barry Belmont, 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 EMILY CAMRAS Divestment is not the solution ALEXANDER LANE|I Pursuing attainable goals Last Tuesday representatives of Central Student Government once again decided to wade into the murky waters of the Israeli- Palestinian conflict. The issue this time? A resolution calling for University divestment from companies whose business activities in Israeli-occupied territories are allegedly violating Palestinian human rights. Much chaos and resentment ensued - acrimonythat was entirely avoidable, entirely unnecessary and sadly, entirely predictable. Why so? Let's step back, breathe a bit and return to reality. Most glaringly - and this may come as a surprise to some representatives' egos, so my apologies ahead of time for any bruising inflicted - I am quite sure that CSG does not have jurisdiction over Jerusalem or any other part of the Middle East. I know for a fact they don't have jurisdiction over my apartment three blocks off campus, because I still own a SodaStream, despite Oxfam and Scarlett Johannson. #UMDivest will not solve what 65 years of U.N. Security Council resolutions have failed to do. It will not move the needle more than a fraction towards peace. It certainly will not represent the undivided viewpoint of the student body that this is the right thing to do - which is quite unlike the two other instances where the University did divest: in South Africa toward the end of apartheid and from the tobacco industry in the early 2000s. Which leaves me to question what, really, is the point? I very much admire the aim of Stu- dents Allied for Freedom and Equality, the campaign's main sponsor, but its means - as demonstrated in the incendiary and classless insults I've seen its members lob at CSG reps on Facebook, as well as the none-too-subtle way they staged evictions #UMMockEviction last December - leave me with little hope that they're the sort of leaders who will grow up to bring peace to Palestine. All heat, no light. Still,tobe fair, it'sthe job ofgroups like SAFE to advocate their interests and maybe stir up some controversy. After all, it brings attention to their issue. So I redirect this writing, and my fire, to CSG, whose job is expressly not to become so political. I fear the Margaret Mead-ification of campuses like Ann Arbor's - Save the Earth! Heal the planet! - has burrowed too far into students' heads. Changing the world is not an entry-level task. It takes time, work and resources far beyond what anyone will have in college. That's not to say it's not possible, but in our impatient modern lives, we seem to want to 0 , have that influence immediately and just skip all the incremental steps along the way. You know, the unsexy parts. IfCSG had hadthe fortitudeto resistopening Pandora's box, they'd have realized how many of those unsexy parts are nevertheless meaningful campus improvements that they mightstill make this year. Here's a list I thought of in thirty seconds: Make MWireless available on the busses; install more bike racks (or longboarding slots!); ensure that every student has access to fresh, healthy food on campus; increase student fanship at sports that aren't basketball, football or hockey; catch up to the rest of the Big Ten schools by putting a student on the Board of Regents. Not socially conscious enough for you? Then how about continuing to address the shameful lack of minority representation at the University, particularly among Black males. All of these things are possible by the direct action of CSG. Put another way, one thing I really admire about the outgoing administration is how understated and focused its goals have been. Creating the Night Owl bus service didn't change the world and neither did makingMujo's a 24-hour cafe, but they weren't designed to. What they did do is improve life on campus - which is worth something. CSG President Michael Proppe set reasonable, accomplishable goals and he followed through. The Student Assembly might learn a thing from that. Due to the fact that on Tuesday all they wanted to do was save the world, they spent hours debating international relations, when instead they might have helped the student body. Every minute they spent on the Middle East was a minute not spent on addressing problems they could actually solve. They apparently forgot that their election to CSG did not mean their election to the Knesset, or the PNA, or the United Nations - or the Model United Nations, for that matter. What it did mean was their responsibility to serve the students of the University. It meant focusing on ways to improve campus. It meant practicing the art of the possible and having the wisdom to know the difference. That wisdom seems sorely lacking these days. There are monumental things CSG might accomplish, if only they knew where tolook. So to all students, as you go to vote this week for a new round of leaders, ask of those to whom you are entrusting this campus: Where is your focus - Ann Arbor or somewhere else? Alexander Lane is a 2013 University alum. The argument against the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement is simple. BDS is based on two flawed principles: it calls for divestment from companies associated with Israel on the basis of human rights violations, and portrays Palestinians as an oppressed minority under Israel. Facts and history have proven these claims false, yet BDS continues to gain support by presenting its mission under inaccurate premises. First, to divest from Israel on the basis of human rights is unprecedented. Israel's human rights record is incomparable to that of other Middle Eastern countries. In Syria, the Assad regime has slaughtered 140,000 people; in Saudi Arabia, oppression of women is rampant; governments in Egypt and Iran have executed hundreds of civilians. In contrast, Israel maintains a standard of human rights comparable to Western democracies, even amid an existential threat that few other countries face. Moreover, it is a misrepresentation to portray Palestinians as marginalized victims. In 1937, 1947, 1967, 1979, 2000 and 2008 - on six occasions - Palestinians rejected offers for a Palestinian state alongside Israel. The humiliation of 1948 and 1967 has stayed with Palestinian leadership, and tensions only rise when new peace offers are lessdesirablethanthepreviousones. As a result, Palestinian leadership often focuses on resistance: in Gaza, Hamas sponsors terrorism against Israel, while West Bank leaders condemn Israeli policies and offers. A more effective leadership would turn its attention to its own citizens and improvetheirinfrastructure,economy and living conditions. However, instead of pressuring its leadership to take initiative, BDS continues to claim victim status and blame Israel, and neither of these approaches improves Palestinians' situation. So how could a flawed movement attract such a large showing at the recent Central Student Government meeting? Through misrepresentation. Under the banner of "human and minority rights" and "freedom," the BDS movement attracts people in two categories. In the first are students who participate because they believe the cause is humanitarian. But how will BDS improve the lives of Palestinians? Will it help them build schools and hospitals, bring them food and water or improve their living conditions? Will it hold their government accountable for its failings and propel their people toward democracy? It won't. Moreover, BDS would be detrimental to Palestiniansw who benefit from certain relations with Israel. For example, Israel has provided medical technology and rehabilitation to civilians, food shipments to Gaza and allows thousands of West Bank Palestinians to work in Israel. Movements that shout "Divest!" are not solving the problems that the Palestinian government has prolonged, and even Israel has reached out to Palestinians in more effective ways. The second, larger group of BDS supporters are Palestinians whose families and relatives have suffered in the conflict. Pain and sadness accompany their stories, and BDS is one of their only ways to resist the complex reality of 1948 and 1967 which resulted in lost homes and land. However, divestment from Israel will not provide a right of return for their families, or address past wrongs. This matter was brought before CSG, not the United Nations. Palestinian students' raw, emotional stories cannot be resolved by divestment from a few companies. They are decades-old problems with which the international community has grappled for years, and a vote for the BDS resolution will not bring us closer to solving them. When emotion and frustration are not used for positive change, they drive hatred and delegitimization. Students latch onto this form of resistance to drive a barrier between college campuses and Israel. BDS may appear to be for divestment from a few companies, but similar efforts nationwide have led to boycotts which hinder academic freedom and valuable partnerships in science, technology and other fields. BDS reinforces a flawed portrait of Israel, overwriting Israel's commitment to democracy and human rights with false accusations. BDS receives attention by misrepresentation: if its supporters were concerned with human rights, they would discuss divestment from Syria or Saudi Arabia, not Israel. If they wanted lasting improvement for Palestinians, they could focus on improving conditions in the territories. Obada Shtaya, a Palestinian speaker from the grassroots peace movement OneVoice, explained his hope that young, empowered Palestinians will petition their own government for democracy. His comments showed young Palestinians have power to stand up for positive change. Similarly, I would encourage SAFE to put its own people first by improving Palestinian lives and creating the potential for a lasting solution. Until then, CSG cannot let itself be moved by mob displays of emotion and false accusations. With its recent decision to table the BDS resolution indefinitely, CSG showed that BDS is not an issue for the Michigan student body to decide. I want to thank its members for remaining impartial, and encourage them to continue to be firm in the face of large crowds and emotional rhetoric. My hope is that the discussion on the conflict can move forward in a productive way - something that can only happen when hatred and misrepresentation, fostered by BDS, are abandoned. Emily Camras is an LSA freshman. FOLLOW THE DAILY ON TWITTER Keep up with columnists, read Daily editorials, view cartoons and join in the debate. Check out @michigandaily to get updates on Daily content throughout the day. 4 0A