4A - Wedesday, February 5, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.corn Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan since 1890. 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 tothedaily@maichigandaily.con 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. Readdressing life sentences The state legislature should approve resentencing hearings for juveniles n June 25, 2012, the U.S. Supreme Court banned life sentencing without parole for juvenile offenders, considering it a form of cruel and unusual punishment. The highest national court did not specify whether this decision would be limited to future convicts, those still on direct appeal, or whether it would apply retroactively to juveniles already behind bars, leaving that decision up to state courts and lawmakers. Tuesday, the Michigan House of Representatives approved Senate Bill 319, updating Michigan law to comply with the Supreme Court ruling only in future cases and those on direct appeal. However, cases regarding past juvenile offenders were addressed by merely adding a "trigger" that would allow rehearings for juvenile lifers if the Michigan Supreme Court or U.S. Supreme Court were to rule again in favor of retroactivity. While the proposed bill complies with the U.S. Supreme Court ruling for future cases, the state legislature should approve resentencing hearings for all Michigan juveniles facing life without parole. Loneliness in the winter Last November, a U.S. District Court judge ruled that the state had to immediately comply with Miller v. Alabama and make all juvenile lifers eligible for parole if they had served at least 10 years in prison. The judge's ruling was stayed when Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette appealed the decision, arguing that the parole hearings weren't warranted under existing U.S. Supreme Court precedent. Schuette currently awaits a hearing before the U.S. Court of Appeals. Similarly, the Michigan Supreme Court is scheduled to hear oral arguments in three juvenile lifer cases in early March, during which it is expected to review the ambiguity surrounding retroactivity. The "retroactivity trigger" was added to the bill in the Michigan House seemingly due to these pending court cases. With more than 350 juvenile lifers, Michigan is host to the second-highest population affected by the bill's future. By relying on court rulings to settle the matter of retroactivity, the state legislature is acting in cowardice. It costs the state $2 billion per year to run the Michigan Department of Corrections. The state government should act now, rather than wait, in order to relieve the burden on taxpayers and give juvenile convicts a second chance. In the 2012 Supreme Court ruling, one of the major arguments against juvenile sentencing for life without parole was that "children are constitutionally different from adults for sentencing purposes." Their "lack of maturity" and "underdeveloped sense of responsibility" leads to "recklessness, impul- sivity and heedless risk-taking." Sentencing juveniles to life ignores the fact that they lack the ability to fully comprehend the nature of crimes they might commit. Furthermore, in that critical age of development, there are several factors - such as socioeconomic and family background - that can contribute to the motives behind an individual's crime. Juveniles should be given a second chance and the opportunity to be rehabilitated. Put- ting these potentially constructive members of society behind bars will not help them on an individual level, and will punish crimes for which they may not be fully accountable. utside, the wind chill is minus 30 degrees. Gusts push loose flakes across the sidewalk like tumbleweeds. Frost crawls up the kitchen win- dow; a sponge on the sill stiffens with ice crys- tals. Somewhere inside our house of unwashed EMILY 20-sonethings, PITTINOS a boy sings - a little sharp, a bit too earnest. Listening closely, I notice his voice crack like a glass nicked by someone coming home drunk, alone and thirsty for more. In my bed, I isulate myself by lying naked under a pile of down and fleece, trapping my own human heat. My feet find each other and rub together for warmth. From other corners of my house, I hear the giddy sounds of couples in love. They nestle under an afghan crocheted by someone's grandmother; they snuggle on our stained loveseat, bickering about where to order the next pizza from. Their laughter pours into the hallway and under nay bedroom door like acold draft. Recently, a good friend sent me a Louis CK clip about sadness. CK says we have to let our sadness "hitus like a truck" so that we can bathe in the happiness that follows. I've grown to feel the same way about loneliness. When I first felt it settling in, I was resistant. My loneliness was a beast that I distracted with scraps of pleasure. I fed it casual lovers - people I'd invite into my life because they were decent, but also because they were there. I fed it films about passion gone awry; I fed it poetms about sisterhood and joy. But a persistent yearning - for romance - still buzz. of me, like a drunkenness about to take hold. A week into the polar v( siock of cold that would anyone's will -- I turned o ended my current fling an my paltas to my lonelitnes consume me. For lack of a better wallowed - for days, I pathetically arotund the lou length pajamas, preoccup my owtromantic doom. this is it, I thought.I1'llbe tae I'll die. But then I was loung my housemates in our livi enjoying a beer, shooting and I realized little had cl still laughed, I still wrote, I cared for by my friends an Admitting and accepting t loely wasn't as insufferable as it seemed. IfV It may even be good for the alo soul. Now I wear nev ltay loneliness like a second we skii. It's nearly comfortable; I nearly enjoy it. I don't feel empty, or even lost. instea up alone knowing I hav and I am later lulled to slee same knowledge. I do s connection. That buzz of often returns, but I wona merely my libido reiindin I am alive; I hope it never gi When I think about e loneliness has done for t I am oddly grateful. it's a personal growth,- if we w CONORANDERSON/Daily - an ache alone, we would never realize who ed inside we are and what we want. Plus, our that was desperate desire to touch and be touched by others, despite the end- ortex - a less distance between us, encourages challenge our creative expression. Art of all ff my TV, kinds often exists to prove that we d opened are not alone in our experiences. I s. I let it doubt artists would make anything if they weren'tburstingwithlthis desire word, I to conquer our human distance. shuffled And, perhaps most importantly, se im full- I think that if we don't experience ied with loneliness, we're less likely to recognize and appreciate love. We alone aad must grow familiar with our solitude it order to identify the kinds of ing with people and relationships that will, at tg room, last, satisfy our longing. the shit, From my bedroom window, I hanged. I watchcarsskidonstreetsglazedwith I was still ice. My neighbor, an elderly woman td family. who now lives on her own, applies hat I was lotion to her elbows in her kitchen. Through toy ceiling, I can hear We were never my housemate move around me, we would our attic singing. "What does it take er realize who to be lonesome? Nothingat all." are and what I raise the windowpane and we want. let the icy breeze touch my face. It burns my skita, d, I wake but invigorates my mind. It's nearly e myself, comfortable; I nearly enjoy it. Most ep by that importantly, I know it won't last. till crave Soon I will lock my window, peel yearning away my clothes and dive into der if it's my bed where I will be alone - or g me that not alone - but always ready to oes away. recognize love through this close verything and humble darkness. humanity, crucial to - Enily Pittinos can be reached ere never at pittinotusaich.edu. EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS Barry Belmont, Rima Fadlallah, Nivedita Karki, Jordyn Kay, Kellie Halushka, Aarica Marsh, Megan McDonald, Victoria Noble, Michael Schramm, Matthew Seligman, Paul Sherman, Allison Raeck, Daniel Wang, Derek Wolfe 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. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Retraction of "Treating mental illness like a wound" STUDENTS ALLIED FOR FREEDOM AND EQUALITY I Opening a discussion platform The Michigan Daily apologizes to the family and friends of Madison Holleran. Earlier this week, we published a Viewpoint article about Madison Holleran titled "Treating mental illness like a wound." The Viewpoint contained a variety of errors and inaccurate statements. In response, we are retracting the Viewpoint and modifying the way we evaluate our community- submitted pieces in the future. The Viewpoint had numerous mistakes regarding Holleran's case. Linh Vu, the Viewpoint's writer, relied on a PennLive article with multiple accounts other than those of the family of Madison Holleran. The Viewpoint misattributed a quotation, claiming that Madison Holleran's mother had stated, "It's not the kind of thing that you want shared in the halls of your high school, in fact, the fear was that it would be whisperedbehind herback ifeveryone knew." This quotation was not from Mrs. Holleran, but from another mother of an athlete who had also struggled with depression. Mrs. Holleran has not made any statements to the press since her daughter's passing. Additionally, the Viewpoint claimed that Madison Holleran had struggled with the dis- order since high school. This was also inac- curate. This information related to another student-athlete. The viewpoint claimed that "Her mother, recounting Madison's tumultu- ous journey, expressed that she once felt an odd notion that her daughter didn't fit the mold of a psychiatric patient." We could not find evidence of this statement. Viewpoints can be written by anyone in the campus community. Vu wrote the piece as a response to her own friend's death. She incorporated the news regarding the passing of Madison Holleran, a University of Pennsylvania athlete who committed suicide on Jan. 17, to urge the University of Michigan to refocus on mental health services. The Michigan Daily expresses its sincerest apologies for this mistake. We regret any pain or anger that we have caused to Madison Holleran's family and friends. Madison Holleran's passing deserved to be treated with the utmost respect and care, and The Michigan Daily failed to provide an accurate account of her life, struggle with depression and the due diligence that our community deserves. Going forward, our community Viewpoints will be subject to stronger scrutiny during the editing process. "If we have learned the msost important lessonpromulgated by Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. -- that jus- tice is always indivisible - it should be clear that a mnass maovement in solidarity with Palestinian fieedomi is long overdue" -Angela Y. Davis, Distinguished Professor Emaerita, University of California, Santa Cruz. In early December, the Academic Studies Association - the largest academic organization devoted to the interdisciplinary study of American culture and history - decided to heed Palestiniaa civil society's call for "Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions," and voted overwheltmitngly to boycott Israeli academic institUtioas. The decision made headline news, appearing on the front page of The New York Times, and sparked much heated debate and conversation on academic freedom, collective solidarity and the silencing of those who critique the Israeli military occupation. Numerous influential academics and public intellectuals have voiced support of the ASA's resolution including Angela Davis, Judith Butler and Carolyn Karcher, among many others. As conscientious students who strive for social justice, we, the Students Allied for Freedom and Equality, stand in full support of the ASA's resolution. We applaud the organization for its courageous stance as well as the remarkably transparent and democratic process it took to reach its decision. We are also pleased with the general prog- ress in the public's attitude toward Israeli settler colonialism and the BDS movement, recognizing that such a resolution would have been unthinkable in previous years. We advocate and affirm the Palestinian activists who have worked tireless- ly to amplify their global calls for BDS, even amid a colonial regime that works tirelessly to systeanati- cally silence their existence. The resolution is not without its opponents though, and some, including our own University President Mary Sue Coleman and Provost Martha Pollack, publicly opposed the resolution in a reactionarystatement. Itdisturbs us that our University administration does not stand against harsh settler colonial policies rooted in racism and segregation that limit people's basic right to education. It's just as startling to us that the administration canspeak onbehalf of the entire University community without consulting the numerous faculty, staff and students who do support the boycott. Our University is complicit in Israel's human rights violations not only through its investments in companies that facilitate Israeli militarism and Palestinian dis- placement -- what 4 UMMockEvic- tion sought to highlight - but also through its ties to several Israeli universities that haven't denounced said violations, including The Technion Israel Institute of Tech- nology, Ben Gurion University and Tel Aviv University. These univer- sities participate in hindering the academic freedoms of Palestinians and non-Jewish Israelis through preferential treatment of reserve soldiers and Jewish Israelis overall, through public acquiescence with the occupation and through close collaboration with Israeli military and intelligence agencies. This discussion on violation of academic freedom by Coleman is contradictory when Palestinians' very access to education is literally obstructed through daily interferences of checkpoints, arbitrary and systematic stop-and- search policies by Israeli soldiers, Israeli-only roads and the ever- expanding apartheid wall. Additionally, African asylum- seekers in Israel are subjected to living indefinitely in open-air detention centers -- in desert temperatures in the Negevknown to exceed 120 degrees - limiting their access to educational resources. An amendment to the Prevention of Infiltration Law of 1954 was madeto grant Israeli authorities the power to detain migrants and asylum seekers up to three years without trial or deportation, while "anyone helping migrants or providing them with shelter could face prison sentences of between five and 15 years." This "anti-infiltration law," as it is known, is not only immoral and in violation of international convention, but also goes against the stated nature of a democratic state. Targeted by anti-Black racist policies, they are kept in detention facilities isolated from civil life to prevent them from infiltrating Israel's nature of a Jewish-Israeli- only state. Palestinians and African asylum-- seekers are unable to produce and share knowledge without undue constraint, which Coleman claims is an academic freedom. They are excluded from fully exercising their right to academic freedom. How can our University boast "exciting and productive collaborations" with Israeli institutions when the Preven- tion of Infiltration Law and other racist policies are meant to exclude from civil society anyone who threatens the religious and/or racial composition of the Israeli state? Opening a platform for discus- sion on the boycott while some are held in detention facilities or are prevented access to schools because of their non-Jewish identity would normalize these people's mar- ginalization in society. Dialogue would center on privileged voices that have unrestricted access to academic resources, detracting from the narratives of those being stripped of their right to academic freedom. Thus, it's important to focus on those narratives by boycot- tinginstitutions and companies that contribute to their marginalization. Ihis article was written by mem bers of Students Allied for Freedom and Equality. Feminine Critique: Ever wonder how your privilege affects you? Emma Maniere analyzes podium howwe can challenge the system and change the status quo. Go to michigandaily.com/blogs/The Podium i