°4A - Wednesday, September 3, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 4A - Wednesday, September 3, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom IE 1Id1i4gan 0atp Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan since 1890. JESSE KLEIN3 PODIUM BLOG: STUDY A-BLOG Fearing the status quo 420 Maynard St. Ann Arboyr MI 48109 tothedaily@michigandaily.com MEGAN MCDONALD and DANIEL WANG KATIE BURKE EDITORIAL PAGE EDITORS MANAGING EDITOR PETER SHAHIN EDITOR IN CHIEF A Unsigned editorials refdect teofal pstsofthe Daily's editorial oau r. All other signed articles and illustrations represent solely the views of their authors. Cooking is chemistry Coming back to Ann Arbor last week was definitely a reality check. Not because of school starting or leaving home again, but rather, I had to start cooking for myself again. And I guess this is a column on my love for food. However, to be clear, by no means am I a foodie. I'm just a hungry college student who occa- sionally has some time on DEREK my hands. WOLFE During the summer at camp, every meal was provided to me at a consistently average quality. And for better or worse, there was variety - though the breakfast burritos did get repetitive. Some nights, the doctors and nurses at the clinic would even be generous enough to buy pizza and other food for the entire clinic staff. That was awesome and worry-free. I didn't have to lift a finger. But now, it's back to making trips to the grocery store, making my own dietary decisions and watching my bill climb as my food gets rung up at the front of the store. I 'happen to prefer self-checkout. Shopping for food is often a hassle, but admittedly one of my favorite things to do. At 'this point with a year of experience under my 'belt, I kind of have it down to a science. The frozen foods and cookie butter are bought at Trader Joe's. The fruits, vegetables and snacks at Kroger. The pack of Arnold Palmer cans and chicken at Costco. Though I do have this routine, I've found picking out my meals for the next week or two to be somewhat enlightening. I have complete control, 'total independence and an opportunity for creativity. This combination can be a rarity. It's just me, my basket and my fellow shoppers 'who always park themselves in the middle of each aisle while deciding which Campbell's soup to pick out. I know I'm not the only one who finds it exciting to find the two-for-one deals of just 'what you wanted and picking out the crispiest apples. The best feeling comes from thinking about how to combine different products to make a dish that has never been made before. It's probably going to be pasta or something like that. But still, for a brief moment each week, I feel like a visionary. Heck, call me Elon Musk. As a side note, Costco chicken and Trader Joe's frozen pastas go really well together. Of course, it's one thing to buy food and another to cook it. But, I'd like to believe my enthusiasm for picking out my food carries over to the kitchen. I've heard it said that the kitchen is one of the only places where sharp objects and open flames - or hot burners - are socially appropriate. There's a certain thrill from slicing, dicing, chopping, baking, grilling and frying. Not really microwaving, though. Anyway, I've found the process of going from raw materials to a finished meal extremely gratifying. For one, I'm no longer hungry after eating. And two, it gives me a sense of accomplishment, especially when I can feed my friends and they like what I make. On multiple occasions, I've even sent pictures of my creations to my family. And yes, they are proud. I think what it comes down to is that I enjoy working with my hands and exercising my mind. Cooking accomplishes both. It's therapeutic. Again, I'm no chef. I don't even spend hours at a time in the kitchen. Most of the time, I'm trying to put together a good, simple meal as quickly as possible so I can get back to work on school business. But taking this step back to write and reflect on food, I've realized how meaningful cooking can become and the control it gives me over my personal health. If I don't want something in my body or even be tempted to eat something by its presence like Hershey's chocolate, then I don't buy it. It's that simple. And if I want to try some crazy recipe off the Internet, I can. As someone who likes science and being challenged intellectually, cooking falls perfectly into that category. Cooking is chemistry. And since I passed Orgo lab, I must be capable of doing it. -Derek Wolfe can be reached at dewolfe@umich.edu. One of my first nights in Australia, my hall and I were having a couple drinks and talking about money. Many of them were hoping to find jobs in the area and asking for advice on where to send out their C~s. Some were complaining about working for $14.00 an hour (Yeah, I tried to hide my scoffing when I heard that too). They finally got around to talking about university fees. In Australia most university fees are paid through the government by a program called the Higher Education Contribution Scheme. During university, the education is free and the student only has to pay it back when and if they start making over $50,000 a year. University tuition in Australia is capped at $10,000 and most are lower. One of my hall-mates wasn't on HECS. Her parents were paying - full price - for her schooling. The other people in the group were shocked, confused as to what it would mean for a kid to have their parents pay upfront for school. I shrank back a little. $10,000 or less a year? I thought. What the hell are they going to think of me paying almost $50,000?! A week ago a new budget was proposed in the Australian government. Under the budget the government would no longer cap tuition prices for universities. The universities would now be allowed to set their own prices, higher fees based on how profitable a certain major is thought to be later on. HECS will now start collecting interest and if you are between 25 and 30 years old you will either have to "Learn or Earn." This is a welfare program that only gives benefits if the person is in school or has a job. The government will force a young person back to school if they are unable to find a job. As the United States government begs and pleads with universities to keep their costs low, the Australian government has gone the direct opposite route. In America, as much as we hate the extreme tuition prices, we have become desensitized to them. In Australia that isn't the case. Even these seemingly small changes caused massive uproar. University students held protests in the center of Melbourne that shut down the tram system. Joe Hockey, the budget writer, was on a political question & answer program where Australian Citizens didn't so much as ask questions but take shots at him and the new budget. It was the topic for every newspaper article and radio broadcast. Even though the changes and the prices were very different from the United States of America, some of the sentiments from the students I talked to were similar to those in the States. Most were just upset about the bleak future they seemed to be in for. Everything seemed to be getting worse, less jobs, less sup- port and an education system that is run like a business - something United States students gave up on trying to combat decades ago. The interest place on HECS seemed to cause the most distress after the uncapping of university prices. Student loans are a huge burden to American college stu- dents. They're also a huge drain on the American economy. It therefore makes sense that Australian stu- dents would fear the same burden being instituted for them. "Kids from the country of Australia already don't go to Uni because they are too afraid to create debt, it's just the culture they have grown up in," said Lucy Johnson, a first year at Australian Catholic University. Even though they might never have to pay any of it back if they don't get a well-paying job, the fear of debt just runs too deep in rural areas. According to the students I talked to the 10 percent interest on HECS will increase these fears and continue to dissuade rural kids from getting degrees. The astronomical prices of tuition in the States doesn't seem to dissuade many from going to college because we have been taught that a college degree is a requirement for the 21st century world. The New York Times wrote an article that stated a college degree is still valuable. It's worth the debt burden that students have and fear once they graduate. In my bubble of Silicon Valley, a university education was the only kind I wanted, regardless of the cost. While Australian students fear the changes coming to their education system, we fear the status quo: that nothing will change except the continued rise in tuition and debt. -Jesse Klein can be reached at jekle@umich.edu. EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS Jaekwan An, Berry Belmont, Edvinas Berzanskis, David Harris, Rachel John, Nivedita Karki, Jacob Karafa, Jordyn Kay, Aarica Marsh, Megan McDonald, Victoria Noble, Melissa Scholke, Michael Schramm, Matthew Seligman, Paul Sherman, Allison Raeck, Linh Vu, Meher Walia, Mary Kate Winn, Daniel Wang, Derek Wolfe NURLAN ORUJLU | The dead end for nationalsm I Watching the watchmen Without government - and without police - we, as human beings, would lose most of our rights. The comedian George Carlin once said, "Rights aren'trights if someone can take 'em away," instructing his audience to read up on the internment of Japanese Americans to "find out all about your precious fuckin' rights." JAMES Japanese Americans BRENNAN had their freedom taken away because the government stopped protecting them (and, in turn, acted directly against them). Carlin believed that human beings have no rights even with government, and in some ways he's correct. Rights and freedom are just ideas that human beings invented and try to enforce. We aren't always successful, but in a country like the United States, rights and liberties have strong protections and enforcement mechanisms, allowing us - for now - to have a good amount of freedom. Like all things, this freedom is temporary. But what keeps it alive is government. If you disagree, answer me this question: Where do rights come from? Many argue that their rights are inalienable, that they come from some "creator" or from nature, as the Declaration of Independence argues. These are both fine theories, but I can't recall the last time God arrested and tried a murderer, nor the last time "nature" stepped in to protect black children from mobs outside of segregated schools. Natural rights are an interesting concept, but rights aren't real unless they're protected. That's the whole point of government. Yes, the state can be used as a tool for tyranny as well, but human beings come together and create government so that our freedom will be guarded. Police are one of the mostbasic mechanisms governments use for the protection of rights.' They are called law enforcement officers for a reason - they enforce laws, and laws are typically aimed at protecting key rights like life, safety and property. I won't mince words: I hate American police in their current form. While the events in Ferguson, Mo. this summer should not surprise anyone who is vaguely familiar with criminal justice in America, they are nonetheless appalling. Police officers have become armed to the teeth and conditioned to a mindset of us vs. The Criminals/The Rioters/The Thugs. Instead of protecting rights and liberties, police are often taking them away from people. I don't trust police, and I probably never will, but with that being said: I would never want to live in a country without them. The only reason we have the freedom that we love is because the government (usually) protects us. The Constitution and all of its amendments are brilliant, amazing ideas, but even if they're written down and passed by legislatures, they mean nothing. We need a way to protect our rights, and police are one of those ways. The consequences of an overly militarized police force go far beyond one notable incident where a teenager is killed and protests are oppressed. Martin Luther KingJr. once spoke of injustice anywhere threatening justice everywhere; the threats to civil rights and civil liberties seen in Ferguson, Staten Island, Davis and other cities is a threat to every American. As police fail to do their job, our rights slip away. In Ferguson, police and the governor shut down freedom of movement and assembly, enforcing curfews and assaulting protesters with tear gas and rubber bullets. It didn't matter what the Constitution said at that point - its defenders were busy rewriting the First Amendment with their guns and tanks. These same events have happened before, they will definitely happen again, and they could feasibly happen anywhere. Rights are not permanent; they last only as long as we protect them. In 1963, Governor George Wallace of Alabama made his famous "stand in the schoolhouse door," physically standing in the way of Vivian Jones and James Hood as they attempted to register for classes at the segregated University of Alabama. President John F. Kennedy federalized the state's National Guard, and a military escort guided the students past the governor to officially desegregate the University. Six years earlier, President Dwight Eisenhower used armed troops to protect the freedom of nine Black students in Little Rock, Ark. who would have otherwise been attacked by a mob of segregationists. Sometimes, we need "jack booted government thugs" - not to take away our rights but to make them real. - James Brennancan be reached at jmbthree@umich.edu. The European Parliament elec- tions that took place about two weeks ago may have an historic importance as the far-right and anti-European Union politicians are gaining more power in the largest single assembly in the world. Even though the right- leaning parties performed worse than they did five years ago, there are more than hundred non-affili- ated lawmakers, most of whom are expected to join the alliance of the rightists and the nationalist. As the Eurozone crisis revealed the deficiencies of economic policies of the EU, considerable amount of political parties in Europe became willing to attack the EU system while bringingbackthe ideasofnationalism and patriotism. It sounds quite scary when someone simultaneously uses the concept of "nationalism" and "Europe" as we get enmeshed in unpleasant recollections of Adolf Hitler's Germany, Benito Mussolini's Italy, and Joseph Stalin's Soviet Union -where multiple nations were living under the strident Russian nationalist propaganda. A famous extremist in Greece, Nikolaos Michaloliakos, is the leader of the neo-Nazi Golden Dawn party and a firm supporter of anti- immigration laws. Michaloliakos is also known for his admiration of Adolf Hitler. It's that same Greece that fought a war against the Nazi Germany and lost 5-10 percent of its population. Meanwhile, its Jewish community was almost exterminated. Despite the staunch efforts of the Dawn party supporters in Greece they're still lacking a significant foothold in the country. The best portrayal of nationalism comes from acontroversialjournalist/ polemicist Christopher Hitchens: "I have often noticed that nationalism is at its strongest at the periphery. Hitler was Austrian, Bonaparte Corsican ... The most extreme Irish Republicans are in Belfast and Derry (and Boston and New York). Sun Yat Sen, father of Chinese nationalism, was from Hong Kong..." I see the quote is missing a very important piece. Joseph Stalin - a Georgian dictator - was the leader of an empire that was established after the Russian invasion of free Republics, including Georgia (country). Although nationalism sounds like an unhealthy ideology to me, it's also important to be able to distinguish it, from patriotism. I would like to describe the difference in a hypothetical way. Let's assume that I was born in China and immigrated to Sweden when I was a teenager. Subsequently, I can become a Swedish patriot after growing a deep affection for the country. However, the same scenario doesn't work with the idea of nationalism. With no Swedish heritage and cultural background I cannot declare myself a Swedish nationalist. Thus, the leaders mentioned above could have been patriots at their best before they abused the nationalist propaganda to carry out their hawkish policies. Patriotism could be a means to contribute to the prosperity of coun- tries as long as it's not being exploited in any wrongdoings by the morally corrupt politicians, which unfortu- nately happens a lot. A prominent 19th century Russian satirist Mikhail Saltykov-Shchedrin's reference to the aforementioned case is flawless: "They are talking a lot about patrio- tism - must haye stolen again." In my sincere opinion, I don't believe that nationalism is a pro- gressive theory that aims to prosper nations without harming anyone. It's the worst enemy of peace that ironically supports peace through strength. To be clearer, nationalism shows more hatred towards other nations than respect to your own. No one wants to see the repeat of the Holocaust, deadly .battles that claimed the lives of many brave people or the gang-rapes of innocent Germans that took place during the invasion of Germany. Nationalist movements that are firm supporters of the anti- immigration laws will eventually acknowledge the fact that there's no room for xenophobia in modern societies anymore as the integration of nations becomes common. Who knows, maybe a hundred years from now it will sound ridiculous to our descendants that there used to be borders and nationalities in our world. That's a discussion for another day as I don't want to sound like an anarchist. What's more important for now is that people realize the irrelevance of one's nationality when it comes to determining his/her individual values. Nationalism will not prevail because it's senseless to be proud of something that isn't an accomplishment, but has been randomly assigned to you. In loving memory of the heroes and victims of the World War II Only June 6, 70 years will have passed since the Invasion of Normandy. Nurlan Orujlu can be reached at norujlu@umich.edu. OAiE QUO9 0TA BLE I think (University President Mark Schlissel) is going to continue that tradition of being engaged with students." - E. Royster Harper, vice president for Student Life, said at Schlissel's open house held on Aug. 28. 4 . I 1 i