I Opinion Page 8 Friday, May 15, 1981 The Michigan Daily The Michigan Daily Vol. XCI, No. 8-S Ninety Years of Editorial Freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Tanny of fear TT IS CHIC for much of the world to damn America as a metaphor for killing and disorder-yet we remain rank amateurs in the art of organized terrorism. Although Wednesday's attempt upon Pope John Paul II's life was apparently the work of a single gunman, the accused assailant has a record steeped in the most virulent forms of terrorist brutality. He is endemic of thousands of radical compatriots of both the Left and Right, who stalk clandestinely through Western Europe and South America-bombing, kidnap- ping and murdering with pitiless efficiency. This growing body of contemporary fanaticism cuts across classic socio-economic barriers-from the working-class gunmen of the Irish Republican Army to the upper-middle- class denizens of the Italian Red Brigades; from the radical factions of the Palestine Liberation Organization to the right-wing "Death Squads" of Argentina and El Salvador. The immevse political dichotomy separating such groups coalesces under a single, nihilistic principle: The world can be altered only through violence. This brute philosophy now holds entire nations captive under a tyranny of fear; it is one of America's saving graces that its mad practitioners have not reached our shores. Guns for butter T HE FACT THAT yesterday's Senate passage of the Reagan administration's $136.5 billion defense budget had been univer- sally predicted does nothing to ease one's anguish over its easy success. This colossal ex- penditure -- at a cost of more than $600 from every man, woman, and child in America - will only serve to fan the fires of a world-wide arms race already threatening to spiral out of control. Out Pentagon apologists continue to milk their alarmist rhetoric for all it's worth: We've got to keep up with the Russians; it's better to be safe than sorry. And so, in the name of vigilance, the White House - with the slavering acquiescence of Congress - continues to pam- per our military establishment as though it were a separate, infallible universe. There is something repulsive about a president who rages against the wasteful evils of big government, then grants unlimited boon- doggles to the very government establishment most symbolic of financial extravagance and bureaucratic overglut. Placed in the shadow of such bald favoritism, Reagan's exhortations Hypocricy rsmectsnopitic.aith.pged. Hypocricy respects no political faith. Detroit: One-trade town 0 By Daniel Berger Will Detroit ever pull itself out of the doldrums? Most of us are familiar with at least a few of the ostensibly glamourous construe- tion projects the city is pinning its hopes upon to hold things together. - There's the Renaissance Cen- ter: 12,000 people work in, its of- fices - Closeto capacity in a city suffering a chronic shortage of office sspce. But the Center's retail spaces suffer from a myriad of vacancies, and few customers are patronizing its hotel, Why aren't the businesses coming in? There's the Cadillac Square shopping center, costing $235 million. This mall will contain space for three major depar- tment stores, 100 satellite shops, and 3,700 parking slots to ac- commodate all the customers they think they're going to get. But so far only Hudson's has committed itself. When will the other two keystone stores materialize? Then there's the controversial Poletown Cadillac plant. The city has evicted its own residents from more than 1,500 houses in an effort to hold - not create, just hold - 6,000 jobs. It cost Detroit $125 million to clear the site, '$60 million to buy up the property, and will cost up to $60 million more in tax breaks to keep just one factory of one company in town. Well-intentioned though they may be, these big projects miss the point. They are cosmetic at- tempts to make .both residents and investors feel better about Detroit by giving consumers shiny new spend money. But who in Detroit is looking for new ways to spend money? Who's even got, it? The private investment in- volved in such gargantuan enter- prises is far too concentrated. Much of it comes from General Motors, whose size and influence should not blind usto the fact that it is but one corporation - one in a declining industry at that. Must Detroit live or die with the automobile? The city is the num- ber two manufacturing center in the nation - its $54 billion in 1980 revenue second only to that of Chicago. Industry remains Detroit's heart and soul, but the turing also ranked high on the rescue list, as did agricultural machinery, robotics and general high-technology development - all viable alternatives and remedies to Detroit's perpetual stigma asa one-trade town. Business booms in the Sunbelt not because of the open sky and the desert air, but because the business climate is conducive to investment and development. Public works and public relations I I 0 THE ONCE-BUSTLING Chrysler Dodge-Main plant in Hamtramck was abandoned and torn down in 1980, symbolizing Detroit's woes. auto artery is critically clogged - the city ought to consider a coronary bypass operation. Meat packing, of all things, seems to be a solid alternative. In a recent study of what industries Detroit ought to try to attract, two economists discovered that the meat packing industry's per capita revenue in Detroit is only half of what it should be. In ad- dition, both wages and em- ployment levels are consistently high in the meat business - enough to give the sagging city an immediate and much-needed economic transfusion. Plastics and resin manufAc- spending are not crucial to the Sunbelt - the area thrives through its own hard-headed financial acumen. Detroit ought to concentrate in a similar direction - on making itself attractive to business economically, not cosmetically. Flashy buildings and glamorous mega-projects attract a lot of at- tention, but they won't cure what ails Detroit. Parf two of a two-part series.. Daniel Berger is a graduate student in the Depar- tment of Communication. Feiffer ST" Rk80T -ir cMMIr FeC MSiNcT 7thRICIHT ToC F 1- 5Nx akFcV6R6 /~/7r uiP v"1 (2r U I I 6 0