OpiiMon Page S Saturday, May 16, 1981 The Michigan Daily I The Michigan Daily Vol. XCI, No. 9-S Ninety Years of Editorial Freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Vote no on 'A' EW BALLOT propositions in recent times have occasioned a display of such bipar- tisan unanimity as has Michigan's Proposal A, also known as the Brown-Smith Plan. The property tax reform proposal - on which state voters will cast their ballots this coming Tuesday - currently enjoys the support of vir- tually every major Democratic and Republican personage in Michigan, both at the ad- ministrative and legislative level. On its sur- face, such unprecedented congruity would likely denote a plan well worth supporting. Such is not the case. We find Proposal A an illiberal measure hastily designed as a stop-gap deterrent to the changing political winds of both state and nation. The current proposal seems a craven reac- tion to the omnipotent shadow of Robert Tisch, Michigan's self-styled anti-tax crusader whose Proposition 13-style referendums were narrowly defeated in 1978 and 1980. Like Tisch, Proposal A would cut individual property taxes by 50 percent across the board; unlike Tisch, the proposal would supplement the resulting loss in state income by increasing Michigan's sales tax from 4 cents to 5 cents on the dollar. The trouble is that, while the property tax cut would give over a billion dollars back to homeowners,, the corresponding sales tax in- crease would put only $800 million back in stae coffers. This drop in revenue will severely squeeze an already austere state budget, crip- pling even further suct services as education, mental health, and aid to the poor. A regressive, flat-rate sales tax would also hit those who can afford it the least; an extra pen- ny and a half on the dollar means nothing to those comfortably off - to the poor, such an in- crease could constitute a very real hardship. Though "A"s proponents claim the proposal's increased homestead income tax exemption will ease the tax burden on renters - notably students - others dispute such an assertion. Proposal A is a profoundly conservative con- coction - a panicked, compromise measure which would have been scoffed at only a few short years ago. If we don't pass "A," its backers warn, Tisch will be back with a far more Draconian measure - after all, half a loaf still is better than one. We reject this negative argument. If our state and nation have reached such a point of no return that we must sell out traditional prin- ciples for the sake of forestalling an even worse fate, then Michigan and America soon won't be worth a plugged nickel. We cannot believe things have reached such a political dead end. Proposal A is a bad gamble on our state's futum We urge you to reject it. Spectre of the draft I Editor's Note: Occasionally political issues cut across the standard dichotomy between Left and Right- Wing thought. This piece, the product of a senior fellow at Stanford University's arch-conservative Hoover Institution, illuminates the growing ap- prehension over a resurrection of America's peacetime draft - a threat which troubles many conservatives as much as it does liberals. By Thomas Gale Moore There are many reasons to. be against military conscription: it is unjust; it is slavery; it might lead to our sons and perhaps our daughters being sent off to a foreign land to be killed. Let me review the reasons usually given tor bringing back the draft: A draft is fair. Recruiting needs are not expected to exceed 30 percent of the population of young men in any future year. Since volunteers will fill most of those places, a draft will only select a few from the many. A draft, therefore, would focus the "obligations of citizenship" - as proponents of the draft like to put it - on only a few individuals. How would those few be chosen? In the past, certain individuals have been exempted, and some provisions for exemption would clearly be required. Bright kids, the children of upper. income parents, will find ways to be exempted. They can find doctors to certify their handicaps; they will claim conscientious exem- ption; they will go to Canada. If a draft could be be fair, would not universal national ser- vice be the best way to ensure that the "burden is shared equally?" To be universal, it. provide make-work jobs. Would they be paid the minimum wage - a very expensive proposition? The cost of an all-volunteer system is too high. At present pay and force levels, a return to conscription would save less than $500 million, less than one half of one percent of the defense depar- tment's annual budget. Larger saving could be .1 I would have to include women, conscientious objectors, the han- dicapped, and the mentally defective. What would the government do with the approximately 4 million young men and women turning eighteen each year? If they were all forced to serve in the military, it would be bloated out of propor- tion and so would our military budget. If some were allowed to have civilian jobs, how would the selection be made fairly? What type of civilian work could this mass of young do? Since organized labor would protest any use of conscript labor to compete with ordinary work, the government would have to "THERE'S NOTNHI MG NEW ABOUT OUR SUPPLY-SIDE ECONOMICS Y z - - fia,1Ui 1 achieved by cutting or not raising military pay, but it is already inadequate. It has declined steadily since 1973. Pay for the lowest ranks is already significantly below the minimum wage. The biggest manpower problem faced by the military is not new recruits but retaining trained personnel. Higher pay is necessary to keep them. A draft would produce a more representative armed force. The military, however, has never been representative. Even in World War II, only 56 percent of the draft-eligible males served. Black Americans suffered disproportionate casualties in Vietnam, as did whites in World War II and Korea - all of these wars were fought with the draft. Would the proportion of blacks be affected by a return to the draft? Certainly not. The number of blacks in the military began to increase during the draft era and has grown ever since. Registration and/or the draft is needed for quick mobilization in an emergency. Clearly a draft cannot speed military training; it takes as long to train a conscript as a volun- teer. In past wars, volunteers, at least initially, have been plen- tiful. If the war is felt as just and right by the American people, there will be ample volunteers; if it is not supported by the public, it should not be fought. It should be remembered that a peace-time draft is not in the American tradition; it only developed in the post-war period. For the first 164 years of our history we relied upon volunteers to man our armed services in peaace-time, and we should con- tinue to do so. Thomas Gale Moore is a Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution. . 0