0 Opinion I Pane 8 Wednesday, June 10, 1981 The Michigan Daily ...yam ., i The Michigan Daily Vol. XCI, No. 25-S Ninety Years of Editorial Freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Usmg the world as a bean-bagr O NE OF THE MOST de-stabilizing forces in international relations is the interlocking nature of a nation's-domestic politics with its foreign policy. To suggest that internal pre-election pressures were the prime motivator in Israel's decision to bomb an Iraqi nuclear reactor may be unduly cynical. Yet only a genuinely naive observer would deny that political con- siderations might have at least constituted a significant byproduct in the Israelis' unexpec- ted attack. It is fond tradition to regard a nation's relations of state as a separate, solemn entity, unsullied by domestic squabbles. Yet any democracy's foreign policy becomes periodically intertwined with considerations which may have no direct connection with diplomacy. Politicians everywhere like to stay in office; they like giving the voters something to cheer about-the more internationally breathtaking, the better. In 1968, Lyndon Johnson called a dramatic halt to our bombing of North Vietnam just two days before Hubert Humphrey was to square off against Richard Nixon; in 1972, Nixon gained revenge by leaking the Vietname "Peace is at hand" revelations a week before his re-election. Reports indicate a planned elec- tion-eve strike by the Carter administration in- to Iran last year was aborted only because news of the planned attack leaked out beforehand. If Israel's Iraqi bombing was similarly motivated, it has surely produced the desired domestic result: Israeli politicians of all stripes have voiced their support of the raid with a unity-in-time-of-crisis patriotism. Prime Minister Menachem Begin, previously trailing in the polls for Israel's June 30th elections, has suddenly become the clear-cut favorite to retain office. Yet one politician's gain can prove the rest of the world's loss. Once again a single nation has played bean-bag with the security of the global community-a security so fragile that a single violent incident could send our planet hurtling into nuclear apocalypse.w Such are the inevitable fruits of recklessness and selfishness in a world too delicate to tolerate such impulses. We must find an antidote to international irresponsibility, both in our- selves and others. Failure to do so will ultimately insure doomsday for the human race. Ordinance perils rights To the Daily: We strongly oppose the or- dinance which would require parolees and half-way house residents to register with the city. Our reasons are as follows: - The personal informations required by the ordinance for the City's records is already on record at, and available from. the Parole Office, located two blocks from the City Admin- istrator's Office. It seems more reasonable to simply Xerox, and then transfer the information from one office to the other. - The ordinance is neither cost-effective nor time-efficient. Duplicating information, as well as promulgating, monitoring, and enforcing the ordinance, wouldbe costly. - The stigmatizing effect of the ordinance would treat A turn from lo gic To the Daily: Regarding the recent letters exonerated for punching out an from Malika Mutakabbir and Arab-speaking student because Joseph F. Ferguson: Mutakabbir we are frustrated in our attempts understands why Leo Kelly Jr. to understand our foreign T.A.'s; (allegedly) reacted the way he a woman should be forgiven for did in shooting two university exploding in violence against a students, and Ferguson is upset young man because some young with Karre Slakin's rejection of men are raping and robbing Mutakabbir's implied acceptan- women in Ann Arbor and are ce of the killing. The crux seems therefore taking away her to be whether or not we accept security and freedom; a black violence as an outlet for person should be understood for frustationasdan e(inthisr murdering two white students frustration and anger (in this because he was frustrated with caser due trcial prejudice and being discriminated against discrimination), because he is black. Neither Mutakabbir nor This philosophy is not logical or Ferguson imply that those par- civilized or moral. Neither is ticular victims were in any way racial discrimination or connected with Kelly's troubles prejudice, but the first except of course by the color oR philosophy seeks nothing of a their skin. They were not killed pemsdysIt snyturngfom because they had added to the remedy. It simply turns from (presumed) prejudicial treat- logic and decency and avoids ment of Kelly - they were killed dealing with the problem. It is in Kelly's venting of his apparent, from the letters of frustrations. Mutakabbir and Ferguson that If we condone this kind of violence is an acceptable alter- violence against people as a native to a solution, that logic and natural result of pressure and self-control and humanity can be frustration then we should con- thrown to the winds. sistently follow the following -Gordon A. White philosophy: We should be May211 parolees as outcasts. Such treat- ment would not be likely to promote law-abiding behavior. - The effectiveness of the or- dinance in improving public safety is highly questionable. We suggest considering measures which seem to be more effective, such as improving street lighting, initiating a late-hour police escort service, or improving public awareness of community education programs which in- form people of what they can do in the event of an attack on a per- son or property. - The ordinance would violate guaranteed rights to privacy, equal protection, and freedom of association. That no ordinance of this kind exists anywhere in the United States strengthens our position that it is fundamentally unjust. When one group is singled out this way, we must all ask our- selves: Who's next? Denyingthe rights of some citizens will hardly safeguard our own. -Lillian Jarman Katherine Edgren June 3 Greedy? To the Daily: The Reagan administration continues to argue that U.S. capitlists need tx breaks and other incentives to increase profits and generate capital for investments that will supposedy revive the economy. Meanwhile report after report is revealing that many of these same capitalists are reaping huge profits, paying next to nothing in taxes, and sitting on top of huge capital accumulations. A report, issued by UPI on April 22, noted that although domestic corporations were ostensibly "assessed a 48 percent federal income tax rate in 1978 ... the Energy Department has calculated that the top 26 in- tegrated oil firms actually paid only 11.9 percent" down from 12.3 percent in 1977. Putting the 1978 figures in persective, the UPI item pointed out that Americans earning $20,000 to $25,000 paid even more taxes that year than the oil giants - an average rate of 13.4 percent. Similar reports in Business Week, Fortune Magazine and Monthly Review show many U.S. capitalists complaining - all the way to the bank! In the light of these facts and others, the Socialist Labor Party points out that working people have nothing to gain and much to lose from the budget-cutting schemes against the poor now in such favor on Capitol Hill. -Archie Sim June 2 4 4 I I 4