Opi nion Page 6 The Michigan Daily Vol. XCI, No. 56-S Ninety Years of Editorial Freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Polish power T WOULD BE against Soviet interests to invade Poland. Given this fundamental truth, the extraor- dinarily ambitious protests taking place this week in Warsaw can be better understood. Ever since the Solidarity labor union was established a year ago, the workers of Poland have bravely expressed their dissatisfaction with their central government in paced, well- orchestrated protests. Realizing that the Kremlin would intervene under only the most desperate circumstances, the protests and the labor movement in general have proceeded with unprecedented success. The Soviet Union, already quagmired on the Afghanistan front, and with its own financial troubles, would like nothing less than a move into Poland. Helpless in an increasingly inter- dependent world order, the Russian leaders obviously understand that the costs of in- vading Poland are prohibitive. So the protests continue, in a twisted sort of carnival atmosphere. The Polish leaders have more breathing room than most perceive, but their failure to improve the country's economic condition cannot continue in- definitely. If and when the peaceful protests become violent, it will be the frustrated workers who start the trouble, not the Soviet army, and by then it will be too late for anyone to suppress. I HEAR IT'S LETTING UP A LITTLE Thursday, August 6, 1981 The Michigan Daily r PRESIDENTIAL LIMOUSINE, MODEL RR/81 00 , ___ 4L iN, J A 7or 4l EPUE-uu ~ , t, 11VTK47 s f+ยง?. Wailing for credibility and self-respect left to By Steve Hook face their constituents during the long August recess-polarize to the left, the imperious The Democrats cower in the Republicans smugly hold tight Year of the Republican. The and even ponder deeper gouges in liberals cringe as the conser- the country's liberal tradition. The vatives stampede. economic foundation has been For all of his faults, President laid, now is the time for the real Reagan sure has clarified our bloodletting-the social issues. hazy perceptions of the world. In a perverse way, the Before we were told that there unqualified stomping that the are only two sides in the Reagan boys have enjoyed may geopolitical struggle, East and be the best thing for their loyal West, it all seemed like a discon- opposition. The Republicans have nected and haphazard affair. nurtured their supposed man- Now that it is understood as a We date, and with the skillful and versus They conflict, it all street-wise guidance of the gip- kind of makes sense. Sort of. per himself, the GOP has seen its Never before (in my short supple-side concepts materialize lifetime) have the issues of into law. For the right-wingers domestic politics been so plain currently basking in the sun, it and simple. It is big government will be sink-or-swim from now on. or small government, in most There will be no "The Democrats areas. Small government or no spoiled our chances" when 1984 government in others. It never rolls around. If the economy seemed this easy before. remains in disarray, the mandate While this process of sim- will be literally handed back to plification has been going on-a the liberals. The experiment will process that deserves as much have tried and failed, and the reverence as the glut of self- GOP will have nothing to say. destructive Washington oddities And it doesn't takea masters in that beckon the media-it has economics to see the obstacles been amusing to watch ahead on the road to prosperity. everybody take sides. Suddenly, Supply-side economics may be a we're making stands on issues we plausable approach per se, but it hardly knew about a year does not incorporate a defense ago-states' rights and block budget that erases much of the grants, depreciation allowances progress made on spending cuts. and bracket creep, the virtues of And the tax cuts, rather than CETA and subsidized housing, initiating a new "psychology" of the evils of totalitarian regimes investment and savings, may and the Cuban connection. Such only cause a short-term rash of are the side-effects of an spending and a continued in- ideological steamroll. flationary assault. As the Democrats in By 1984, the administration's Washington-with barely enough foreign policy may be shred of all its macho presumptions, and its form-over-substance appraoch may be hopelessly vulnerable. Barring any unforeseen progress in arms control, NATO con- tinuity, or Third World relations, the Democrats should inherit a wealth of podium-stomping material. Rarely considered by political analysts is the social effect of Reaganomics-the profound dislocation of our institutions. We are all guinea pigs in a nation- wide experiment, and the curren- tly positive morale is clearly dependent on better days ahead. For everyone who has been effec- ted by the sweeping reformation of the private sector and the snubbing of the public, their per- sonal viability will mirror that of the conservative ideology. If the social upheaval proves unworthy in light of continued domestic recession, well, it will be the Democrats turn once again. For now, we can reflect on the recent weeks of Conservative Conquest with some comfort. As citizens-recipients of the manic federal policies-we win either way. If the supply-side, East versus West approach somehow succeeds in enhancing domestic and international stability, so much the better. If it fails, which it probably will, the political pendulum will swing back, to the left, and it will be the Republicans, not the Demorats, who will be terminally defensive. Steve Hook is the Daily's editorial director. E I 4 \ \ fJ. i \ r'\\ S _, ; ,,\ ; ) 7 $ ' a a