Opinion 4 Page 8 Friday, August 7, 1981 The Michigan Daily States have rights too! By Mark Gindin their tax dollars, block grants are the best remedy. EVENTUALLY the argumen- waste, because the costly process of filtering dollars back to the taxpayers is simplified. With less mirliin~m~s b etniahtv ha safety in numbers, but danger in collectivity. The original foun- ders recognized that principle dnr diinr fnrnn svr The closer the government gets to the individuals it ts against rights for localites will miduwe-menstaningetween te ana mite the tederal gover- governs, the better. When far off and detached from the come down to how much power to consumer and the government, nment. citizens, government is hardly responsive to their needs. give them. In the past, rights there is less needless allocation of The states are now servants of When close by and immediate, it can be more sensitive, were abused and people-par- valuable resources. the central government, exactly more effective. ticularly minorites-were taken The economic advantages of opposite from the tradition of the Local school boards, for example, are directly controlled advantage of. Clearly, too much block grants, however, pales in Jeffersons and Madisons by those who are affected by their policies. The same ap- power was given them, and the comparison to the philosophical established. We have not benefit- plies to city and township councils. The proximity of the constitutional guarantees of in- advantage-the increase in ted from collectivity, in fact, we power base to the citizens makes for smooth leadership and dividual protection under the law freedom and autonomy for the have lost freedom. active voter participation. ON THE OTHER hand, the federal government often dic- tates the policies of remote areas it hardly has any direct communication with. Many environmental, labor- management, and educational regulations do not ap- preciate the unique needs of the diverse localities which they control, and often they are unrealistic and un- manageable. Block grants proposed by the Reagan administration are the intermediate step between federal and local control of were ignored. However, the states and localities. Ultimately, freedom is the various programs, and they should be encouraged, rather abuses of the past should not be The United States of America issue. By centering the source of than condemned, by the civil-minded citizens seeking uses o teptul otde Te U nited tates . Ame y cewer in the soue f justice. For those who demand a more equitable return for used as a perpetual condem- are just that united states. They power in the hands of the federal nation of the concent_ united for the common defense bureaucgnrats_ the will of the in- 4 I f a Also, local control leads to less and general welfare. There is divduLdbecomesinsignificant., dividual becomes insignificant. The Michigan Daily Vol. XCI, No. 57-S Ninety Years of Editorial Freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Sadat's doomed peace initiative Anwar Sadat's visit to Washington this week was filled with noble ambitions and high ex- pectations, but now that it has concluded, there's nothing to cheer about. Recent events in the Mideast have had several effects. Notable among these was the decimated political influence of the Egyptian president-once an integral force-who helplessly watched the region-wide hostilities intensify. Also, the escalating Israeli- Palestinian conflict made it clear that mutual diplomatic acknowledgement is crucial. Israel's bombing of PLO headquarters ap- peared more provocative than defensive, and the Arafat-orchestrated retaliations did little more than cement their bilateral disdain. Sadat's discussions with President Reagan-and his suggestion that the PLO be included in peace talks-could have ameliorated both of these effects. Reagan could have used the opportunity to admit that, yes, the Palestinian nation does exist and cer- tainly isn't going away. By doing so, he would have simultaneously re-established Sadat's role as a prime mover in the lethargic region. Instead, we heard more anti-Soviet tough talk and a shallow vow to continue peace efforts, without the PLO. Nothing ventured, nothing gained. States need federal laws By Fred Schill To a liberal Southerner like me, "states' rights" reeks of racism and Good 01' Boy politics. It was under the guise of fighting for states' rights that the boys of the South fought to maintain the racist status quo in the early 1960s. The term has lingering con- notations that frustrate efforts to re-define it in its neo-Reaganist context. Small wonder that the administration avoids using the phrase when foaming on and on about returning power to the cities. ESSENTIALLY, the Reagan administration believes one good way to shrink the federal gover- nment is to divest it of many responsibilities, such as Social Security, and endow them in- stead on state governments. This is a common idea among many who feel the federal government has become too pervasive. This is perhaps the most reac- tionary of Reagan's multifarious return-to-the-good-old-days in- clinations. The problem with too many right-wingers is that they seem to remember the "good old days" a little differently than the history books. They seem to remember a federal government that usurped the power of smoothly- functioning states, presumably in an orgy of liberal government gluttony. Only blacks and a few of us pinki left-wingers seem to recall the days of states' rights as less than idyllic. . IN FACT, THE problem the courts and eventually even Congress found with leaving vir- tually all government to the states was that ther wa s astoqn- ding inequity in the application of the Constitution and federal laws. For instance, Southern states had a markedly different idea of how to interpret the Fourteenth Amendment than did many other states. If Ronald Reagan had been in office in the early 1960s and really wanted to enforce his states' rights approach to government, blacks might still be forced to take "literacy tests" that Ein- stein couldn't pass in order to vote. Those who feel that such balony is all parr-of the past should spend some time in Birmingham, Alabama or Michigan. White- flight suburbanites are making life very unpleasant for any blacks who dare to venture into Debutante-land, while the Ku Klux Klan and other racist organizations are aggressively on the rebound. It is not beyond my imagination to envision a time in the future when racism is again legislated. NOR IS THE issue limited to racism. Many states, again notably southern ones, continue to enforce all manner of laws that discriminate against women. Not coincidentally, almost no southern state has ratified the Equal Rights Amendment. Bias runs deep in the human condition. What it all boils down to is that, at some point, the people (some say the federal government) determine that some issues are too important to leave to the whim of individual states. Racism was hopefully such an issue, and the intrusion of the federal government into this sector of state power was based on unacceptable abuses of 'states' rights by those who wielded power. rStates' rights, even in less fun- damental areas such as Social Security, can only work smoothly when disparities and inequities are not too widespread. Anyone who considers the expense cause by state-to-state disparities in even minor concerns-for instan- ce, auto manufacturers must make somewhat different cars for California because of the state's tough pollution laws-should pause and think awhile about transfering Social Security and other programs to the state level. WHAT MIGHT happen if several states decided not to maintain Social Security, either because they could not afford to (Michigan comes to mind) or don't want to? It is not incon- ceivable that such a situation could accentuate the migratory trend to wealthier, less troubled states. But even if moving Social Security to the state level wrought no havoc, caused no con- fusion, nor perpetuated inequities or abuses, it establishes a dangerous precedent. Many reactionaries, Reagan among them, would like to make this the first of many responsibilities lif- ted to the states. Abuse of the so-called states rights too blatant to be ignored led to the Civil War in the 1860s. History repeated itself when abuse of states brought an on- slaught of civil rights legislation and a broadening of the federal power base 20 years ago. As Marx noted, when history repeats itself once, it is a tragedy. When it repeats itself twice, it is farce. Gindin and Schill will con- clude their 4-round bout neat Friday. 4 I I e