Wednesday, June 9. 993 - The Michigan aiy Sumr Weeldy -5 VIEWPOINT Gun control proponents ignore right to revolution By OLIVER GIANCOLA The emotional arguments of opponents and advocates of gun control can be overwhelming. But in the passionate debate over gun control we often forget that the Second Amendment is a fundamentalrightguaranteed by the Billof Rights. If we analyze the Second Amendment with the same care and concern that we normally use when discussing the much-revered First Amend- ment, we see that there are sound historical and political reasons for upholding citizens' rights to gun ownership. When seen in this way, it is clear that the Second Amendment protects the right to revolution. Our government was founded by a revolu- tion. But our founders did notsee their revolution as a one-time-only event. Rather, the founders thought that the right to revolution is essential to a person's political self-expression. Thomas Jefferson captured this idea in the Declaration of Independence. He wrote that in order to secure the "unalienable Rights" of "Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness," "Governments are institutedamong Men, deriving their justpowers from the consent of the governed ... [and] when- ever any Form of Government becomes destruc- tive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or abolish it, and to institute new Govern- ment..." The Second Amendment protects this right. The Second Amendment, one of the ten amend- ments to the U.S. Constitution, states, "A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed." The debate over the wording of the Second Amendment has obscured its revolutionary con- text.Gun controladvocates assert that the people's right to bear arms is contingentupon their partici- pation in a militia. They argue that we no longer need our own weapons because the U.S. military protects us from foreign invaders. Since militias are obsolete, they maintain, so is the Second Amendment. The founders, however, saw militias (and citizen ownership of military firearms) as an important check on government tyranny. Alexander Hamilton believed,"If circumstances should at any time oblige the governmentto form an army of any magnitudethat army can never be formidable to the liberties of the people while there is a large body of citizens, little if at all inferior to them in discipline and the use of arms, who stand ready to defend their rights and those of their fellow citizens." In Hamilton's view, a government can use its professional army to suppress its citizens. The threat of revolution isan important deterrent against this kind of abuse. Gun ownership is essential to maintaining this threat. The right to revolution - the ultimate act of political self-expression - is important to any government which is truly run by and for the people. If this right seems unnecessary in today's democracy, think again. How much say did you have in the decision to send troops to Iraq? Who really controls the military - the citizens or the government? Who can say whether such power would ever be used here in the United States? While we have responsible political leaders, we can trust that this will never happen. Right now, we might not feel the need to retain our own weapons. But in the future, when we do need to express ourselves violently against government tyranny, it may be too late to get that right back once it has been lost. The only way to ensure this right for ourselves and for future generations is to guard the Second Amendment. Giancola is a Daily Arts staff writer LETTERS 'We need the American Jobs Protection Act with or without NAFTA' To the Daily: Michigan workers don't need another give- away trade treaty that sends their jobs to another country. Instead they need the American Jobs Protection Act to save them from a problem we already have. Before we talk about any new NorthAmericanFreeTradeagreement(NAFTA), let's fix the old one. Fornearly 30years,thousandsofgood Ameri- can manufacturing jobs have paraded south via the U.S.-Mexico Maquiladora program, which encourages companies to jump across the Rio Grande to a duty-free manufacturing zone. In 1965, the Maquiladora strip had 12 plants em- ploying 3,000 workers. It now numbers 2,000 plants employing over a half-million workers. These jobs should have gone to workers in this country - 100,000 of them are Big Three autojobs. Many more of them are with Anerican- owned auto parts suppliers. Our Michigan autoworker families aren't the only victims. Ac- cording to a 1993 study, we've lost 1,800 non- auto jobs to Mexico in the past 10 years. Our jobs went south for one reason: a cheap Maquiladora labor force earning less than SI per hour, with no pensions or benefits. Their income will never enable them to purchase as many American-made goods as NAFTA supporters claim. Wefaceotherinternational threatstoourjobs. Hong Kong pays an average ofS53.20per hour for labor. Korea pays $3.82; Singapore, $3.78; Sri Lanka, 31 cents; Taiwan,S3.59; Portugal, $3.69. These abysmal wages, all less than half of the U.S.average,are luring uncaring American own- ers to move overseas. The targets of my American Jobs Protection Act are companies that want to exploit this cheap labor. If we can't encourage them to reconsider and stay home, then they should be discouraged from moving to a country where Stone Age working conditions exist. We must keep the jobs we have. First on the list in the American Jobs Protection Act is a requirement for companies considering a move to give at least six months advance notice of a possible job loss, citing reasons and supporting information for the move. With this information, workers and community leaders can renegotiate with officials to possibly save jobs. If a company still insists on moving to a country where wage rates are less than half of ours-onewithsubstandardworkingconditions - then the American Jobs Protection Act would require them to: give employees four weeks of severance pay for each year of service; continue employee health care benefits for 18 months; provide individual workers up to $10,000 over two years for retraining and relocation ex- penses; provide five years credit toward retirement benefits; cover individual workers retraining and relocation expenses up toS10,000 over two years; and give states and localities a return of tax abatements and economic incentives that had been extended to them. We need the American Jobs Protection Act with or without NAFTA. We can talk and talk with Mexico and Canada, but American jobs continue to leave the country. Let's protect our workers and their families and our hometowns from further economic damage. Rep. William Ford D-Ypsilanti Everyone should recycle To the Daily: Recently I have noticed many recyclable "wastes" finding refuge in the trash bins of the third floor architecture studios at the Art and Architecture Building. As studentsstudying to be professionals in a field where we are developing the built environment and improving the way people live and work, it is ironic that we can not manage such an easy thing as recycling and has receptacles strategically placed throughout the studios. However, it seems that many of the students (who, like myself, spend more time in the studio than at home) do not understand the importance of recycling, or simply don't care. Nevertheless, I am not willing to give up on my peers just yet for I don't believe that students are intentionally throwing away recyclables. The Art and Architecture building did recycle more paper this year than last, yet resources are still being uncollected. Student awareness involving this issue must be raised, and I personally expect to do more than just write this letter. I encourage all University students to learn more about recy- cling and how they can contribute, at school, home and work.Contact Recycle UM, stop by the city hall and pick up a brochure, or look me up, justget involved.Buy recycled products, recycle the products you buy. Christian Unverzagt College of Architecture and Urban Planning Junior University fails to understand the importance of undergraduate education, errs in Campbell case To the Daily: Upon hearing the tragic news that Prof. Rich- ard Campbell has been denied the tenure, and the recognition, he so richly deserves Ilam unable to contain my response. Once again,this University is choosing to devalue the needs and importance ofitsmost valuable asset: UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS! As an undergraduate student I am so frequently frustrated by the inexperience of myT.A.'s,and my participation in Dr.Campbell's Fall 92, Communication 103 course was exhila- rating! This man is brilliant, intellectually stimu- lating, inquisitive and above all, approachably humane. I can only question, in bewilderment, the audacious lack of sensibility founding the University's decision in this matter! How can you deprive -no rob - so many student's searching minds and hungry hearts of the magical journey Dr. Campbell leads toward knowledgeandunderstanding? Inaseaofstrange faces and an ocean of youth's uncertainty this incredible instructor hasstood for me as a beacon of direction, pouring rare light upon the darkness of questions so many of my fellow students grapple with. If only I could pierce you with the legitimacy of what I'm saying as eloquently as Dr. Campbell has inspired me, and hundreds of undergraduates like me, with the wisdom of his perspective. Perhaps it is because I'm older and more experienced than your average undergrad (I'm 25 years old) that I so fully comprehend the gravity of your mistake. I've been on my own for some time now, I've served with the U.S. Army and felt the clenching caress of death and igno- rance there, I've sat through classes where I felt likemy mindwasstarving becausethis university provided me with an insecure and undirected (though well-intentioned) T.A. in return for my money. I deserve, as does every other undergraduate inthisuniversityto beinstructedby professorsof Dr. Campbell's caliber and yet I frequently am not. How dare you chip away at the quality of my expensive and hard-earned education with your insensitive decision to deny Dr.RichardCampbell tenure! I am frustrated and infuriated that you have closed, or perhaps never even opened, your eyes to the immeasurable benefit his presence brings to the environment of this university! So many tender spirits hesitate here for a moment in their lives searching for answers, seeking, hoping to figure out who they are and where they are going. Their journey is so fragile, so impressionable ... how can you allow any but the very best to influencethe young minds youare in charge of? How can you be so irresponsible as toallowevenoneofyourvery best,Dr.Campbell, to slip away?? Your decision disgraces and de- values us all and I raise my voice to join the many others urging you to reconsider. Michel Phillips LSA Junior