4 - The Michigan Daily - Monday, July 31, 2000 Edited and managed by GEOFF GAGNON PETER CUNNIFFE students at the 4 4 Editor in Chief JOSH WICKERHAM University of Michigan Cit e Editorial Page Editors Unless otherwise noted.munsignededitor as reect the opin on 420 Maynard Street majoritf the Daily i editorial board. All other articles, letters and Ann Arbor, MI 48109 cartoonsd not necessariliVreflect the opinion of The Michigan Daily N apster's days were numbered from the to attack. As it would be suicidal for recorn very beginning, so last week's short- companies to sue individual users, this lived injunction and supposed victory for the * h Y St ** approach seems fairly safe from the talons o Recording Industry Association of America court-savvy record companies. comes as little surprise. bNa ster's fall strengthens free music movement At stake with the continuing Napster tria The injunction issued by a federal judge, I pL IS11tf~ IUYI~wI is not the future of online music swap who called the program "a monster," was but the authority, profit and reputation o meant to stop the flow of copyrighted music favor with record companies< It has little rel- fixing. Five major record companies, con- recording industry. By attempting to destro via the networked masses on Napster's sys- evance to Napster's court case and will prob- trolling 85% of the market, settled with the the music swapping software of choice, th tem until a trial could be held later this year. ably make little headway in convincing FTC in May; this price fixing cost con- RIAA has succeeded only in enraging fre Nine hours before Napster's site would have record companies that Napster is safe for sumers $480 million. MP3 swapping gives music advocates, alienating buyers of copy gone down, an appeals court allowed their business. This plan seems oddly con- consumers the power to fight back. And righted music and effectively bolsterin Napster to stay online, provided none of the trived and probably has more to do with Napster's death knell last week will not stop users of online MP3 swapping software songs being downloaded are copyrighted by Napster's newly appointed CEO and profit this new tidal wave. They have created a martyr of Napster. the 18 record companies involved in the suit potential than concern for the free music MP3's can be swapped with a host of Users should continue to downloa against the company. Users have been franti- movement. Napster alternatives already proliferating on MP3's and let new artists find their way int cally downloading music ever since. But this If record companies understood the fun- the Net. Clones like Gnutela, iMesh, the mainstream. Record company endorse court case will not stop the flow of digital damental shifts in the music market, they Gigabeat and Scour are very similar to ments, the proper distribution channelsi music proliferating on the net. would work with established players. Napster Napster but have so far not been affected by bloated marketing budgets do not necess- I Napster's response to this has been a call could offer subscription-based payment plans court rulings. Other music exchange pro- ly create bands worth listening to, nor dl to arms. They are encouraging users to "buy- or micropayments instead of furthering the grams sidestep the machinery of current law they guarantee consumers great music; thes cott" and purchase CD's of artists who open- RIAA's massive hysteria. entirely by providing no central computer old approaches to the music business simpl ly support MP3 downloading. This approach But consumers should feel no pity for system (as did Napster), but open individual retain profits for record companies. is an almost panicked response on Napster's bloated record companies. The recording computers to music swapping, thus avoiding And profit - not the future of MP3s part and seems more an attempt to curry industry came under attack recently for price the creation of a central target for the RIAA is what Napster's trial was all about. KidsFirstNo! Voucher proposal bad for public schools A shadowy affair Alternative conventions address ignored issues This Fall, Michigan voters will be con- fronted with a ballot measure - known as Proposal 1 - which will institute a limit- ed school voucher program in the state. The measure, being pushed by a group called KidsFirstYes!, would mean that students in poorly performing school districts would be given "opportunity scholarships" of about $3300, which could be used to pay for pri- vate or parochial school tuition. While this proposal may seem helpful to students stuck in under-performing schools, it poses a serious risk to the entire public education system of Michigan because it strips the State Constitution of its provision banning the use of public money at private schools. While only about 30 of the state's 582 public school districts would immedi- ately be affected by Proposal 1, the end of the ban on state funding for private schools means the state legislature can expand the program or even take it statewide at will. The proposal also allows local school boards to institute the use of vouchers in their districts. Proposal 1 backers usually only mention its effects on poorly performing schools, but the measure poses the serious threat of wide- spread and even statewide use of vouchers. Voucher programs, often dubbed "school choice," are dangerous to education because they rob public schools of funds and send public money to schools with no public accountability. Frequently touted as a way of improving failing schools, vouchers actually harm those schools by taking their resources. The theory behind school vouchers is that if parents can choose which schools their children attend while always receiving a set amount of money from the govern- ment, schools would have to compete for students like businesses and thus be con- stantly striving to improve. But like trickle- down economics, vouchers help only the rich at the expense of everyone else. School choice is a sham because there is no real choice for parents or students. Unlike public schools, private institutions can accept or reject anybody they want. A parent cannot just choose to send their kid to private school, they can only choose to apply. The big winners if vouchers are institut- ed will not be kids in bad schools, but par- ents of kids already in private schools. They can already afford private schools, but will receive money that was originally earmarked for often under-funded public school sys- tems. About 11% of students in Michigan are already in private or parochial schools and if vouchers are instituted statewide - a very real possibility under Proposal 1 - state and local education budgets will have to be stretched to cover those students. Because of limited capacities, most stu- dents will not have the chance to attend pri- vate or parochial schools, but will have to stay in the public school system even as money is being funneled out of it. Studies using standardized tests on exist- ing voucher programs in other states have also shown that there is virtually no differ- ence between the quality of education received by children who left the public school system with vouchers and those who stayed in. The use of vouchers in parochial schools, which is allowed under Proposal 1, also violates the Constitutional separation of church and state, as was proven by a recent court ruling that shut down Cleveland's voucher program. School vouchers are clearly not the answer to the problems faced by many pub- lic school districts. Critics of public schools need to start looking at ways to actually improving them, including increasing their funding, rather than holding out the false promise of vouchers Two hundred years ago, America consist- ed of only sixteen sparsely populated States with a fairly homogenous demograph- ic, both socially and politically. Communication was slow or impossible; newspapers were usually local in scope and mass media loomed a century or more in the future. The decision to hold national conven- tions for political parties was, at that point, a brilliant democratic theory. They provided a fair chance for citizens to run for office, and to create a forum for the public to meet the candidates and debate current issues. Today's conventions have strayed far from the theoretical beginnings the Founding Fathers had in mind. They have become million-dollar parties, elitist in the sense of the word most detrimental to democracy: the political sense. Candidates concern themselves more with self-celebra- tory speeches than discussion of party plat- forms, leaving the public in the dark about candidates' positions on current issues. Beginning this year with the Republican National Convention in Philadelphia, Shadow Conventions will also be held to serve the electorate by bringing light to new issues. The Shadow Conventions will be held at the same time as the national con- ventions and in the same cities. They will be loosely affiliated with the party of the corre- sponding convention, but will not select can- didates. The purpose of the Shadow Conventions is twofold: to provide an arena for debate over political issues and to make this discussion open to the entire American public. Admission will be free. As the orga- nizers of the conventions assert on their web- site, "it's time to put the poor on the political agenda," to "give voices to millions of Americans who are currently shut out of the national debate." Although the National Conventions have already been guaranteed almost constar coverage by the corporate media, responsi ble American voters should focus their atten tion on the Shadow Conventions. For one o the first times in Campaign 2000, politica issues like the gap between the rich and th poor, the failed war on drugs and camp finance reform will be up for public scru" commentary, analysis, and debate. Most of the candidates have already beet unofficially chosen. With this in mind, it i now time not to congratulate the winners but to start thinking seriously about th issues that will decide the outcome of th final elections. The responsible voter wil resist following the stick-and-carrot routin directly to the corporate, media-prep c ballot box. This is a time to turn to inde dent media options like the Shados Conventions for less biased informatio about what the candidates stand for, what th issues are, and what the public can do to sup port the causes they believe in. Organizers of the Shadow Convention claim they are "engaged in the politics o ideas, not the politics of electioneering. While the National Conventions write th official list of candidates that caps this cam paign's 'political engineering,' the Shadoy Conventions and other independent medi sources will be leading actual discussion o political issues - discussion mainstrean parties avoid lest they lose the ever-impos tant 'swing vote' just before the elections Take a stand for campaign finance reforn and against soft money and irresponsibl political spending by following the Shadox Conventions in favor of the Nationg Conventions. I