Monday, July 2, 2001- The Michigan Daily-- 5 j Spiders'questfor world domination must be stopped Idon't mean to alarm anyone, but out of hiding. nary spiders. Mold, mildew and what there may be an army of giant, Until recently, they were all hiding must have been a steady supply of edi- mutant spiders currently plotting in my grandparents' basement (or, ble insects were not enough for them. s the militant overthrow of a small town "down the cellar" in Pennsylvanian). It They yearned to see the world beyond i- in Pennsylvania. And if they succeed, (the basement/cellar) has a stone floor the staircase. Before long, they were e there's no telling where they'll strike and is adorned with several piles of electing officials, holding rallies and s next. junk that no one making speeches from little podiums d Before I divulge just how I came has even looked at to one another about conquering the n across this sensitive information, a few since February 24, ominous Man Upstairs and all of his e words on spiders: 1965. For decades, Wretched Offspring. Each year, as Some people think I'm afraid of it has been an their supply of aforementioned nour- a spiders. This is completely false. As a ideal breeding ishment increased, they got bigger and s Powerful Woman of the New Millenni- ground for - and stronger. Every now and then, they is um, I have far more important things I don't use this would send a brave representative e to think about than whether or not I term lightly - though the laundry chute to check v actually swallow six spiders in my creepy crawlies. things out. n- sleep every year. I am not at all curi- As a child, I'd Yet somehow, in all the years I've it- ous as to how this statistic was docu- AUBREY see them occa- been visiting that house, I never saw ir mented. Also, I have never left the HENRETTY sionally. Besides one spider outside the bounds of the ar computer lab because there was a big .> %being a haven for basement. :s green spider tiptoeing around right scary bugs, the That is, not until last week. ug next to my mouse pad. And I'm defi- basement was also where Gramma Upon entering the area of the to nitely not getting all itchy just thinking kept all the canned goods; few orders house known as the Back Room, I was A about it. were more terrifying than the ones that startled to find a spider that could eas- So, back to Pennsylvania: began, "Aubrey, would you go down ily have used me as a toothpick kicked a- I became aware of the burgeoning the cellar and get ... " So I'd be down- back in Gramma's recliner! One pair s- arachnid revolution last week while stairs, getting a can of Beefaroni or of his legs were crossed, another st visiting my grandparents in Sharon, something, when out of nowhere a spi- behind his head, the third knitting a tea to Pennsylvania (motto: "We're serious der roughly the size of a mature water- cozy and the fourth holding the TV of ... and don't call us Shirley"). On the melon would slink down from the remote and a glass of iced tea. He took :i- surface, Sharon is a peaceful town ceiling and stick its tongue out at me. a sip, then noticed me standing slack- as with her own candy factory, steel mill Brutal though these encounters jawed in the doorway. "Oh, I'm sorry," :s, and Meek Street. All-American. Din- were, I felt safe in the knowledge that he said. "Did you want to sit here?" ne ers: Yes. Starbucks: No. the spiders liked it down there and Ha, ha! I am such a kidder. He was er But an evil far greater than Corpo- were not coming upstairs where I really drinking a Frappuccino. to rate America lurks beneath Sharon's might unwittingly swallow them in my ii- public golf course and her tastefully sleep. Or where they might swallow -Aubrey Henrettys column runs every li- landscaped lawns. And its hairy, multi- me in my sleep. other Monday. She can be reached via >ls legged soldiers are starting to come But like I said, these were no ordi- e-mail at ahenrett@umich.edu. sattie to legalize marijuana 'about freedom' TO THE DAILY: Thank you for so succinctly stat- Sing views held by a large majority of the American people. In your editorial ("Just say yes: Legalizing marijuana would benefit many," 6/18/01), you pose the ques- tion: Why does the government per- sist in keeping marijuana illegal? According to Judge Gray - a long- time advocate of marijuana law reform - without the marijuana users, the government cannot justify the enormous expenditures that the drug war incurs. The curtailment of civil rights, reaching from the first amendment, through the fourth and badly warping the tenth among those atrocities being committed. Politicians inevitably have a problem with saying that they have made mistakes. Even should those mistakes lie with a con- gress long dead. g Mandatory minimum sentencing, property confiscation laws, free speech abridgements if not downright censorship, the creating of two gener- ations of Americans that fear the% police, and distrust the authority that supposedly. wishes to help them. We have, thanks to the daiugwar, the test'- ing upon demandat oodily tiuids, ot all citizens. Itsis a proven fact, harder drugs are undetectable after 36-72 hours in the urine or blood, marijuana itself leaves the body after 8-24 hours, the metabolites it leaves behind remain up to a month, depen- dant upon body metabolism. We have seen the Supreme Courts of both State and federal persuasion steadily back the politicians. We are noticing an increase in allied nation resentment against the heavy handed drug warrior tactics, coercion and threats not the least of what those good peoples face. In Illinois, it is now good law to stop and search a vehicle should it bear a Led Zeppelin sticker. Upheld by the Illinois Supreme Court last year, they decid- ed this was "Probable cause." Mainly because older marijuana users like Led Zeppelin, the mind boggles. We applaud your stance, and hope to see more. Marijuana does not break down your door in the middle of the night. This is reserved for D.E.A. agents and local police forces, clad in black, and sometimes shooting the wrong citizens. This is, in our minds, not about marijuana, it is about freedom. Let freedom ring! KELLY L. WHITE - The letter.wrier is tile itioderdt6r ofmrtirjuana.com. The politics of identi We all know someone who is mixed, interracial, biracial, whatever you want to call it. What I find interesting, but rarely discussed, is the strikingly similar manner in which these individuals create their political identity. Whether we like it or not (and whether we wish to acknowledge it or not), we all have some sort of sociopolitical identity. I don't mean here that we all identify with a par- ticular organized ideology, but rather that we all have some sort of politi- cal status in our society. Of course, some of us enjoy a more privileged political status, and those of us who do enjoy that status are usually oblivious to it until con- fronted with a situation where it smacks them in the face. White men in our society are of course at the top of this sociopolitical totem pole, and after that, the pecking order becomes a little fuzzy, with the youngest immigrant community usually sharing the bottom spot with whatever ethnic group happens to be the foreign policy enemy of the time. (Today, of course, Arab/Muslim-Americans possess both those roles.) What is sure, though, is that white men are not ready to willingly abandon their powerful political sta- tus. In fact, I once heard Chris Rock say during a comedy show that "there's a white one-legged busboy around here that wouldn't trade places with me ... and I'm rich!" So what is striking is how interracial individuals always seem to more closely identify with that part of their biological identity that enjoys the lower political status. Why is this? Wouldn't we think that when faced with the choice of identifying one's own identity, that he/she would wish to latch onto that identi- ty that would grant the higher sociopolitical advantage? Well, the fact of the matter is this: We don't get to choose. And this is why we find mixed individu- als almost always identifying more AMER G. closely with that ZAHR part of them which has the w history of politi- cal oppression. One of my closest friends has a black father and a white mother, yet she almost exclusively identifies with the black community, even though we both grew up in a community that was over 95% white. This is because our society does the identifying for her. In the larger scope, she doesn't gain any height on that totem pole because her mother is white. In fact, I find myself in a similar position. While both of my parents are Palestinian, my father is a Chris- tian while my mother is Muslim. Yet I find myself more closely identify- ing with my Muslim identity than my Christian one. This has nothing to do with religion. I am not particu- larly high on organized religion. This all has to do with politics. Being an Arab in America is already closely identified with being Mus- lim, and when coupled with the fact that I am half Muslim, my identity in this society is far from advanta- geous, far from the political advan- tage we would expect for a Christian. It is because of these social phe- nomena that those of us who are not pure white Judeo-Christian males cannot ever deny our inherently political existence. I am personally irritated whenever I hear a fellow Arab-American say something as asinine as "Yeah, I'm an Arab, but I'm apolitical." It's a contradiction in terms. When you and/or your group are the subject of political and social discrimination, your every act car- ries a political implication, regard- less of your desire to have it do so. Being black, Muslim, Arab, Latino/a, Chinese, Bosnian - the list goes on - is inherently and vio- lently political in American society, especially given the close ties between our government's foreign policies and the way our media por- trays them. Now should all this talk about our not being able to construct our own identity create any sense of powerlessness? Of course not. When enough of us assert our identity - our oppressed identity -_and con- tinue to cling to those causes of the powerless that are just, things will and must change, because no social power will survive as long as it con- tinually oppresses people simply because it can. -Amer Zahrs column runs every other Monday He can be reached via " $ e~maLd t zilr ng@umicUKi: