VIEWPOINT A vision for a new student activism The Michigan Daily - Monday, June 6, 2005 - 5 Save our political discourse now! JESSE SINGAL STM! THE T IDIE BY DALE WINLING About a year ago, a member of the Old Fourth Ward Association contacted members of the Ann Arbor city council. He wanted to discuss some house fires in neighborhoods near the University campus. Through that e- mail and subsequent discussions over the next several months, OFW members tried to make a specious connection between couches on porches and house fires. Thus was born the campaign to ban the porch couches that students love and homeown- er associations hate. The stakes were raised when couch opponents tried to push the ban through city council before students got back to school last fall. Fortunately, quick-witted students got wind of the proposed ban and started talking it up on their blogs and web sites. Students and other sensible commu- nity members debunked the myth of the fire hazard and stood up for the simple freedom to put comfortable furniture on one's porch. For the time being, thanks to these students, you and I are safe to sit on our couches this summer eating Stucchi's ice cream or sipping a beer after work. And in the process, these students exposed the campaign for what it was: an attempt by organized homeowners to push their values on a largely disorganized student- renter population within Ann Arbor. The calculus of local politics is this: Nearly every segment of the city has hom- eowner and business groups to look after its interests. The Old West Side Associa- tion, the OFW and the State Street Busi- ness Association all lobby and organize within the city to promote their agendas. Students, however, have no organiza- tion to represent their sizable interests in Ann Arbor (Michigan Student Assembly being a campus-based organization). We don't have much say on local issues; we don't have much representation within city government; we don't have much of a chance to set the agenda for Ann Arbor. This is despite students' composing somewhere around a third of the city's population - in fact, in some areas like the Old Fourth Ward (the neighborhood north of Huron Drive, actually now the city's First Ward), students and renters are at least a whopping 90 percent of the neighborhood's population. This situation is not unique to Ann Arbor - in college towns across the state and the country, sizable student popula- tions are at the mercy of neighborhood political machines. Ask your friends in East Lansing why they can't have couches on their porches. Ask your friends at Fer- ris State about the padlock ordinance there, where three noise violations can get you kicked out of your house and makes the house uninhabitable for up to a year; or your friends at the University of Florida about the one there. Students in Ann Arbor are not alone in not having been organized to fight against these draconian measures when they are proposed. They have cer- tainly not put themselves in a position to help shape the city agenda. What is unique to Ann Arbor is that this is about to change. Recognizing the poten- tial strength of the student vote and the raft of issues that affect students who live in the city, students are launching neighbor- hood associations of their own. By orga- nizing students by geography, these new associations intend to overcome the tran- sience of student renters. An advantage the homeowner associations have is that their members know each other from commu- nity activities: school open houses, church groups and gardening clubs. Students, on the other hand, often don't know their neighbors and identify more with their campus, their programs or other groups unrelated to where they live. By getting stu- dents to identify with their neighborhoods and mitigating the year-to-year move- out cycle with a stable political structure, student neighborhood associations will force city politicians - who are elected by geographical wards - to respond to student issues. Only then will students be acknowledged as the enduring group with common interests that they are. It is at that point that we can get beyond aesthetic battles and someone can address why nearly half the renters in Ann Arbor, according to the U.S. Census Bureau, pay more than thirty percent of their income for housing - exceeding federal standards for low- and middle- income renters. Or perhaps then someone will remedy the lax enforcement of the housing code and reprehensible lack of maintenance by absentee landlords, both of which contribute to blight in student neighborhoods. Or someone can explain why residential parking permits - which limit parking on public streets to immedi- ate locals - are being pushed by home- owner associations and subsidized by the city. Join the first student neighborhood group, the New West Side Association, and see how you can help. And introduce yourself to your neighbor. Winling is the founder of the New West Side Association. For more information, visit www.newwestside.org. y first exposure to the Lyndon LaRouche PAC came this past winter, when I attended a lecture by Professor Juan Cole on theIraq war. Dur- ing the question and answer period at the end, someone from the PAC asked a question. Professor Cole, in his response, referred to members of the group as "cultish." The questioner quickly became agitated and screamed "This man is a fascist!" loud enough so that everyone in the large room could hear it. "Professor Cole's a fascist?" I thought to myself. "He sure hides it well." So I can't honestly say I didn't know what I was in for when I accepted a flyer from a "LaRouchie" on the subway a cou- ple of weeks ago. "Save our U.S. Consitu- tion Now!" screamed the headline, and it was authored by the man himself, Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr. Now the subject of the flyer is the judi- cial filibuster controversy, which has since been resolved in a manner that didn't fully please anyone. Butidespite the dated nature of the subject, much can be learned from the tone and brand of rhetoric utilized: "Leading Democrats and other rec- ognize that there is an ominous parallel between the incendiary activities of White House radical right-wing propaganda min- ister Karl Rove and Vice President Dick 'Hermann' Cheney's plot, and the incen- diary actions used by Hermann Goer- ing which led to Reichschancellor Adolf Hitler's seizure of dictatorial powers on February 28, 1933 ... Tens of millions of people died as a result of what happened in Berlin on February 27-28, 1933. With the present Bush Administration pushing for 'preventative use' of existing nuclear weapons now, many more than tens of millions will die world-wide, if we let the U.S. walk down that same road now. That increasingly hysterically desperate admin- istration now intends to use those weap- ons just about as quickly as you can say, 'Remember what happened with Iraq.' I'm going to respond to the final part of this excerpt first. The Washington Post reported on May 15 ("Not Just A Last Resort?") that the United States' Strate- gic Command, or Stratcom, does indeed have a contingency plan, CONPLAN 8022, that includes a nuclear option. Specifically, it would utilize "a specially configured earth-penetrating bomb to destroy deeply buried facilities." Is this scary? Yes. The Post article itself refers to the nuclear side of the plan as "disconcert- ing." But does this mean that Bush is itch- ing to use a nuclear weapon? Of course not. For LaRouche to argue that this is the goal or intention of the Bush Administra- tion - nuclear war - smacks of the ide- ological blind spots that arise when you hate too much and think too little. As for the Hitler comparisons - why should I even bother? Really, what's the point? Comparing Bush to one of the 20th century's most notorious figures is so utterly sophomoric - and, unfortunately, cliched - that it's hardly worth respond- ing to. Suffice it to say, Bush is not Hitler. Bush is nowhere near Hitler. When did it become impossible to say simply, "I dis- like the guy, and here's why..."? I'm notgoing to comparefBush to Hitler. I'm not going to claim that he wants to start a nuclear war. I'm not even going to take the very Bush-esque route of branding him as "evil." What I'm going to do is say that it is utterly remarkable that, after the innumerable claims made by him and his administration aboutmIraq turned out to be utterly false, no one was ever held account- able. See what I just did, LaRouchies? Wasn't that easy? You don't need to imme- diately seek out the most sensationalistic, hyperbolic ways to convey your dislike of the man. You don't need to call anyone you disagree with a "fascist." When the facts are on your side, all you have to do is use them. It's so much easier to respond to "Bush and his administration are simi- lar to Hitler and his administration" than it is to respond to "The vast majority of the things Bush and his administration said about Iraq in the buildup to the war have turned out to be false. Why?" Come on, LaRouchies: Let's leave the name-calling to those who don't have the facts on their side. Singal can be reached at jsingal@umich.edu. The weight of words MARA GAY MN' SFEE still believe in journalism. If I have a religion ,>. it is the words I have faith in, trust- ing in their power to expose lies and undermine injus- tice. But as my best friend heads off to the Naval Academy, I cannot help but think that journalism has failed him; that I have failed him. If a journalist's job is to "comfort the afflicted and afflict the comfortable," these should be the golden years of the profession - the president and his admin- istration have provided us, after all, with a stream of policy decisions and principles that beg for rebuttal. Instead, it is journalism itself that has been exposed, writers as fabrica- tors, media organizations as political think tanks, newspapers as irrespon- sible, unconscionable wastes of trees. The New York Times tries its hand at responsible journalism and finds its reporters imprisoned for failing to reveal their sources. Partisan pundits scream unintelligibly at one another from the television screen, masquerad- ing as intellectuals and patriots. This friend of mine is many things - generous, loyal and patriotic - but he is not political, and to him the Navy is an opportunity to fulfill a duty to coun- try, a duty he believes we all share. Were the media as courageous he, they would present the American public with the facts, an act that would quickly dismiss the idea of this conflict as a righteous cause. The truth is that Iraq is a war con- ceived under the most dubious of circum- stances, waged without enough troops or sufficient armor. I have been a lover of words my whole life, and it is my jobto express ideas in their form. But lately, the words do not flow onto the laptop with the same speed and convic- tion as the lies I am trying so desperately to challenge, and I have no idea which viola- tion of human rights is more worthy of a column or which scandal more necessary to investigate and expose. The true identity of Deep Throat, the anyonymous source who helped Wash- ington Post reporters Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein bring down the Nixon administration in 1973, was revealed last week. While it could have been a refresh- ing reminder of our responsibility as journalists to question the status quo, the media preferred to discuss whether the men were heroes or traitors. They missed the point. Watergate is small fries compared to the lies and scan- dal that plague today's political arena. The Bush administration is the scandal, and everything necessary to undermine its legitimacy is right in front of our faces - there is no need for mysterious sources or porn-star aliases. Right-wing activist judges are shoved through the Senate and onto the nation's highest courts with a ruthless disregard for minority rights. Education is embar- rassingly underfunded, millions of Amer- icans live without health insurance and the gap between the rich and the poor is ever widening as corporations are given more handouts than urban Detroit. And then there is Iraq. I am outraged at the war on terror and where it has taken us. But it is journalism that is supposed to function as a "fourth estate," a final check on the powers of government, the ultimate guardian of the people and their right to know. And instead of demanding open and honest debate, the media has allowed the administration's greatest lie to pose as a romantic exercise in good- will, duty and patriotism. Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein remindusthat whenjournalismisresponsi- ble it can do great things. They have provid- ed the modern media with an opportunity it cannot afford to pass up: the opportunity to be ashamed of our gross negligence, our reverence to political balance over facts, and our loyalty to the large corporations that own the media instead of the Ameri- can people, who need desperately for us to ask the tough questions. These are trying times for someone who believes in the ability of journalism to change the world one word at a time. My best friend is leaving for the Naval Academy at the end of the month. And while I struggle to understand how he could entrust his life to the same govern- ment that brought us the tragedy of Iraq and all its disturbing vignettes, I need to be able to trust in journalism more now than ever before. It has to be strong enough to challenge the authority that he must blindly follow, to question the war that he cannot. Gay is a Daily editorial board member. She can be reached at maracl@umich.edu. 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