I 4 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, May 30, 2006 UWj £idgwn &Iitu FROM THE DAILY Inadequecy vs. lunacy Solution to energy crisis requires lifestyle changes JEREMY DAVIDSON Editor in Chief IMRAN SYED Editorial Page Editor JEFFREY BLOOMER Managing Editor EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN SINCE 1890. 420 MAYNARD STREET ANN ARBOR, MI 48109 tothedaily@michigandaily.com Unsigned editorials reflect the official position of the Daily's editorial board. All other signed articles and illustrations represent solely the views of their author. Editorial Board Members: Amanda Andrade, Emily Beam, Jared Goldberg, Theresa Kennelly, Christopher Zbrozek FROM THE DAILY CSI: W-ashi-ngto Coverups have no place in a democracy After a year of record-setting gas prices, oil companies have earned record-setting profits. In response, Gov. Jennifer Granholm - hoping to send the right message to such companies and vot- ers alike - submitted an online petition last week to President Bush, urging, among other things, a profit cap and a repeal of the tax cuts that have mostly benefited the wealthy. But while it is well intentioned and a step in the right direction, Granholm's petition will not be successful in helping most driv- ers' top concern: lowering the price of gas. Even so, her efforts were not made in vain. In the absence of an external force such as a natural disaster to drive oil prices up, the apparent avarice of oil executives - for- mer ExxonMobil CEO Lee Raymond's $98 million retirement package comes to mind - has made many Michiganians angry, and rightfully so. A tax on oil profits will bring some much-needed revenue, but with- out attacking the real causes of rising gas prices rooted in our addiction to oil, it will fall short of its intention. Republican gubernatorial candidate Dick DeVos's energy plan, on the other hand, can only be described as foolish. DeVos, who believes that taxing oil profits will stifle invest- ment, wants to eliminate the sales tax on gaso- line. This plan would only save the consumer $0.06 for every dollar that the price of gas increases above $195. However, the amount of revenue the state would lose as a result is a whopping $285 million. Without a plan to make up the difference, key funds like those for school aid, local government sharing funds and the state general fund may fall short. There are better ways to knock gas prices down and to lower our dependency on oil. Making fuel-efficient cars more readily available is a good first step, as is focusing more resources on alterative fuels like etha- nol. Consumers should also be encouraged to drive less, participate in carpools and car sharing when possible or use mass transit systems, such as subways, elevated trains and buses. (Of course, such mass transit systems must first be built.) Less people on the road will cause the demand for gas to decrease, and thus drive down prices. Even with allthese changes,we canno lon- ger overlook the fact that it is time to reeval- uate our ingrained perceptions of where and when to drive. As suburbs move farther and farther away from centers of employment, Americans find themselves commuting up to two hours each way for work. Given the skyrocketing price of gas and dangerous increases in greenhouse emissions, we must accept that the era of one person driving a seven-seat SUV 50 or 60 miles to and from work is over. This solution will take more time and effort than others, but it is the only one that will prove viable in the long run. Gov. Granholm's proposals reflect the outrage of the ever-increasing price of gas coupled with record profits by oil compa- nies. But simply increasing taxes (or fool- ishly decreasing them, as DeVos would do) will not counter the threats we face in the long run. What we need is a cure, and we cannot back down if, like all life-saving medication, it is a little hard to swallow. A government that is willing to violate its own laws to spy on its citizens is worrisome enough. But one that refuses to allow investigations into whether its actions have broken the law is even more dangerous. In a number of recent actions, the Bush administration has sought to shut down inquiries into whether the National Secu- rity Agency's spy programs have violated civil-liberty protections. Such contempt for investigation is simply unacceptable in a society based on the rule of law. When reports surfaced last December that the NSA had been listening in on the inter- national phone calls of Americans without a warrant, the Justice Department tried to investigate whether the lawyers who had reviewed the program acted appropriately. The Office of Professional Responsibility, the Justice Department's ethics office, sought security clearances in January to review the classified NSA program. Earlier this month, it found out that its investigators had been denied security clearance, a decision its director described as "hard to believe." With- out any way to access information, the office was forced to drop its investigation. The secrecy surrounding the NSA pro- gram has suffocated other investigations. After USA Today reported that the NSA had obtained the phone records of tens of millions of Americans, members of Congress requested the Federal Commu- nication Commission to investigate; the NSA's program, after all, is ostensibly a violation of federal telecommunications laws. Yet the FCC announced last week it would not investigate the matter, citing the difficulty of obtaining information about the classified program. National security concerns may also ultimately lead to the dismissal of class-action lawsuits brought against phone companies alleging that they violated their customers' privacy by cooperating with the NSA. Indeed, the Bush administration has greatly increased the use of the so-called "state secrets privilege," a legal mecha- nism to encourage the dismissal of cases that might reveal information critical to national security. It used the state secret privilege successfully this month to ensure the dismissal of a case brought by Khaled el-Masri, a German citizen who was apparently kidnapped in Macedonia by the Central Intelligence Agency through its "extraordinary rendition" program. El- Masri was held at a secret CIA prison in Afghanistan for five months before the government realized they had the wrong guy. This month, the administration again asserted the state secret privilege on behalf of AT&T, which is being sued over allega- tions that it has allowed the NSA to con- struct secret computer rooms at its facilities to spy on phone and internet traffic. National security reasons do, in rare cir- cumstances, have the right to prevent the prosecution of claims against it in open court. Yet a drive for secrecy cannot legitimize a wholesale refusal to allow investigations. The state secrets privilege was used about 55 times through the entire Cold War up until 2001. In the first four years since Sept. 11, the Bush administration has used it at least 23 times. And the fear that state secrets would be revealed in open court, of course, has no bearing on the refusal to grant security clear- ances to DOJ and FCC investigators. There are ample means - from internal investigations and closed sessions of the Congressional intelligence committees to secret intelligence courts - to balance a legitimate need for secrecy with the abso- lute requirement that a nation governed by laws allow investigations when laws may have been broken. This administration, however, is far too fond of secrecy, and far too ready to stifle investigations. In the past, claims of "national security" were used to justify gross abuses by intelli- gence agencies such as opening mailofprivate citizens and members of Congress, and even CIA tests of drugs such as LSD on unsuspect- ing citizens. These agencies were only able to act with such disregard for the rights of those they were sworn to protect because of an abiding and pervasive lack of will to oversee anything said to concern national security. As people who value freedom, Americans shouldn't stand for a government that will shut down any investigation into the excesses of its national security apparatus. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Columnist doesn't understand Wal-Mart's destructive power To THE DAILY: Unfortunately, Wal-Mart is not the out- standing corporate leader John Stiglich wants us to believe (Walmart: poverty war- rior, 05/22/2006). To claim it provides ade- quate healthcare and helps local economies is a misjudgment. Let's look at the facts. Sources at www. walmartwatch.com indicate that fewer than half of Wal-Mart's employees are covered by its insurance plans - which are packed with hidden fees. This leaves the remaining 600,000 employees to rely on public health assistance, paid for by taxes. Essentially, you and I are paying for our local Wal-Mart to stay in business. Meanwhile, local economies are devas- tated when new Wal-Marts open. An aver- age of two local supermarkets will close T nZ Tr r-- 1 D = with each new Wal-Mart, not to mention the effect on hardware stores, automotive shops, clothing retailers and pharmacies. Also, local businesses spend much more within their neighborhood than the outsourcing giant Wal-Mart. While no one asks retail- ers for higher prices, we must consider the full picture of what Wal-Mart is doing to our country. If we value capitalism, shouldn't diversity in the marketplace be one of the defining features we agree to protect? Finally, I question if a distribution plant in Somerset, Md. would have really helped poverty in that area. Consider that Wal- Mart's average employee makes $1,000 below the poverty line if he has a family of three. Wal-Mart's record of violating envi- ronmental laws and discriminating against women and minorities probably wouldn't end in Somerset either. I don't shop at Wal-Mart because its poor quality goods and services are something See LETTERS, Page 5 JON OQUIST 'HIS SMALL, BLURRY, oo srss s ssr UZZY, PREY OBJET MUS $0YOaS rEEt, CA stLAETRUCK t LIGHT11 Tst WOLITRAtDEllR 80 501'UFFTHE PENTAD AND ANEDINSA tIE I PES55 nMM1.0U5 FlOS a, 3A 1 NA ILDI