Monday August 13, 2007 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com EMMARIE HUETTEMAN My conviction GARY GRACA Stamping out the media This summer marks the 35th anniversary of the Supreme Court's tempo- rary mora- torium An eye for an on capital punish- eye has made ment. And our country today marks blind. the second day since I heard that Sen. Sam Brownback (R-Kans.) and I might actually agree about something. Because Sam and I are Roman Catholics, it seems only natural that we should be opposed to the death penalty. Our faith promotes forgiveness and life, after all. And as the Republican presidential hopeful once reasoned, "If we're trying to establish a culture of life, it's difficult to have the state spon- soring executions." But then again, Catholicism wasn't enough to change the minds of death penalty support- ers Sen. Joe Biden (D-Del.), Sen. Chris Dodd (D-Conn.), Gov. Bill Richardson (D-N.M.) and former New York City Mayor Rudy Giu- liani (R). In fact, when the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life conducted a survey two years ago to gauge American opinion on the death penalty, it discovered that opposition to it is highest among those who characterize their reli- gious affiliation as "secular." So if religious convictions aren't moti- vating individuals to oppose capi- tal punishment, what is? Maybe it's suspicion about why the United States is the only Western nation that still uses the death penalty. Our neighbors Canada and Mexico abolished the practice in 1976 and 2005, respec- tively. Even Germany, which has been fighting the culture of death stereotype since the Third Reich, got rid of the death penalty in 1949. Maybe it's the influence of social theorists who believe that capi- tal punishment doesn't deter vio- lent crime. They assert that those who commit murder are not typi- cally in a rational frame of mind, whether due to drug use, passion or mental illness, and thus don't consider the consequences of their actions. In fact, a United Nations study in 1998 concluded that the death penalty's effectiveness in deterring crime could not be prov- en, addingthat it was unlikelythat it ever would. Or maybe it's an acknowledge- ment that we're only using the death penalty to comfort our- selves. In "The Audacity of Hope," Sen. BarackObama (D-Ill.) asserts that while the policy is ineffective in reducing crime, he supports its use when "the community isjusti- fied in expressing the full measure of its outrage." When someone rapes and murders a child, for instance, the crime is so horrify- ing that we want to feel justified in our almost primal desire to exact revenge. We don't want to recognize our shared humanity with that murderer, and we cer- tainly don't want to see any simi- larities between his crime and our justice. This year marks the 31st anni- versary of the reinstatement of capital punishment. And today I realized thatnmaybe I was too quick to say that I agree with Brown- back. Upon further research, I found out that he used to support the death penalty, and still sup- ports it in "rare, extreme cases." His convictions aren't even strong enough for the issue to appear in his platform. But if Brownback won't take a strong stance on this, I will. Capi- tal punishment is an antiquated policy, ineffective in purpose and unjust in nature. Rather than take steps toward its abolishment, though, this country continues to ignore its blatant flaws and aggra- vate the problem. Last month, Missouri legis- lated that anyone who reveals the identity of an executioner is fair game for legal action. Why? Because The St. Louis Post-Dis- patch released the name of the doctor who admitted to giving inmates less than the required sedative dosage during lethal injection, basically subjecting them to torture. He blamed his dyslexia. Far be it from anyone to subject him to discomfort for the sake of questioning an inherently flawed system. I wish someone would question the system. Emmarie Huetteman is the summer associate editorial page editor. She can be reached at huettemeiumich.edu. The sky is falling on Ameri- can media. That was the message in every newspaper and televi- sion station across the country on Aug. 1 when Rupert Mur- Postage doch finalized will be the his takeover of Dow Jones & media's Co., publisher downfall. of The Wall Street Journal. Since Murdoch is a media tycoon and egotist with a love for crowding out competi- tion and forcing his opinion on an unsuspecting public, what could possibly be worse? Just consider that, according to the Guardian, all 175 of the pub- lications in Murdoch's empire editorialized support for the war in Iraq in 2003. Or consider that Murdoch is so cozy with legisla- tors around the world that he has both avoided media ownership laws and helped create laws more favorable to media monopolies like his company News Corp. Or just tune in to Fox News Channel sometime. But while all the hoopla about Murdoch made for a riveting story, the media missed a more impor- tant, but far less glamorous, story. Although a Murdoch-controlled Wall Street Journal isn't ideal, if the current state of America's media moved closer to its demise, it probably didn't happen on August 1, 2007. It probably happened on July 15, 2007. That was the day when the postage rates for periodi- cals increased. On the surface it's easy to brush this off as an inconsequen- tial change that won't do much but raise the cost of your Sports Illustrated by a few cents. But that's not quite the case. For the thousands of small, independent publications across the country, these pennies are adding up to massive, unexpected increases in cost - costs that many of these magazines can't afford and cer- tainly can't afford to pass on to their readers. Alreadysituated in a fragile mar- ket that places mass-media corpo- rations at a clear advantage from the start, independent publica- tions are highly vulnerable to this postage increase. If they choose to pass the cost onto readers, they risk losing an already dwindled readership. If they choose to meet the costs head on, they may have to skim valuable content from their publications or cut staff. Although the change affects all small publications relatively equally across the political spec- trum, from the leftist magazine The Nation to the right-wing The National Review, it doesn't affect all publications equally. According to a May op-ed piece in the Los Angeles Times by Tere- sa Stack and Jack Fowler, when the United States Postal Service originally proposed the postage increase, it was supposed to be a 12-percent hike for all publi- cations. But, that proposal was abandoned, and in its place, a proposal drafted by the larg- est magazine publisher in the country, Time Warner, was pushed through. By giving preference to higher- weighted items and bulk mail, the new rate system is expected to raise the cost for large publications slightly while piling on increases to the small publications. Some estimates from McGraw-Hill even estimate that it could increase postage for small magazines by as much as 30 percent. But because the new system is so confusing, no one is certain. Regardless, the new postage system promises to be an added threat to an already endangered, but important, part of Ameri- can media. Publications like The Nation and The National Review offer something that the media monopolies don't. While the tra- dition of investigative reporting is largely dying at newspapers across the country, these magazines are challenging and provoking, even if you disagree with the political ide- ology they advocate. If the American media is going to die, it isn't going to end with the bang of Murdoch's fortune - it's going to end with a whimper, as small publications across the coun- try wither away. Gary Graca is the summer editorial page editor. He can be reached at gmgraca@umich.edu. PERFECT ANN ARBOR LOCATIONS! BEAUTIFUL SETTINGS! LOTS OF AMENITIES! Spacious 1 & 2 BedroomApart- menlo, with Balconies/Patias, Walk-in Closets, FreeStorage On-Site Laundry, Swimming Paul, Outdoor Recreation areas & much more! PET FRIENDLY! TRAVER KNOLL APTS 1984 Traver Rd (N. Campus-Near U/M Hospital) SHOREVIEW APTS 420 Kellogg N. 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