9 Page 4--The Michigan Daily -Tuesday, January 29, 1991 U, fe icign atij EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109 Viewpoint NOAH FINKEL Editor in Chief DAVID SCHWARTZ Opinion Editor Unsigned editorials represent a majority of the Daily's Editorial Board. All other cartoons, signed articles, and letters do not necessarily represent the opinion of the Daily. :.From heDaily. Shanty destruction Students must not censor differing opinions on Diag 7-~ - --". --',., ,,te -K- / 0- T4 ---- --- - - ---- --- A E TO OgPM IM A T316 MA,.LARE- fIES A LAST TUESDAY NIGHT THE ANTI- war wall in the Diag was destroyed by five anonymous students. The same night, the shanty constructed by the campus group S.O.S. (Support our Soldiers) was also damaged by unidentified vandals. What these acts of wanton destruc- tion portray is a disregard for and in- tolerance of free expression. The Uni- versity should serve as a marketplace of ideas, where different points of view can be openly aired and debated. The Diag in particular functions as a public arena where Ann Arbor residents and University students can say or do as they please. The shanties, for good or bad, play an important role in campus dialogue, and provide a voice for dif- ferent sectors of the student body on issues that matter to them. The Gulf War has elicited extreme emotions from students across the po- litical spectrum. The destruction of the anti-war wall and the S.O.S. shanty in support of our troops demonstrates a censorship of ideas, and does nothing to further campus debate about the U.S. presence in the Gulf. No matter how much a student may disagree with a certain point of view, reacting violently is not a viable alternative, and, in fact, lowers the validity of one's own par- ticular viewpoint. Indeed, attempts to suppress dissenting voices give the impression that the perpetrators are un- able to respond coherently and intelli- gently to the others' arguments. The war is a very controversial issue on this campus and across the nation. To reduce campus debate to childish acts of destruction divertsenergy from the extremely important dialogue that should be taking place. In this time of desperation and con- fusion, it is important that students be able to express themselves fully, and explore their own feelings and opin- ions. The shanty demolitions lie counter to this end. If a campus group disagrees with a shanty or mural on the Diag, they should build their own dis- play expressing their own point of view. Differing opinions and spirited campus debates are acceptable, and even necessary, but senseless vandal- ism is neither. SP F 'U' should work to protect Arab-Americans By Alita J. Mitchell There are many of us here at the Uni- versity and in the Ann Arbor community who for a long time have been interested in the Middle East - some because of ethnic origin, some because of personal experience in the area, some because of academic discipline and many because of a love and admiration of the people and their culture. There are a variety of reasons; but I think it is safe to say all of us havebeen frustrated and saddened, for many years, with the many voices on this campus who have spoken out against injustice have been selective in focusing their concern for human rights violations; Nicaragua; El Salvador; South Africa. The plight of the Palestinians was long ignored. It is heartening that finally the Pales- tinian people are seen as a valid cause. But as a group, Arabs and, by extension, Arab-Americans continue to be suspect - a stereotype perpetrated in films, on television, and in the press. With this image in many minds, a grave concern is that the consequence of the war in the Gulf will be increased racism against Arabs and Arab-Ameri- cans. An atmosphere of fear and mistrust is being well orchestrated by the Bush Administration's warning of impending domestic terrorism. Last Monday, the University began a week of activities honoring Martin Luther King, Jr., a leader who guided us through the frightening times of the 1960s. We should continue the celebration, by searching for a non-violent solution to the present crisis. Unfortunately, the Bush Administra- tion has begun to pursue a violent soluo* On this campus we deserve to have assurances from our University administration that it will not tolerate racist acts, both political and openly violent, against Arabs or Arab-Americans within our community and that the University will take appropriate actions against such crimes. On this campus we deserve to have assurances from our University adminis- tration that it will not tolerate racist acts, both political and openly violent, against Arabs or Arab-Americans within our community and that the University will take appropriate actions against such crimes. Mitchell is an Ann Arbor resident. Monument was a disgrace To the Daily: I applaud the students who destroyed the anti-war monument, which stood on the Diag last week. I, too, agree with those students who said it sent a nega- tive message to the U.S. troops. My first reaction to the monument was one of disgust. I felt like crying be- cause, to me, the monument's depiction of violence made it seem as if it's the troops' fault for the war. If a person kills another in war it is not murder. The monument looked like a murder scene. I am beginning to wonder if people realize how negatively the University has been portrayed recently on the news. The minority of war protesters are mak- ing it seem like all University students are against the war. Perhaps the destruc- tion of the monument will change other's opinions. My message to war protesters is the following: War was inevitable. It has started and no one can do anything about it! Support your troops! Stop send- ing a negative message to them! The United States has a just cause to fight a war: Hussein. Lisa Rigg LSA first-year student KE.NNE I HMULLEMIUSIly Destruction of the anti-war wall and the S.O.S. shanty sparked another round of campus debate over the conflict in the Persian Gulf and student groups' freedom of expression. Costly conflict Misguided federal spending, not war, hurt economy Daily coverage distorted MLK events FEDERAL RESERVE BOARD CHAIR Alan Greenspan announced last week - to the surprise of very few - that the nation's economy has indeed entered a recession. Greenspan and his cronies in the Bush administration have apparently decided to blame the maladies of the American economy on the incredible cost of the conflict in the Persian Gulf. The war is providing the administration a new scapegoat in its attempt to duck the blame for the past decade's spiraling deficit. Even conservative estimates place the price tag for the conflict at close to $1 billion a day. President Bush has announced that the bill for Operation Desert Storm will be at least $60 bil- lion, and that is only if the war unex- pectedly ends in the next few weeks. The war will undoubtedly contribute to the postponement of the much-touted "Peace Dividend" administration offi- cials promised at the end of the Cold War. However, it is clear that money gained from prospective cuts in the federal government's bloated defense budget would not have been spent on improving the nation's schools, re- v>:rmin e ha s ,-r _ -r~ An 4 - 4,4__A savings and loan industry. Throughout the 1980s, the Reagan administration pursued a vigorous two- front economic policy: massive in- creases in defense spending coupled with deregulation of many of the na- tion's major industries. While the mili- tary buildup continued to bleed our economy's shrinking coffers, profits soared in the banking, airline, and de- fense industries. As we enter the '90s, the economic rollercoaster has taken a dip, and the government has no money to foot the bill. The U.S. government is broke. It seems that the prospect of clean- ing up the nation's budget has become so daunting that federal financial direc- tors are searching for any justification for the precarious position of the U.S. economy. The expensive U.S. action in the Persian Gulf has conveniently pro- vided them with an economic excuse accepted by most flag-waving Ameri- cans. As the United States becomes more heavily entrenched in the Persian Gulf, our economy slips precariously close to financial ruin. Hopefully, the billion- dollar-a-day fight to oust Saddam Hus- To the Daily: Without trying to threaten the Daily's journalistic freedom, we would like to draw attention to the un- fortunate choice of quotes in the story "900 attend Unity Rally. to honor King" (1/22/90). It is one thing for some fringe fa- natics to spew racist nonsense; it is quite another for a supposedly objec- tive student newspaper to promote that garbage in print. Comments such as "your big white father," and the "white imperialistic war" are extremely insulting (we hap- pen to be white) and would be inap- propriate on any day - but especially on the day dedicated to the memory of Martin Luther King, who would have, we hope, found them as repul- sive as we do. MLK's so-called followers have distorted his vision of tolerance and "color-blindness" into one of crude bigotry and artificially-maintained racial hatred. Surely some statements more in line with King's philosophy were made on campus on that day; why didn't any of those make the pages of the Daily? Serge Elnitsky Rackham Graduate student Michael Gravlin Jr. LSA senior present. King wanted us all to be ac- cepting people of love, not people prejudging and stereotyping on the basis of race. Yet at a rally to honor the man who so poignantly supported love and colorblindness, it is hatred and racism that predominated the article. "This is a white man's war," some- one was quoted as stating. This state- ment is hateful towards all whites, re- gardless of their feelings about the war in the Gulf; if you are white, this statement is directed to you. Is this colorblindness? Why are we intentionally segregating ourselves like this? The horror of racism made me sick as I continued reading, "don't fight for white folks who fight their fathers' war. White folks, you should be there. Wherever your big white father sends you, you should be there." I don't care whether you are white or black, blatant racist comments like this should make you cringe with disgust. King wanted to abolish racism. The gauche statements in this article could in reality do nothing but perpetuate the evils of racism and prejudice. How sad to see the ideals of love and peace between all people regardless of their color eroded to the point where even rallies to honor tion to the crisis - war. During these anxious times, it is more necessary than ever to insist on toleration of people with differing views and of peoples from dif- ferent cultural backgrounds than our own. Let us all commit our energies to work for peace and justice. Don't silence differing opinions To the Daily: I read in the Daily (1/22/90) that a group of students tore down the anti-war "monument", in part because they felt the sentiments expressed were "too graphic and unnecessarily violent." First of all, the logic in this state- ment is so twisted that I almost don't believe anyone would say such a thing. The monument was "graphic and un- necessarily violent" -- and war isn't? The questionable logic of the statement aside, and whether or not the anti-war stance is "right" or "wrong," tearing down the monument was a stupid, mali- cious and cowardly act. It seems a little like the irrational ac- tions which start wars in the first place. In fact, those who built the monument couldn't have said it better. Destruction and the repression of dif- fering opinions, all under the guise of patriotism and eagles and stars and stripes is what seems "anti-American" to me. The true patriots are those who believe and fight for the ideals of free- dom, democracy, and equality, not* those who blindly follow anything our government does and try to silence those who do not agree. Shilpa Satoskar LSA Junior War is "too graphic" To the Daily: The war in the Persian Gulf has lefts me confused and sickened. I don't know where to stand on many issue concern- ing this war. I do know I am appalled at the destruction of the anti-war monu- ment on the diag. However unjust or just we might ar- gue this war to be, we cannot let our democratic values be threatened. The destruction of this monument violates freedom of expression and freedom to disagree with our government. 0