Newsroom: (541) 346-5511 Room 300, Erb Memorial Union PO. Box 3159, Eugene, OR 97403 E-mail: editor@dailyemeralcl.com Online Edition: www’. dailyemerald.com Editor in Chief: Jessica Blanchard Managing Editor: Michael J. Kleckner Editorial Editor: Julie Lauderbaugh Assistant Editorial Editor: Jacquelyn Lewis Editorial Don’t publicize HIV test results The Oregon Health Division is doing a dis service to the community by requiring health care providers to report names of all people who test positive for HIV, the virus that can lead to AIDS. The state should drop this requirement and allow complete anonymity. As of Oct. 1, the Oregon Department of Human Services began its new reporting system, which keeps the names of patients in a database until their case report has been completed. DHS will then assign a unique identification number to each case, which begs the question: Why not simply use a number in the first place? The threat of possibly being identified when testing for HIV and AIDS may deter people who fear they have the virus from being tested. The University Health Center is also required to submit names of those who test positive, and the fear factor of being revealed as having HIV or AIDS, espe cially on such a small campus, is detrimental to the success of student health care. Unfortunately, there is still a stigma attached to having HIV or AIDS, and that makes it insensitive of the Oregon Health Division to require identification. Although the reasoning behind the new policy is to provide state health officials with more accurate numbers, the bottom line is that officials can just as easily track patients anonymously. Editorial Policy These editorials represent the opinion of the Emerald editorial board. Responses can be sent to letters@dailyemerald.com. Letters to the editor and guest commentaries are encouraged. Letters are limited to 250 words and guest commentaries to 550 words. Please include contact information. The Emerald reserves the right to edit for space, grammar and style. Poll Results: Every week, the Emerald prints the results of our online poll and the poll question for next week. The poll can be accessed from the main page of our Web site, www.dailyemerald.com. We encourage you to send us feedback about the poll questions and results. Last week’s poll question: What are your plans for Halloween? Results: 62 total votes Trick-or-treat—5 votes, or 8.1 percent Study—6 votes, or 9.7 percent Drink—29 votes, or 46.8 percent Participate in Pulse costume contest—4 votes, or 6.5 percent Play with Ouija board—0 votes, or 0 percent Go to a party—11 votes, or 17.7 percent Don’t know—7 votes, or 11.3 percent It appears as though drinking is the option of choice this Halloween among online voters. And unfortunately for Parker Brothers, it looks as though voters have outgrown the novelty of Ouija boards. This week’s poll question: How are you changing your holiday travel plans because of terrorism? The choices: Taking the train Staying home Hitchhiking Renting a car Taking the bus Keeping plans the same Don’t know/Haven't thought about it Awakening America The human race is not necessarily a violent species, as a whole. It is our relatively peaceful nature that makes society possible. However, we do have a violent potential that emerges from time to time. Even sen sible people can become feverishly ag gressive when discussing the urgent need to end aggression. It is this ability to pro duce violent anger that has enabled us to progress and survive. But uninhibited, it has also caused much suffering and — death. The question L then becomes, F when is violence i justified? Some may say that vio lence is never justi fied, but there is a g| problem with that attitude, because we are not a passive Debenham species. And if progress. It is because each individual strives to exceed that so much advance ment has occurred. It is because people stand up for what they value that values are instilled. We might ask ourselves whether the terrorist attacks were justified. In the eyes of many Americans, they certainly weren’t. But what about in the eyes of the terrorists? Bush thinks he has a clear idea of who is good and who is evil, and he declares this openly in his speeches. But evil is not so clearly de fined. What is evil, and where does it come from? Who creates it, and why? I believe the human race is inherently ag gressive, but assuredly not evil. Per haps it is ti me we looked closer at this term so easily prescribed. Certainly these violent attacks were cruel and devastating. But would we have listened to a peaceful approach? And will we listen now? Extreme vio lence does have a cause, a foundation, and we need to question what it is and how we can change it. Killing the terror ists will not stop them, because we are Columnist everyone were al ways submissive, there would be no not getting to the root of the problem. We often think of the United States as wealthy, great and free. We say that the rest of the world hates us because we stand for these things. But is it re ally so black and white? Perhaps we need to consider how our country could have invited these attacks. It is time to give up some of our national ego. America may be great and wealthy, but our wealth has made us self-absorbed isolationists. The problem is, you aren’t going to wake a bear out of hibernation by slip ping a note next to its snoring head, ask ing to talk things over, especially when the bear’s den is soft and comfortable and protected. Maybe we, the American society, are that bear — thirsty for oil, hungry for power and craving the ex pansion of our commercial regime. In Peter Utsey Emerald deed, we have been so captivated by our own satisfying dreams that it took crashing airplanes to wake us up. But instead of coming out with a rever berating roar and a thrash of our yellow teeth, we should question the reason we’ve been awakened. We can’t eat every thing we see without thinking, or we’re bound to get ourselves poisoned. The United States has already eaten too many bad berries and rotten fish. Is it not natural that we should have a stomachache? The world in which we reside is not a passive one, and unfortunately some times it takes violence to create change. Now that we’re awake, we should take the time to learn why. Tara Debenham is a columnist for the Oregon Daily Emerald. Her views do not necessarily reflect those of the Emerald. She can be reached at taradebenham@dailyemerald.com. Letters to the editor Fossilized dung is better than fresh It's common sense that: The University supporting a service that refuses to hire people because of gender is a violation of the University’s own non-discrimination policies. Losing three to six residential blocks or losing the downtown hospital site to a Coburg/Crescent site is preferable to los ing the hospital altogether. A traffic-filled downtown mall is prefer able to an abandoned pedestrian one. When you make downtown a historic district, you drive new businesses away and eventually kill downtown by limit ing its development. Look at Albany, Corvallis, Lebanon, etc. A student-funded organization that doesn't undergo an annual budget ap proval process is wide open to charges of fraud and abuse, regardless of whetherthere’s impropriety or not. Any California team that’s having a good season will be ranked higher than any Ore gon team, even though we're better. The odds of you catching Anthrax are infinitesimally low. Not all war is bad. Without the Amer ican Revolution, there would be no America (as we know it), no Bill of Rights, no Constitution, no freedom any where — the American Revolution helped to inspire the European and Latin American ones. Dissent and disagreement aren’t dis loyalty. Not all partisanship is bad. Without dissent, disagreement and discussion, we’d all be boring carbon copies. Not all partisanship is good, either. Without compromise, we'd never get anything done. Even a coprolitic daily newspaper like the Emerald, which has all of the vigor and enthusiasm of a lobotomized sloth, is better than a fecal publication like the Commentator. Derek Ian Jones sophomore undeclared Smoking marijuana should be your choice I am 45 years old and capable to make my own choices on how to raise my own family. The interpretation of what mari juana does and how it does it doesn’t even configure in my life (“There’s no hope with dope," ODE, 10/15). I’m aware marijuana affects different people in different ways, but the issue here is still choice. Human nature is always looking for escape — whether its coffee, tobacco, alcohol, food, money, sex, whatever. With the shape the nation’s in, it might help everyone to sit back and burn one just to think about what happened and how we’re going to deal with it. I hate the thought of having to kill an other human being, whether in war or peace, and not having a choice on how to deal with it myself. Marijuana is a minute issue. I have children and am dealing with issues of drugs, alcohol, violence, war and now terrorism. I have to teach them how to make their own choices on all of these subjects, and all I have to do it with is sheer determination, help from God, a strong (weakening) back and good friends and family. Marijuana has strengthened my life in all of these areas. But now I’ve had to give up pot because of drug testing in the workplace. I've had the same job for 20 years. Pot has never interfered with anything until this testing start ed. I thought the Fourth Amendment meant what it said. Apparently I was wrong. Dale Covington Cross Plains, Tenn.