Newsroom: (541) 346-5511 Suite 300, Erb Memorial Union P.O. Box 3159, Eugene, OR 97403 Email: editor@dailyemerald.com Online Edition: www.dailyemerald.com Thursday, January, 16,2003 -Oregon Daily Emerald Commentary Editor in Chief: Michael J. Kleckner Managing Editor Jessica Richelderfer Editorial Editor Pat Payne Editorial SUV ‘terror’ ads detract from real point of message Over the past few decades, the United States’ love af fair with the automobile has become more and more an addiction to the pump as it is anything else. One of the main causes is the rising importance of what was once a niche vehicle: the sport-utility vehicle, or SUV. The auto industry, seizing on the “flavor-of-the month” status that the Chevrolet Suburban enjoyed, has produced ever larger and less fuel-efficient SUVs. With more and more SUVs on the roads, the need for the pump is greater than ever, to the nation’s environmental, social and political detriment. Conservative commentator Arianna Huffington has tak en a stand against increasingly unnecessary SUV use, al though we think she’s using the wrong tactics. Advertise ments that she helped create are now playing in the nation’s largest car markets, claiming that driving an SUV is tantamount to supporting Osama bin Laden. Her argu ment: America buys oil from mostly foreign sources, in cluding Saudi Arabia and Iraq, and these sources have had links to terrorist groups, such as Hamas and al Qaeda. Ergo, to buy oil from these sources is to fund terrorism. While we believe that U.S. dependence on foreign — and all — fossil fuels should be diminished signifi cantly, we also believe that Huffington’s ads oversim plify a much more complex problem. While it is true that some wealthy Saudi Arabians have funded terror ism, it is often from their personal wealth and not directly from oil profits. Secondly, at least some of them give their money not to directly sponsor the killing of innocents by suicide bombers, but instead into more benign purposes that these groups, unfortunately, provide. Either out of politi cal opportunism or genuine concern, groups like Hamas actually provide education, food and clothes to the peo ple under their purview. The Huffington SUV ads were designed to parody the overplayed Ad Council/Partnership for a Drug-Free America ads (“It’s only harmless fun. ... I helped kill a family in Colombia”) that try to link marijuana with ter rorism. Both ad campaigns are very misleading, and instead of trying to foster a discussion of the issues, they use scare tactics to disguise the truth. In the anti-marijuana ads, the argument is reductive to the point of ridiculousness. All drugs do not come from countries that support terrorism, and even if they did, following the money back to any one specific source or act of terrorism is nearly impossible. Substitute “oil” for drugs” in the preceding sentence, and the same point is true of the SUV ads. Instead of offering the average citizen falsehoods to dis cuss around the nation’s water coolers, as these ads do, why not take an informed look at how much of the total U.S. oil imports come from which nations; how much U.S. fossil fuel consumption is because of SUVs; and then put that information in front of the public and let them think about the issue? We applaud the fact that people are starting to wake up and realize that an overbearing dependence on fossil fuels is dangerous. However, the tactics Huffington is using are counterproductive to a real discussion of the issue. Editor in chief Jessica Richelderfer Julie Lauderbaugh Managing editor Columnist Jenna Cunningham Student representative ■■HU Counting in all Christians YOU Rfc RIGHT. I DO SENSE SOME RACIAL HOSTILITY. [VlH tTE northwest CHRISTIAN 'HDLlECrE iiiiii RNANt|4L A shadow has been cast on the campus and community of Northwest Christian College. With a new label, “racist,” which is far from “Christian,” this small reli gious college is facing a controversy over recent events con cerning the firing of Associate Dean of Education and School Counseling Betsy Clewett. As reported in the Emerald on Monday ( “NGC dean qustions rea son for dismissal,” ODE, Jan. 13), the firing of Clewett has raised awareness of Sarah Spellman Spin cycle how the institution treats minority stu dents, leading a few students and staff to believe the school is unjust. Clewett was fired from her position at NCC in December for what she and her sup porters believe was having a voice for the minority students of the community. As a result, three other faculty members have re signed, including Cloe Veney, NCC’s only black faculty member in its history, and law suits may be filed against the college. Although President James Womack claims the dismissal of Clewett was not on the basis of race, I still feel that the handful of students have a right to be concerned. Glewett and supporters claim that the treatment of minority students at the col lege was not up to par compared to that of white students. They said this often re sulted in minorities having difficulties re ceiving help from the financial aid office, difficulty with housing and mistreatment of the black basketball players and other students of color from both staff and peers. As a former student, it saddens me to hear of the recent events of this college that is so dear to my heart and has helped shape the person I am today. As I first read of this controversy in The Reg ister-Guard earlier this month, I was shocked to hear the news. Although I have never witnessed this kind of behavior from students and staff, I do not doubt that this goes on. I do recall a few instances where race was discussed between my peers in the rug room (a com monplace for students to gather), but I thought it was in good fun. Although I was not involved, I feel for the students who believe they were persecuted. This behavior doesn’t surprise me much, however, on the basis of the de mographics of the institution. Within this small community of 500 students, NGG reported in 2001 that minorities com pose only 10 percent of the student body (which is typical of small Christian col leges). Also, a typical trend I have noticed in the composition of the campus is that Peter Utsey Emerald many students seek the “small-college” atmosphere because they, too, come from small towns and communities, and often have not experienced such cultural diversity before. I hope that this situation will bring something positive to the students and staff of NGG. I hope that NGG can contin ue to be a loving community, and only expand from here, integrating more cul turally aware programs to help change the demographics of the school. On Aug. 28, 1963, the powerful mes sage from Martin Luther King Jr. rang through Washington, D.G., as his “I Have a Dream” speech was delivered from the steps of the Lincoln Memorial. I can only hope that nearly 40 years later, it can make an impact at NGG as well. As he said: “All of God’s children, black men and white men, Jews and Gentiles, Protestants and Catholics, will be able to join hands and sing in the words of the old Negro spiritual: ‘Free at last! Free at last! Thank God Almighty, we are free at last!’” To use King’s words, I hope the minority students can feel comfortable at their col lege again and not be treated differendy on the basis of the color of their skin, but of the content of their character. Contact the columnist atsarahspellman@dailyemerald.com. Her views do not necessarily represent those of the Emerald. Letter to the editor Republican does not mean racist Thursday’s editorial, “GOP needs to use action, not just words, to heal racial divisions” (ODE, Jan. 9), simply perpet uates that tired shibboleth of die left that republicans are racists. Republicans don’t have a former Ku Klux Klan Kleagle, like democratic Sena tor Robert Byrd of West Virginia, in their ranks. Only last year, Sen. Byrd, in an in terview with Fox News’ Tony Snow, re ferred to “white niggers.” Byrd quickly apologized, but he wasn’t criticized by democrats or forced to resign his Appro priations Committee chairmanship. During debate over the 1964 Civil Rights Act, Byrd spent 14 hours and 13 minutes in an unsuccessful filibuster. He voted against the bill along with 20 other Senate democrats. Only six republicans voted against the bill. Meanwhile, the Democratic Party panders to minorities with racial quotas, preferences and double standards. This is especially true at colleges and univer sities, dominated as they are by the left. Consider the University of Michigan’s af firmative-action admissions policies: Ac cording to the Center for Equal Oppor tunity, the odds ratio favoring admission of a black applicant with identical grades and test scores to a white applicant is 174 to one. The implicit and utterly racist message here is that black stu dents must be held to lower academic standards than everyone else. It is republicans, not democrats, who punish nostalgia for racism in their par ty. It is democrats, not republicans, who perpetuate racial stereotypes and preju dices, or to use President Bush’s memo rable phrase, “the soft bigotry of low ex pectations.” Sean Walston sixth-year graduate physics CORRECTION The final sentence of molecular biology Professor Franklin W. Stahl’s letter to the editor (“University should review involvement with Nike,” ODE Jan. 1 5) was printed incorrectly and had a different meaning than Stahl intended. The sentence should have read: “It is not good for the University’s image, not to mention its truth-seeking mission, to lie with the liars.” The Emerald regrets the error.