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 Tuesday, June 3,2003 -Oregon Daily Emerald —-: Commentary Editor in Chief: Michael J. Kleckner Managing Editor Jessica Richelderfer Editorial Page Assistant: Salena De La Cruz Editorial Smacks to campus-area landlords who have removed recycling options for their tenants, smacks to the city for not having a housing code that mandates recycling availability for all tenants, and smacks to those tenants who misuse the recycle bins and lead some landlords to remove recycling. Quacks to Ruben Studdard for be coming this year’s “American Idol.” Studdard’s presence and voice had many anti-reality TV types cheering for him as he beat the less-charismat ic Clay. Smacks to congressional Republi cans for pushing through a giant tax cut and at the last second, slipping in language that removes child tax credits for the poorest Americans. For shame. Quacks to Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon and Palestinian Prime Minister Mahmoud Abbas for making concessions and getting the peace process moving again. Let’s hope when they meet Wednesday with President George W. Bush, even more progress will be made. Smacks to the University admin istration for deciding to publish stu dents’ e-mail addresses in the print version of the student directory — which likely will turn everyone’s gladstone account into a trash can for spam. Quacks to the LGBTQA for finish ing off Pride Month on campus with a “Love-In” that successfully demon strated there is support for LGBT members of the campus community. Smacks to whoever vandalized Uni versity student Sanam Aarabi’s art work displayed in the EMU Aperture Gallery. Art is often a political tool — so create your own art if you have a statement to make, but respect other people’s work. Quacks to the ASUO Student Sen ate for funding a digital upgrade for campus radio station KWVA, and su per quacks to Charlotte Nisser for all of her hard work at KWVA to make the upgrade happen. Smacks to the FGG for voting Mon day to let major media companies own even more outlets, which will help extinguish the voice of independ ent and local media across the coun try. Super smacks to Chairman Michael Powell, who it seems is single handedly fighting to eliminate Ameri can democracy. Quacks to the University Theatre for its 1,000th production, “This Ship of Fools,” and super quacks to the theater and Noah Smith’s friends for organizing a benefit performance to help pay for Smith’s medical expenses. Smacks to the Lane County Budget Committee for eliminating its animal abuse investigator. Sure, let’s not wor ry about the kids mutilating kittens — it costs too much. Instead, we’ll be sure to catch them after they become serial killers. Quacks to Florida legislators, who recently repealed a two-year-old law that had forced women to publish their sexual histories in a newspaper if they wanted to give a child up for adoption but didn’t know who the fa ther was. Why was this archaic throw back to public shaming passed to begin with? Where’s the WMD? According to decision theorist Philip Tedock, when confronted with choices, decision-mak ers take into account not only the potential ramifications of their actions, but also how oth ers will perceive them. The easiest way of deal ing with this social accountability “is by mak ing decisions that one is reasonably confident will be acceptable to others.” The United States and Britain sold a preemp tive attack of Iraq by invoking the imminent threat of Hussein’s weapons of mass destruc tion. It is unlikely that any motive other than the elimination of these weapons could have convinced Congress and Parliament to assent to war. DJ Fuller No holds barred So was the elimination of WMD an authentic casus belli, or was it an easily digestible ration ale cooked up by administrations intent on de posing Hussein for other, less justifiable rea sons? This question becomes more pressing with each day we fail to find WMD, the search for which has now stretched into its third month. It appears that the con sensus on the WMD story is fraying at the seams. Early last week, Defense Secretary Donald Rums feld suggested that Hus sein may have destroyed his WMD before the war be gan. He later retracted this comment. Assistant Defense Secretary Paul Wol fowitz, in an interview with Vanity Fair, allud ed that the Bush administration pushed the WMD issue because it was “the one reason everyone could agree on.” Meanwhile, across the pond, a senior British intelligence official has murmured that a gov ernment dossier on Iraq — which claimed that Hussein was capable of deploying biological and chemical weapons within 45 minutes of decid ing to use them — was altered to make Tony Blair’s case for war more compelling. BBC News reports that the dossier, which was “presented as the work of the intelligence services,” was actually compiled by junior aides of Blair’s. They apparently mistrusted their own expertise, for “long passages were copied al most verbatim — and sometimes exaggerated — from a paper written by a Ph.D. student in California,” while “other information came from Jane’s Intelligence Review.” Whether or not the Bush or Blair administra tions actually believed there were WMD in Iraq, the failure to find those weapons would reflect on them equally poorly. If no WMD turn up, we can postulate a number of reasons for their ab sence, all of which make the coalition of the willing look bad. If WMD were never there, then the coalition either acted on poor intelligence or lied out right. If the weapons had been there but were smuggled somehow to Syria or Iran, then the war failed in its purpose of nullifying the prolif eration of WMD. Rumsfeld’s suggestion that Iraq may have de stroyed its weapons before the war is patently ludicrous. Why would Hussein have done such ,Steve BaggS Emferald a thing without telling the United Nations? The only reason for him to have destroyed his WMD, in the face of imminent attack by a superior military, would have been to prevent the attack from happening in the first place. For Hussein to have publicly destroyed his WMD would have been purposeful; what function could secretly destroying them have served, ex cept to expedite his own demise? It doesn’t really matter which way you look at it — if no WMD turn up, the Bush and Blair administrations’ preemption policy will look ei ther disingenuous or poorly conceived. Which is why they are still insistent that the weapons will be found, in light of overwhelming evidence to the contrary. As Tetlock writes,””the need to justify policies that have worked out badly can place great pressure on decision-makers to increase their behavioral commitments to these failing policies.” The Pentagon announced Friday that it is sending a new team to Iraq to hunt for WMD. This, after the first team, the Army’s 75th Ex ploitation Task Force, has dismanded its opera tions after a fruitless search. Why a new team will be more successful than the first isn’t all that clear. Why the Pentagon would send one anyway is quite a bit more so. Contact the columnist at djfuller@dailyemerald.com. His opinions do not necessarily represent those of the Emerald. U.S. media's negligence threatens our democracy Guest commentary Uncounted stories of magnitude and rele vance go untold by a negligent and conflicted United States press — the disgrace runs deep. The U.S. press completely ignored the story of 60,000 valid Florida voters in the last presi dential election illegally purged from the voter rolls by Katherine Harris. The press focused al most exclusively on the “hanging chad” issue while ignoring an outright act of treason. Journalists such as Greg Palast who investi gated and reported on the issue had to go to Eu rope to be published. Let us not forget secretary of State Colin Powell’s urgency in making the case for war with Iraq, utilizing 5-year-old pla giarized and moot information from some grad student’s research paper. Frankly, this is also an act of treason, but where is the press follow-up? And of course, this war was supposed to be about those apocalyptic WMD’s, which have nev er been found, but that is old news. While Iraq and Afghanistan lay in ruins, news network cheerleaders are already gearing up for Bush’s Caligula-like war mongering ambitions for a regime change in Iran. Continuing, ad nauseam. “Top gun” President George W. Bush flies onto aircraft carrier for photo-ops while simul taneously cutting veterans benefits in half. The press completely ignores this act of outrageous hypocrisy, not to mention the deafening silence pertaining to his being AWOL from the National Guard for 18 months. And finally, three cheers for the press falling all over itself to saturate the American public with the touching Jessica Lynch rescue story. Remember the debunked “incubator baby” sto ries from the first Gulf War. It turns out that the saving of the little white princess from the evil ones is nothing but a big propaganda scam (see BBC documentary “Saving Private Jessica”). Our democracy is unraveling, and it won’t stop until an irresponsible and pathetically compromised news media is held accountable. Gerry Rempel lives in Eugene.