Newsroom: (541) 346-5511 Suite 300, Erb Memorial Union P.O. Box 3159, Eugene, OR 97403 E-mail: editor@dailyemerald.com Online: www.dailyemerald.com Friday, February 27,2004 Oregon Daily Emerald COMMENTARY Editor in Chief: Brad Schmidt Managing Editor: Jan Tobias Montry Editorial Editor: Travis Willse Eugene Police overzealously administer zero tolerance Editor's note: This commentary is part of the Emerald's and ASUO Legal Services' ongoing efforts to assist students through education as well as representation. ASUO Legal Services' attor neys are licensed to practice in the state of Oregon. Information disseminated in this article does not constitute legal advice and does not create an attorney/client relationship. For legal advice, contact an attorney licensed in your state. You should not make legal hiring decisions based upon brochures, advertising or other promotional materials. As an attorney for ASUO Legal Services, 1 am aware that the majority of arrests and citations of students are for alco hol-related offenses. These offenses include minor in pos session, allowing or furnishing alcohol, driving under the influence of intoxicants and Oregon Liquor Control Com mission violations for mishandling a keg. Many students have expressed frustration over receiving citations for con __ duct which did not seem, at the C3* 1 1 jRfcTT time, to violate a law. They are also frustrated with the aggressive and sometimes condescending attitude of the Eugene Police. The definition of what actions constitute these crimes and violations is increasingly widened by the overzealous Eugene Police Department "Party Patrol," which has stat ed a policy of "zero tolerance on underage drinking." It is not an exaggeration to state that you act at your peril if you are present where alcohol is served outside of a com mercial establishment. For example: • A sober designated driver arrived at a party to retrieve his friends and was cited for minor in possession when he was seen removing beer bottles from his friends' hands so he could get them into his car. • A person who was 21 threw a party with signs posted stating that those under 21 were not allowed. The "Party Pa trol" stormed the gates and found a minor who snuck into the party and grabbed a beer. The host was cited with a Class A misdemeanor of furnishing alcohol to a minor, which can result in a $5,000 fine and a year in jail. • A minor was asleep in bed while her roommates watched a movie. Police appeared at the door looking for someone who did not live there. Once the front door was open, the police insinuate themselves into the house where the minor was forcibly awakened by the police and cited for minor in possession when she admitted to having had a beer earlier. • A 25-year-old bought a keg and signed an affidavit stat ing the keg would be at his house. The next weekend, he took the keg with its remaining contents to another party to finish the beer. The "Party Patrol" raided the party and he was dted for the Class A misdemeanor of false swearing be cause the keg was not at the original address. While these examples of citations may not hold up in court (remembering the USA Patriot Act has not yet eroded the presumption of innocence), the dted parties now bear the burden of numerous court appearances, possible trials and the threat of jail and/or fines of hundreds of dollars if they lose. In addition to the cost and inconvenience associated with these experiences, students are reporting increasing amounts of physical contact from police, induding being made to stand in the cold for hours in handcuffs and be ing subject to choke holds, take-downs and other uses of force. Students come to see me with bruises, chipped teeth and head injuries. Students are reporting that the OLCC has begun confiscating personal property associat ed with the consumption of alcohol, including music equipment and stereos. The moral of this story is for students to exhibit extreme caution around underage drinkers. If you are underage, do not drink or allow yourself to be around places where alco hol is served. If you are over 21, do not allow any minors on the premises and adhere closely to OLCC requirements for the use of kegs. Be careful out there. Laura Fine is an attorney with ASUO Legal Services. Her opinions do not necessarily represent those of the Emerald. LEAPING OVER LOGIC I've been told that after the University hands me a diploma next June, I'll look back with fondness, even longing, at my undergraduate years. Staying up until 4 a.m. on weekends playing video games with greats and learning big ideas from sol id professors. But there are things I'll be happy to leave on campus. The 8 a.m. finals, home work until 4 a.m. on school nights and everyone who has problems distinguish ing between the realities of a real world and the sometimes incestuous, self-serv ing or just plain loopy rhetoric passed off as academic or otherwise intellectually meaningful discourse. To be fair, the university setting is the Fertile Crescent of mindless rhetoric. Cam pus culture is to pseudointellectual flotsam as dorm shower floors are to bacteria (again, something I don't and won't miss). For one, given that most students are just beginning their tenures in the arena of pub lic dialogue, unjustifiable zealotry can usu ally be chalked up to the impetuousness of youth and novelty. Moreover, I naively sug gest that students calling for an end to nan otechnology research because it has poten tial military applications, or for a stop to animal research because they believe it has no material value, do so largely out of con cern for the quality of the world around them. (Professors promulgating irrespon sible rhetoric don't have this excuse.) But the road to the hell that is philosophical in coherence is paved with good intentions. To wit: In January 2001, the University hosted a conference on social issues called: "Against Patriarchy: a step toward the abo lition of male privilege." Designed as part of "a movement towards the elimination of male privilege, domination and sexism" — which I politely read as ending gender discrimination — the conference's central questions included: "How does male dom ination connect to other oppressions, such as racism, heterosexism, ableism, dassism, capitalism, government and spedesism?" Travis Willse Rivalless wit Nevermind that advances leading to the extended lifespans, greater personal freedom and wider educational opportu nities that we enjoy today are all conse quences of the capitalist economic system (admittedly, among less fortunate effects associated with the free market that have more to do with individual ethical flaws than the system itself). Nevermind still that "speciesism," however the word might be defined, probably carries the il legitimate oratorical baggage of devaluing human life. In 2002, a letter to the editor of Eugene Weekly insisted that "In order to end (vio lence against women and minorities), we need to deconstruct patriarchy and all its forms of violence." While the author clear ly didn't understand what deconstruction is, ending violence against all people is im portant, and there are many things that people can do to curtail that problem. However, misusing words and passing off empty rhetoric isn't one of them. In 2003, in a letter to the editor of the Emerald, a concerned citizen wrote that de veloping a "multiscale materials and de vices center" in the East University area was tantamount to "ethnic cleansing" because it would displace families living there now. The ethics of the University forcing low-in come families to move aside, a comparison to the worst sort of human rights viola tions is unwarranted and unjustifiable — it's the same brand of despicable, offensive rhetoric that PETA used when comparing treatment of animals to the despicable treatment of Jews during the Holocaust. (In the interest of fending off concerns about disclosure, this letter was submitted to the Emerald before my tenure as editori al editor.) Illegitimate debate does worse than pol lute the realm of public argument: Laymen who recognize the fallacies in bad argu ment might associate the bunk logic or un civil conduct with a wider movement. While this in itself is often a logically ten uous leap, the damage can be very real: Vi olent religious extremists detract from reli gious messages of peace and compassion. Likewise, ecoterrorists self-righteously de stroying private property divert attention from the noble aims of responsible envi ronmentalism. What's an intellectually responsible stu dent to do? Take suspect rhetoric with a grain of salt. If you hear a bad argument at the lunch table or in the classroom, stand up and speak for yourself. Contact the editorial editor at traviswillse@dailyemerald.com. His opinions do not necessarily represent those of the Emerald.