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The Emerald operates independently of the University with offices in Suite 300 of the Erb Memorial Union. The Emerald is private property. Unlawful removal or use of papers is prosecutable by law. ■ In my opinion Seeking unity, peace by peace Some days are better than others. Then there are good news days, which are the best. Take for example Monday, Oct. 3: Tom DeLay gets in dicted on a second, more-to-the-point money laundering charge, Anderson Cooper finally cracks a smile and shows clips of Saturday Night Live making fun of him (and then keeps the tape rolling when the joke turns on Geraldo Rivera), and finally, George Bush nominates Sandra Day O’Connor’s second replacement. But Monday was not just a good news day, it was a really good day, too, be cause it was the day I got cable. Let the C-SPAN marathons begin. There is nothing I love more than when the president pulls someone completely out of left field. John Roberts was such a nominee. Prior to his nomination and confirmation, he was relatively unknown. No skeletons were brought out of his closet; he seemed like a nice enough family man. The Republicans loved how he didn’t really answer a lot of questions, and the Democrats just sort of took one for the team. The politicians and the media makers assumed he would breeze through confirmation and he did. George Bush even loved him so much he bumped up his nomination to Supreme Court justice. Because, of course, Rehnquist is dead, and needs a replacement much quicker than Sandra Day O’Connor, who retired to take care of her terminally ill husband. I have long thought that Bush’s Supreme Court nominations were go ing to be socially moderate, as is the case with Roberts. I do not think Roberts will try to overturn Roe v. Wade or turn gay marriage into a fed eral issue, nor do I think any Bush nominee will. I think Bush used these issues to activate voters who vote ac cording to what makes them feel “icky,” and does not really care about the direction the court goes on social issues. No, Bush cares about big ARMY FETH RHETORIC CHECK business and how it will fare. He cares about making his friends and loyal minions rich and powerful. So while Roberts was a moderate “nice guy” surprise, Harriet Miers is the epitome of the W. appointment. Why this story contributes to such a great news day has mostly to do with how it is being spun. First off, Miers is — predictably enough — an old crony of the presi dent’s. Hailing from Texas, she has made her way up in the White House, from Andy Card’s staff to the presi dent’s staff. According to several news reports, her latest duty has been to “regulate the flow of information to the president’s desk.” Most likely this includes phonetically spelling out big words in the margins, attaching acronym cheat sheets to government agency reports and deciding which Bed Bath & Beyond coupons are really a good deal and which she should just shred. Miers has no judicial experi ence, but she has been on the Texas Lottery Commission, where she fired two guys and earned herself the repu tation of being “tough.” She has also been Bush’s personal lawyer, repre senting him during a dispute concern ing his east Texas fishing cottage. I can see how hooking her up with a sweet job in Washington is a way to say “Thanks,” but a lifetime appoint ment to the highest court in the land? Who could possibly think this is a good idea? Tlirns out Democratic Senate Leader Harry Reid does. Speaking with a silent, overly eye-lined Miers by his side, he declared, ‘Like 39 or 40 or so of justices that have gone be fore, she has absolutely no judicial ex perience. I think that’s a good thing! ” Okay.... There is nothing like unedited democracy. Reid babbled on for a while about how unqualified Miers is and how that totally qualifies her for the position. Then he started to praise her character by saying we really need “someone like her,” without elaborat ing on what that meant. Eventually, Reid addressed the rumor that Miers gave money to A1 Gore when he ran for president in 1988, adding, “That makes it better for me. ” But it was the delivery that was re ally comical. There were many awk ward pauses and — I swear this is true — actual laughter from Reid as he tried to pump up the tuffet Little Miss Miers was standing on. In sharp contrast, Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman and Republican Arlen Specter commented on Miers’ difficul ty finding a job. Reid also said he personally told Dick Cheney to tell the president to nominate Miers. Reid, who is Mor mon and anti-abortion, might just be the kind of guy who could pull off a compromise with the notoriously stubborn administration. After all, Clinton allowed the Republicans to pick a Supreme Court justice from a pool he selected as a compromise to ensure an easy confirmation. It has come out quickly that Miers financial ly supported the Democratic Party, supports the idea of full civil rights for gays and backed AIDS education pro grams in Dallas. So while Miers has no experience being a judge, she cer tainly has experience being a liberal, which would explain Reid’s giddi ness. The immediate fallout of this nomination is funny, interesting and constandy developing; maybe the real good news is what went on last week to make such a nomination happen. afeth@ dailyemerald, com INBOX Strike for Peace campaign protests 'deadly priorities' The action I’m taking is not about political parties. It’s about deadly pri orities that have been ruining this country for 55 years and creating a world of suffering for those here at home and our soldiers abroad. In fact, after all I have learned about foreign policy, I have come to admire General Dwight Eisenhower the most among recent presidents. He was a Republi can and the only president since World War II to warn the American people about the greatest cause of the many symptoms we suffer today. In January 1950, the United States had more than 250 atomic bombs and the Soviet Union had just tested its first. Without the consent of Ameri cans, the administration of President Harry Tinman, a “Democrat,” decid ed to adopt a military- rather than people-based economy and launch the Cold War. Since then our nation has dependended on conflict, and the world has suffered numerous wars. The breadth and depth of the Pen tagon’s reach in our schools and com panies, in addition to the fact that the manufacture and sale of weapons has been our top industry since 1950, should stand out in one’s mind when hearing claims that we are a peace loving nation or debating the validity of federal priorities after a poor re sponse to a hurricane. The Pentagon is pressuring Japan to rescind Article 9 of its constitution The first nation to use WMDs, the United States, is urging Japan, the only nation to suffer nuclear attacks, to re-establish a military and arm it self with nuclear weapons. The Pen tagon’s plan for the next 20 years is an arms race, despite the fact that we are on top. We are telling the rest of the world to build up for war because we are the world’s Wal-Mart of weapons. Strikeforpeace.org attempts to high light the dominant role of the military industry in America’s economy. We stand for a future of shared resources instead of a future of resource wars. The weapons we help the Pentagon develop in our schools will be used in such wars unless we step away from the microscope to see the macro view and change America’s priority from war-industry profit to the founding vi sion of prosperity for all. Strikeforpeace.org is not anti-re search or anti-weapons research. We stand against wasteful Pentagon con tracts at public expense. Strikefor peace.org is not anti-nanotechnology. We believe nanotechnology in a peo ple-based society can solve many problems if we stop living like war riors. Strikeforpeace.org is nonviolent. We believe our servants in Washington should respond to popular demand, and we seek to broaden awareness to foster stronger interaction. Strikeforpeace.org hopes Ameri cans will recognize the suffering our way of life engenders in the world. The American people did not neces sarily choose this way of life and should have the knowledge, the right and the courage to correct it. If we do not unite to advance peace, we will perish by advancing our war technology. The CampU.S. Campaign focuses attention on statis tics revealing America’s disordered priorities in hopes of instigating change. This campaign will not end until America adopts a reasonable de fense and declares an end to the age of war for profit and the beginning of an age of prosperity for all. Brian Bogart Graduate student ■ Editorial Radio host's comments perpetuate racist beliefs Former Education Secretary William Bennett uttered a disturbing sentiment last week to a caller on his syndicated radio show. “I do know that if you wanted to reduce crime, you could — if that were your sole pur pose — you could abort every black baby in this country and your crime rate would go down,” Bennett said. He then qualified the statement by saying, “That would be an impos sible, ridiculous and morally reprehensible thing to do, but your crime rate would go down.” Bennett has claimed that his statement was not racist because all he did was create an ex ample of a morally reprehensible situation; i.e., he wasn’t actually advocating abortions for black women, he was just using it as an exam ple. Bennett added that it was important to have candor while in the process of getting rid of extremist hypotheses. A statement like “You could abort every black baby in this country and your crime rate would go down” may be a just metaphor, meant to help Bennett explain himself to a ra dio audience, but it is still a metaphor that per petuates the idea that black people are primari ly responsible for crime. Statements like Bennett’s put the guilt of crime on the shoul ders of black citizens and lead to the unac countability of everyone else. As a former secre tary of education, Bennett should know the “intrinsic” link between race and crime won’t ever stop being intrinsic until officials such as himself take racism seriously. Bennett’s words, based on the notion that black people naturally commit more crime, show serious disregard for a national history of racism. Racial minorities must work continually to overcome racism, and it was inappropriate for Bennett to demean and work in opposition to that struggle with his statement that race and crime are unquestionably linked together. What’s more, when Bennett suggests forced abortions onto black women, he’s hardly sug gesting a hypothetical situation: Exactly that happened during the 1960s, when government paid to sterilize poor, black women. We doubt that any women appreciated this statement, regardless of Bennett’s primary pur pose within the context of the radio show. As a representative of the U.S. political system, Ben nett has a responsibility to show respect toward all people in die nadon; this is especially true of the people who have not always received such governmental respect. As someone intimately acquainted with the U.S. education system, Bennett should under stand the role education plays in improving one’s financial status, which in turn reduces crime. Perhaps Bennett could better apply him self to advocating educational improvement and reform for our nation's impoverished com munities, some of which include minorities. The next time William Bennett wants to demonstrate a hypothetical, morally reprehen sible situation, he should look to more pragmat ic solutions rather than hurtful reminders of the past. As long as a link between crime and race is created, even in the form of discourse such as Bennett’s, there will be no hope for a racism free future. CORRECTION Because dan editor’s error, Monday's headline "Boga rt shuns schodwork for campaign” should have clarified that although graduate student Brian Bogart is not attend ing class, he is completing work outside of it.