Oregon Daily Emerald Wednesday, November 30, 2005 NEWS STAFF (541)346-5511 PARKER HOWELL EDITOR IN CHIEF SHADRA BEESLEY MANAGING EDITOR MEGHANN M. CUNIFF JARED PABEN NEWS EDITORS EVA SYLWESTER SENIOR NEWS REPORTER KELLY BROWN KATY GAGNON CHRISTOPHER HAGAN NICHOLAS WILBUR NEWS REPORTERS fOE BAILEY EMILY SMITH PART-TIME NEWS REPORTERS SHAWN MILLER SPORTS EDITOR SCOTT). 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Inc., at the University of Ore gon, Eugene, Ore. 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 Informed for the Holidays This is going to be a great winter break. For some reason we appear to have four weeks off, as far as I can tell from the 17 times 1 checked. Po litical news, my bread and butter, usually tends to die down as Con gress spends six weeks in recess dur ing the time between Thanksgiving and mid-January. You can always count on our men and women of Congress to set the highest standard for time off. Consumer driven infotainment will no doubt take over the media. It has already started, with massive attention paid to Black Friday and Cyber Monday. Wow. A bunch of people started shopping for the holidays on the cul turally determined “first days.” I fail to see how that is news, seeing as it happens every year. People only feel the need to shop on those days be cause the media told them to in the first place. Then the media in turn re ports on the fact that everyone listened to them. Meanwhile, real things are happen ing every day, but the politicians who put the news into partisan sound bytes suitable to the 24 hour holy cow nature of cable news are taking a break, and the system suffers. Luckily, we live in the wonderful age of new media. Besides catching up on all the books you neglected during school and renting whole seasons of premium cable shows on DVD, it is also a wonderful time to catch up on the Internet. Oh yes, the great time-waster can actually be quite informative. So over the break, when you just can’t listen to Rita Cosby rasp one more pointless tabloid story, when you know the top 10 most-wanted-toys-list by heart, or just need a break from shopping online, take a look at these sites, and start a new trend: Informed for the holidays. Wonkette: By far the best and most irreverent political blog out there. The ARMY FETH RHETORIC CHECK site is very D.C., a town that func tions as its own universe, so a few things might fly over your head. (But terstick is not the actual name of the baby panda at the National Zoo). But for straight politics, gossip and analy sis, it can’t be beat. Wonkette, edited by journalist Ana Marie Cox, will make you laugh as you learn just how sleazy our nation’s capitol, and our leaders, can be. www.wonkette.com The Raw Story: Somewhere be tween a blog and an online newspa per, The Raw Story has helped lead the media back to watchdog status. The site is regularly quoted by tradi tional media, and the reporting is re ally good. They also accept submis sions, so if you are a budding journalist, it might be a good way to get started, www.rawstory.com Media Matters for America: Presi dent and CEO, David Brock, is a fasci nating character. He used to be a part of what he calls “the Republican noise machine,” when he wrote for the ultra-conservative Washington Times. He is now an award-winning author with a mission. He wrote “Blinded by the Right: The Conscious of an Ex-Conservative” and has now devoted his career to pointing out bias in the media. If you still think we live in a land with a “liberal media,” you have to check this site out. It is also a great source for audio and video clips, www.mediamatters.org BBC: For those with a worldly taste for news, this is your outlet. Just imagine if the media was loyal to you, the taxpayer, rather than the share holders of their multinational corpo rate overlords. It’s also great to just get an outsider’s view America, kind of like overhearing a conversation about yourself, www.bbc.co.uk Center for Media and Democracy: If you ever feel like the public rela tions filter is an omnipresent part of your life, or contrarily, you have nev er even thought about it, PR Watch and the Spin of the Day will have you gaping at your computer screen. About 50 percent of news is generat ed by PR. It is important to know what kind of filters the facts go through before they are disseminated to the masses, www.prwatch.org Huffington Post: Author, colum nist, and politico Arianna Huffing ton’s online empire is a force to be reckoned with. Huffington is respon sible for leading the successful cam paign to keep the ethically challenged Judith Miller from becoming a well respected martyr. Her blog has a ter rific regular staff, as well as amazing contributors like John Cusack and Bill Moyers. HuffPo has all kinds of fun pulling biased, spoiled journalists off their newsprint pedestal. www.huffingtonpost.com Wayne Madsen: If you want the story behind the story behind the sto ry, you must go here. You will find the day’s news and the kind of insid er background on the key characters and plot developments that bring everything into colorful and crooked context. I wouldn’t exactly call this site news, but Madsen doesn’t really either: “This online publication tack les the ‘politically incorrect’ and ‘po litically embarrassing’ stories and holds government officials account able for their actions. This Web site extends a warm open invitation to whistleblowers and leakers.” www.waynemadsenreport.com Happy Holidays news hounds. afeth@dailyemerald. com ■ Guest commentary Government should not punish hybrid vehicle drivers with tax I was casually enjoying a post Thanksgiving cup of eggnog when CNN announced that the U.S. Chamber of Commerce was suggesting a new tax on those who drive hybrid and other alternative energy vehicles. Of course, I assumed there must have been some mistake. But when I looked online, I was shocked to find the story confirmed by both NBC and an ABC news affiliate. Apparently, the federal Highway Trust Fund is running out of money for repairing the nation’s road system. In order to correct the problem, sever al proposals have been set forth: First, that the federal gas tax (about 18 cents to the gallon) be adjusted for in flation; second, that drivers be billed for miles driven. And, as aforemen tioned, that a tax be imposed on hybrid vehicle drivers. The reasoning here is simple: All drivers “should have to pay their fair share” to fix potholes, bridges, etc., “regardless of how much or what kind of fuel they use.” But before charging progressive-minded drivers extra, shouldn’t the government take a more progressive stance itself? Shouldn’t some attention be focused on creating a broader system of pub lic transportation? That would do far more to minimize road wear than would punishing drivers. 1 understand that because the Unit ed States is vastly larger than most Eu ropean nations, it has proved difficult for the government to develop a univer sal system of public transportation. This does not mean, however, that it should abandon the attempt. With oil rich countries now producing to their capacity, it will not be long before the price of oil makes fossil-fuel dependent transportation obsolete. The time of the personal automobile is drawing to a close, regardless of whether the government or anyone else wants to admit it. The government should not, therefore, punish those people who are doing their bit to re duce our dependency on foreign oil. By even suggesting it, government is send ing a clear message to the environmen tally conscious of America — that the efforts they are taking to secure a cleaner, better future are for naught. If the folks at the Chamber of Com merce are really that concerned about a nearly-obsolete road network and are devoid of the vision necessary to create public transportation for the masses, then perhaps they should consider in stead a tax based on vehicle emissions. By doing so, they would be taxing the real culprits, those who make living and breathing in our cities a challenge, and who help make the United States one of the biggest air polluters in the world. And perhaps upon greater re flection, they will realize that those who spent the extra money to get a hy brid car in the first place shouldn’t be begrudged the few dollars a year that they save from investing in our future. Willow Baumann, University student ■ Editorial Now is the time to start learning from history The year is 2025. Students at North Eugene High School are studying a modern history textbook that tells horrifying stories of the genocide that took place in Sudan at the be ginning of the century. The young students are visibly upset when they hear stories of hu mans raping and killing other humans in mas sive numbers. The textbook has a scanned image of a column by Nicolas Kristof that ran in The New York Times on Nov, 29, 2005. The article tells the story of two sisters who be longed to the Fur tribe in Darfur. The girls watched a janjaweed commander behead their father when the father begged for the commander to let his daughters go. One student asks, “Why do we have to learn about this? We can’t do anything about it now — it already happened.” The teacher patiently explains that we must learn about history to avoid repeating it. Another student asks, “But in the early 1990s, didn’t the same thing happen in Rwanda?” People are disheartened about the Su danese genocide in 2025. There is a best-sell ing novel out that tells the story of one brave woman who was able to hide from the janjaweed militia and survive, and it makes people sad. The movie “Camp Darfur” re counts the story of heroic members of the African Union who risked their lives to pro tect women from being raped when they left the refugee camps to gather firewood, and it makes people sad, just as people were sad in 2004 after watching “Hotel Rwanda.” In 2005, people are shaking their heads and asking, “How could the U.S. government abandon the people in Rwanda? Didn’t they see that there were people there who couldn’t defend themselves?” In 2025, people will shake their heads and ask, “How could the U.S. government abandon the people in Sudan? Didn’t they see that there were people there who couldn’t defend themselves?” In 2025, college students in coffee shops ask each other hypothetical questions like, “If you were walking by a parking lot at night and saw a woman being raped, wouldn’t you stop to help? How could you just walk by and do nothing? That’s exactly what the United States did while women were being gang raped in Sudan in 2005.” The college students are glad that the United States has learned from history and won’t let that sort of thing happen again. In 2005, it’s time to stop talking about learning from history. It’s time to actually learn from it by working to prevent this hypothetical future — one where people are ashamed of the United States’ apathetic atti tude toward yet another case of genocide in a far away country. Despite recent news reports that brutal vi olence in Darfur is worsening as peace talks deteriorate, the Bush administration has re fused to label this crisis a genocide. If named a genocide, the United Nations and thus the U.S. would be bound to intervene. Government negotiators from the United States and other countries on the ground in Sudan are growing frustrated while our gov ernment pays only lip service to this crisis. Real people with homes, families, hobbies, nicknames, favorite hangouts and photo al bums are being raped, beaten, tortured, en slaved and murdered. We cannot avert our eyes anymore. It is time to declare this situation what it really is — a genocide.