The Battalion OPINION T1 < Monday, October 23, 1989 Opinion Page Editor Juliette Rizzo Th£ ~3/81£-ThumP£Rs'\. . Inflicting Their Version Of Religion Agginst Anyone Different. .. (C) R8“l FTTfeiilSOKl cne- Care political prog ical di M ram: isastei 1 In the shorthand of government, the whole business is called, quite simply, “catastrophic.” That turned out to be a good choice of word. Walter R. Mears Associated Press Mail Call Learn about your neighbor EDITOR: Female Guard Room escorts? EDITOR: For about 30 seconds, I was imagining everyone living on a large piece of land where people are asking each other, “Who am I?”...“Who are you?” Believe it or not, this is exactly what’s going on in the world today. I just started realizing this predicament after reading Curtis Franks’ article Oct. 17, “Culture has place in history.” The world is made of many different races. Each race has differnet cultures. The problem is we all live together, but we really don’t know each other. The devastating part is that some of us lack knowledge in our own culture. What is there to do about this? There is only one answer to this. Find out more about yourself and find out more about your neighbor. As a black individual, I invite all races to enroll in Black History or Sociology of Black Americans. There are several different cultural organizations on this campus also. Once we are more familiar with our history, more than likely we will understand our culture. To each individual: Learn more about yourself, your neighbor and mankind. All praises to Curtis Franks for writing this very fine article. Raquel L. Jarrett ’93 Letters to the editor should not exceed 300 words in length. The editorial staff reserves the right to edit letters for style and length, but will make every effort to maintain the author’s intent. Each letter must be signed and must include the classification, address and telephone number of the writer. Recently, two girls on their way home late one Saturday night felt uneasy about walking alone and decided to call the Guard Room in hopes of obtaining an escort back to their residence hall. They were shocked to find out that there were only females in the Guard Room who were not only unwilling to provide an escort, but also quite rude when asked why not. The woman who spoke to them on the phone, said they were basically “out of luck” since there were no men there that evening. This letter was not written to suggest that women should not be in the Guard Room, but only to suggest that an alternate plan be taken. First, it should be said, that we are in no way opposed to women being a part of the Corps. We do believe they are perfectly within their rights to be there. However, if they are unable, or unwilling to provide escorts, then maybe an alternative plan of action should be taken. Our suggestion is that the women possibly serve their time during the day when escorts are not as pertinent, or serve their time along with the men. We, as those who ask for escorts, do not understand why women would be there in the first place if not to provide escorts since that is the main purpose in having the Guard Room. As people who depend on the Guard Room for safety reasons, we do feel this issue is quite important and does deserve some attention rather quickly. Gretchen Thompson ’93 accompanied by two signatures The Medicare Catastrophic Cover age Act of 1988 has itself proven to be a political catastrophe. The program is a problem for 'the members of Con gress who approved it and now are in the process of undoing their unpopu lar handiwork; for the administration that first supported it and then fell si lent; even for senior citizens’ lobbyists who endorsed the plan without antic ipating the backlash. itude and support, reaped outr-i from the people paying the tax, u of them already paying for theiroi catastrophic health insurance. &; people who were paying little or surtax came to believe that they’d lie: sessed, and joined the opposition, protection would have beenmosts able to lower-income retired peo the least organized and least voca the nation’s seniors. Now Congress is trying to figure out how and what to try to salvage out of catastrophic, the insurance program el derly Americans — at least those who know how to get a message to Washing ton — apparently did not want and clearly did not want to finance. President Reagan proposed the pi gram in the first place, butwhathers ommended in 1987 was a relatin modest plan to protect the elde against huge medical bills, with ana mated price tag of $2 billion a year While the White House at one point said the program should be preserved, President Bush is offering no further advice. “We are letting the congressio nal process hash this out,” Bush said Friday. Congress added benefits, and When the final measure was enact 16 months ago, the five-year cosh estimated at $32 billion. The now is up to $48 billion. The president said if Congress pro duced something he deemed unsatis factory, he would not hesitate to step in. The administration isn’t saying what might prompt it to take action, or even a position, on a program Bush en dorsed as a candidate. The Reagan plan was supposedic financed with a flat, $4 monthlyp: mium charge. To pay for the panded program, Congress devk the 15 percent income tax surchai; that stirred the senior rebellion. After the House voted outright re peal, Secretary of Health and Human Services Louis Sullivan endorsed a Sen ate measure that would have preserved major features of the law and reduced the controversial surtax on elder Americans that was to have financed it. Unnecessary laws restrict freedoms I support the National Rifle Associa tion and the American Civil Liberties Union, which on its face sounds pretty oxymoronic. The N.R.A. is the su preme bastion of conservatism, situ ated ideologically just left of Attila the Hun, while the A.C.L.U. is the nation’s greatest champion of every bleeding heart liberal cause that comes to mind. Scot Walker Editor But although their methods are dif ferent, the goals of the two groups are not so diametrically opposed as it ap pears; both groups, in their different ways, are trying to protect the Ameri can people from the American govern ment. allow a law, for instance, that says Con gress has the power to stop people from criticizing it, but we almost had (and still might end up with) a law pre venting people from burning the flag. We would impeach a president who tried to tell us how or with whom we can or cannot have sex, yet we tolerate laws in various states that prohibit ho mosexual intercourse or even, in some cases, heterosexual oral sex. He did so in a letter to the Senate Fi nance Committee, but the administra tion quickly and curiously declax ed that Sullivan was speaking only for himself. Even the most powerful of the nior lobbies, the American Assoc®; of Retired Persons, got tangled in issue after agreeing to go along w the financing system. The AARPm says, somewhat defensively, strongly supports the benefitsl. never advocated" the surtax systc The associat ion wants broader fins ing, including an increase in the bacco tax. That’s not likely. Budget Director Richard G. Darman sent up a letter of his own. “Nothing in this letter should be construed as an ex pression for or opposition to’one cata strophic illness substantive amendment as opposed to another,” Darman de creed. What is likely is that Congresswi far more wary of such programs,ai especially of such financing systems, the future. And what’s certain is it costs the program would have covet will be paid in other ways — pocket, in higher premiums for prisi health insurance, and in taxes, 1« state and federal. The N.R.A. exists primarily to pro tect what it sees as Americans’ right to keep and bear arms, based on its inter pretation of the Second Amendment to the Constitution. The N.R.A. keeps a high profile, has a massive advertising budget and contributes millions of dol lars to try to swing elections in favor of candidates who agree with its views on why gun control is a bad thing. The N.R.A. fears all forms of gun control, because it sees it as the first step in a chain of events that could lead to a pro hibition on any gun ownership by pri vate citizens. the goals of the A.C.L.U., like the Ku Klux Klan or the American Nazis. As the A.C.L.U. sees it, if we start taking away the right of any group (no matter how repulsive), to assemble, speak, worship, etc., then we start the process that leads to the loss of those rights for everyone. We would revolt if the government, in order to improve our health, forced us to do 100 sit-ups every day, yet we ask for laws to stop people from smok ing or drinking ordriving without seat- belts, in order to protect our health. That’s where the N.R.A. and the A.C.L.U. meet. The Constitution, in its entirety, with all the good parts and bad parts, is the foundation of our country, and it’s mighty dangerous to start mucking around with it. We have to guard our freedoms carefully, be cause no matter how stable and secure and free our country seems right now, we are always only one or two steps away from living in a police state. That’s why I support the N.R.A. and the A.C.L.U., because they work to stop the “little laws” that are so insid ious. And that’s why we need to get out of the mentality that all of our ills can be solved by passing laws. Every time we pass another law, we are putting new restrictions on ourselves, remov ing little bits of our personal liberty, which in the long run undermines the freedoms upon which our country was founded. The catastrophic coverage act was supposed to provide insurance to pay for costly hospital and doctor care, to put a cap on out-of-pocket medical costs. It also offered new benefits for prescription drug costs. The benefits were to be phased in gradually. In signing the bill he counted at jor domestic achievement, Reagi nonetheless offered a warning, and! proved too true. He said that with* diligent cost controls, the progff could be too expensive to afford. The A.C.L.U. focuses its efforts on the courts, where they come to the res cue of any person or group whose Con stitutional rights are being violated. That often means defending groups whose ideas are in direct opposition to The danger never comes in the form of one horrible law that is designed to take away all our freedoms at once; in stead, the problem is with laws that take away our liberties in tiny, little chunks. Scot Walker is a junior journalism major and editor of The Battalion. But the tax to pay for those benefits, which already is in place, produced the backlash. It is a surtax of $22.50 for ev ery $150 in federal income taxes paid by the elderly. That spared low-income retirees, imposing the surtax on about 40 percent of the people eligible for the insurance. The maximum tax is $800 a person, and about six percent of the elderly faced that top levy. “This could be more than a problem,” Reagan said. “Itcouldk tragedy. The program, after all, is to'' paid for by the elderly themselves.) we must control the costs of thesene benefits or we’ll harm the very we are trying to help.” Congress, which had expected grat- Walter R. Mears is vice presit and columnist for The Associate Press and has reported on Waste ton and national politics for 0 than 25 years. The American people would never The Battalion (USPS 045 360) Member of Texas Press Association Southwest Journalism Conference The Battalion Editorial Board Scot Walker, Editor Wade See, Managing Editor Juliette Rizzo, Opinion Page Editor Fiona Soltes, City Editor Ellen Hobbs, Chuck Squatriglia, News Editors Tom Kehoe, Sports Editor Jay Janner, Art Director Dean Sueltenfuss, Lifestyles Editor Editorial Policy The Battalion is a non-profit, self-supporting newspa per operated as a community service to Texas A&M and Bryan-College Station. Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those of the editorial board or the author, and do not necessarily rep resent the opinions of Texas A&M administrators, fac ulty or the Board of Regents. The Battalion also serves as a laboratory newspaper for students in reporting, editing • and photography classes within the Department of Journalism. 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