Opinion Page 9 • Tuesday, March 23, 2004 Pointing the finger 1$ international terrorism continues y people must stop blaming world leaders aker, irbedJ 3 1 8E HI.)) n.) IT WASN’T feP- T he terrorist bombing in Madrid on March 11 and the recent passing of the one-year anniversary of the start of Operation Iraqi Freedom has brought a recent surge of global opposition to the War on Terrorism. The New York Times reported that, last Friday, a crowd of as many as 100,000 people gathered to protest the war in Iraq, with similar demonstrations occur ring in Vancouver, Seville and Rome. But instead of rebuking the terrorists who mur dered thousands of innocent people on Sept.l 1 and March 11, they blame world leaders such as George W. Bush and Tony Blair, two of the few men bold enough to assert moral courage to defend the free dom that these terrorists seek to destroy. The news of American sol- diers dying daily in Iraq is heart breaking for those back home, and though they take an oath to uphold the U.S. way of life at the possible cost of their lives, no one wants it to come to that. These protesters claim to love peace, but they have to realize that if they truly love peace, they must understand what peace requires. Every rational individ ual wants peace, but groups such as al-Qaida are not leaving us that option. The mass graves unearthed in Iraq will not be undone by simply desiring peace — to uphold peace, the world must be rid of those who seek to destroy it. And yet, even days after the terrorists attacked Spain, the Spanish did not become angry at those who murdered them — they blamed their leader for inviting the attack by supporting the United States, and elected his rival, Jose Zapatero, who the Toronto Star reports vowed the withdrawal of 1,300 Spanish troops from Iraq. One cannot help but wonder where the world’s sense has gone when people are killed and protesters don’t blame the murderers but instead blame those who are trying to fight them. "Any sign of weakness or retreat simply validates terrorist violence and invites more violence for all nations,” Bush told representatives from 83 countries at the White House last Friday. And he’s absolutely right — by allowing the terrorists to achieve their goal in backing out of your defense against them, you give them victory. Killers who deliberately tar get the lives of innocent men, women and children do not deserve victory — they deserve to be rightly MIKE WALTERS * ^These protesters daim a love of peace, but they must understand what peace requires. ... A coward surrenders to the lesser enemy in a fight in defense of the innocent... . blamed for their acts, and they deserve utter annihilation as punishment for them. “It is only as retaliation that force may be used and only against the man who starts its use,” novelist and philosopher Ayn Rand once said. “No, I do not share his evil or sink to his concept of morality: I merely grant him his choice, destruction, the only destruction he had the right to choose: his own.” Some disagree with the U.S. invasion of Iraq on the grounds that it was not openly and directly attacked, but this is an ignorant stance. The thousands of Iraqis unjustly slaughtered at the hands of Saddam Hussein proclaim the evidence of his guilt. His crimes against humanity are just that — crimes — and an affront to those who value human life. The old saying of “what is right is not always popular,” has never been more true when look ing at the thousands who attack Bush and Blair for their stance in seeking an end to Saddam’s reign of terror and for trying to bring democracy and peace to a country that has seen neither in decades. Deciding one year ago to not go to war in Iraq would not have brought peace to that country — it would only have meant more mass graves to be dug and filled. Some realize that, and now it’s time for the protest- ers to come to that same realiza tion. As Martin Luther King Jr. said, “True peace is not the absence of tension, but the presence of justice.” Justice must be brought to regimes of tyranny if world peace is ever to be achieved, and justice also means blaming those who have committed a crime. A coward surrenders to the lesser enemy in a fight in defense of the innocent, of the U.S. way of life and of all this nation holds to be morally right. And while innocent people do get hurt and killed in even the most moral of wars, it is a mistake to equate those acts with the deliberate targeting of innocents as terrorists do. To fight against these leaders instead of fighting the terrorists is even worse. These protesters must either decide that they are pointing their fingers in the wrong direction, or acknowledge that peace is not really what they want. Mike Walters is a senior psychology major. Graphic by Paul Wilson )FF\| jff" 1 ' negations against athletes lemish University’s image MAIL CALL nwd ometimes the opportunity to recruit for Texas A&M comes at the strangest times. For me, it occurred on Saturday while eating lunch at the lorthgate McDonald's when a black woman walked in ith her daughter and asked for directions to particular toon the A&M campus. She said her daughter was tested in the engineering program. She then asked lutthe campus in general. Were there many blacks e? Were they treated well? Considering the incident over spring break involving oA&M football players, Geoff Hangartner and Cole ith, allegedly shouting racial epithets at a group of blacks, I know how to answer her. Regrettably, A&M football players being arrested has been a imon occurrence since September. But allegations related to this particular idem are so serious they deserve sepa- te commentary. On his Web site, coachfran.com, head coach Dennis Franchione said ith players have denied making the racial s. Hangartner went as far as to take a lygraph, which he reportedly passed. |ut no matter how this incident plays out, s reputation has already suffered parable damage. Hangartner was charged with a DWI d Smith with public intoxication, but the ory garnered national interest because of iracial angle. The drunken driving targe levied against Hangartner is (tremely serious. Unfortunately, drunken illege students stupid enough to drive eall too common. However, what put this story on the front ige of popular Web sites such as ESPN.com and SI.com are ie allegations by the blacks in another car that Hangartner and shouted racial slurs at them. A College Station police Seer also wrote an affidavit claiming he could hear the slurs m across the street. The potential consequences of this incident are far-reach- ig.This incident will hurt A&M’s recruiting efforts. It is too isyforA&M’s athletic rivals to pull up this story from the Dernet and show it to minority recruits. It will also undoubt- ly hurt A&M’s academic recruiting efforts for more minori- students. In turn, the stature of A&M as a world-class diversity will suffer. The A&M community’s reaction to these events is just as This inddent will hurt A&M's recruiting efforts... It will also undoubtedly hurt A&M's academic recruiting efforts for more minority students. In turn, the stature of A&M as a world-class University will suffer. important as the incident itself. Frankly, some of the reaction by Aggies to this incident has been disturbing. On the Texags.com football boards, some posters have argued that there are even acceptable times to use a racial slur. It is important Hangartner and Smith are treated fairly and given due process, but the Aggie fami ly must vigorously condemn any prejudicial attitudes and redouble A&M’s diversity efforts. Some might fear this involves instituting affirma tive action into A&M’s admissions policies. While this is not necessarily true, it certainly involves Aggies telling other students to stop acting like fools and embarrassing this school. Perhaps the only positive incident to come from this story is its potential to instigate a serious dialogue about racial relations on the A&M cam pus. The question that should be consid ered is why some Aggies still harbor dis gusting, outdated attitudes. I once received an e-mail calling me the “n-word” from a student who was upset over an article regarding diversity. Nothing hurts more than being told by a fellow Aggie that you are less than human, unworthy of respect. It should upset Aggies everywhere that enrolled minority students have a more negative perception of A&M than non-enrolled minorities, according to a study by the Race and Ethnic Institute at Texas A&M. This means minority stu dents have negative experiences that solidify their perception that A&M is a racist school. It seems every semester there must be some racial incident that conveys the message that minority Aggies are not welcome here. Whether it is a “ghetto” party planned on Martin Luther King Jr. Day, an offensive comic that appears in The Battalion or controversy over the election of a black yell leader, minority students are tired of being the butt of so many racial incidents on this campus. This must stop immediately. If that comes at the cost of two of A&M’s foot ball players facing serious consequences, then so be it. Abortion can't be judged on appearance In response to Cody Sain’s March 22 column: I was surprised, at the end of Cody Sain's March 22 editorial "Opening the Casket on Abortion," to find that Sain is a philosophy major. Judging from the content, I am forced to conclude he cannot distinguish between rational arguments (and there are many to be made against abortion), and logical fallacy. Sain's first "point" is that "one should be able to decide from the pictures if the fetus is indeed a ... person." If personhood is deter mined by visual judgment alone, would Sain grant legal autonomy to a particularly realistic computer rendering of a man? Early-stage fetuses of primates and other higher mammals are virtually indis tinguishable to the layman. Shall we then grant chimpanzees per sonhood based on how their unborn look? These absurd examples demonstrate that argument from appearance is hardly a firm base for a moral stance. His second "point" claims that abortion, if a normal medical proce dure, should not induce repulsion. This is both appeal to emotion and a strawman. Comparing suction aspiration and dilation cutterage to something as mild as stitching a cut to prove a moral point is blatant intellectual dishonesty. Plenty of medical procedures are beneficial, yet horrifying to look at. The effects of chemotherapy on children, for example, can be visually devastating. Yet I don't see any picketing at the oncology wards of children's hospitals. I doubt many have the stomach to watch a bone marrow transplant. Shall we condemn lipo suction because it makes us go "Eww?" Of course not! To morally judge something based on appearances and emotional reactions is to throw away all semblance of reason. If the only argu ments you and “Justice for All” can offer on behalf of the pro-life camp are these assertions, I implore you to step aside before you harm your cause any further. Josh Shamburger Class of 2006 Collins Ezeanyim is a senior computer engineering major.