Opinion U.S. exporting death Food, not tobacco can be sold overseas In the last week, two interesting facts have been re vealed about the tobacco industry in the United States. First, the majority of research done by the industry has * been reported falsely. Second, the federal government will spend $3.5 million dollars this year to promote the U.S. tobacco industry overseas. A judge in New Jersey has said that over the past 40 years, the tobacco industry deliberately mislead the American public into believing that smoking was safe. Now, the United States Department of Agriculture is giving that same industry money to advertise overseas. U.S. District Court Judge H. Lee Sarokin went so far as to call the industry’s vow to disclose its research findings “nothing but a public relations ploy — a fraud — to deflect the growing evidence against the industry.” That lie now is being marketed overseas through agriculture department grants. Representatives of the tobacco industry claim that promoting the export of tobacco is just like promoting the export of any other agricultural product. But exporting tobacco creates health problems, while exporting other farm commodities can solve health prob lems. Spending $3.5 million to promote a deadly habit world wide is ridiculous. America must feed the world instead of kill it. Smoking in the United States has dropped 32 percent in the last 22 years, and many communities are enacting strict anti-smoking laws. Yet the U.S. government tinds no shame in spending millions to get foreigners hooked. Tobacco is a killer. Money spent on its promotion could be much better spent, for example, subsidizing other farm products to export to countries that cannot afford to buy the food they need. With all the problems in the world, the last thing other countries need are American products that create more. Rep. Peter H. Kostmayer, D-Pa., said of the tobacco advertising program: “I think it is exporting death. It’s not a wasteful program, it’s a deadly program.” Death is not something the world needs more of, especially from a country that knows better. Nations slow to share power 1 am writing in response to the column published in the DN on Feb. 3 (“Bush’s military cuts not enough”). The United Stales, the Soviet (dis)Union, Britain, France and Ger many can build nuclear weapons — a serious threat to world peace! But if Islamic nations build or become ca pable of developing nuclear weap ons, that is not digested by super powers. This stinks. I am sure Israel, the largest recipi ent of US aid, had nuclear weapons a long time ago. That’s why the Lon don Times wrote that Israel iscapable of building as many as 200 nuclear weapons. There is no doubt that the main stream ultra-conservative right wing“ countries have already started to flex their muscles to capitalize on Soviet weakness. Why shouldn’t they. Isn’t it the survival of the fittest? The thing is these superpowers arc so used to deciding the fate of Third World na tions that they couldn’t swallow the rise or any major achievement of ci ther Islamic or non-Islamic nations. Arshad Altaf Shaikh junior pre-pharmacy Whites not necessarily racist In response to Chris Halligan (“Half truths form white identity,” DN, Feb. 7), I’m white and proud of it. I have to be proud of it because there’s nothing I can do about it. Also, I’m sick and tired of people trying to make me feel guilty for being white. Or feel guilty of being a racist just because I’m white. I’m not a racist. I never held a slave, killed an Indian or put down the women’s movement. I’ve traced my family history back lo when ihcy came to the United Slates in 1870. None of my ancestors ever held slaves, killed Indians or put down the women’s movement. So if you, Chris, want to let some one tell you you’re a racist just be cause you’re white, fine. But don’t try to convince me— I’m not guilty, and proud. Scott Ruff sophomore geology -LETTER POLICY The Daily Nebraskan welcomes brief letters to the editor from all read ers and interested others. Letters will be selected for publi cation on the basis of clarity, original ity, timeliness and space available. The Daily Nebraskan retains the right to edit or reject all material submitted. Readers also arc welcome to sub mit material as guest opinions. Whether material should run as a let ter or guest opinion is left to the edi tor’s discretion. - Letters and guest opinions sent to :he newspaper become the property r-f the Daily Nebraskan and cannot be r turned. \nonymous submissions will not t> onsidered for publication. Lct tc s should include the author’s na:nc, year in school, major and group affiliation, if any. Requests to withhold names will not be granted. Submit material to the Daily Ne braskan, 34 Nebraska Union, 14(X) R St., Lincoln, Neb. 68588-0448. 1 BRIAN ALLEN Legal drinking age hypocritical On June 4, 1988,1 was uncere moniously kicked out of a Lincoln bar while attempting to celebrate my 18th birthday with a little underage drinking. My older brother had assured me that anyone could drink in this par ticular establishment. Either I didn’t fit into the broad category of anyone or he was wrong. 1 was in Lincoln with my brother instead of at home with my parents, as most recent high school graduates would have been. Two days later, I was to report to the Military Entrance Processing Facility in Omaha, prior to my departure to Fort Jackson, S.C., for Army basic training. The 21-year-old drinking age is hypocritical and bogus. I was kicked out of the bar because the citizens of this country, through their represen tative government, had decided that as an 18-ycar-old 1 was not yet mature enough to make intelligent decisions about my consumption of alcohol. Yet this same body of citizens has decided that 18-year-olds arc mature enough to defend their country in the armed forces, cither voluntarily or through the draft. The same people who arc not considered responsible or competent enough to control their consumption of alcohol, evidently arc competent and responsible enough to vote, be tried as adults, enter into legal con tracts and be sent into battle. Thousands of 18-, 19- and 20-ycar olds were sent to Saudi Arabia and Kuwait for operations Desert Shield and Storm to kill or be killed for a government and its citizens who don’t even trust them to have a beer. These soldiers liberated an entire country and defeated the fourth-larg est standing army in the world, and when they came home, they still couldn’t even get into a bar. While these people all enlisted in the armed services voluntarily and arc personally responsible for ending up in combat, it also is true that most of them (the men) could have been drafted. Every U.S. male citizen must register for the draft by his 18th birth day, yet he can’t legally drink for three more years. As part of my job in the Army Right now, anyone between the ages of 18 and 21 is subject to all the liabilities of adulthood, and, uons. of the benefits. National Guard, 1 inspect mortar and cannon tubes for faults that could cause them to burst. It is inconceiv able to me that, as a minor, I was trusted to find faults that could cause the deaths of an entire mortar or tank crew and yet 1 was not trusted enough to be allowed to purchase alcohol. As far as I know, qualified people under age 21 in this country can drive buses and taxi cabs, fight fires, drive ambulances, help build skyscrapers, bridges and dams and fly aircraft. But a beer at the corner bar? Sorry, not yet responsible enough. I freely admit that many 18-ycar olds arc not mature enough to know when they have had enough, but maturity is not necessarily a function of age. 1 know just as many 21 -, 31 - and 41-year-olds who have not learned to set reasonable limits for themselves. It doesn't matter where you set the limit — people will abuse alcohol. Dropping the drinking age to 18 would not produce any more alcoholics than are being produced now. For fairness, that is exactly what we must do. Suppose, after being turned down at the bar, I had been responsible for a fatal traffic accident on the way home. 1 would have been tried as an adult, although I hadn’t been treated as one only minutes before. Suppose I had broken my contract with the Army and failed lo report for basic training. Again, I would have been given the harsher adult treatment. Right now, anyone between the ages of 18 and 21 is subject to all the liabilities of adulthood and none of the benefits. Few minors arc stopped from drink ing by the 21 -year-ol. drinking age. I know it never put mu h of a strain on my consumption bac • in my untamed youth. Buyers always were plentiful, and I usually could f nd a party with a ®if no party could be found, my buddies and I would do what minors still are doing everywhere. We’d gel a trunk full of beer and go cruising — definitely a dangerous proposition. Other than adding a sense of ad venture to drinking and thereby en couraging me to drink more often, the only thing the 21-year-old drinking age did was prevent from drinking in a bar, which w*s probably the safest place I could have been. At least in a bar, the bartender may cutoff heavy drinkers eventually, and someone at least semi-sober usually is willing to drive the drunkest pa trons home. This was not the ease at most of the underage parties I went to. Some people ma think it would be equally fair to rai‘ the draft age to 21 and not drop the drinking age, and they would be parti ' > right. But to achieve true fairness in the system, we would also have to raise the age of legal adulthood to 21 Because most pee pie begin to live their own lives on .bout their 18th birthday, it would be very difficult and countcrproduc c to raise the age of legal adulthood. Thousands ol people would not be able to take out loans without co-signers or engage in business dealings, would be tried as minors instead of adults and would not be able to vote. As a matter of equity, it would not matter if the ages of legal adulthood, draft and drinking were 18,21 or even 31 — as long as they were the same. As a matter of praciicality, 18 is the only age which will suffice. Allen is a senior me*. .nical engineering major and a Daily Nebr*«kan columnist. -EDITORIAL POLICY Stall editorials represent the offi cial policy of the Spring 1992 Daily Nebraskan. Policy is set by the Daily Nebraskan Editorial Board. Its mem bers arc: Jana Pedersen, editor; Alan Phelps, opinion page editor; Kara Wells, managing editor; Roger Price, wire editor; Wendy Navratil, copy desk chief; Brian Shellito, cartoon ist; Jeremy Fitzpatrick, senior re porter. Editorials do not necessarily re flect the views of the university, its employees, the students or the NU Board of Regents. Editorial columns represent the opinion of the author. The Daily Nebrask an’s publishers are the regents, who established the UNL Publications p>>ard to super vise the daily production of the pa per. According to poh. y set by the re gents, responsibility for the editorial content of the newspaper lies solely in the hands of its students.