The Blue Banner Editorial Who’s really in control? Basic morality implies a respect for truth, something which seems more and more rare in our leaders, our media, and ourselves. Of course, one thing about truth is that leaders set the example, even though we think we no longer need someone to show us how to act. If our administration is not willing to tell the truth about what happens in student court, or what decisions are made concerning students with criminal records, why should we expect them to tell us the truth concerning anything else? And why are they the ones in charge? And why is the student court acting as though the administration is dictating their thought? Student court is for students to evaluate and judge their fellow students who have broken university laws or federal laws. Stu dent court is not a puppet for the administration to use. Student court and student government are, as the names imply, student entities. They are run by students, for student affairs, accountable to students. If a student organization will not answer questions that stu dents have, then it does not fulfill its function. So the questions remain, who told student court to stay quiet? If they can't say anything because of closed seesion, arid Reid was judged to be harmless, why don't they want that feet published? If he is not harmless, why the overwhelming concern for the one against the many? Wouldn't the prudent course of action include at least inform ing the university population of the matter so that students can use their own judgement in how to respond? We do not advocate infringing on his right to privacy, but we do ask that a matter of such grave import be opened to public knowledge, so that each and every student may do what he deems best in this situation. Hopefully, we can act grown-up enough to know when to be kind and forgiving, and when to be cautious, but please, we ask that we be given the whole truth, in order to makean informed decision. Why was this closed, if Reid is innocent, (or at least, barely guilty), and who, if anyone, is behind administration's reluc tance to speak on the subject? Let's act like thetruth has some relevance for our lives, and free the student court to make their own decisions, based on evi dence, not on some misguided utopian view of UNCA. We should keep in mind what Oscar Wilde said, "The pure and simple truth is rarely pure and never simple." Editorial Board Catherine Elniff Andrea Lawson William Davis Anne Kuester Jeannie Peek Editor-in-Chief News Editor Features Editor Sports Editor Copy Editor Staff Gretchen Brooks, Kenneth Com, Shawn Culbertson, Marissa DeBlasio, Nick Foster, Troy Martin,Wendy McKinney, Susan Sertain, Denise Sizemore,Michael Taylor, Jennifer Thurston, Christine Treadway, Jack Walsh, Jeanette Webb Karen Brinson Alice Hui Greg Burrus Advertising Business Manager Circulation Mark West, faculty advisor The Blue Banner is the student newspaper of the University of North Carolina at Asheville. We publish each Thursday except during summer sessions, final exam weeks and holiday breaks. Our offices are located in Carmichael Hall, Rm 208-A. Our telephone number is (704) 251-6586. Our campus e-mail address is UNCAVX::BANNER. Nothing in our editorial or opinions sections necessarily reflects the opinion of the entire Blue Banner editorial board, the faculty advisor, or the university faculty, administration or staff. Unsigned editorials reflect the opinion of a majority of the Blue Banner editorial board. Letters, columns, cartoons and reviews represent only the opinions of their respective authors. The Blue Banner welcomes submissions of letters and articles for publication. All submissions are subject to editing and are consid ered on the basis of interest, space, taste and timeliness. Letters must be t3fped, double spaced, and must not exceed 300 words. Letters for publication must also contain the author’s signa ture, classification, major or other relationship with UNCA. Interporn; The demise of Big Brother James Hertsch Columnist There is no Internet pornog raphy problem. The media are lying to us about it. They’re looking for a story. It’s the minority who run around with pornorgraphy rings. There is no Internet pornog raphy problem. There are some scum out there who exchange this stuff regu larly, child pornography rings, etc. They can be arrested, tried, and sentenced under existing law. Such people should go to jail, and they do. There is no Internet por nography problem. The knee-jerk reaction to all the hype has been to write legislation about it...totally outlaw “indecency” on the Internet, or any computer net works. To prosecute not only those who distribute it, but those who are the providers for those who distribute the dirty pictures. We would as soon sue the phone company for somebody making an ob scene call. There is no Internet pornog raphy problem. Finding publications like Playboy and Penthouse on the Web is not that hard. It’s also not that hard to get hold of them in a bookstore; indecency hardly began on the Internet There is no Internet pornog raphy problem. Where are the parents? Why don’t they supervise the kiddies on the computer? Why don’t they turn the computers off? There is no Internet pornog raphy problem. The Internet, a decentralized group of computer networks, is the ultimate expression of free speech. You can say any thing. Do anything. You flame. You get flamed. And all Big Brother can do is watch. Officials at the Simon Wiesenthal Center have sent notes out to Internet provid ers, asking that content which would spread racism, anti- Semitism, or general mayhem, be censored. Be removed. That ideas be destroyed. That ideas be restrained. Providers, as a general rule, state that they’re not respon sible for their users. And well they should say this, for we need this freedom to exchange ideas. We need the ability to discourse, without having to hide behind the veneers of po liteness we use in real space. For the human species, there can be nothing more'valuable than this communications me dium. In cyberspace, everybody can hear you scream—and multitudes will scream back. It sounds like the main “prob lem” is free speech. The Internet is the ultimate expression of the “free market place of ideas.” As it stands now, the Internet is not peace ful, but it is a hubbub of activ ity. It is freedom, it is liberty. The Internet is home to every body and nobody. There is no problem on the Internet. Yet, as we’ve seen above, some say there is. Some ask that the Internet be regulated. Some believe the marketplace be re stricted. Some would even re quire that the Internet be closed. And, why should the govern ment regulate the Internet? The answer is that the govern ment is here to protect as. To shield us from the unknown. To address our fears. That’s the larger issue here. Fear. Fear of change. Fear of the unknown. The informa tion Revolution is wonderful and frightening. With modern technology, you can send a message from here to the South Pole. Thanks • to the miracles of e-mail, we are coming closer to becoming a true global village. Camara derie, friendship, and under standing across national boundaries are more possible ' than ever before. With e-mail , a person can get to know you onadeep, personallevel...from a thousand miles away. With your Social Security number, and some hacking, a person can find out almost any thing about you. Your name. Your birthday. Your shoe-size. Your credit rating. Anything you say or do. It’s like the ancient gods and their priests, who saw all, knew all, and, with a few words of power, could strike you down where you stood. Today’s priests can sacrifice you on the altar of technology. Today’s priests, though ridi culed, hold a certain mystical power. They are the gate keep Basketball, it’s not a game anymore Nate Conroy Columnist Man, I hate people. Particularly parent sports “fans” at their child’s high school athletic events. These contests are low-profde games with a few normal fans, but abounding with “parent-fans.” These overzealous moms and dads eagerly pick up the slack for the small crowd, screaming and hollering about offense and defense. Many even yell dur ing time-outs and halftime when the teams are in the locker room. Having escaped the ranks of the participants in high school athletics, I now grudgingly take my place among the mob in the bleachers to watch my sis ter play... JV high school bas ketball - the worst of parent- fan hells. On one particularly dark and stormy January evening, my seat choice landed me right beside a lovely woman who, for lack of a better name, we’ll call “Bertha.” How shall I de scribe this prodigious hulk of woman? Just conjure up the most hideous, obnoxious, re pulsive, jackass of a woman of which you could think. Next picture her bellowing cheers and jeers continuously for two hours. Then put two little rat tailed children scampering around at her feet. Imagine Bertha en couraging them to mock the other team and make screeching noises during free throws. Imagine her arguing with the other team’s parents; imag ine her arguing with her team’s parents; imagine her arguing with the world. One of Bertha’s slams on her fourteen year-old enemies (the other team) was “We got a sumo out there!” When one of the larger girls bumped into somebody. Ironically, Bertha looked about as close to a Sumo wrestler as any woman I’ve ever seen, ex cept she was much louder and, much less attractive. Nonethe less, Bertha’s children found the remark extremely humor ous, showing their approval by with them. By the time the game reached halftime, hate and loathing had filled the gym as if the pink slime from “Ghostbusters 11” was bubbling up underneath the bleachers. Random parent- fans (probably easygoing, friendly people who could func ers of the information super highway. They sit, huddledattiny keyboards... who knows what they think? Today’s priests mutter incan tations under their breath, chants as unintelligible as an cient mystical verse. WYZIWIG and GUI and Source Code and Executable. The Church on a Hill is a Church in a Valley. Silicon Valley. Bill Gates might as well be the Pope. Some of us are clergy. Most of us are the flock. The congregation. With the new technology, we can move beyond this physical world. Touch another one. We can reach across the planet to shake hands...or to break them. The only vi^ay to control this, some people believe, is to regulate it: You can’t say this. You can’t say that. You can’t do this. Meanwhile, the hack ers, the devils and demons of this new mythology, become instead minor deities. They thumb their noses at the au thority which tould trap them in the name of some “greater good.” It’s chaos in the midst of ordered series of binary data, zeroes and ones in perfect har mony. Internet pornography and cybersmut and extremist po litical rhetoric are only part of the “problem.” Most of the “problem” is free speech. Free speech is only part of the revo lution. The revolution is hap pening all around us, awful and glorious. It’s coming. It’s here. It’s gone. And we can’t even try to stop it. repeating the comment for the next ten minutes. Bertha was obviously pleased with herself for having made the eight year- olds laugh as she chuckled along tion normally within society during the day) were trans formed into screaming, raving lunatics. These people all had jobs, friends, and families, but the fact that their child was on the court caused them to lose all self-control. I asked one piarticularly ruth less fan, “Would your mother like it if she saw you act like this?” “This is my mother!” she re sponded, pointing to a lady who was screaming twice as loud and foaming at the mouth. “AND THAT’S MY GRANDDAUGHTER!” granny roared, gesturing to wards the girl on the court ar guing with the ref. Who was winning the game on the court? I almost forgot. Luckily, with a few minutes left everyone realized there was a good game going on! Even Bertha quit stomping and started supporting her Nean- derthaloid daughter. The thun dering fans quit yelling at ev erybody and actually started cheering! copy Due Sven and both * their Tf