The Pilot Thursday, November 20, 2008 Page A3 Opinions U.S. automakers help themselves - to our tax dollars By Lauren Taylor Pilot editor in chief Benjamin Franklin is often credited with the saying, “God helps those who help them selves,” a phrase that encour ages perpetual hard work and diligence. But he took it a step fur ther, saying, “Without continual growth and progress, such words as improvement, achievement, and success have no meaning,” That couldn’t be more true to the Detroit Three right now. The auto industry is looking for a government garment with which to cover its naked incom petence. Ford and Chrysler are in deep but not nearly as badly as General Motors. Toyota has been beating the brakes off of GM in sales since last year, a disgraceful situation, and it’s all due to their lack of ingenuity and bad business practices. When foreign car compa nies were marketing innovative, fuel-efficient cars to Americans, GM offered us the Denali and pointed to a gas pump. Now that money’s tight, luxury SUVs aren’t moving off the lots. Sure, there’s the Saturn, a U.S. brand that gets good gas mileage, but why has it been up to other countries to lead the auto industry in anything but luxury automobiles? I guess what I’m really won dering is why domestic auto makers didn’t come up with the Smart car. To be honest. I’m pretty jealous that German en trepreneur Thomas Heidemann sold his construction business and decided to make, what I think, is a great contribution to the auto industry. Why couldn’t the Detroit Three pop that one out? Now they’re asking for a stack of billions to help keep their companies going and com pensate employee layoffs. There were several ways they could have foreseen this coming, and in continuing to chum out gas-guzzlers, the signs of the times were ignored. But it isn’t all their faults. The feds could have coughed up some change to fund more research for fuel alternatives when the hippies were scream ing for it, especially in lieu of ethanol being just as costly as gasoline. If the trinity would have been willing to adapt, it may have prevented their grievous situations. As seems to be the routine these days, American pockets being are called upon to pay the price. I’m sure we would have been happy to pay a smaller tab earlier on. An investment in re search would have yielded a fleet of returns. Now the tab goes on our unemployment rate. If it was up to me. I’d make all the people who told us to buy Escalades put Thanksgiv ing dinner on their employees’ tables. But President-Elect Barack Obama is serving up a bill to President Bush gobbling a different tune by Turkey Day. The proposed bailout is $25 billion, but more than that will be needed to take care of busi ness. An additional $20 billion may get tacked onto that to get the Detroit Three out of hot wa ter, as reported by CNN. I guess this is the excep tion to Franklin’s admonition to work hard and help yourself After all, why would a bunch of CEOs need their own help or God’s, for that matter, when they have government bailouts? I suppose Mr. Franklin couldn’t have predicted this scenario. NOAH, HE WAS Floating his STOCK WHILE EVERYONE ELSE WAS FN LIQUIDATION. From the Brain of Jermaine By Jermaine Gash o Let 5 Talk Politics Obama presidency not about black and white, it’s about a better America for all By Diana Palka Pi/ot staff writer Let it be known, I voted for Obama. I support a majority of his platform and I am anticipat ing a much-needed change in the policies of our nation. Now that we’ve set the re cord straight. I’d also like to make it known that I am also aware of what he doesn’t stand for, and I think that must be cleared up as well. Obama doesn’t stand for “re verse racism.” It is not black-on- white racism, which is racism just as much as white-on-black racism is. Reverse racism simply does not exist, and that is something the media and the greater popu lation must understand. Obama doesn’t stand for another black movement. He is not Malcom X. He is not the Rev. A1 Sharpton. He is a medium of change for the entire United States, not just black America. I know, I know. I am not black. I know that there is noth ing in my ancestry that can even compare to the magnitude of slavery. I know that there is nothing I can relate to, as a white female, that can equal the struggle of blacks in the Ameri can South during the 1950s and ’60s. Because of this I also real ize that I cannot share the same joy, pride and sense of accom plishment over the impact of an African American man being president. However, I do understand how “big” it is for our country to have Obama as president-elect, and the global implications his election has. Obama was not voted in as president of any single race. He is president of our nation. He is not in office to cater to one demographic, something that must be realized by all rac es, political parties, creeds and genders. I am not asking anyone to stop showing pride, or to re nounce any beliefs they hold or causes that need attention. I am simply drawing atten tion to the need for unity in our nation. We all have a responsibil ity to remain color blind and to realize that this is all more than just black and white. Fan favorite ‘Total Request Live’ passes into television liistory By Emma M. Lind Harvard Crimson, Har vard U. On Sunday, MTV’s “Total Request Live” is sued its swan song, and I wasn’t listening. Dubbed TRL by its hordes of dev otees — among whose ranks I used to count my self— the show marked a generation of awkward and not-so-awkward teenagers who tuned in for a decade to watch, fanatically, their favorite “celebs” battle for the top spot on the show’s daily music video count down. In middle school I watched TRL religiously. The Pilot Nancy-Pat Dire Faculty Advisor Lauren Taylor Editor in Chief Nancy-Pat Dire Tyler Kucifer Designer Jessica Jones Kayley Potter Photo Editors Lanny Newton Sports Editor Michelle Alwerdt Blake DuDonis Cassie Gold Shauntel Greene Kory McNair Diana Palka Molly Phipps Andrew Veeder Staff Writers Bryan Cooper Kate Gazaway Tyler Kucifer Jill Phillips Staff Photographers Phone Number: 704-406-3844 P.O. B^x 5192 falling in lust with Lance Bass and experiment ing with eye glitter in the bathroom mirror. Today, ‘N Sync is dissolved, Lance Bass is gay and TRL silently ran its last episode while I sat in my room pretending to work on my thesis. I feel a certain degree of guilt about letting my last chance to watch the show slip by, not because I was waiting with bated breath to see who was number one, but because I cannot imagine my 13-year-old self feeling anything but shame at the way her 21- year-old counterpart for got this defining feature of her adolescence. For all of TRL’s ap parent mindlessness, it represented a crucial slice of pop culture that I loved and felt a part of. TRL facilitated the sort of direct public en gagement with artists that you can’t get on YouTube, eMusic or iTunes. Beyond the viewer and the video, TRL was about you, your best friend, host Carson Daly, the hundreds of people waving signs outside of MTV’s studio in Times Square and Brit ney Spears before she got trashy. It was bubblegum beautiful. The passing of TRL is a reminder that the media institutions that I always viewed as essential and contemporary are fading away. TRL’s viewership has been dropping since its peak at the turn of the century, and its daily aver age number of viewers of more than 700,000 over the past 10 years pales in comparison to MTV’s top rated show right now — “The Hills” — which regularly lures four mil lion. When you watched TRL, it was possible to envision yourself, maybe someday, as one of those sign-wavers floors below. But hanging out with celebrities is so 20th cen tury. Culture today values actually being a celebrity yourself Shows that de pict the “real lives” of young people — like “The Hills” or the phenomenal ly popular “Gossip Girl” — present viewers with a more palpable alternative to their own life. But I confess: When I read on Tuesday that TRL had run its final episode on Sunday, my reaction was completely self-centered: a melodramatic response to a reminder of the pas sage of time. A generation of college kids who grew up on TRL didn’t care about its death, and as I didn’t watch on Sunday night, Daly said, “We’re old now.” I’ve finally resigned myself to the idea that I’m on the forestalled brink of adulthood. Time flies and things change, whether for the better, the worse, or the entirely indifferent. Sports Bulldogs out of tournament after defeat by UNC Asheville through the Asheville defense, giv ing Gardner-Webb its first goal of the game in the 75th minute. The goal was Morrison’s seventh of the By Andrew Veeder Pilot sports writer On Nov. 13, the Gardner-Webb men’s soccer team was eliminated in the first round of the Big South Conference Tournament when the Runnin’ Bulldogs fell to UNC Ashe ville 4-2. GWU concluded its season 5-3 in conference play. Commenting on the season in retrospect, head Coach Tony Setzer said: “The season was positive from a conference stand point. I was pleased with the results.” UNC Asheville scored first in the affair after a turnover midway through the first half The Ashe ville offense made quick work of the turnover, sending the ball deep into Gardner-Webb territory. After a header and a few slick moves, fresh man Bryan Bartels found the back of the net, just above the out stretched hands of senior goalkeeper Dane Geraci. The goal proved to be the only one for either team in the first half. After the break, the Runnin’ Bulldogs returned to the pitch ready for action. The Gardner-Webb of fense applied as much pressure as possible, trying to rebound from the 1-0 deficit. Asheville’s Ryan Haupt led the charge again for his team. From the 30-yard line booted the ball into the back of the net, putting the team up 2-0. “We squandered chances, they finished one, got another and then we had to chase them the rest of the game,” said Setzer. The Asheville Bullddgs again found themselves in a promising position when Alex Morrow scored 10 minutes later. The silent Gardner-Webb offense picked up its intensity, and didn’t go down without a fight. Morrison connected with a well-placed free kick that was unscathed as it passed season. Only five minutes later, Ashe ville scored once again off a throw- in. In the last minutes of the game, Morrison scored again, but the goal proved to be too little, too late as Asheville advanced into the semi finals of the Big South Conference Tournament. The season has ended for the Runnin’ Bulldogs men’s soccer team with an overall record of 6-11. The record in Big South Conference play was 5-3. The Bulldogs were the fourth seed in the conference tour nament. Setzer seemed optimistic about building off of this year’s perfor mance for the 2009 season. “This season allowed us to build a solid foundation for our fijture in the Big South.”