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To: im a survivor who wrote (3928)9/28/2001 5:07:45 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 13815
 
LEONARD PITTS JR.: Peace is good, but let's hold that thought

September 28, 2001
BY LEONARD PITTS JR.
The Detroit Free Press

Chances are, you've never heard of Jeanette Rankin. It was immediately after the surprise attack on Pearl Harbor that she became, for a moment, famous. Or maybe the word is "infamous."

Congress was in session to consider a declaration of war. Before the attack, there had been a lively peace movement in this country -- people determined, at all costs, to keep the United States out of the conflagration in Europe. Afterward, the hue and cry everywhere was for war.

Rankin, a Republican representative from Montana, cast the lone vote in opposition. Her dissent so outraged onlookers that an angry mob chased the committed pacifist through the corridors of the Capitol.

I've always appreciated the lonely courage of her stand.

Something like that stand is beginning to emerge in the wake of Sept. 11. As the country cries out for war, peace rallies have broken out on college campuses nationwide. Social activists like Harry Belafonte and Rosa Parks are questioning the wisdom of retaliation. And a letter making the rounds on the Internet urges America to bomb Afghanistan with butter, rice and other staples the starving poor of that wretched country find in short supply.

Some in the peace movement simply oppose an indiscriminate military campaign that cannot help but target innocent civilians along with the thugs who have hijacked their country -- an argument with which I have no quarrel. But others crusade against any military response, period. For them, no provocation justifies the use of force.

I couldn't disagree with that assertion more. Yet I'm pleased to hear it, nonetheless.

We need balance
These are troubling times. We've just seen more than 6,000 human lives obliterated. People want retribution. We are as united in that as we have ever been in anything.

There's righteousness in that demand. There's also a certain danger. When emotions are this raw, it's easy for a crowd to become a mob. Not surprisingly, you can already see signs of it happening. Some have said we ought to turn Afghanistan into the proverbial parking lot. Some have used their pain and anger as excuses to visit violence upon fellow Americans who are -- or simply look -- Arab.

Terrible things can happen when passion is unhindered by reason. So the counterweight the peace movement provides is a valuable one. But at the same time, the argument that violence is never justified is spurious at best.

Time to fight
Martin Luther King Jr. was probably the greatest pacifist in American history. Yet even he acknowledged that there were times violence was necessary. If called to service in the Second World War, he said in a 1967 sermon, "I believe that I would have temporarily sacrificed my pacifism because Hitler was such an evil force in history."

Sometimes, history demands that aggrieved people draw an uncrossable line. This is one of those times. Otherwise, what comes next? Is the next hit chemical? Biological? How many lives will that cost?

The nascent peace movement will be the conscience of the mob in days to come, and that's a good thing.

But most of us understand, as King did, that sometimes, the cost of peace is too high. Sometimes, peace costs more than war.

I like Jeanette Rankin. But she was wrong.
__________________________________________________________
LEONARD PITTS JR. appears most Wednesdays and Fridays in the Free Press. Reach him at the Miami Herald, 1 Herald Plaza, Miami, FL 33132; toll free at 888-251-4407 or at leonardpitts@mindspring.com.



To: im a survivor who wrote (3928)9/28/2001 5:35:20 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 13815
 
Stocks Rise on Optimism as Quarter Ends

Friday September 28, 5:25 pm Eastern Time

By Chelsea Emery

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Stocks rallied on Friday, the last day of a brutal third quarter, after better-than-expected economic data boosted optimism and sent investors out to snap up shares battered by last week's rout.

This was the worst quarterly performance since the fourth quarter of 1987 for both the blue-chip Dow average and the broader Standard & Poor's 500 Index, according to MarketHistory.com.

The Dow Jones industrial average (.DJI) rose 166.14 points, or 1.91 percent, to 8,847.56, while the Nasdaq Composite (.IXIC) gained 38.09 points, or 2.61 percent, to 1,498.80, and the Standard & Poor's 500 index (.SPX) advanced 22.33 points, or 2.19 percent, to 1,040.94.

The blue-chip Dow average jumped 7.4 percent this week -- its first rally after four weeks of declines and its biggest percentage gain since 1984, said research firm MarketHistory.com.

``Most investors believe this is as close to the bottom as they're going to see,'' said Erick Maronak, research strategist for NewBridge Partners, which oversees $3.5 billion. ``A few more negatives came out of Sept. 11, but ... you can see there are economic and financial positives -- we've had rate cuts and energy prices are down.''

The waves of profit warnings and layoff announcements, already a fixture in the third quarter, accelerated into a flood of bad news after the Sept. 11 air attacks that destroyed the World Trade Center in New York City and damaged the Pentagon near Washington, D.C.

Airline stocks, such as US Airways Group (NYSE:U - news), which rose 13.4 percent, helped boost the broader S&P 500 index.

Advancing issues outpaced decliners by four to one in heavy trading on the New York Stock Exchange, where 1.65 billion shares changed hands. More than two stocks rose for every one that fell on the Nasdaq, and about 2.1 billion shares traded.

For the week, the S&P 500 jumped 7.8 percent, while the Nasdaq gained 5 percent.

Last week, the Dow marked its biggest weekly drop since the Great Depression in the 1930s.

For the year, the Dow is off 18 percent, the S&P 500 has lost 21.2 percent and the Nasdaq Composite is off 39.3 percent, making it the worst January-to-September period ever for the tech-heavy market measure, MarketHistory said.

Even after this week's gain, the Dow and the S&P 500 marked their worst quarterly performance since the fourth quarter of 1987.

Stocks plunged to three-year lows last week -- the first week of trading after the attacks on the United States -- as Wall Street worried about the outlook for corporate profits, given the costs of possible military retaliation or a prolonged economic slump.

But indexes have clawed back as investors bet stock prices are cheap, considering the Federal Reserve's eight interest-rate cuts this year.

The average trailing price-to-earnings ratio for companies in the S&P 500 has dropped to 19.4 from 20.9 before the attack, research firm Thomson Financial/First Call said.

Mutual funds helped boost indexes as well, as they took cash they had raised on worries that clients would yank money out of funds and put it back into the market.

``A lot of institutions had raised cash for redemptions that, by and large, didn't happen,'' said Graham Tanaka, manager of the Tanaka Growth Fund. ``So then funds, including ours, looked at this cash and said, 'Maybe we should put this to work.'''

Investors will be anticipating the outcome of the Federal Reserve's policy-making committee meeting on Tuesday, when the panel will discuss whether to slash rates again this year in another attempt to prop up the slumping economy.

``There is a sense we are not yet back to normal, but starting to'' get there, said John Davidson, chief investment officer at Circle Trust Co., which manages $8 billion. ``Next week, I am guessing there will be a 50-basis-point cut in the federal funds rate, which should help shore up confidence.''

Corporate America continued to blame fallout from the Sept. 11 attacks for crimping earnings by exacerbating a slowdown that had already been under way. But on Friday, investors said they were looking past the immediate numbers.

Travel and residential real estate company Cendant (NYSE:CD - news) cut its earnings outlook, saying recent acquisitions will add less of a boost to its earnings than earlier expected, due to the attacks.

Still, the stock rose $1.36 to $12.80 after Cendant said 2002 earnings would be higher than this year's and it will go ahead with its plan to buy travel-related companies Galileo and Cheap Tickets.

United Parcel Service (NYSE:UPS - news), the world's No. 1 package-delivery company, said profit may be as much as 18 percent lower than expected because of a dramatic drop in shipping activity immediately after the attacks. But shares rose $2.26 to $51.98, as the report removed a measure of uncertainty of how badly package shippers had been hurt. Wall Street was also cheered by reports of a rebound in package shipping volumes.

Safeway Inc. (NYSE:SWY - news), the No. 3 U.S. grocery chain, rose $1.22 to $39.72 after reporting profit that met Wall Street's expectations and said it is comfortable with analysts' fourth-quarter forecasts.

Some economic numbers were better than expected, even as they underlined the slowdown in the economy.

Consumer confidence, as measured by the University of Michigan's sentiment index, fell to 81.8 -- its lowest level in nearly eight years -- but was much better than the drop to 79.6 that economists had forecast.

And fund managers took heart from The National Association of Purchasing Management-Chicago's barometer of manufacturing activity in the Chicago area, which rose to 46.6 in September. Although a number below 50 signals a contracting manufacturing economy, the gain came as a surprise to analysts, who had estimated the barometer fell to 40.7.

``Investors are willing to stay the course here,'' said Tim Woolston, who helps oversee $1.7 billion for Boston Advisors. ''We had some economic news that showed improvement and I think the economy will recover over the next six months or so.''

The U.S. gross domestic product grew by 0.3 percent in the second quarter -- higher than the 0.1 percent gain expected by economists -- according to the Commerce Department's third and final reading. But analysts noted that period preceded the attacks on New York and Washington.