Pubdate: Thu, 19 Oct 2000 Source: Capital Times, The (WI) Copyright: 2000 The Capital Times Contact: http://www.thecapitaltimes.com/ Author: John Nichols SHARPLESS' DRUG FANTASY John Sharpless says he is a different kind of congressional candidate and, after this week's foreign policy debate on the University of Wisconsin campus, it will be difficult to argue the point. The Republican challenger to U.S. Rep. Tammy Baldwin says he is determined to compete with the Madison Democrat for the hefty student vote that many believe tipped the 1998 election. And, as a UW history professor who used to sport a bit of a ponytail, his outreach to youth was going about as well as might be expected for a candidate of the hipster party of Strom Thurmond and Jesse Helms. Then came Monday's debate in front of a crowd that included some of the most engaged students on a campus where the burgeoning movement to end corporate abuse of sweatshop workers got its start. In what will surely go down as one of the more novel appeals ever advanced by a supposedly serious candidate for elective office, Sharpless delivered what appeared to be an anti-drug homily: "Let me moralize for a moment. Throughout this country, there are cultural and political elites who will lecture you on sweatshops, T-shirts and tennis shoes; tell you that you shouldn't buy Nikes or drink coffee at Starbucks. And after they finish that self-righteous lecture, they drop their nose on the table and snort a line. "They are directly responsible for the destruction of the social fabric of South American nations. They are directly responsible for the destruction of (the) political infrastructure of Mexico. As long as the laws are there, people have to take responsibility for their actions. A line of coke on the table is like buying a pair of tennis shoes made in the sweatshops.'' Sharpless' statement was eerily reminiscent of the rambling rhetorical flourishes of former President Ronald Reagan's latter days on the public stage. In fairness to Reagan, however, he apparently was more in tune with international solidarity activism and the sentiments of college students. Most students on the UW campus are not active in the anti-sweatshop movement. But they are surely aware of it, and by all indications they are generally supportive of efforts to ensure that Bangladeshi children are not chained to poles and forced to produce soccer balls. Why, I have even heard some self-professed "conservative'' students agree that it was not all that cool for Reebok to have the local dictator jail union organizers at its Indonesian factories. But whether or not students support the movement to get sweatshop products off campus, they surely know their classmates who are devoted to the cause. The activist students are their roommates, their friends, their teaching assistants. And even the most disengaged students are amply aware that the young activists who built the anti-sweatshop movement are, by every reasonable measure, a temperate crew. As someone who has covered the anti-sweatshop movement from its infancy on the UW campus, I am forced to report that these young people are not exactly the party squad. During the sit-in earlier this year at UW Chancellor David Ward's office, they displayed a marked tendency toward study of human rights reports and concerned dialogue regarding international labor standards that would scare the wits out of George W. Bush. "These are pretty serious students -- the kind of students who would risk getting arrested in order to fight for human rights and workers' rights in developing countries,'' explained former Associated Students of Madison chair Adam Klaus. Klaus was one of the 54 young people -- almost all of them UW students - -- arrested in and around Ward's office during protests in February against the school's refusal to take a leadership role in the battle against the corporate abuse of women and children working in sweatshops. He's now working for Tammy Baldwin, a role he sees as a continuation of his social justice activism. Baldwin's lucky to have Klaus on her side. A native of Watertown with impeccably good manners and an inspiring earnestness, he's one of the smartest, hardest working and most well-liked students on campus. When I talked with him the other day, Klaus was drinking a can of Coca-Cola. "It's the only Coke I do,'' he said, and it's tough to imagine how any champion of students would doubt or disparage him. Which returns us to John Sharpless. Surely, the professor is not the first tenured academic to promulgate a crackpot theory -- nor even a theory about crack and pot. But it is a rare politician indeed who, as he seeks student votes, claims that young people working for a just world are "cultural elitists'' who mingle their activism with felonious substance abuse. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake