The Death of Affirmative Action: A Denial of Race in America
By: Iris Qi
On June 29th, the Supreme Court struck down the practice of affirmative action, declaring UNC and Harvard’s admissions practices to be discriminatory towards Asian and white Americans. Affirmative action stemmed from the civil rights movement of the 1960s and is the practice of considering a student’s race in admissions.
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Biden Re-election Campaign: What comes next?
President Joe Biden has recently announced that he will be running in the 2024 election for his second term. He is currently one of the oldest presidents in office and will be 86 by the end of his second term, which has raised concerns over his age. During the video released announcing his run…
By: Haasini Sanisetty
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A Massive Oil Drilling Project
On March 13, 2023, The Biden Administration approved one of the most controversial and largest oil developments on federal lands: Willow, an oil reserve in Arctic Alaska.
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Michigan State University Mass Shooting
By: Shiwani Tamaskar
Monday, February 13, 2023 eight students at the Michigan State University were victims of a mass shooting. Three were killed and five were injured while a gunman was on the campus of MSU. The suspect was identified as Anthony McCrae, a 43 year old man who was later found dead from a self inflicted gunshot.
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Florida's Brainless Ban on AP African-American Studies
AP African-American Studies is a pilot course currently being taught by 60 teachers across the country, with the AP test not officially launching until 2025. The general objective of this class, according to the Official AP African American Studies Course Framework, is to understand the black experience in America and its modern connections through African-American history, connections with the present, key figures, movements, art, literature, and more. Wilfred Chan for The Guardian says that “structural racism, racial capitalism, mass incarceration, reparations, intersectionality and Black Lives Matter” are required topics.
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New York City Nurse Strike and National Implications
By: Laila Kirkpatrick
Over 7,000 Nurses from two of New York’s biggest hospitals went on strike on January eighth.
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California Ends January with Three Mass Shootings
By: Margaret Chen
On Friday, January 20th, 10 people were slaughtered by a mass shooter at a dance studio in Monterey Park, California, a predominantly Asian community just east of Los Angeles.
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The Model Minority Myth: the Danger of Being "A Smart Asian" in America
By: Iris Qi
The experience of Asians in America has been long and difficult, to say the least. One need to only look at the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882, Japanese internment during WWII, segregation, mass lynchings, and stereotyping to tell of a deeply racist society, an American history ridden with Asian hate.
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Gender Bias in Healthcare
By: Shrividya Regadamilli
Whether it has to do with the lives being saved or the lives saving people, gender bias is often present in the healthcare community for reasons as simple as inherent belief stamped in by society.
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All You Need to Know About Title 42
By: Haasini Sanisetty
Title 42 is a protocol that was put into place during the period in which Donald Trump was president. It basically says that federal officials are allowed to turn away immigrants at the border due to the risk that they might bring Covid-19 into the country.
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How Abortion Affected the Midterms
By: Madeleine Burke
On November 8, the 2022 midterm elections were held. However, more than inflation had an affect on this years midterms, abortion rights also made its mark on the ballot. With the fairly recent overturning of Roe V. Wade, the right to an abortion has become a popular topic of conversation when deciding which candidate to vote for.
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Navigating the Upcoming Midterm Elections/The Power of the Vote:
By: Madeleine Burke
On Tuesday November 8, the 2022 midterm elections will be held in Washington D.C. The midterms are some of the most critical elections of the year as they decide which members of the house will serve for the next 2 years. Every seat in the house along with 35 senate seats will be decided in this year's midterms.
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Affirmative Action in America
By: Laila Kirkpatrick
Affirmative action is a set of procedures used to eliminate unlawful discrimination among applicants for jobs and higher education. In 1961 President John F. Kennedy issued an executive order stating that "The contractor will take affirmative action to ensure that applicants are employed, and that employees are treated during employment, without regard to their race, creed, color, or national origin."
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“No Kill” Meat is Coming Closer to Being Sold in the U.S.
By: Gabby Pribisich
“No kill” or cultured meat is a very new concept that has recently been expanding among the scientific world. This meat is not from a living animal, but actually grown in a lab using a small sample of animal cells and then cultivating it to grow outside of the animal’s body using bioreactors.
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The Pressing Threat of Election Denial
By Emily Jones
As the 2022 Midterm Elections were on their way, the concept of election denial became more discussed and apparent in the United States political system and scheme, and it is this concept of election denial that distresses a large number of experts who study democracy today. As a result of the “election fraud” claimed by former President Donald Trump
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Immigration In the United States & Washington's Response
By: Lucy Castellanos
Immigration in the United States is and will continue to be a very controversial topic. Following Trump’s presidency our nation saw grave restrictions on becoming a legal immigrant, not to mention how difficult it became for asylum seekers.
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Kenyon College’s Young Writers Workshop (Opinion Piece)
By Bobin Park
Alongside the drily welcoming stalks of crops, the camp bus carried the ten or twenty-something high schoolers deeper into the Ohio valleys until houses finally dotted next to the road. Gambier, Ohio
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What's Going On with Trump and the FBI?
By Eva Kroh
Last Monday, late morning, Mar-a-Lago staff and residents found themselves witness to an FBI raid of former President Donald Trump's private residence in Palm Beach Florida. Top secret and other sensitive documents were suspected
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TikTok & Teens: A Controversial Duo
By: Fatema Dinary
TikTok has grown in popularity in the past years since its remodel from Musical.ly in August 2018. With its short 15 second videos and easy content creation, viewing and sharing, this platform became a hotbed for community bonding and localized trends. But due to its addictive nature and competitive style,
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Will Monkeypox Cause Another Pandemic?
By: Liu von Engelbrechten
In May 2022, the first outbreak of a non-endemic monkeypox was seen in the United Kingdom. Since then, it has spread to the US through international travel and imported animals. Recently, a new spike in cases
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