The Year in Review 2009, Part 3: Culture and the Media

The Year in Review 2009, Part 3: Culture and the Media

With the first month of 2010 coming to a close, we’re back to present the final chapter of the Year in Review 2009. Pop culture and the media. 2009 was a year of media frenzies. The White House engaged in a battle against Fox news, which it described as more like “talk-radio” than a news organization. [...]

Read more
The 3rd Dimension

The 3rd Dimension

Despite relatively mediocre reviews, Avatar has grossed slightly over $1.6 billion worldwide since its December 18th release. Less than a month later, virtually every major electronics company was showing off 3D televisions and Blu-Ray players at the yearly Consumer Electronics Show. Just as 2009 could be called the year of Twitter and the iPhone, 2010 [...]

Read more
The Year in Review 2009, Part 2: The Economy and Healthcare

The Year in Review 2009, Part 2: The Economy and Healthcare

With a new president, Barack Obama, Congress set out to tackle the president’s two biggest goals: to repair the economy and pass healthcare reform. A year later, new healthcare bills have been passed and the economy is on its way to recovery. But all these changes happened with no shortage of fanfare. 2009 was marked by raucous healthcare debate, media controversies, and economic turmoil. [...]

Read more
How an Atheist Spends Christmas

How an Atheist Spends Christmas

Every December 25th, Christians in America celebrate the biggest religious holiday of the year, Christmas. And much of non-Christian America celebrates along with them, albeit a little guiltily.
Coming from an atheist family, I am one of the many non-Christians who celebrates Christmas every December. We don’t believe in Jesus. We don’t believe in the Bible. [...]

Read more
The Year in Review 2009, Part 3: Culture and the Media

The Year in Review 2009, Part 3: Culture and the Media

With the first month of 2010 coming to a close, we’re back to present the final chapter of the Year in Review 2009. Pop culture and the media. 2009 was a year of media frenzies. The White House engaged in a battle against Fox news, which it described as more like “talk-radio” than a news organization. [...]

Read more
Ben Drucker, Editor-in-Chief
Keeping Your New Year’s Resolutions

Keeping Your New Year’s Resolutions

It’s a brand new year. And that means a brand new you! New Year’s is an opportunity to reflect on the past year, to remember the memories you’ll cherish forever and the moments you’d like to forget. It is also a perfect chance for everyone to make a commitment towards improving themselves and their quality [...]

Read more
Jake Silberg, Editor
The Bailout and Stimulus of the American Economy

The Bailout and Stimulus of the American Economy

Since it became clear that the U.S. was in the midst of an economic recession in 2008, the federal government has invested trillions to promote economic stability and, eventually, growth. These investments can be classified into two primary categories: bank bailouts and broader economic stimulus. [...]

Read more
Ben Drucker, Editor-in-Chief
A Paperless World

A Paperless World

“When I was your age and we needed to know something, we looked for it in books…books!”
Sorry Mom, but I never have spent hours in the library searching for facts and I doubt I ever will. I strive for efficiency, simplicity, and ease when completing tasks, and luckily for me, a paperless world allows for [...]

Read more
Ben Donald, Managing Editor
The Most Wonderful Time of the Year

The Most Wonderful Time of the Year

Ads on every TV, radio, billboard, newspaper and magazine all say the same thing come December—it’s the most wonderful time of the year. It’s wonderful for everyone; wonderful for the companies that sell presents that then advertise them, wonderful for the various media outlets that get money for those advertisements, wonderful for the parents that get [...]

Read more
Sarah Brauner, Staff Writer
Twenty First Century Hate: Extremism in Germany

Twenty First Century Hate: Extremism in Germany

The Nazi party didn’t die with Hitler. Neo-Nazism is still present around the world, but especially in Germany. Many Germans are disgusted by the far-right group while others still adhere to the group’s rhetoric. Despite the country’s calculated efforts to stamp out its extremist past, the neo-Nazi movement remains alive and well in Germany, forging [...]

Read more
William Nzioka, Staff Writer
Capitalism, All Rights Reserved

Capitalism, All Rights Reserved

Reconsidering Socialism as a Solution, not a System

“All socialist utopias come to grief with roast beef and apple pie”  - German sociologist Werner Sombart, 1905

Americans like getting what they want, when they want it. They like their roast beef and apple pie. They don’t like socialism.
Why not? Because when we have food on the table as a result of two centuries [...]

Read more
Seth Wolin, Managing Editor
Honest Politics

Honest Politics

After pledging his honesty to the American people by being forthright about tax hikes in the 1984 presidential race, Walter Mondale went on to receive the lowest number of electoral votes in the history of the Democratic Party. A rare attempt at honest politics failed miserably. But despite the evidence which demonstrates that honest politicians never prevail, voters continue to expect truthfulness and are aghast when two years down the road few of the politician’s original promises have been fulfilled. [...]

Read more
Ben Drucker, Editor-in-Chief
The Eco Craze

The Eco Craze

Organics. Chemical Free. Bio based products. Lately, it’s all about saving the world. We need to go green, to recycle, to make our carbon footprint smaller. And now- lucky us, it’s become the latest trend—you can buy eco-friendly almost anything. Clothes? Yep. Toys? You got it. Even water bottles have gone “green” with their new [...]

Read more
Sarah Brauner, Staff Writer
The Virtual Recruitment Office

The Virtual Recruitment Office

In a pledge to the United Nations, the U.S. Military and the Pentagon both promised that U.S. citizens under the age of 17 would not be targeted for military recruitment. Despite these promises, America continues to sell the highly profitable business of warfare to its youth. With President Obama having recently committed another 30,000 troops [...]

Read more
Aaron Brown, Staff Writer