Archive for January, 2011

Living in the Shadows: The Need for Comprehensive Immigration Reform

Author: Jeremy

When I arrived at work last Friday, I could immediately tell that something was amiss. The blaring music and jovial voices that usually filled the kitchen at my restaurant were strangely muted that afternoon, the movements of my co-workers slowed as they battled the thick, warm air above the gas range. “What’s wrong?” I asked [...]

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An Ode to Saudi Arabia: Breaking sterotypes and barriers

Author: Christy Stanker

Saudi Arabia is easily one of the most misunderstood and least known about countries in the United States. The images of desert, camels, and most of all, women covered entirely in black dominate the image Americans conjure of the gulf nation. As someone who has been studying the Middle East and Arabic for the last [...]

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State of “Our” Union

Author: Anais

A few words on exclusion President Obama addressed “one American family” on Tuesday night: a family he insisted includes American Muslims, undocumented immigrants, and America’s most vulnerable populations.  While I am grateful for these words, America has never been a unified family.  Nor have we been, as President Obama patriotically claimed, the world’s “moral example” [...]

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Politics and the Internet

Author: Klein

For the past several semesters, I have explored how politics can leverage the use of the Internet to mobolize communities. This interest in how computers and politics collide has led me on a course to explore different political communities on campus: from student groups to political campaigns to even protest politics, all in addition to [...]

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Daily Cal: ASUC Sponsors Vigil for Victims of Tucson Shooting

Author: Molly

By J.D. Morris Daily Cal Staff Writer Date Added Friday, January 14, 2011 | 5:21 pm Last Updated Monday, January 17, 2011 | 12:57 pm The ASUC Senate voted electronically Tuesday evening to suspend parliamentary procedures and pass a bill that sponsored a candlelight vigil for wounded Arizona Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords and called for more [...]

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What the attempted assassination of Congresswomen Giffords means for women in politics

Author: Molly

As we all know by now, sexism still exists in the US. While last Saturday’s tragic shooting was likely not connected to Congresswoman Gabrielle Gifford’s gender, her attempted assassination underscores a problem in this country that we have been fighting for generations to cure: the limited role of women in the political process. When I [...]

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A Bill in Support of Standing Against Violence: A Candlelight Vigil for Rep. Gabrielle Giffords

Author: Anais

(Passed by the ASUC Senate, January 11, 2010.) Authored by: Anais LaVoie, Jonathan Uriarte and Senator McDonald Sponsored by:  Senator Alabastro, Senator Bach, Senator Del Rosso, Senator Freeman, Senator Gong, Senator Horning, Senator Loomba, Senator McDonald, Senator Montouth, Senator Pham, Senator Salahi, Senator Youm, Senator Zhang, and Executive VP Nanxi Liu WHEREAS, on Saturday, January [...]

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Rhetoric and Violence

Author: Tom

I think it’s important that we draw a distinction between the negative effects of destructive political rhetoric in America and the terrible tragedy in Tucson. Clearly, this gunman, Jared Lee Laughner, was deeply disturbed and committed an atrocious act that no sane American could possibly condone. It is unlikely that Loughner would have targeted a [...]

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When does free speech cost a life?

Author: Daniel Tuchler

When does free speech cost a life? Only a few days ago, a tragedy lasting no more than a few minutes in Tucson, Arizona shook the foundation of this country over 200 years old. In an assassination attempt said to be possibly fueled by “political rhetoric”, Jared Lee Loughner opened fire outside a Safeway grocery [...]

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