Religiously Old-Fashioned
Indiana has been a bastion for gun-toting, Bible-wielding, Obama-hating Republicans for as long as I can remember.
Indiana has been a bastion for gun-toting, Bible-wielding, Obama-hating Republicans for as long as I can remember.
Recently, I abandoned my regular podcasts to listen to a new one: “Serial.”
Ridley Scott’s new movie, "Exodus: Gods and Kings," is the newest attempt at a biblical re-do that has got a lot of people asking the question, “Why is everyone so white?”
A year old article written by Anthropology professor David Graeber stirred some controversy when Graeber began questioning exactly how necessary all these jobs that have been created within the last half-century really are. Of course, Graeber calls himself out, asking from the readers’ perspective: who are you to say what jobs matter and which don’t?
I was 5 years old when the Windows on the World collapsed on 9/11. I didn’t know what terrorism was, or that it could result in 2,996 deaths.
The blog, gettingracistsfired.com, is self-explanatory.
You’re sitting in class. Maybe you’re paying attention, maybe you’re scrolling through Tumblr, I don’t know and I don’t care. Then your teacher starts calling on students.
If you didn’t already know just how bad the CIA tortured captives during the War on Terror, the Senate Intelligence Committee released a report Tuesday that described the inhumane methods of torture used by CIA officials on detained militants during the George W.
Recently, there has been controversy regarding the harsh CIA interrogations President Obama has failed to stop.
The events in Ferguson, Missouri have rattled our nation. From protests in the streets, sporting events, and, yes, in legislative bodies, Americans have been engaged in an in-depth discussion on the issue of race in the United States.
Holiday parties are boring. They’re just sad get-togethers where you eat snowman-shaped sugar cookies and moan about the weather. College students try to make it fun with ugly Christmas sweaters and a lot of peppermint Schnapps and we’re more inclined to complain about exams and final projects and how little sleep we’ve had. But even that gets boring.
As this semester ends, I find myself continually reflecting on a few things. The Indiana Daily Student ran two pieces about student well-being and sexual violence on campus that were insightful, but filled me with a sense of frustration and hopelessness. Even in my classes people expressed anger.
I don’t feel qualified to write one of these, a “goodbye column.” I need to be older, wiser.
The week before finals is supposed to be free of any major exams in order to give students free time to study for finals week.
The representation of sexual pleasure in pornography is often skewed and offers an unrealistic representation.
Imagine a chicken farm in Who Knows Where, Middle America, where an abundance of healthy, happy chickens are endlessly frolicking about in the open air, pecking and scratching about to their hearts content.
This will be my last column of the season. I thought I would end with a somewhat alarming, somewhat conspiratorial thought I have on the state of our world.
Thanks to California’s law banning what is termed as Revenge Porn, a recent conviction will hopefully lead to the end of the trend.
There’s been so much discussion around race relations recently that I thought I would impart an interesting concept introduced to me within the past week. So many people seem to be focusing on African American problems and injustices, how the legal system could be tweaked to work against minorities.
In this country, women are left at a distinct professional disadvantage by their physiological ability to become pregnant and give birth. Of course, this disadvantage is entirely unwarranted; not all women become pregnant or give birth, and those who choose to become mothers are not made less capable, intelligent or professionally valuable by their decisions.