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(03/29/18 4:00pm)
The University’s adamant insistence on the need to create a private police force is a rushed attempt to circumvent student and community input and involvement in an issue which raises serious concerns of accountability and transparency.
(09/28/17 1:57pm)
Like any city, Baltimore has a reputation outside of itself. Unlike the idealized perceptions of New York City and Los Angeles, Baltimore must contend with a number of misconceived assumptions. When Hopkins students subscribe to these assumptions, native Baltimoreans are “otherized” — maintaining instead of challenging the social gap between “them” and “us.”
(09/21/17 2:06pm)
Hidden in an unassuming building on North Howard Street, Current Space, one of Baltimore’s numerous art galleries, is currently presenting a new exhibition, which attempts to engage viewers on the very abstract levels of form and color.
(09/07/17 12:55pm)
When I first walk in to the exhibition, I wonder why there is a box in the middle of the room.
(05/04/17 5:02pm)
Currently, far-right extremist Marine Le Pen and independent centrist Emmanuel Macron have advanced to the second (and final) round of voting. The French election process has two tiers; More than 10 candidates participated in the first, although only five were considered true contenders. Significantly, it was the first time in French history that neither candidate of the two major parties — François Fillon of the center-right Republican party and Benoît Hamon of the left-wing Socialist Party — advanced to the second round.
(04/20/17 6:36pm)
The fact that the administration’s foreign policy seems less of a policy than a collection of vague, explicitly-to-subtextually aggressive statements has only been contributing to this pattern.
(04/06/17 8:29pm)
The health care bill debacle reinforced, in no uncertain terms, the Republican attitude toward the Affordable Care Act (ACA) during Obama’s presidential terms. Namely, they opposed it for the primary reason that it came from the opposition party and specifically from the Obama administration. (Yes, they even originally scheduled the repeal/replace vote date to be on the anniversary of the ACA.)
(03/16/17 2:27pm)
Diplomacy and tact are not words which come to mind when describing Trump and his administration’s handling of international affairs. He’s painted the world in black and white, according to how he sees fit, and seems intent on retaining a brazen attitude even toward America’s allies.
(02/16/17 9:19pm)
Yet, besides the obvious absence of diversity, two other glaring and unsettling trends continue to hang above the administrative picks like a neon sign. More than a few of Trump’s picks have little to no experience in the field in which their position is situated, and several have histories of either promotion of regressive policies or opposition to the departments they are now expected to lead.
(02/02/17 4:30pm)
Of the 14 executive actions Trump signed in his initial seven days, the one that had (and has) perhaps the most immediate and direct effect on people’s lives is the executive order pertaining to immigration and refugee situations.
(12/08/16 5:46pm)
There were chants, too. And prayers. Songs. Signs. Solidarity. The coming together for a cause, a movement, a purpose — for caring for one another, our well-being and our futures.
(11/17/16 7:14pm)
There have been complaints of exaggeration or ungrounded fear on the part of those opposed to Trump. Yet it is clear that throughout his campaign, Trump enabled hate. He spewed rivers and rivers of outrageous, inaccurate and harmful rhetoric. He encouraged violence.
(10/27/16 4:34pm)
In the midst of such a contentious, confounding and exhausting presidential race, it can be easy to lose track of the consequences of voting. It’s particularly simple, in the midst of the frenzy for president, to sideline the host of concurrent down-ballot contests like congressional and gubernatorial races, along with a slew of local legislative, judicial and executive elections.
(10/13/16 7:16pm)
It is also the kind of horror embedded into the very contemporary history of the United States.
(09/29/16 3:39pm)
Perhaps not quite. But America certainly got a taste of disaster, or at least the potential of it, on Monday night. Oh America, America — look where your infatuation with the risqué has brought you now.