Waters: Governors against refugees contradict American values

The terrorist organization Islamic State has once again spread violence and terror into the lives of thousands of innocent civilians and captured global attention. The international community is now pressed to launch military strikes in Syria—where IS strongholds are located—and to address the growing migrant crisis.

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Chong: Remembering Harvey Milk

Friday Nov. 27 marked the 37th anniversary of Harvey Milk’s assassination—one of the United States’ first prominent gay activists. In honor of his death, a memorial march and vigil was held at Harvey Milk Plaza in San Francisco. Milk was the first openly gay politician to be elected to office in California.

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Hamberger: Nazi imagery on subway ads is tasteless promotional method

A subway shuttle car connecting Times Square and Grand Central Station in New York City was recently adorned in Nazi imagery to promote Amazon’s new show “The Man in the High Castle.” Based on the 1962 Philip K. Dick novel of the same name, the show focuses on what would have happened if the Axis powers had won World War II—a potentially Nazi-controlled America.

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Morrison: Planned Parenthood shooting echoes societal aggression against abortion

A gunman opened fire at a Colorado Springs Planned Parenthood Clinic on Friday Nov. 27, killing three and wounding nine. The gunman has been identified as 57-year-old North Carolina-native Robert Lewis Dear. The attack has sparked controversy regarding both gun control and women’s rights.

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Holdgruen: Chicago Police crimes reflect lack of law enforcement accountability

The Chicago Police Department’s history of corrupt policing and bureaucracy is being revived in national headlines after the recent murder charge in the police shooting of an innocent black teenager. Officer Jason Van Dyke was charged with first-degree murder in the fatal shooting of 17-year-old Laquan McDonald, an incident reminiscent of not only Chicago’s unjust police system, but all of America’s nationwide ignorance of institutional police corruption.

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Staff Editorial: Sodium label well-intentioned, not enough to alter eating habits

New York City chain restaurants such as Applebee’s and TGI Friday’s are now required to print salt shaker symbols next to menu items that contain more than the daily recommended intake of sodium.

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Face-off: All-college hour would have been better suited for student walkouts

Geneseo has a very socially active student body—and that’s definitely something to be proud of. The “Geneseo Walks Out” protest in support of Concerned Students 1950, however, had serious logistical flaws that were detrimental to its potential impact.

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Chong: On the incorrect labeling of models as unhealthy, starved

Each year, the highly anticipated Victoria’s Secret Fashion Show monopolizes the media for about a week, drawing in millions of viewers worldwide. Each year, however, the show is met with its fair share of controversy.

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Morrison: Cup controversy is unnecessary, does not merit attack on religious beliefs

It’s not even Thanksgiving, yet media outlets have been bombarding readers and viewers with the controversy surrounding Starbucks’ newest “holiday” cup—or, rather, its lack of a holiday theme. The company is known for its seasonal drinks released around the holidays, usually served in a cup with vaguely Christmas-related decorations.

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Face-Off: Walkouts use disruption to send crucial message

A recent Facebook event entitled “Geneseo Walks Out” invited Geneseo students, faculty and administration to join together to walk out of classes on Monday Nov. 16 in support of the events at the University of Missouri.

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Sigal: Religious beliefs should not have place in intellectual discourse

Director of the Center for World Catholicism and Intercultural Theory and DePaul University professor of Catholic studies William T. Cavanaugh gave Geneseo’s 2015 MacVittie Lecture on Tuesday Nov. 10 examining whether or not religion causes violence.

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Staff Editorial: Mainstream media response to tragic events ignores non-Western nations

After world events such as the recent attacks in Paris, there is usually widespread response from the Internet and social media users. This past week, Facebook newsfeeds were flooded with profile pictures filtered with the French flag and many posts supporting and mourning the victims of the attacks.

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Tomaszewski: Media skews, whitewashes Watson-Yousafzai interview

I was thrilled to watch actress and United Nations Goodwill Ambassador for Women Emma Watson interview fellow activist and Nobel Peace Prize recipient Malala Yousafzai on Nov. 4. While it was great to see these inspiring women connect with each other and discuss a myriad of important issues, it was dismaying to see multiple media outlets place the focus primarily on Watson in their headlines.

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Talbot: Keystone XL rejection not enough to prevent fossil fuel depletion

The White House officially rejected the construction of the Keystone XL pipeline on Friday Nov. 6, causing tree-huggers everywhere to celebrate—or at least share articles on social media. While many are calling the decision a “huge win” for environmentalists, there are plenty of reasons to be skeptical about its true impact. Keystone XL would have formed a branch of the existing Keystone Pipeline, which is owned by TransCanada.

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Frank: Selective diversity on campus contradicts value of acceptance

We talk a lot at Geneseo about being an accepting community that values the diversity of our student body. The school’s diversity statement reads, “Diversity stands as one of Geneseo's core institutional values, framing the College's sense of community and fostering respect and appreciation for the broad spectrum of backgrounds, beliefs, talents, interests, and life choices of students, faculty, and staff.” I’m afraid, however, that we’ve collectively fallen far short of this ideal.

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Holdgruen: Mizzou protests bring attention to racist harassment on campus

In response to racial harassment and systematic inequality on their campus, a group of University of Missouri students have been protesting to garner change within the predominantly white school. The protests continue in the face of white supremacists and anonymous Internet threats aiming to stop them.

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Social Host arrests ineffective in enforcing student safety

The Geneseo Police Department recently made its first arrests in conjunction with violations of the Village of Geneseo’s newly minted social host law. While it is important to remember that laws are in place for a reason, I would question the wisdom of a law that seeks to penalize students in the name of keeping others safe, but in actuality only succeeds in the former—all the while demonstrably failing in the latter. The social host law holds anyone with the “actual or apparent authority and ability to regulate, direct or dominate private premises” responsible for underage consumption of drugs or alcohol that may have taken place on said premises.

In an interview with the Genesee Sun, Geneseo Police Chief Eric Osganian ‘91 noted that the closure of several bars over the past year has resulted in house parties and ambulance calls growing much larger. The social host law, however, does not provide for any sort of mechanism to address the issue of public safety.

The social host law reflects the Village’s distrust of students to act responsibly to ensure one another’s safety. One might point to the aforementioned rise in emergency response calls as positive proof that students are unqualified to protect safety, but such reasoning rests upon tenuous logic.

The fact that emergency calls are being made is, by itself, insufficient to prove that there is a safety crisis arising from house parties. The police chief did not cite any rise from previous semesters in deaths, injuries, accidents or hospitalizations resulting from drug or alcohol-related complications.

The calls may have been precautionary measures or made by resident assistants, who are trained to place emergency calls if they so much as perceive a student to be in need of medical assistance. Even if out-of-control house parties are the most damning threat to student public safety, the social host law is impotent in curbing parties compared to existing state law that covers similar ground. The $250 fine—which Osganian indicated was the most likely outcome for social host violations in an April 3, 2015 Lamron article—falls drastically short of the penalties resulting from a class A misdemeanor, which the first two social host violations were charged with.

Students, police and the Village can find common ground in hoping to increase public safety at house parties. To that end, students should utilize robust risk management protocols at parties to keep attendees safe. By sending undercover officers into parties to enforce the Village law, however, the police are essentially splintering student risk management efforts between keeping attendees safe and making sure that there are no undercover cops present—cops who can hand out a social host violation that could result in criminal charges.

If public safety were the true catalyst for this law, the conversation would focus on what students can do to make parties safer. Rather, the law seems to be a symbolic condemnation of student house parties by the Village, a way to raise revenue or, most likely, both. Framing the social host law as a legitimate method to increase public safety is simply untenable.

Geneseo Police and all that the rest of our local emergency response units do is important and valuable work in protecting students. Members of the Geneseo community should not stand behind a plainly symbolic, revenue-boosting law while public safety falls by the wayside.    Frankly, a Village law that leads to Geneseo students facing criminal charges reflects a true lack of concern for student welfare and should be strongly opposed.

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CollegeHumor video gives unique, educational metaphor for sexual assault

Comedy website CollegeHumor created a video starring five popular male celebrities to bring awareness to the stigmatization and misunderstanding of sexual assault. In the video, the five men realize there is a bear in their house—and according to their statistics that mirror sexual assault statistics, one in five men get eaten by bears. “New Girl” actor Jake Johnson is the main character who tries to belittle the situation of getting killed by a bear, which parallels with the common belittling of sexual assault victims.

“[The bear] isn’t going to eat all of us ... Statistically, that doesn’t mean one of us, it means one in five people,” Johnson said. Johnson thinks of bear attacks as something that happens to other people and not something that could happen to the few people trapped in house with a bear. Sexual assault is something most people do not believe will ever happen to them, despite its common occurrence.

Additionally, Johnson said, “Hey, what happens between you guys and the bear is none of my business,” a common excuse people have when ignoring sexual assault. Because sex is involved, it is treated as if it is a private issue that others should not get involved in.

The video—while humorous—addresses multiple points in the fight against sexual assault. CollegeHumor is obviously directed at college students and sexual assault is a huge problem on college campuses. Both men and women are affected by sexual assault and they can both misunderstand the issue. The video is a good way to attract the right demographic to an issue that directly affects them.

Sexual assault is a serious issue, however, and humor is not always the best way to go about it. While we as college students may act immature sometimes, we are still adults and old enough to understand right from wrong. College students shouldn’t need a funny video with popular comedians to tell them sexual assault is serious and wrong.

The video shows an understandable and clear metaphor for sexual assault in a way that portrays its immediacy and seriousness, but humor shouldn’t be the preferred method of bringing awareness to sexual assault.

 

 

Chong: Abolition of one-child policy not enough to stabilize Chinese economy

In an effort to replenish the state’s workforce and even out its elderly-to-working age population proportion, China recently announced plans for a new policy that allows citizens to have two children instead of only one.

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Morrison: Sexism hinders women in STEM fields

Six Russian astronauts began a rigorous eight-day experiment in a mock spacecraft on Oct. 28. This space test is in preparation for an all-female 2029 Russian Moon mission. The implications of this mission are not only incredible for women in the general sense, but especially for women in science, technology, engineering and math fields.

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