Category: Daily Articles

  • Monday, December 30th 2024

    • Incredibly sad to see a country regress to what might as well be the Dark Ages. The Taliban has effectively barred women from many jobs, and most public spaces, and excluded them from education beyond the sixth grade in Afghanistan. After trillions of dollars, 10 years, and thousands of American lives, Afghanistan is right where it began, under militant Islamic rule. Taliban leaders go as far as to say that windows should not overlook or look into areas like yards or kitchens and that properties must find a way to obscure views to “remove harm” in case a woman is seen.
    • A stark divide between Europe and the U.S. is arising on how online moderation and free speech are policed. The U.S. largely allows social media companies to regulate as they deem fit, with sweeping protections against lawsuits for what their users post. On the other hand in Europe, social media platforms have a lawful duty to remove harmful and illegal content or face large fines. Going a step further, in Europe, the authorities will even investigate, jail, or fine you for speech that ultimately would be protected under the First Amendment in America. With this said, Trump’s top picks to regulate the online landscape are pushing for more regulation around what U.S. social media companies can or cannot regulate, a move which might in turn stoke misinformation.

    The Walmart Effect | Atlantic

    • New studies come out putting focus on how large retailers such as Walmart hurt local communities by 1) Causing local businesses to close, in turn causing local unemployment to rise, and 2) Increasing the share of low-paying jobs. This combo effect increasing unemployment and replaces any jobs that were lost with worse ones, all at the cost of providing the community lower-cost goods. Does it all even out in the end or are these communities worse for it?
    • A story as old as time, those affected most in war are the ones not fighting it. Lebanon faces an uphill battle to rebuild its country and government, this time without as much support and blank checks as its last national crisis.
    • A possible precursor to what the economy will look like in the following years, the bottom third of Americans are beginning to default on their credit card debt. With more money going to repay debt payments less is available to be used to boost the economy.
  • Monday, December 16th 2024

    • An insightful look into one of America’s most pressing culture wars, transgenderism within children. Republicans want none of it, loudly announcing how it’s destroying American values and mutilating children. Democrats want all of it, announcing how it’s immoral to put any restrictions on healthcare no matter the age or condition of the child. The truth, more specifically the global data and studies, tells a much more developing story on the most effective and ethical way to treat children facing gender dysmorphia. The key point is that the American Medical Association and its recommendations on transgender care do not line up with new global studies and countries’ practices on when and how to treat children, specifically focusing on puberty blockers.
    • As both Europe and the Middle East fall into chaos, from war, rebel uprisings, and dictatorship, Myanmar (which recently experienced a military coup) shows a look into the aftermath. After the military overtook the country which was previously under civilian rule prices began to rise sharply, jobs closed, and protests squashed most commonly with bullets. Of those who were affected the most were women who before the coup held steady prestigious roles such as nurses and doctors, now they’re being shoved into prostitution to simply survive. “It’s difficult to accept that, despite all my years of study to become a doctor, I’m now doing this kind of work just to make ends meet”, “People might judge me, but they don’t understand what it’s like to be hungry, to watch your child go hungry, and to have nothing,” she said. “Every day, I pray for a way out.”
    • A look into the possible future where Trump’s administration takes an aggressive approach to weed out undocumented immigrants through the experience of a tech company facing labor shortages. When Jabil, a growing tech company, found out a majority of their workers hired through a staffing agency were undocumented they moved to immediately fire them. This action caused Jabil not only to lose upwards of $50 million in possible revenue but also essentially paused their growth and potential clients as they had to restructure their workforce seemingly overnight. It paints a picture of the ever-real world where this isn’t an isolated incident but a plague that all U.S. industries might face is Trump removed undocumented immigrants overnight, as he is signaling he will do.
    • Our ever so often reminder that gun violence, specifically in schools, continues to ravage our communities. That violence has been left unchecked for over a decade, with the Sandy Hook shooting just passing its 10-year mark a few days ago. With both political parties in the US having extremely different solutions one thing ties them both together, their inability to implement ANY solution, often at the cost of children’s lives.
    • Just as Trump and Republicans in the US floated the idea of privatizing the USPS the U.K. approved the sale of its similar service, the Royal Mail. Being privatized since 2013 the Royal Mail has faced its share of challenges adapting to the new digital landscape, but privatization and sale to an international owner in the country’s best interest?