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Economic Inequality and Twitter Polls: The Case for the Billionaire Tax

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By Sofia Guimaraes (PO ’24) Three months ago, Elon Musk tweeted, “Much is made lately of unrealized gains being a means of tax avoidance, so I propose selling 10% of my Tesla stock. Do you support this?” This tweet sparked debate on the Biden administration’s proposed billionaire bill and cast attention on the growing income inequality in the USA, highlighting the need for a...

Facebook is More Dangerous Than You Think

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By Grace Fan (PO ’23) For many of us, Facebook has been around for as long as we can remember. Though it might have started as an innocuous platform to connect people, it has transpired into a media platform that breeds misinformation, conspiracy groups, and a toxic environment for its users. Its monopolistic reach into almost all aspects of society has proved to be detrimental to not only...

How the NSA Perpetuated Human Rights Abuses in Ethiopia

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By Kenyamarie Mahone The issue of telecommunications surveillance has become a marker of political freedoms in the 21st century.  With increasing technological capacities in the Department of Defense, and the growing role of technology in everyday American life–Americans have become wary of surveillance and its many forms. This has become especially true in the wake of Edward Snowden’s...

Big Tech and Bigger Fines: Holding Facebook Accountable Post-2016

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Leonora Willet (CM ’25) More than three years ago, whistleblower Christopher Wylie exposed how Cambridge Analytica, a U.K. based consulting firm, accessed Facebook consumers’ data without their consent. As a former employee of the British consulting firm, Wylie witnessed firsthand Facebook’s use of consumer data to target users for disinformation campaigns. The primary means by which...

The United States and Ethiopia’s Civil War

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By Grayson Shaw (PO’ 25) Last weekend, thousands of protestors flooded the streets of Washington D.C. calling on President Biden to act, a sight that Americans have seen nearly every day on the news since election day. However, this protest was not about Medicare for All, Black Lives Matter, or the ongoing climate crisis. The demonstrations surrounded the ongoing conflict in the Tigray...

Regulatory Capture at the FAA

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By Leo Kalb Bourke (PO ’22) On October 29, 2018, a Boeing 737 MAX departing from Jakarta, Indonesia, crashed into the Java Sea 13 minutes after takeoff, killing all 189 people on board. Several months later, on March 10, 2019, a MAX – this time leaving Addis Ababa, Ethiopia – plunged to the ground approximately six minutes after taking flight, killing 157 people. The crash of this second...

FOSTA-SESTA: How the solution to online sex trafficking may have made the problem worse

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By Kenyamarie Mahone (PO ‘23) FOSTA-SESTA: Its Origins In April 2018, Donald Trump signed into law the Fight Online Sex Trafficking Act (FOSTA) and Stop Enabling Sex Traffickers Act (SESTA), frequently referred to as the FOSTA-SESTA package. The two bills, which had been merged into a single package in 2018, were brought forth to address the alarming proliferation of sex...

Biden’s Questionable Approach to Immigration Policy: Yearning for Progress but Holding Onto Trumpism

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By Sofia Guimaraes (PO ’24) A few weeks ago, pictures of Haitian migrants being aggressively detained at the Mexico-U.S. border shocked the public and brought attention to Joe Biden’s immigration policies. Even though Biden ran his campaign on the promise of reforming the Trump administration’s immigration policy and made changes to the system in his first months of presidency...

President Biden: Looking to the Future or Recycling 45’s Playbook?

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By Grayson Shaw PO ’25 On Wednesday, September 15th, the United States announced the sale of nuclear submarines to the Australian government in order to advance their deterrent capabilities against Chinese influence in the Pacific. Complicating these matters, Australia had previously negotiated a deal with France over the sale of standard submarines, and the US had not communicated this...

Texas and Mississippi: The Forefront of the Battle Over Roe v. Wade

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By Leonora Willett (CM ’25) Nearly 50 years on, the landmark 1973 decision Roe v. Wade is far from settled. With the support of anti-abortion groups, state legislatures are passing newer and more restrictive laws counter to Roe v. Wade. With the changing composition of the Supreme Court, women’s Constitutional rights to an abortion are in question. With the support of Texas Alliance...

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