Posts in Editorials
COVID-19 Is Eroding American Democracy

A few weeks ago in Wisconsin, the Republican state legislature forced an in-person election, endangering thousands of voters, and disenfranchising those who were unable to safely get to a polling place, such as the elderly and immunocompromised. The state went on to change requirements for how absentee ballots would be counted at the last minute, leaving thousands of votes uncounted.

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Response and Retaliation in Aftermath of Drone Strike in Iran

In the immediate aftermath, reactions across the world varied largely depending on one’s perspective of the broader conflict between the two countries. While thousands of Iranians took to the streets to mourn the death of Soleimani, other Iranians expressed pleasure with his death, given his role in suppressing local dissent and promoting aggressive Iranian government policies overseas that sustain Iran’s status as a “pariah.”

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Bursting Our Bubbles: Improving Diversity on UNC's Campus

With growing political tensions on campus due to events such as the Genocide Awareness Project, issues with campus police and Confederates and last year’s toppling of Silent Sam, we need to come together as a campus and listen to perspectives outside our own. This is by no means saying that centers and spaces for minority groups are a bad thing - in fact, they are crucial to ensuring the minority voice can be heard in the broader discussion and helping underprivileged students find success and representation at Carolina.

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NC Educators Deserve Respect, and Funding

“The example of education bears the truth: our capitalist state government is exploiting the good will of teachers simply because they can. Educators in North Carolina, and the country, lack classroom funding, have class sizes that are too large, have more students living in poverty than ever before, and do not have access to the national standard of health care professionals in schools for their students.”

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You Think You’re Better Than Me?

“Despite the progress made over the past 100 years of granting and protecting citizens’ right to participate politics regardless of their social status, it seems that deep within the American psyche remains an elitist, classist, and often also racist notion that only a privileged few belong in politics.”

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