All Things Consider  
ConvoTracker: Discrimination By Any Other Name Is Still Discrimination

Today we at The Conversationalist are introducing a new weekly feature: The ConvoTracker. Each week a guest blogger will write about a contemporary topic which they think is important and explain why. This week we’re happy to have Emily Rutherford, a sophomore at Princeton majoring in History and American Culture. Emily is a staff writer [...]


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March 16, 2010
Is Internet Activism Equally Influential To Physical Activism?

I’ve been thinking about the power of the Internet to socially or politically organize. It’s a precarious matter. Internet activism can quickly fall into blank-stares and late night time-killing apathy. Lately, it seems my Facebook event calendar is a prolific spam box for College Democrats’ and LSA Student Government’s disposal. I effortlessly “attend” all events [...]


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March 16, 2010
Don’t Switch The President On The $50 From Grant To Reagan

Last week North Carolina Congressman Patrick McHenry proposed changing the face on the $50 bill from Ulysses S. Grant to Ronald Reagan. In an excellent op-ed this past Sunday, Princeton Historian Sean Wilentz argued (with due respect to Reagan) that Grant should stay the face of the $50 bill: RONALD REAGAN deserves posterity’s honor, and [...]


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March 15, 2010
Microsoft CEO Hates iPhones So Much He Stomps On One

How’s this for awkward: some lots of Microsoft employees use iPhones. It’s not that surprising if you think about it, the iPhone is the hottest phone out there. Techies like the ones who work at major software companies are going to be drooling over hardware like that, even if it wasn’t a hit for the [...]


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March 15, 2010
Texas Education Takes a Hit

The forecast for the future of Texas education wasn’t looking good, but things have finally taken a turn for the worse: The Texas Board of Education on Friday approved a social studies curriculum that will put a conservative stamp on history and economics textbooks, stressing the superiority of American capitalism, [and] questioning the Founding Fathers’ [...]


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March 15, 2010
The Future is Now: Internet Rights

Last week my Consider colleague Daniel Strauss wrote an intriguing post about the possibility that the Internet could be a human right someday.  Seems like a distant, utopian goal, right?  Well, it looks like the future may come sooner than we thought: The Federal Communications Commission is proposing an ambitious 10-year plan that will reimagine [...]


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March 15, 2010