Thursday, October 22, 2009
The Ad Council
Wednesday, October 21, 2009
Social Citizens
Sunday, October 18, 2009
Student Activism
Wednesday, October 14, 2009
Through the Eyes of an Artist
Saturday, October 3, 2009
The Palestinian Bias
Losing one’s identity can be one of the most detrimental things to happen to a human being. This is exactly what is happening to Palestinians. Palestinians are from Palestine, but there is one problem. Palestine doesn’t exist. Now, the world is making these people out to be villains, extremists, and terrorists. Historical bias is now being used as a ploy by governments to instill a view on a people who have minimal resources to defend themselves. What makes Palestinians’ situations so difficult is that they are fighting with Israel, a nation created in 1948. It is a nation created for a race of people that three years before its creation, had almost been driven to extinction. It would be easy to conclude that because of the state of its own people, and its age, Israel should be one of the most non threatening countries in the world. However, its presence greatly disturbed Palestinians, and the endless feud that we still see today began. Western countries seem to be sided with the Israelis, maybe because of its vulnerability, or because they are remembering what had just happened to these people in the Holocaust less than a century ago, but it is obvious that Palestinians are labeled as the bad guys, and are constantly exploited. I am not saying that either side is right. Both Palestinians and Israelis alike are at some fault for the war raging in Gaza and on the West Bank, but Palestinians are at an unfair disadvantage. They have no country of their own, their people are scattered everywhere and are being exiled from almost every country they flee to. The West also seems to be bending history so that Palestinians are viewed as the wrongdoers. The United States, although trying to settle the issue, still sends a lot of aid to Israel.
Friday, October 2, 2009
A Recent Discovery
Tuesday, September 29, 2009
Tompkins' Article
Even today, when we can use photography to forever capture events as they are happening, there are always opposing views and counterpoints no matter how obvious the truth may seem. Today, it is just more difficult on some topics to draw certain opinions. 200 years ago, it may have been obvious that the white man was at fault, the Indian was at fault, or both were equally at fault, but because there is no foolproof evidence of what happened, any of those viewpoints could have substantial credibility. Since we never will know what truly happened in the past, we have to make an opinion from everything that we know.
