Addressing The Surge of Migrants on The Southern Border And The U.S’ Failed Efforts to Fix it By Matthew Walsh ’26 8,000 migrants cross the United States – Mexico border every day. That number is expected to account for three million individuals by the end of 2023. As floods of migrants seek refuge from corruption […]
Articles
A Summer of Natural Disasters
The rise in natural disasters in the U.S. is not a surprise By Charlotte Garrity ’26 Heavy smoke consumes the typically bright skies of Maui, blanketing the rich wildlife and crowded villages with fire, ash, and disaster. Such was the horrific experience of Maui residents this past summer as their homes were destroyed by wildfire, […]
Unintended Consequences
How AI Poses Challenges to Education By James Foote ’25 As artificial intelligence has planted itself into our everyday lives, the education system must grapple with the pros and cons, along with the effects that it has on generations of youth learning. With newly created AI chatbots like OpenAI’s ChatGPT or Google’s LaMDA, educators realize […]
Neo-Nazi Gatherings in Florida
A chain of unprecedented hate spread throughout Florida By Mirabel Ge ’27 Several Neo-Nazi gatherings have occurred in Florida in the past few months, worrying government officials and locals. According to the Anti-Defamation League, on June 10th, a group of 18 protesters gathered outside of the Orlando Disney World, spewing anti-semitic, white supremacist, and anti-LGBTQ+ […]
Biden vs Trump on the Separation of Migrant Families
The Failure of Two Administrations to Ethically Treat Families Seeking Safety in the US By Adia Smith ’25 In recent months, the Biden administration has been promoting its fight to reunite separated migrant families at the US-Mexico border, a phenomenon that originated under the Trump administration. However, a deeper look into this campaign reveals ongoing […]
BRICS Is Doomed To Fail
The coalition poses little threat to the U.S. dollar By Bradford Kimball ’24 Brick by brick, stone by stone, BRICS has been steadily expanding its alliance and trying to challenge the ubiquity of the U.S. Dollar. In 2023, BRICS, the alliance between the developing economies of Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa, announced that […]
Preemptive Strikes
How Google Eliminates Competition Before It Even Steps onto the Starting Line By Sophia Stafford ’25 A flourishing economy thrives on competition. When multiple companies compete in the marketplace, it drives innovation, delivers fair prices, and guarantees diverse choices for consumers. However, a danger arises when one firm dominates the market. If there is only […]
The U.S’s Hopeless Strategy to Counter Gas Inflation
The United States’ hands-off’ method of dealing with gas inflation places is ineffective By Andreu Beltran ’25 There has been a gas shortage in the United States mainly because the Middle East is unable to supply it. However, as the United States’ need to depend on the East decreases, its demand for gas increases, which […]
Game of Thrones vs. OpenAI
A new frontier in human-machine collaboration By Tia Reddy ’26 The creation of ChatGPT, OpenAI’s generative language model, has sparked yet another controversy after the Authors Guild, including Game of Thrones’ George R.R Martin, filed a class-action lawsuit against Open AI. The writers, whose livelihood depends on creativity, claim that their works were subject to […]
A Republican Alternative to Trump
Nikki Haley’s campaign is promising but still needs work to truly contend By You-Yan Wang ’26 Faced with a raucous Milwaukee crowd and several opponents bickering over each other’s words, Nikki Haley interjected calmly and quoted the late Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, Margaret Thatcher, “If you want something said, ask a man. If […]
