Articles

Leave The Kids Alone: Smart Toys and Privacy

Recent technology has made children more susceptible to data breaches.  What are the repercussions? By: Adhiti (Tia) Reddy Imagine a five-year-old playing with a toy in the comfort of the four cozy walls of her “safe” home, but embedded in the toys are devices that could lead to information breaches and compromising of their data. […]

FDA Approves New Abortion Medication

How this reform will bring positive change in our community By: Adia Smith A new development in the fight for abortion rights has recently come to light. On January 3rd, 2023, the FDA released new guidelines allowing common pharmacies to provide medical abortion in states where abortion is still legal, vastly increasing accessibility. As the memory of […]

Remote Learning: The Ideal Response to A COVID Surge

Aparajita Srivastava //The best of two bad solutions// The Omicron variant is extremely contagious and spreads rapidly through schools. Omicron demonstrates that learning can become ineffective when schools must simultaneously work to stem the surge while educating students. When new COVID surges emerge, schools must go remote. Omicron serves as a perfect case study that […]

Youngkin’s Educational Policy

Christian Bateman //Why banning critical race theory threatens education.// In January 2021, Virginia’s self-proclaimed “education governor,” Glenn Youngkin, began his first term by signing a series of short-sighted education-related executive orders. While a number of these deserve criticism––especially his premature lifting of the state’s mask mandates in schools––Youngkin’s ban on critical race theory in classrooms […]

A Paper Dragon

Graham Bateman //China’s Power is Vastly Overestimated// On December 17, 2021, Chinese property giant Evergrande formally entered default. While the future of Evergrande remains uncertain, the Evergrande crisis represents a rare, widely publicized failure of a major Chinese institution. Since 1978, China’s gross domestic product (GDP) growth has averaged approximately ten percent. More than eight […]

Against COVID: Balancing Boston’s Needs

Miley Chen //Examining Mayor Michelle Wu’s controversial COVID policy.// If anything has been persistent during COVID-19, it is the presence of protocol and controversy. As mask mandates and weekly testing have become routine, lawsuits and protests have as well. On December 20, Mayor Michelle Wu added another protocol to Boston’s list in the form of […]

Oxford School Shooting

Caroline Roche //Should Ethan Crumbley’s parents be held accountable for their son’s crime?// Hana St. Juliana. Tate Myre. Madisyn Baldwin. Justin Shilling. These are the names of the four young adults murdered by Ethan Crumbley on November 30th in the Oxford School shooting. Although these four experienced the worst consequence of Crumbley’s violence, the devastating […]

The CDC’s Mixed Messaging

Nikki Minsky  //The agency has squandered its chance to take a unified stance in fighting the COVID-19 pandemic// The CDC’s recent messaging and protocols surrounding the COVID-19 pandemic have been unclear and contradictory, causing people to question the credibility of the organization’s guidance. The inconsistent statements released only add to a rampant “pandemic fatigue,” resulting […]

The Death of Federal Vaccine Mandates

Jack Theobald //Businesses Left to Determine Covid Policies Without Government Support// On January 13, the Supreme Court voted 6-3 to block the Biden Administration’s “vaccine or test” mandate on large private employers. The justices argued that the mandate, which took effect in early January and required that all private employers with over 100 employees necessitate […]

Back to Top