Passover Feminist Traditions

Consider adding this to your family’s traditions!

In honor of Passover, the coming of the spring harvest and the liberation of the Israelites, here’s an explanation of the Orange on the Seder Plate:

In the early 1980s, while speaking at Oberlin College Hillel, Susannah Heschel was introduced to an early feminist Haggadah that suggested adding a crust of bread on the seder plate, as a sign of solidarity with Jewish lesbians (there’s as much room for a lesbian in Judaism as there is for a crust of bread on the seder plate).

Heschel felt that to put bread on the seder plate would be to accept that Jewish lesbians and gay men violate Judaism like chametz violates Passover. So, at her next seder, she chose an orange as a symbol of inclusion of gays and lesbians and others who are marginalized within the Jewish community.

She offered the orange as a symbol of the fruitfulness for all Jews when lesbians and gay men are contributing and active members of Jewish life. In addition, each orange segment had a few seeds that had to be spit out – a gesture of spitting out, repudiating the homophobia of Judaism.

You may have heard other versions of how the orange came to be a part of Passover. Heschel addresses this, writing:

“Somehow, though, the typical patriarchal maneuver occurred: my idea of an orange and my intention of affirming lesbians and gay men were transformed. Now the story circulates that a MAN said to me that a woman belongs on the bimah as an orange on the seder plate. A woman’s words are attributed to a man, and the affirmation of lesbians and gay men is erased. Isn’t that precisely what’s happened over the centuries to women’s ideas?”

So at your next seder, think about the groups who are still enslaved by social constructions today and maybe even question how to include them within society and the Jewish religion and culture.

Second Amendment Rights While Preventing Tragedies: How to Strike a Balance

For those of you who don’t know him, meet Congressman Eliot Engel. Engel represents New York’s 17th District (made up of the Bronx, Westchester and Rockland County). Engel sends out a monthly e-mail addressing various holidays, memorials and government events. Today, I received an e-mail from him addressing the struggle between Second Amendment rights to bear arms and the tragic acts of violence which have struck our country in recent years due to people in possession of guns.

What sparked Engel’s e-mail was the anniversary of both the Columbine High School shooting, April 20th, 1999, and the Virginia Tech University shooting, April 16, 2007. Both of these school shootings shocked the nation and comprehensive studies were undertaken in their wake to determine what prompted them and how to better protect the public. However, whatever progress has been made has been overshadowed by the 36 notable school shootings in North America alone which have occurred since.

A 37th incidence of gun violence in schools occurred just yesterday at Ross Elementary School in Houston. As the Huffington Post reported, a kindergartener brought a gun to school and it fell out of his pocket and went off, injuring himself and two other students. Although this occurrence, by all accounts an accident, does not have the same quality of menace, perhaps it is even more upsetting due to the very lack of intentionality and the perpetrator’s age. If students are not safe at their schools, where can they go?

As Engel writes,

With over 280 million guns in civilian hands, the terrible truth is that there is no place to hide from gun violence. Children and teens are not safe from gun violence at school, at home, or anywhere else in America. According to the Children’s Defense Fund, 3,042 children and teens died from gunfire in America in 2007—one child or teen every three hours, eight every day, 58 every week. Almost six times as many children and teens—17,523—suffered non-fatal gun injuries and the often lifelong emotional aftermath that follows. Gun violence, especially in poor communities, drives thousands of vulnerable young people into the pipeline to prison.

Engel cites statistics compiled by the Brady Campaign, founded by Reagan’s press secretary James Brady, which speak to the prevalence of gun violence:

-States with the highest levels of gun ownership have 114% higher firearm homicide rates, and 60% higher overall homicide rates than states with the lowest gun ownership;

-A gun in the home tends to be used more often for purposes other than self-defense. For every gun fired to injure or kill in self-defense, 11 were used in suicides, seven in criminal assaults and homicides, and four in unintentional shooting deaths or injuries.

-Every year there are only about 200 legally justified self-defense homicides by private citizens, compared with over 30,000 gun deaths.

However, taking away a person’s right to own a gun is not necessarily the solution. As we all know, guns are not always used for violence and can be useful in fact in preventing it, when the people operating the weapons know what they are doing. So, how do you find a happy compromise between the distinct conservative and liberal takes on the Second Amendment?

Engel proposes some strategies he has taken to negotiate this middle ground, such as:

[I] Introduced the Protect Law Enforcement Armor (PLEA) Act, HR 6030 in the previous Congress, which would ban the Five-seveN handgun. Several types of ammunition for the Five-seveN have the ability to pierce law enforcement body armor. The Five-seveN handgun is one of the most popular with traffickers supplying Mexican Drug Trafficking Organizations (DTOs) who have nicknamed the gun the “mata policia” or “cop killier.” It was also used by Major Nidal Hasan in the horrific Fort Hood shooting last November where 13 people were killed and 30 others wounded. I plan to re-introduce the bill in the current Congress.

I support the steps he has taken. The task at hand now is to pinpoint various reforms that are in all of our best interests: keeping guns away from minors, out of schools and off the black market, to name a few. Perhaps once we’ve addressed these dangers we can move on to the second step, which is identifying aspects of our culture which promote violence and lead to the these tragedies.

Y Not BAGC? Volunteering Opportunities

*Co-written by guest blogger Mady Katz

Waltham Group has a lot of programs: seventeen at the moment. Oftentimes when students want to volunteer they’re not sure which programs to choose. So, we’re here to tell you a bit more about one program in particular: Kids Connection!

Kids Connection is a branch of Waltham Group which encompasses two youth groups: the Waltham Boys and Girls Club and the Waltham Y.

When volunteers go to the Boys and Girls Club, they put together various activities for the 6 to18 year olds to do. The range of programs includes: sports, arts and crafts, gardening, homework help, and photography. What makes the Boys and Girls Club unique is that for an extremely affordable price they can become members and then partake in whatever activities they want. They can use facilities, which include a playground, a pool, a pool table (part of a larger game room) and more. Volunteers really have an opportunity to bond with the kids one-on-one and form strong relationships with each other. There is usually a lot of laughter involved. All that is required is filling out a few background check forms and making a weekly commitment for an hour and a half.

Onto the Boys and Girls Club’s sister program, the Y! The Y allows kids to use its facilities for a wide variety of activities. The Y has a pool; multiple gyms; yoga, aerobics and other types of fitness classes; and even a rock-climbing wall. Although Kids Connection has been involved with many different programs at the Y over time, this semester we’ve focused on Teen Night, which is a Friday night program exclusively for teens aged 13 to 18. This program is targeted at middle school and high school kids since this age group usually finds itself engaged in less safe activities due to lack of supervision. Another element that makes the Y unique is that Kids Connections coordinators work with the Y’s staff to bring in Brandeis student clubs to perform and interact with the kids, as when Kaos Kids, Brandeis’ hip hop group, performed for the kids in the fall of 2010. Volunteers get to bond with the kids and organize whatever activities they want, and there is not a strict weekly requirement.

Mady Katz is the Boys and Girls Club coordinator and Elly Kalfus is the Y coordinator. Both coordinators are happy to share information or talk with prospective volunteers. For more information, e-mail katzm@brandeis.edu or ekal@brandeis.edu.

Want to Write for Innermostparts?

So if you’re reading this, I must ask…
See what you like?
Want to contribute?

Due to a large number of graduating writers and changes in our blog’s staff, we need FRESH BLOOD.
If you’re interested in writing for us in any capacity or just have some input to give, come to Einstein’s at 4 pm today for a short pre-break interest meeting.

Questions? Can’t make it but want to be involved? Please contact me (Elly Kalfus) at ekal@brandeis.edu or Esther Brandon at brandone@brandeis.edu

ELECTION RESULTS spring 11

President: Herbie Rosen
Vice President: Gloria Park
Secretary: Todd Kirkland
Treasurer: Dan Lee
F-Board: Jacob Agi, Gabe Weingrod Nemzow, Donghae Choi, ONE UNFILLED
Racial Minority F-Board: UNFILLED
Jr. Rep to the Board of Trustees: Beneva Davies
Jr. Rep to the UCC: UNFILLED
Jr. Rep to the Alumni Association: UNFILLED

All unfilled positions will be up for election in the next round, which must take place within 5 school days, meaning the latest they could take place is the Monday after break, May 2.

The breakdown of how many votes each candidate received will come soon. Look below:

Election Results2011

Less than Two Hours to Vote

Student Union Spring 2011 Elections

Now until 12 am

Look, even if you don’t know the candidates or don’t feel like making the effort TO get to know them (just stop by fb), it’s still worth it to vote. Although it is frustrating that the school messed up the settings on its contract with Big Pulse, resulting in a more-confusing-than-usual voting process, there are some clear directions you can follow in order to vote!

These polls are an Instant Runoff Voting system. You will rank up to the total number of candidates (and Abstain) by preference. You do not need to vote for all of the candidates but may. Your first preference will be counted unless your first preference has the least number of votes in which case your second preference will be counted until one candidate receives a majority of the total number of votes.

Important Voting Information:
Go to the website and you will have the option to VOTE NOW on the right hand sidebar. Due to recent voter fraud attempts there is a new security measure in place. When reaching the voting website input your UNET ID but DO NOT put your password in. ClickFORGOT YOUR SIGN-IN OR PASSWORD, then you can proceed to vote.

Please check the following link to VOTE: http://brandeisstudentunion.org/elections/185

The positions up for candidacy are:
-President
-Vice President
-Treasurer
-Secretary
-F-Board
-Racial Minority F-Board
-Jr. Representative to the Board of Trustees
-Jr. Representative to the UCC
-Jr. Representative to the Alumni Association

If you have any questions, concerns, or trouble with the voting website, please contact Shirel Guez (shirelgz@brandeis.edu).

Politics Now and Student Union Pres Debate

More important, social justice, democratic-y events.

Tonight, Politics Now in Golding 101 at 8 oclock. Come here presentations from a bunch of different clubs on campus about what they do to transcend the Brandeis bubble. For more info, look at it in the innermostparts activist calendar.

Later on in the evening, check out the Student Union Presidential Debate at 10:15 in Olin-Sang 101. “This debate amongst the candidates for Student Union President is a unique opportunity, as members of the Brandeis Community, to discern for ourselves what student we want representing us and taking Brandeis into the future. This was an idea we batted around only 9 days ago, and now the event is co-sponsored by B.A.D.A.S.S., WBRS, The Hoot, BTV, The Justice, and the Student Union.” -Justice League

Election begins tomorrow, expect more live updates and news.

Dr. Andrew Wakefield tonight

Wikipedia describes Andrew Wakefieldas “a British former surgeon and medical researcher known for his fraudulent claims of a causative connection between the measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) vaccine, autism and autistic enterocolitis. The latter controversial term was created by Wakefield to describe an unproven form of inflammatory bowel disease.”

Michael Willrich, esteemed Brandeis professor in the History Department, wrote Pox: An American History this past summer, on the subject of the pervasive fear of vaccines throughout American history. In an article in the New York Times printed in January 2011, he commented on Wakefield’s study:

“The evidence against the original article and its author, a British medical researcher named Andrew Wakefield, is damning. Among other things, he is said to have received payment for his research from a lawyer involved in a suit against a vaccine manufacturer; in response, Britain’s General Medical Council struck him from the medical register last May. As the journal’s editor put it, the assertion that the measles-mumps-rubella vaccine caused autism “was based not on bad science but on a deliberate fraud.””

Dr. Wakefield stands amidst a heap of controversy because of his incendiary report linking autism to vaccinations. And guess what? He’s coming to Brandeis. Tonight. In the Rapaporte Treasure Hall (in Goldfarb Library) from 7:30 to 9.

Everything You Ever Wanted to Know about Copyright Law

As college students, we’re lectured a lot about plagiarism. But, do most people even know basic facts about copyright law and tradmarks? I know I didn’t.
So Max Price and I looked up copyright law at the U.S. Copyright Office and these are the hilarious highlights which we transcribed here for you, worthy readers:

How do I protect my recipe?
A mere listing of ingredients is not protected under copyright law. However, where a recipe or formula is accompanied by substantial literary expression in the form of an explanation or directions, or when there is a collection of recipes as in a cookbook, there may be a basis for copyright protection. Note that if you have secret ingredients to a recipe that you do not wish to be revealed, you should not submit your recipe for registration, because applications and deposit copies are public records. See FL 122, Recipes.

Can I register a diary I found in my grandmother’s attic?
You can register copyright in the diary only if you own the rights to the work, for example, by will or by inheritance. Copyright is the right of the author of the work or the author’s heirs or assignees, not of the one who only owns or possesses the physical work itself. See Circular 1, Copyright Basics, section “Who Can Claim Copyright.”

How do I protect my sighting of Elvis?
Copyright law does not protect sightings. However, copyright law will protect your photo (or other depiction) of your sighting of Elvis. File your claim to copyright online by means of the electronic Copyright Office (eCO). Pay the fee online and attach a copy of your photo. Or, go to the Copyright Office website, fill in Form CO, print it, and mail it together with your photo and fee. For more information on registration a copyright, see SL-35. No one can lawfully use your photo of your sighting, although someone else may file his own photo of his sighting. Copyright law protects the original photograph, not the subject of the photograph.

Can I get a star named after me and claim copyright to it?
No. There is a lot of misunderstanding about this. Names are not protected by copyright. Publishers of publications such as a star registry may register a claim to copyright in the text of the volume [or book] containing the names the registry has assigned to stars, and perhaps the compilation of data; but such a registration would not extend protection to any of the individual star names appearing therein. Copyright registration of such a volume of star names does not confer any official or governmental status on any of the star names included in the volume. For further information on copyright protection and names, see Circular 34, Copyright Protection Not Available for Names, Titles, or Short Phrases

Overheard at Brandeis: Innaugural Post in Weekly series

Hey,

So as my earlier posts this week have demonstrated, I’m into series now.
Ever walking around campus and overheard people saying the dumbest shit? Or the most intellectual garbage? Or something that profoundly and sincerely changes your life?

Well now you have something to do with it. Please send it in to tips@innermostparts.org! And if it’s good enough, we’ll repost it!

One I’ve been storing up for a while:

(Walking past the hill atop which the Brandeis statue stands)
Person 1: It’s not a rock, there are trees growing out of it.

Thanks for reading the innaugural post, now start sending them!

Comical Excerpts from University E-mails

Much like Jay Leno does with newspapers, I will now be collecting excerpts from all University e-mails and re-posting them here for the likes of all of you.

First post in the series, thanks to Hiatt

Women for Hire Chicago Career Expo
Wed., Apr. 6, 10:00 a.m. – 2:00 p.m. (Navy Pier, 600 East Grand Avenue, Chicago, IL)
Get candid advice from professionals, gain feedback on your resume, and learn tips/tricks on how to ace a challenging job search.
RSVP: Hiatt NACElink > Events > Info Sessions

Study Abroad Gets in on Today’s Excitement Too

What else is happening today?

Study Abroad is telling students going abroad in the 2011-12 school year that if they don’t submit all of their application materials by noon then they will suffer the consequences.

Excerpted from J. Scott Van Der Meid’s (Director of Study Abroad) e-mail sent out yesterday:

If you did not apply in enough time to get a decision by noon tomorrow, you have a serious problem on your hands since our office has been very clear through our forms and numerous emails that you needed to apply by at least March 1st to get a decision.

What are students to do if they haven’t heard back yet, you ask?

Allyson and I will be the only ones in the office tomorrow to assist with any issues you may have. Please come by and speak with us in person from 9-noon tomorrow. We WILL NOT accept any emails around delays of forms. You must come in person and we strongly suggest you don’t wait until 11:59 to see us.

Looks like I’ll be one of the many waiting outside the crowded Office of Study Abroad tomorrow to try to explain why my program hasn’t gotten back to me yet.

While I understand the need to report your study abroad status and Brandeis’ wish to estimate how many students are doing what next year, and so how many new students they can provide for, I don’t appreciate the harsh tone of this e-mail and the seeming insensitivity to students whose programs are not accommodating to Brandeis’ early deadline. If study abroad deadlines (both internal and external) and application information were made clearer from the start then this would be a non-issue. However, it wasn’t, and so study abroad becomes a hassle and source of confusion for many.

The topping on the cake?

Please note that there are many offices around campus who need to know for sure who is confirmed for study abroad and so our strict deadline is a result of being a team player at Brandeis

What day is today?

Inauguration Day!

Time Thursday, March 31, 2 to 3:30 p.m.
Location Gosman Sports and Convocation Center
Description The installation of Frederick M. Lawrence as the eighth president of Brandeis University. Reception immediately follows.

It’s going to be really exciting and official. Everyone should come (remember to pack your tickets) and dress up! If you can’t make it, livestream it. Perhaps we’ll even have some cool media to put up on this site at the end of the day.

Activist Movie of the Month- Crips and Bloods: Made in America

Wow. I just saw an amazing documentary that made me feel so ridiculously uncomfortable, antsy and hopeless throughout that I almost cried (and I don’t cry at movies).

Its title? Crips and Bloods: Made in America.

What it’s about? It tells the story of the formation of the Crips and the Bloods, two of the most infamous gangs in the United States. Both gangs are exclusively African American and located in Los Angeles. The movies traces the gangs’ history from its roots in slavery to the efforts being made to fight gang violence today.

Where’d I see it? Student Peace Alliance and Students Organized Against Racism co-sponsored the screening of the movie in Golding tonight and had a pretty decent turnout. Normally I don’t stay for talkbacks but I did this time and was very pleasantly surprised; rather than focusing on our own victimization stories or berating the sad state of America, a lot of the discussion was productive and solution-based. Although we’re mostly disillusioned college students, we were able to talk about the possibilities and hope the movie left us with.

What I’m taking away from it: The idea that one of the best ways to approach gang violence is to empower the communities in which it is occuring; instead of just dealing with the reprecussions (ie stronger law enforcement, counseling for PTSD), we can help people recognize the harms of gangs and give them the resources to make changes within their communities themselves.

Wanna get involved?: I am one of the Waltham Group Kids Connection coordinators and volunteers go to Teen Night every few Friday nights at the Waltham Y. The primary purpose of Teen Night is to keep teens off the streets (there is a rising number of gangs in Waltham) by giving them other arenas where they can feel connected, motivated and comfortable. However, often at the Y volunteers&staff end up supervising more than interacting with the teens. If anyone would like to brainstorm ideas as to how to connect WITH teens (who aren’t always the most responsive) and be role models while still being peers, it would be much appreciated.

This is just one small way in which we can help. For more information about the movie and ways to get involved check out the official movie site, http://cripsandbloodsmovie.com, and consider reading Gangleader for a Day, an amazing book about Chicago gangs from a sociology grad student’s perspective.

Organized Crime – Crips And Bloods: Black American Gangs In Los Angeles. This site is also helpful for background information on the bloods and the crips.

Aramark Contributing to Brandeis Japan Earthquake Relief Efforts

Wow. So apparently the Student Union, Dining Services and the administration collaborated, and did something which benefits all of us. That’s awesome. Who would’ve thunk it?

So tomorrow is the Grand Opening of the Village POD (C-Store), at 7 am! And apparently 10% of sales “up to a cap” (what is the cap? why is a secret?) from everything purchased there tomorrow will go towards Brandeis Japan Earthquake Relief Efforts!

That’s awesome. Yay giving us an incentive to buy more! I like when capitalism works this way, because it helps people and makes you feel empowered as a consumer. We should all go out and buy, buy, buy.

For full text of e-mail from Daniel A. read below.

To the Student Body:

The Grand Opening for the Village POD is tomorrow (March 28)!

The Student Union, Dining Services, and the administration worked together to ensure the completion of this project.

Moreover, Aramark has committed to donate 10% of sales (up to a cap) from the first day to the Brandeis Japan Earthquake Relief Efforts. The POD will open at 7 AM. Make sure to check it out.

Enjoy it!

Daniel Acheampong, Student Union President
Mark Collins, Senior Vice President for Administration
Aaron Bennos, Dining Services

The Lottery

Panic has seized the campus. Students are desperately seeking one another out, trying to make deals in order to determine their fates. What is the cause of this commotion?

The lottery.

Almost everyone agrees that the housing system at Brandeis is terrible. I would like to explore what I think is wrong with it, possible models we could implement from other schools in order to fix it and then open the floor up for feedback or other suggestions which would help the housing process run more smoothly. Of course if there were more dorms, more dorms with kitchens, and nicer dorms people would be much more positive about their housing options, but I’d rather focus on changes that can be implemented at little to no cost and do not take that much time; changes to the system.

1. Your lottery number is completely random
You could get a crappy number potentially all 3 years during which you have the ability to select your room at Brandeis. True, this randomization does not give people with higher GPA’s better lottery numbers say, as they do at the University of Mary Washington and Rowan University, which is a policy change I would not support, but it allows for some students to consistently receive bad numbers while others receive good ones.

Solution: Some schools have implemented systems in which if you get above a certain number one year then you are guaranteed to get below that number the following year. For instance, if you receive a “bad” number as a sophomore, you would get a “better” number as a junior, although irregularities such as studying abroad or availability would of course affect this system. Although this would make the process less “fair” i.e. less randomized, it would make it more fair in terms of everyone suffering equally, by receiving a mixed bag of the good and the bad numbers.

2. Your appointment time is randomly assigned, and you must go in person
Many students have class or other responsibilities they cannot get out of, preventing them from attending their appointment times. Instead, they must appoint proxies to advocate on their behalf, although choosing a room for someone else is very impractical and difficult. This applies to students who study abroad in the spring as well. In addition, because students use more time then they are allotted, there is usually a delay, during which students must wait outside until they are called in, making the appointments very inconvenient and unhelpful. Not to mention the added stress of having to go in person.

Solution: Tufts, Harvard University, Boston College and the University of California, Berkeley all use StarRez, an online site which facilitates student housing. Tufts switched over to StarRez this past fall. As TuftsDaily reported, one major benefit is that “students under the new lottery system will be able to access a customized view of available rooms based on their class year, the type of room they are looking for or the building they wish to live in.” StarRez worked with Tufts in order to craft a system which would work well with their housing opportunities for students, taking into account restrictions based on class year and limited housing. The Director of Tufts’ Office of Residential Life and Learning, Yolanda King, said of StarRez “They are well known in terms of other housing departments at other schools.” Another change that could be implemented even without the online system is the public posting of what dorms are still available on an hourly basis so that students know what their options are when they show up for their appointments. Taking the secrecy and unpredictability out of the process would definitely relieve stress for many participants.

3. The Department of Community Living website is confusing
This is something the Department of Community Living could definitely fix if given the proper student input and in possession of good technological skills. The language and wording of many of the policies are confusing, such as the range of options for students studying abroad in the fall and spring, and the website contains empty links or redirects you to incorrect locations.

Solution: Some school’s websites, such as George Washington University’s, contain itemized lists of housing with diagrams attached depicting what each individual room looks like and its dimensions. I have friends who mixed up the height and width of their Castle double when selecting their room assignment and were quite surprised when they first set foot in their room the following semester, which leads me to believe that pictures truly do help.

What other problems and possible solutions do YOU see?

Dating Violence Bill: Will you take action?

I got this e-mail from the Love is Not Abuse campaign, which works to prevent dating violence in teens. This is an important cause and one that hits close to home. As an intern at the MA Second Step, an organization which helps survivors of domestic abuse, I recognize the prevalence of dating violence, especially on college campuses. I think that this initiative is a great place to start in the fight against domestic violence. Read below and see what you think.

Below is a message from Bill & Michele Mitchell, our dedicated State Action Leaders for Maryland. They are parents to Kristin Mitchell, who graduated from Saint Joseph’s University and 3 weeks later lost her life to dating violence on June 3, 2005. The Mitchells have since worked tirelessly with Delegate Jill Carter, a National Foundation of Women Legislators (NFWL) representative, to pass a 2009 bill encouraging that lessons on teen dating abuse be implemented in schools. Currently, they are working to pass a stronger, more comprehensive law in the state of Maryland and they need your help with House Bill 386 – the Kristin Marie Mitchell Law!

What we’re asking will take a few minutes, but it could also save the life of someone you know. We need your support to help pass a Maryland law that would do a better job of putting teen dating violence education into classrooms.

This law would:
1. Adopt a program in the public schools to educate students about dating violence
2. Include education on services provided to victims of dating violence
3. Name this law “The Kristin Marie Mitchell Law”
4. Declare the first week of February as Tween / Teen Dating Violence Education and Awareness Week in Maryland

We need you to
1. WRITE INDIVIDUAL EMAILS to a list of delegates (below). You would be sending a total of 23 emails
2. The point of your email is you are: “In support of HB386, the Tween and Teen Dating Violence Education Law”
3. This would require you to write to EACH INDIVIDUAL delegate…
Copy and paste email addresses into EACH email…
Start each with the appropriate delegates name (taken from their emails)

Sample:
Dear Delegate (add delegate’s NAME),

I am in support of HB386, the Tween and Teen Dating Violence Education Law. I would like for you to vote in favor of this Bill.

I want Maryland schools to have the best available teaching for our young women and young men. This law will enable better ways of getting this life-saving information to our tweens and teens so they are knowledgeable about dating abuse, dating violence, and the resources available for help.

I personally know the Mitchell family and am aware that their daughter, Kristin, was completely unprepared to recognize the warning signs that caused her to lose her life due to dating violence. Please help by voting in favor of HB386, the Tween and Teen Dating Violence Education Law.

Respectfully,

(YOUR NAME)

Here is the list of delegates…
sheila.hixson.annapolis@house.state.md.us
samuel.rosenberg@house.state.md.us
kathy.afzali@house.state.md.us
kumar.barve@house.state.md.us
joseph.boteler@house.state.md.us
talmadge.branch@house.state.md.us
jon.cardin@house.state.md.us
mark.fisher@house.state.md.us
bill.frick@house.state.md.us
ron.george@house.state.md.us
glen.glass@house.state.md.us
carolyn.howard@house.state.md.us
jolene.ivey@house.state.md.us
anne.kaiser@house.state.md.us
eric.luedtke@house.state.md.us
aruna.miller@house.state.md.us
leroy.myers@house.state.md.us
justin.ross@house.state.md.us
andrew.serafini@house.state.md.us
melvin.stukes@house.state.md.us
michael.summers@house.state.md.us
frank.turner@house.state.md.us
jay.walker@house.state.md.us

I know it asks a lot, but if you have a moment, make some e-mails, or pass it along to a friend?

Student Union Takes It Downstairs to the People

So, as announced in the Student Union e-mail earlier this week, the Student Union set up a table downstairs in the Atrium today to interact with students- directly! And what were students encouraged to talk about? Housing! (I’ll be posting my own reflections on housing tomorrow)

Senators, website designers and a secretary or two were there for students to talk with, a video camera was present to document their concerns and laptops were available for them to fill out complaint forms online.

The Student Union will be conducting a Feedback Assessment on University Housing tomorrow (Tuesday, March 15), with regards to the selection process and availability options on campus.

This Assessment is completely voluntary, and Union Representatives will have a table set-up in the Shapiro Campus Center Atrium from 4pm to 8pm. Please feel free to stop by and let us know your thoughts and concerns with Housing.

We will have an option for your opinion to be videotaped and sent to the Administration. We will also have laptops out for you to record your thoughts and concerns. If you are unable to pass by, but still want your voice heard – utilize the Complaint Section of our Student Union Site: http://brandeisstudentunion.org/complaints!

The material will all be forwarded to the administration, in the most grassroots-y project the Student Union has put on in a while. I think this is a wonderful thing and was really happy to see representatives taking the time to man the booth and answer students’ and others’ questions. Nice job, StudUn! Keep up the good work!

The next question is, of course, whether or not this will lead to any Housing policy reform (which is greatly needed), and if the Student Union will make similar efforts to hear the voice of its constituents on other topics (say…dining?). Hope they do!

Check Your Mailboxes: Today’s the Day

So our ally the Justice League has been doing a lot of promotion the past few weeks, and it’s all led up to this moment.

The big reveal: Justice League Fix It Campaign: Official Ballot.

You will all be receiving ballots in your student mailboxes today right about now, and there will be loudly obnoxious boxes conveniently located nearby for you to deposit them in. There’s an online picture of the ballot above, and we will be working on sending out a poll which you can fill out online as well. This is my interpretation of the three issues the ballot asks you to vote on:

1. Point-dollar parity. In short, it varies for each meal plan, but Aramark charges Brandeis students on average $1.40 per point you buy on your meal plan. That means that besides the inflated prices of food here, you are literally paying more than you would were you to pay with cash, when using a meal plan. And we are REQUIRED to buy meal plans for most on-campus housing. So, what we are asking for here is for a more fair and equal exchange between a dollar and a point.

2. Transparency in our dining services providers. Each year Aramark’s contract with the school is renewed automatically, meaning that Aramark has little incentive to change the quality or variety of food they offer us, or change their meal plans. Rather than advocating for the removal of Aramark, what we would like is for Brandeis to consider other food providers’ offers so that Aramark has a reason to try to be the best it can, and we can choose which company would be the best fit for our school. The first step to negotiating better terms is to at least consider the competition.

3. Many of our university committees have little to no student representation. The past few have had Student Union representatives, but sometimes these students do not have voting power within the committees, and they are always vastly outnumbered by administrators, faculty and trustees. We would like more student representation, by requiring that each committee has at least two student representatives, each of whom have voting power within the committee. In addition, rather than having the administrators choose which students should serve on committees, why not have students decide who we want to represent us (as we do in most other manners)?

So, what do you think? The plan is to collect as many ballots as we can over the next 1-2 weeks, tally the results and then hand deliver them to President Lawrence. So, if you want your voice heard, fill out a ballot and turn it in! Even better, if you want to get involved, sign up here for the Justice League’s official listserv and tell us why you care.

More updates will follow. For more information check out the facebook page.

History of International Women’s Day

From the EDM, Education for Development, website, a brief history of the roots of International Women’s Day!

One hundred years ago, the women of the world were burdened with oppression. And one hundred years ago, they found the value of talking to each other, organizing themselves, and fighting for their rights. Then, a National Women’s Day was born in the United States, a first step towards women realizing their potential as powerful citizens of their nations and of the world. The day was February 28 1909. The now defunct Socialist Party of America was in celebration. The context, a time of turbulence and change, of ideological battles and injustice.

It would only take another year, at the International Socialist Women’s Conference in Copenhagen, when Clara Zetkin, leader of the Women’s Office of the Socialist Democratic Party of Germany, proposed the idea of an International Women’s Day. Zetkin asserted the need for a day that could be commemorated worldwide when women can collectively insist on their needs and demands.

Over 100 women from 17 countries would unanimously agree to establish an International Women’s Day (IWD) for the rest of the world. Then, it would begin to be celebrated on the third Sunday of February every year, until it is moved to March 8 in 1913. The decision to celebrate an International Women’s Day was an obvious response to the growing inequality women were experiencing in politics and the workplace – in all of their lives – across the globe. It would also serve as a celebration of the women’s movements’ fight for suffrage.

International Women’s Day

It’s the 100th anniversary of International Women’s Day and a bunch of events are happening around campus!

Feminist Majority Leadership Alliance Sponsors Feminist Coming Out Day

Tuesday March 8th from 7-8 in the Women’s Rresource Center, 3rd floor of the SCC.
What does it mean to be a feminist?
FEMINISM is the logical response to sexism; it exists because sexism exists. FEMINISM is “the radical notion that women are people.”-National Organization for Women’s website, http://www.now.org/history/debate.html
We’re feminists. We’re proud of it. And we’re coming out of the closet to show it.
As part of a national effort to encourage people to embrace their feminist roots we are throwing a feminist coming out day celebration and you’re all invited.
More info on the national campaign: http://feministcomingoutday.com/
Please look around campus for our fliers, and share any feminist quotes or definitions you have!

Russian Club sponsors Student Talent Show!

Tuesday, March 8 · 6:30pm – 9:30pm
Rapaporte Treasure Hall, Goldfarb Library
RUSSIAN CULTURE WEEK!!
Come join us as we celebrate with Russia and women everywhere on March 8th, International Women’s Day. International Women’s Day is a global holiday celebrating the economic, political, and social achievements of women past, present, and future. In Russia, International Women’s Day is a national holiday where women, married, single, with children, or without receive flowers and appreciation from the men in their lives.
In celebration of the event, the Brandeis Russian Club and friends will be featuring its many talents in a student run talent show. Come watch as we sing, dance, and celebrate women everywhere.
FESTIVE RUSSIAN FOOD AND DESERTS WILL BE SERVED AND FLOWERS WILL BE GIVEN OUT TO EVERY WOMAN IN ATTENDANCE!!
FREE AND OPEN TO PUBLIC!!
Contact Name: Lev Gorfinkel, Contact Email: levig321@aol.com

Tomorrow: Positive Foundations and Girl Effect International Women’s Day Dinner

Join Positive Foundations and Girl Effect for a semi-formal dinner party to celebrate the 100th anniversary of International Women’s Day on March 9 from 8-11 PM in Sherman Function Hall. There will be off-campus food from all your favorite restaurants in Waltham!!! International Women’s Day is a special day to celebrate the political and economic achievements of women, as well as to shed light on the challenges that women all over the world are currently facing. Speaker Scott Seibold, a prominent advocate for health in East Africa from The Global Poverty Project, will present an inspiring multimedia presentation called “1.4 Billion Reasons” to educate us all about the causes of poverty, the challenges that women in developing countries face, and the simple changes we can all make to help. All proceeds will go toward Dr. Hawa Abdi’s hospital and refugee camp in Somalia. You’ll be helping to provide lifesaving medical and nutritional treatment for women and children, and support literacy and leadership training at the camp’s Women’s Education Center. Tickets are $5 and will be sold in Shapiro and Usdan all week from February 28th until March 8th. Contact Aditya Sanyal: sanyal10@brandeis.edu

WBC Protests Protected Under First Amendment, Supreme Court Rules

On Wednesday, the Supreme Court ruled 8 to 1 that protesting at funerals is protected under the First Amendment. The case made its way to the SC after Albert Snyder sued the Westboro Baptists Church (WBC) for defamation, invasion of privacy, and intentional infliction of emotional distress, as a result of their picketing at his son’s, Corporal Matthew Snyder, funeral in March 2006. The WBC is known to oppose Catholics, people who serve in the military, Americans in general and many more groups. A federal jury found the WBC liable for invasion of privacy and intentional infliction of emotional distress, awarding Snyder’s family a total of $10,900,000 in 2007.

However, the WBC appealed the case to the Supreme Court and was granted cert. As Wikipedia reports,

“Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, joined by 42 other Senators, filed an amicus brief in support of Snyder with the Supreme Court, and shortly after Kansas Attorney General Stephen Six filed a separate brief supporting Snyder. This brief was joined by the Attorneys General of 47 other states and the District of Columbia, with Maine and Virginia being the two abstaining states.”

In an unpopular decision, the Supreme Court found in favor of the WBC, overturning the money awarded to them by the federal jury and protecting their right to protest at future funerals. As the New York Times reported,Chief Justice John G. Roberts wrote for the majority,

“Speech is powerful. It can stir people to action, move them to tears of both joy and sorrow, and — as it did here — inflict great pain.” But under the First Amendment, he went on, “we cannot react to that pain by punishing the speaker.” Instead, the national commitment to free speech, he said, requires protection of “even hurtful speech on public issues to ensure that we do not stifle public debate.” […]All of that means, the chief justice wrote, that the protesters’ speech “cannot be restricted simply because it is upsetting or arouses contempt.”

Arts Forum

So the first ever Brandeis Arts Forum took place today from 3-5 pm.

I know many of us over here at Innermost were unable to attend but I’ve heard that about 70 people DID attend, including several administrators and of course President Lawrence.

We are in communication with the Office of the Arts and will be posting information as it filters through to us, but do any of our loyal readers who were able to attend want to post feedback, summaries, or their opinion of the concept behind the event itself?

I think it’s a great initiative on behalf of the Office of the Arts, the arts community, and everyone involved with making it happen. I’m also happy that President Lawrence attended, an indication that he is able and willing to hear student input.

LGBTQA Developments

An update of LGBTQA rights legislation in America, thanks in part to Trisk’s Political Outreach listserv

Maryland: The State Senate approved a same sex-marriage bill, which will likely soon be signed into law by the governor. According to the Huffington Post, the Senate’s only openly-gay member, Democrat Richard Madaleno, said during the debate “This bill is quite simple, it has two parts to it: It reiterates that no religious denomination will ever be required to recognize, perform or celebrate any marriage that is against its beliefs. At the same time, it provides full equality under the law for thousands of same-gender couples in our state, couples like Mark and myself.”

Montana: State Rep Kris Hansen’s bill to invalidate any local anti-discrimination ordinance that protects a class not included in the state’s anti-discrimination bill (read: LGBTs) has passed the House, sending it to the Senate. If passed, an initiative approved in Missoula that added “actual or perceived” sexual orientation and gender identity to protected classes in employment and housing would be struck down.

Hawaii: Gov. Neil Abercrombie signed the civil unions bill into law!

Kentucky: a bill providing more protections to gay bullying victims is headed to the full House for a vote.

On the federal level, the Huffington Post reported that “In a major policy reversal, the Obama administration said Wednesday it will no longer defend the constitutionality of a federal law banning recognition of same-sex marriage.” That means that the Defense Against Marriage Act will no longer have the backing of the federal government, since the government is basically saying marriage should be decided on a state by state basis (the way it always has been).

There is a lot changing every day in the national fight for LGBTQA rights. It;s exciting. Check here for more, and stay up to date!

Breaking News: House Votes to ban Planned Parenthood from Federal Funding.

BREAKING NEWS from Planned Parenthood!

Did you hear? The House voted to bar Planned Parenthood from federal funding. They cut funding for HIV tests, cancer screenings, birth control, and more, putting millions of women and families at risk. We can’t let it go unanswered. It’s time for you and me to stand with Planned Parenthood. Sign the open letter to the reps who voted for this bill — and to the senators who still have a chance to stop it.

http://www.ppaction.org/IStandWithPP

Let’s show FML that students want change: kickoff organizing meeting

FML meeting in 20 minutes! Castle Commons! 8-10 pm! Open forum! Brainstorming! Food?

This meeting is for anyone interested in the planning process of the Fred Lawrence Campaign.

Here’s the situation: Fred Lawrence is new, and he’s going to make changes. He’s shown an interest in students and has shown that he respects us and our opinions. It’s time to meet that trust by acting as good citizens and pulling the student bod together to find common solutions to thing we are worried about.

The Plan: We get as much of the student community as we can in one room. Together, we create a list of action items we want Pres. Fred to take. Then, we talk to our friends and get tons of signatures to back these proposals.

This Meeting: people interested in executing this campaign meet up and figure out how we are going to pull this off and organize to get it done.

For more information check out the fb event: http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=193847217310816

Victory: Brenda Will Remain in England and Get a Second Shot at Asylum

On January 29th I put up a post about Brenda Namigadde, a woman from Uganda who was living in England, and at risk of being deported back to her home country despite the persecution and death threats she would face there because of her sexual orientation. All Out, an LGBTQA global organization was fighting for her rights, and set up a petition to keep her from being deported.

Well now, thanks to global pressure and in part to everyone who signed the petition, Brenda has received help from the government and has a shot at survival.

Two weeks ago we reached out to you and shared the story of Brenda, a Ugandan lesbian fighting a deportation order in the UK, which would send her back to the homophobic violence she fled eight years before.(1) Now, thanks in large part to a massive international display of people power, Brenda has been released from the immigration removal center and is working with her legal team on a fresh asylum claim.(2) Together, we made a huge difference!

In less than a week, over 60,000 people from around the world signed a letter to the UK Home Secretary, we created an international news story, and scores marched in London. Next, hundreds of All Out members in the UK pressured their representatives in Parliament to sign on to a motion sponsored by Brenda’s MP, Andy Slaughter, asking the Immigration Minister to intervene in Brenda’s case. Over fifty MPs followed suit.(3)

After being literally pulled off the plane to Uganda only days ago after a last minute injunction that halted her deportation(4), a judge in the UK has just ruled that the evidence merits a new judicial review of Brenda’s asylum claim. She now has a new shot at freedom from persecution, a huge community of supporters, members of parliament, and legal advocates who are standing by her side. Brenda’s asylum case is finally getting the fair review it deserves.

We will continue to stand with Brenda, recognizing that her harrowing story is just one of many in a broader push for freedom, dignity and equality. We came together – straight, gay, lesbian, transgender and all that’s between and beyond – and it made a real difference. But we have a lot more work to do if we want to realize our vision of a world where everyone can live freely and be accepted for who they are.

Stay tuned for more updates, and thank you for supporting people of all genders and sexual orientations’ right to express themselves safely in the world.

SPace is the Future

Special elections are open!
Here you can vote for the Senators for East Quad, the Village, and the class of 2012.

While I encourage you to vote no matter who you’re voting for, I would like to present the case for Sarah Pace (aka “SPace”), who is running for the Village senator.

Sarah has demonstrated her ability to be a leader many times over, even though she is only a sophomore. She is extremely devoted to her a cappella group, Company B, and is responsible for all of their amazing, pun-tastic facebook events. She is an active member of theatre on campus, performing in many shows ranging from Hillel Theatre Group to seniors’ theses.

As anyone who has met her can testify, Sarah is outgoing and enthusiastic. She enjoys volunteering, bringing people together, and voicing her opinion on things when she feels something is not right.

Her goals according to her facebook campaign page are:

“As an energetic, involved, and organized Village resident I feel that there are many things I could bring to the position of Village Quad Senator. I am a sophomore who has resided in the Village for over a semester now, and you’ll be hard-pressed to find someone who loves it more than I do.
The conglomerate of students that live in the Village- Sophomores, Mid-Years, and Transfers- are a special group and deserve a representative who will voice their needs at Senate meetings. I will be that person.”

Sarah and I are in Criminal Law together. This past week our class acted out the trial from the “Bonfire of the Vanities,” a book we had recently read. Sarah was a member of the jury. Although someone else was appointed jury foreman, when Sarah noticed that fer fellow jurors were having trouble starting their deliberation, she jumped in, helping to structure the debate by taking a preliminary vote on each of the charges, and making sure to include an “abstain” option. These little details, which may seem irrelevant, ensured that the process was conducted in a fair and comfortable manner for all involved. Throughout the conversation she urged people to express their opinions and alleviated the tension. By the end, the former jury foreman volunteered to hand over the position to her, and she in turn, accepted.

This is just one small anecdote which illustrates Sarah’s capabilities and skill. For more, look at all of her endorsements. (She was also the only candidate to secure any endorsements).

These include:
* Kaos Kids
* Change Agency
* Innermost Parts
* Tympanium Euphorium
* Hillel Theatre Group
* Company B

So, if you want a good leader to represent you in the Student Union, vote Sarah Pace for Village senator. And if you don’t live in the Village, tell your friends who do to vote for her. And if you don’t have friends, then come write for Innermost Parts!

Munchies from Moody

Hey,

I’m in the sophomore C3 (common cause community…sappy I know). Basically what that entails is choosing a place to volunteer for February break and spending the rest of the year fundraising so you can get there.

We chose the Gay Men’s Health Crisis, which, despite its name, helps a wide variety of people who have HIV or AIDS, and also does outreach work to educate people about the risks of unsafe sex and this growing epidemic. The group is located in New York, my hometown.

SO, since the trip is just two weeks away, we are having our biggest fundraiser YET tonight, Munchies from Moody. A lot of really generous restaurants on Moody and Main Streets donated food to us (who knew places DID that?) and we will be selling it all to you for $3 a plate. We have food from Tango Mango, Margarita’s, Little India, Tuscan Grill, Waltham Pizza, Cappy’s, Baan Thai, Erawan of Siam, and the Ninety Nine.

So, if you want to eat good food, get a sense of the restaurants in the Waltham area, or even just, oh I don’t know…donate to charity, come on out to the ICC tonight at 6 pm and bring at least $3….come on time or the food might run out before you get a chance.

Note: Vegetarian options available. You know who I’m talking about.

Brandeis Pluralism Alliance Grant Applications Due This Sunday!

Many people on campus do not know what the Brandeis Pluralism Alliance is. I probably wouldn’t either if I weren’t on the steering committee, which reviews the grant applications and helps the groups who are selected.

That being said, I am, and so I would like to advertise a unique opportunity to you. (I promise I won’t use the word “resource” throughout this post.)

“The Brandeis Pluralism Alliance (BPA) grants funding and assistance to student and faculty initiated projects that address issues of identity, pluralism and unity.” Basically, it exists to help Brandeis stay true to its social justice roots, and to provide the means for people on campus to realize their pluralistic dreams. What does pluralism mean, you ask?

Well I looked it up on Urbandictionary and it said it had not been defined yet. So I tried dictionary.com but got a lot of philosophical definitions, like “a theory that there is more than one basic substance or principle.” Finally I looked up cultural pluralism, and it redirected me to multiculturalism. That makes more sense, since we hear it preached every day by our professors and peers here on campus. Multiculturalism, unity, bringing people from different paths of life together; that’s what pluralism is all about. And the BPA seeks to foster that.

Last year we granted funds for the What If? Speak In, A Night for Pakistan, Worker Appreciation Cafe, Diwali, Wong Fu Productions Fall College Tour Event, Mela, Famni Ki Li Ansamn/Families Reading Together, and the Justice League’s very own Campus Camp Wellstone activist training. For a complete list with descriptions visit the BPA’s hompage.

SO, the important thing to note is that if YOU have an idea for a project for this spring which could promote pluralism on campus, you should apply. Even if it’s just an idea, there’s no harm in trying, and if selected, the Steering Committee appoints a liason to help you put on your event/program. However, the deadline is FEBRUARY 6, this coming Sunday. So, if you’re at all interested, go to the grant application site and play around with it, see what you can come up with and submit.

Good luck!

BREAKING NEWS!

…It’s still a Snow Day

In fact, the Massachusetts Dept of Public Safety reports that

In order to protect public safety and facilitate clean-up from the February 1-2, 2011 winter storms, Governor Deval Patrick has directed that non-emergency employees who work in the Executive Branch of state government do not have to report to their workplaces on Wednesday, February 2, 2011.

Here are some tips on what to do in February storms, in terms of driving, roof collapse, loss of power and more.

Bonus: Does anyone know what the Reach-Throw-Go method refers to?

All Out Campaign- Help Brenda

All Out, an organization created to help LGBTQ members of communities across the globe, has recently taken on the plight of Brenda Namigadde, a Ugandan woman who escaped to England eight years ago for fear of her life, because of her sexual orientation. At the moment, Brenda is facing deportation back to Uganda, even in the wake of the brutal killing of David Kato, one of Uganda’s most prominent gay activists, on the 26th.

All out provides information of the abuses to which members of the LGBTQ are subjected to on a daily basis, even protected under the law. “In 76 countries around the world being LGBT is a criminal offense. In 10, it is legal grounds for execution or life imprisonment. Even in countries where LGBT people have secured basic rights, many LGBT people are denied the opportunity to live full and equal lives and endure daily homophobia.”

All Out has started an online petition which they say has been signed by 50,000 people from over 160 countries, requesting Brenda be granted asylum so she can remain in England. Perhaps as a result of the political efforts to keep Brenda safe, a UK High Court judge granted a temporary injunction in Brenda’s case yesterday, meaning the decision of whether to grant her asylum or to deport her will be postponed.

Please halt the impending deportation of Brenda Namigadde (Case Ref # 1166867), a Ugandan lesbian scheduled for removal. Brenda fled Uganda eight years ago because of persecution for her sexuality, but if forced to return Brenda fears that she’ll be, “tortured, or killed … they’ve put people like me to death there.” The fact that a virulently anti-gay, high ranking member of the Ugandan government has taken note of her case means that Brenda faces clear and present danger if she is returned to Uganda.

Last July you told the press, “We have already promised to stop the removal of asylum seekers who have had to leave particular countries because their sexual orientation or gender identification puts them at proven risk of imprisonment, torture or execution.” Please use all of the powers at your disposal to act now to halt Brenda’s deportation.

I urge you all to read and sign this petition, since it is truly a cause that spans the political spectrum. No matter where a person lives s/h/ze should not be punished for his/her/zer sexual practices if they are not hurting anyone. If we become aware of countries which practice this kind of discrimination it is our duty to protect those who have risked persecution by admitting their identities and have asked us for help.

Note: Thanks to Brandeis’ TRISK for sending out information about this human rights abuse and providing the links upon which the majority of this post is based.

Activist Movie of the Month is…Erin Brockovich!

So last month’s activist movie was the King’s Speech.
This month’s is an oldie but a goodie…Erin Brockovich.
It’s been playing on TV a lot lately, so I had the chance to rewatch it.

Erin Brockovich (Julia Roberts) is a woman who has three children but not much else going for her. She finds work at her lawyer’s law firm and grows intrigued when she stumbles across a file about a real case involving the Pacific Gas& Electric Company. She does some investigative work and, lo and behold, the company has been polluting the ground around its factory with toxic chemicals for years, and has even lied to the residents’ faces about the danger these chemicals present.

Erin exposes their lies, reveals to the community that the pollution is the cause of many of their health problems, and convinces them to sue PG&E. Ultimately, PG&E settles, those who have suffered are compensated, and everyone goes home happy, more or less.

Brockovich is a great movie which straddles many different genres: drama, legal thriller, biography and even romance. It is funny, clever, and inspirational. It’s the classic little-guy versus the big-bad-corporation flick. But most importantly, it’s based on a true story.

In 1996, PG&E settled for $333 million, which remains the largest settlement ever awarded in a direct-action lawsuit in the history of the United States to this day. And Erin is now the president of her own consulting firm, Brockovich Research and Consulting. You can look her up here.

Much like A Civil Action and other stories of lawyers helping innocent victims of negligent, or worse, chemical companies, Erin Brockovich shows that lawyers CAN do good and that pollution is bad. Real bad. Two good lessons to keep in mind!

New ‘Quiet Cars’ Aboard Fitchburg and Franklin Commuter Rails

Hate when people next to you are talking on their phones or conversing loudly with their fellow passengers? If so, and you live in Massachusetts, you’re in luck.

The MBTA, Massachusett’s public transport system, started a new pilot program in which there will be a designated ‘Quiet Car’ on the Franklin and Fitchburg commuter rail lines during peak times. This program, launched in response to results of a recent survey of customers, began on January 3rd and will run until April 3rd, just 90 days. Afterwards, the MBTA will decide whether to continue the initiative or not on a regular basis.

On the MBTA’s homepage information about the Quiet Car is provided, such as the fact that the Quiet Car will be the car located closest to the locomotive. Tips as to what is appropriate and what is not on the designated Quiet Cars are offered as well. “[On the Quiet Car] Customers are asked to: refrain from cell phone use; keep pagers, cell phones, laptop and PDA sounds off; and speak quietly. Conductors will, of course, lift the quiet car restriction in times of disruption or severe overcrowding.”

I feel like this is a good experiment for the MBTA to try, and I’m happy they’re responding to their clients’ concerns. Although I don’t think I would prefer to sit in a Quiet Car, everyone has had the experience of someone close to them talking obnoxiously loud, and so this is a nice alternative for those who are especially sensitive about volume. In addition, it can make those long, awkward train rides with semi-acquaintances less so, since now you have a REASON not to talk.

Don’t worry though, if you need to talk while on the Quiet Car you can; whispering is aloud as long as it’s brief.

State of the Union

So, I didn’t watch the State of the Union. Lame, I know. My mom told me it was good but nothing amazing, if that helps excuse me. Hopefully someone who did watch it will post reactions, but for now, I wanted to post an e-mail I received from my good friend Barack.

This e-mail is a rousing summary of what I can only believe was his SOTU address, and it is actually pretty moving. He talks about all the progress we’ve made in the past year, about his decisive and tangible plans for the future (80% clean electricity by 2035, creating new jobs by renovating roadways and technology). Most of all, he emphasizes the part we all have to play in helping out nation grow and ‘rise up’; that these goals are not attainable unless we all work together. It is quite an obvious plea to the Republicans and Democrats in Congress to work together. And I like that he sounds like he’s asking rather than telling.

So whether or not you support Obama or think he’s on the right track, doing what’s best for the nation, read the letter below and tell me, dawgone it, doesn’t this letter make you feel hopeful on the inside?

Tonight I addressed the American people on the future we face together.

Though at times it may seem uncertain, it is a future that is ours to decide, ours to define, and ours to win.

I know we will.

Because, after the worst recession in decades, we see an economy growing again.

Because, after two years of job losses, we’ve added private-sector jobs for 12 straight months — more than 1 million in all.

Because, time after time, when our resolve has been tested, we, as a nation, have always prevailed.

Overcoming the challenges we face today requires a new vision for tomorrow. We will move forward together, or not at all — for the challenges we face are bigger than party, and bigger than politics.

Yet the story of America is this: We do big things.

Just as the progress of the past two years would not have been possible without your hard work, we will not realize the agenda I described tonight without you.

So as we continue this great mission together, and we set out the plans for how far we can go, I need to know that you are ready to work side by side with me once more.

Will you stand with me as we strive to win the future?

The last two years have been marked by unprecedented reforms and historic progress.

But there is much more work to do.

Moving forward, America’s economic growth at home is inextricably connected to our competitiveness in the global community. The more products American companies can export, the more jobs we can create at home.

This vision for the future starts with innovation, tapping into the creativity and imagination of our people to create the jobs and industries of the future. Instead of subsidizing yesterday’s energy, let’s invest in tomorrow’s. It’s why I challenged Congress to join me in setting a new goal: By 2035, 80 percent of America’s electricity will come from clean energy sources.

It means leading the world in educating our kids, giving each of our children the best opportunity to succeed and preparing them for the jobs of tomorrow.

We must build a 21st century infrastructure for our country, putting millions of Americans to work rebuilding roads and bridges and expanding high-speed Internet and high-speed rail.

We must reform government, making it leaner, smarter, and more transparent.

And we must take responsibility for our shared debt, reining in our long-term deficit so we can afford the investments we need to move our country forward.

That is the vision I laid out tonight. That is how we win the future.

It is going to take a lot of work — but I have no doubt we are up to the task.

Half a century ago, when the Soviets beat us into space with the launch of a satellite called Sputnik, we had no idea how we’d beat them to the moon. The science wasn’t there yet. NASA didn’t even exist.

But after investing in better research and education, we didn’t just surpass the Soviets. We unleashed a wave of innovation that created new industries and millions of new jobs.

This is our generation’s Sputnik moment.

Please stand together with me:

http://my.barackobama.com/WintheFuture

It is because of each of you, who define the will of a people, that the state of our union is strong in the face of tough challenges. You are the reason our future is still bright in the face of deep uncertainty.

And you are the reason I believe that future is ours to win.

Thank you,

Barack

Future of Comp-Sci Technology Poses Threat to Society As We Know It

There are currently robots being made by professors from MIT and the like, which will resemble humans and will be programmed to respond to humans in normal, societally-appropriate ways. Some people are excited. Others are scared.

It’s all discussed in an article from The Chronicle. The author interviewed Professor Sherry Turkle, who is involved with cutting-edge computer science technology, but who devoted much of the the last decade to writing books about the possible threats they pose to humans forming and maintaining relationships, and warnings of what may come from our overdependence on technology.

David Levy on the other hand, another expert in the field and author of Love and Sex with Robots argues the merits of having robot-humanoid companions, such as providing socially inept people with relationships they may never have otherwise. He proposes that by the year 2050 many people will be hiring skilled, trained robots to babysit their kids, and some might even choose to marry robots.

I’m baffled by the progress scientists have made in this field, since I had no idea that humanoid robots were in the works, let alone might be commonplace 40 years from now. This article (courtesy of Eunju Namkung) provides both the pros and the cons that come with this technology, though it leans towards Turkle’s point of view, emphasizing the dangers over the benefits. I find myself agreeing with Turkle that in a world in which people rely on technology for emotional support or companionship, society will slowly break down. Already human connections are being severed due to the availability and accessibility of electronic devices (although they present numerous socializing opportunities too of course), and so with the opportunity to interact with a pre-programmed machine which will answer the way you want it to and to which you owe nothing, this degenerative state can only worsen.

I’m not a Luddite, but I don’t think electronics should replace the potential for human interaction, which it would do were scientists to program machines to resemble and simulate humans.

Oh, and here’s a Whitest Kids U Know video which demonstrates the dangers robots present.

Gun sales up in wake of Giffords Shooting

Sales of handguns have risen in the wake of the shooting of Congresswoman Giffords and nineteen other innocent bystanders.

In a brief entitled “Pistol Sales Surge After Shooting,” Bloomberg News reported that the increase in sales is a result of the incident, and that gun dealers attribute it to people’s fear that Congress might tighten gun restrictions.

An Arizona gun shop owner is quoted as saying in the brief, “When something like this happens people get worried that the government is going to ban stuff.” I’ve heard the argument that people need to own guns in order to stop crimes like this from happening, and I understand it although I don’t put much stock in it. Having more guns in circulation only makes the world more dangerous. An overly simplistic proof of this is that deaths by shooting have increased exponentially in relation to the number of firearms in circulation. We don’t allow handguns on college campuses, or any weapons for that matter, because we believe that the fewer guns around, the better.

However, the point is that people are specifically buying more handguns! What makes someone go out and buy something they think the government will soon make illegal? If our elected officials think that handguns are among the most dangerous and unnecessary weapons (unless you’re using them for nefarious purposes, in which case they’re very effective) then why not try to convince them otherwise, or at least look into their reasoning? When there’s a devastating fire, do people buy more matches?

61st Speaker of the House to take office today

John Boehner, the 61-year old representative from Ohio, will be sworn in today at 12 pm as the 61st Speaker of the House, when the 112th Congress convenes today. He was unanimously elected for the position by the House Republicans on Novermber 17th, which happened to be his 61st birthday. (Watch the Opening Session of the 112th Congress live now, on facebook!)

Boehner has a long history in Congress. He has served as a representative for ten terms and as the Republican House Leader (aka Minority Leader) for two. He served as the Majority House Leader from January 2006-2007. He chaired the House Committee on Education and Workforce from 2001 until 2006.

He grew up in Ohio with his eleven brothers and sisters and his campaign page paints him as a family man. In Congress, most of his work has been targeted at reforming Congressional rules in order to cut down on excess spending, such as earmark expenditures.

Wikipedia provides fun facts about the history of the Speaker of the House title. If Boehner is officially elected by the House today, as is expected, he would: “be the first Speaker from Ohio since fellow Republicans Nicholas Longworth (1925 to 1931) and J. Warren Keifer (1881 to 1883); be the first Speaker who has served both as majority and minority floor leader for his party since Texas Democrat Sam Rayburn.”

For more information, visit his official government page at http://johnboehner.house.gov/

Watch the Opening Session of the 112th Congress live now, on facebook!

Freedom for the price of a kidney

Gladys and Jamie Scott, two sisters who have been serving life sentences in jail for 16 years now after their 1994 conviction on charges of armed robbery, are being released on “an indefinite suspension of sentence,” which is “tantamount to early parole,” announced Mississippi Governor Haley Barbour on Dec. 29. However, the special condition placed on their release is calling attention from all sides of the political spectrum: Gladys will have to donate a kidney to Jamie, her older sister.

Jamie requires dialysis treatment, an expense which costs the state of Mississippi almost $200,000 a year, and is in need of a kidney transplant. AOL news reported that Chokwe Mumuba, the sisters’ attorney, admitted that the condition “does sound a little barbaric,” but that Gladys was the one to initiate the voluntary offer, when she included it in her appeal for early parole. Neither has complained about the conditions of their parole, although others have criticized the agreement.

Governor Barbour released a statement about his decision, reproduced here from a WCBI article.

“To date, the sisters have served 16 years of their sentences and are eligible for parole in 2014. Jamie Scott requires regular dialysis, and her sister has offered to donate one of her kidneys to her. The Mississippi Department of Corrections believes the sisters no longer pose a threat to society. Their incarceration is no longer necessary for public safety or rehabilitation, and Jamie Scott’s medical condition creates a substantial cost to the State of Mississippi.

The Mississippi Parole Board reviewed the sisters’ request for a pardon and recommended that I neither pardon them, nor commute their sentence. At my request, the Parole Board subsequently reviewed whether the sisters should be granted an indefinite suspension of sentence, which is tantamount to parole, and have concurred with my decision to suspend their sentences indefinitely.

Gladys Scott’s release is conditioned on her donating one of her kidneys to her sister, a procedure which should be scheduled with urgency.”

Arthur Caplan, the director of the Center for Bioethics at the University of Pennsylvania, said in an interview with MSNBC that it was the first time he had ever encountered this type of situation. “When you volunteer to give a kidney, you’re usually free and clear to change your mind right up to the last minute,” he said, expressing doubts as to the ethics of the deal.

Chief of organ transplants at Hackensack University Medical Center in New Jersey and the chair of the ethics committee at the United Network for Organ Sharing, Dr. Michael Shapiro, told MSNBC that he does not think the organ transplant should be a condition of release either. “The simple answer to that is you can’t pay someone for a kidney,” Shapiro said. “If the governor is trading someone 20 years for a kidney, that might potentially violate the valuable consideration clause,” which prohibits people from trading organs for other items, namely freedom, in this case.

The whole other side of this issue is that the women’s trial and the severity of their sentences has been contested for a long time by the ACLU and other civil rights groups, who have posited that the women’s African-American heritage contributed to their conviction in the state of Mississippi. The total money they were believed to have stolen was $11, which seems wildly out of proportion with the double life sentences they each received.

However, I think the question of their alleged guilt, or of whether they deserve the sentences they got, is irrelevant to the question of whether the terms of their release are ethical and/or constitutional. So, tackling the latter question, no, I have serious qualms about a system whereby people can be rewarded by the government for giving up body parts. Parole is supposed to be granted on whether the defendants have reformed and/or present a threat to society. Sometimes medical problems are taken into account, such as in the case of a defendant who is expected to pass away soon and would like to spend his last months with his family, but never before in the case of a healthy patient, as is being done for Gladys. Gladys could surely donate the kidney voluntarily but still remain in prison, so there is no connection between her appeal and her sister’s health. Her decision and that of the state should be decided on completely different bases, and should not be dependent on one another. In addition, practical questions have surfaced such as what will happen if the doctors do not think their kidneys will be a match (beyond matching blood type which they have already done), or if Jamie chooses not to accept the kidney. The governor has brushed these questions off, saying they will be decided as they come up.

Another important question is whether the state should take into account the cost of upkeep its prisoners require when deciding parole. It seems a very flawed system if unhealthy criminals would be released because they are costing the state too much money to take care of them. No one has said that this was the basis for the governor’s decision, but he did reveal the monthly cost of Jamie’s treatment in relation to their release. I would prefer if the state were to treat criminals as need-blind (I wish Brandeis would too), since the government shouldn’t free them simply because of economic constraints.