Anti-media rhetoric destroying journalism credibility ahead of midterms
There is no question that next week’s midterm elections will arguably be some of the most important in modern history.
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There is no question that next week’s midterm elections will arguably be some of the most important in modern history.
My name is Katie and I am one of the most liberal people you may ever meet. I am also a devout Christian.
Let’s face it. Talking about gender and sex is uncomfortable and confusing.
It is a tough time to be a Democrat. And I do not wish to exasperate the current state of progressive pessimism. But much like Al Gore, I am compelled to share a rather inconvenient truth: President Donald Trump is likely to be reelected in 2020.
A Washington Post journalist went missing nearly a month ago, yet the mystery surrounding his disappearance continues.
President Donald Trump has had mixed public reactions regarding Washington Post journalist Jamal Khashoggi’s disappearance.
Brett Kavanaugh’s tumultuous confirmation saga came to an end on Oct. 6 when the U.S. Senate approved his appointment to the Supreme Court. Despite credible accusations of sexual assault levied against him by Christine Blasey Ford, Republican leaders forged ahead with his nomination process. In the end, their determination paid off. But if Kavanaugh’s ascension to the nation’s highest court surprised you, it shouldn’t; we live in a new era of politics that has expunged the old rules of political engagement.
Bill Cosby, the man once considered “America’s Dad,” was sentenced to 3–10 years in prison this month for drugging and sexually assaulting a handful of women at his home some 50 years ago — or did he?
Students should be able to make it through college without being targeted for who they are.
SAFE members decorate the door of their meeting room in the CUB with kind and uplifting words in response to a vandal's hateful words last week.
Life with Tourette’s syndrome is difficult enough without offensive headlines.
On the heels of sexual assault accusations against Brett Kavanaugh last week, it appears that Congress is no closer to appointing a Supreme Court justice to fill the seat left vacant by Justice Anthony Kennedy.
Democrats and Republicans blame one another for the nation's problems, but they are the ones to blame for the disconnect between themselves and Americans.
Yahoo on Sept. 11 released a video on Facebook that advertised the opening of the new Cortlandt Street Subway Station at the World Trade Center in New York City. At 14 seconds into the video, it shows an image accredited to Getty Images, with the caption “Under rubble when the twin towers collapsed in 2011” — which any American knows is false, showing the true definition of media blindness in this generation. In under one hour this video had 185,000 views and only 36 comments, with only six viewers realizing Yahoo’s mistake.
Bill Rollin is a Communication/Journalism student at Shippensburg University.
Some will say the behaviors of a professional player should never exceed the level of fury that American professional tennis player Serena Williams displayed on the courts at the U.S. Open final last week.