From the American election to authoritarian crackdowns in Hong Kong, Hannah Arendt’s thought is more relevant than ever, writes PhD student Tim Pit Hok Yau.
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“The Student Demographic Survey has so much potential, as long as we can unlock it. This idea has so much promise, so long as we can release the data for the entire community to benefit from,” writes Sarina Virani.
“Recovering from intense academic work and stress is rather difficult, if not impossible, while obligated to work on that exact intense academic work and under that exact stress. Because that obligation continues, reading break is not a time where students can truly take care of themselves,” writes Marie Erikson.
“Just as housing prices anger Canadians across the country, immigration has become more contentious through its inherent link to the housing crisis,” writes Nichols.
The AMS is hosting a Ubyssey-moderated Vancouver-Point Grey candidates debate today, Friday, October 18, from 6–7 p.m. in the Norm Theatre in the Life Building.
Was the fact that I now had some seniority in university overwhelming, daunting, and unforeseeable? One hundred percent, writes Ava Cervas.
Whether or not you consider it a good thing or not (I think it’s not), luck and the actions of people who aren’t BC Conservatives have had more to do with their rise than anything Rustad and company have done, writes Michael Grindlay.
The truth is, every single person in BC is in a relationship whether they may or not know about. That relationship happens to be with their MLA, writes Amardeep Bains.
Learning a bit of a new language out of interest should certainly be encouraged, yet this may not provide the skills that the Faculty of Arts aims to teach, writes Marie Erikson.
"The university dilemma has arisen because, as a society, we’ve molded university into a place where study is a means to an end. In the case of Bowdoin, it is even worse - a business model. That was never, and should never, have been the project of the university," writes Sunny Das.
Campus colours connect you with an in-group despite not knowing each other. This visual identification breaks down the toughest barriers to forming social connections by showing commonality, writes Kev Heieis.
We hate clichés. How cliché!
“Your life doesn’t follow a fictional plot line,” writes Azquet Gomez Merlo.
Simply improving public opinion of bisexuals might not be the answer to reducing biphobia. It is a question of ontology: how we think up the categories we use to classify ourselves and how these classifications can be exclusionary to those who live on the margins of them, writes Elodie Bailey Vaudandaine.
I know it’s hard not to compare yourself to others, especially when they’re your friends. But here is something important to keep in mind: appearances can be deceiving.