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    • What Young America learned about Islam

      What Young America learned about Islam0

      Currently much controversy surrounds Islam and its compatibility, or lack thereof, with the Western world. To some, Islam is a religion of peace whose adherents desire nothing more than the way of life enjoyed by others in Western nations. To others, Islam has a strong undercurrent of violence and fundamentally conflicts with Western values of

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    • Is Social Media Tearing Us Apart?

      Is Social Media Tearing Us Apart?0

      It feels like 1968. How do I know this? Because everyone is saying so. (If you don’t believe me, look at this.) To be fair, there is grounds for the comparison. In 1968, the country was torn by urban violence, civil unrest, and (domestic) terrorism. College campuses were hotbeds and protesting was all the rage.

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    • Chicago: 75% of Murdered Are Black, 71% of Murderers Are Black

      Chicago: 75% of Murdered Are Black, 71% of Murderers Are Black0

      After hearing about a woman attempting to start a sex-strike in Chicago, ultimately based on the Ancient Greek play Lysistrata, to end the gun violence, we thought it would be good to dig into the numbers a little bit. We wish we hadn’t.  Simply put, Chicago has a massive Black-on-Black murder problem. All of the

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    • People Should Be Able to Calmly Discuss Politics

      People Should Be Able to Calmly Discuss Politics0

      There’s a popular pie chart that’s been going around social media for some time now. It furthers the belief that arguing about politics is always and everywhere a futile endeavor: I agree that most political arguments today—both on and off social media—quickly devolve into angry name-calling. But I think this phenomenon says something more about

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    • What the ancient Greeks would have thought of Donald Trump

      What the ancient Greeks would have thought of Donald Trump0

      You know them already, but you probably don’t have a name for them let alone an understanding of what drives them and why. They are called cholerics. They are one of the four temperaments identified in the proto-psychology of the ancient Greeks. And they have an innate sense of self-worth and ambition that drives them

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    • Why we need to teach political philosophy in schools

      Why we need to teach political philosophy in schools0

      What is the spectre haunting Europe today? It’s simple. The thing that truly dogs us, that really drags at our heels, is ignorance. Ignorance of the fundamental ideas at the heart of politics. Ignorance of the key terms of political argument: liberty, equality, power, justice, and so on. Ignorance of the subject matter of political

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