A ceasefire for the "War on Drugs"
By Dan Keyserling | July 27, 2006WE WERE somewhere around the 1970s on the edge of the Acid Wave when the drug war began to take hold.
WE WERE somewhere around the 1970s on the edge of the Acid Wave when the drug war began to take hold.
ON WEDNESDAY, President Bush vetoed a bill that would have allowed federal funding for embryonic stem cell research, claiming that "murder" is wrong and that the lives of embryos should not be sacrificed for a chance to develop life-saving cures for a number of deadly diseases.
THE BUSH Administration may be trigger happy in its foreign policy, but it cravenly shrinks away from scientific progress. On July 19, President George W.
AS I sat at the reception desk answering incoming calls and recording the views of constituents for Sen.
THE ALMOST uncontrollable smirk plastered on President Bush's face as he stood before a Republican audience last week was roughly akin to that of a man who has been wasting his money on the lottery for years and has finally gotten his hands on a winning ticket.
WITH THE summer well under way, I can't help but think back to the summer before my first year. Amid all the nervousness and excitement a few things get lost, namely students' volunteer efforts.
The Supreme Court is in the midst of one of the hottest environmental debates now ongoing -- and sadly, it's only going to get hotter.
UNIVERSITY President John T. Casteen, III is upset about the Living Wage Campaign, and thinks he can lie his way out of the issue. That conduct isn't relevant to the Campaign except inasmuch as it has to do with securing the future of the University and its most neglected members, as numerous economic studies have shown a "living wage" would (theoretical economic objections notwithstanding). But a university president undermines his own position as an educator when his example teaches that deception and slander are okay as long as they serve your self-interest. That is the lesson of his recent open letter in the Alumni Association's University of Virginia Magazine, where he makes so many untrue claims that there's simply not space to fully go into them here.
FEW WORDS in poltics today are bandied about with less meaning than "fiscal responsibility." The catchphrase has been used to justify just about everything from deficit spending to drastic cuts in social services.
This past week the United States Senate came within one vote of approving the 28 amendment to the Constitution and passing it along for state ratification.
ON SEPT. 20, 2001 President Bush declared, "Afghanistan's people have been brutalized -- many are starving and many have fled.
BECAUSE of the great promise of equal opportunity, immigrants have flooded our shores and borders ever since the ink dried on the Constitution.
WHEN IT comes to scholarships, all the recent buzz has been about the need-based AccessUVA program.
PERHAPS no force in recent history has been as revolutionary as the Internet. From "Snakes on a Plane" to Chuck Norris, we can thank the Internet for many of the redeeming aspects of our culture.
Imagine a supermarket where every customer pays a different price for food. Customers who are better cooks pay less than customers who are lousy ones, and customers who earn more pay more than customers who earn less.
EDMUND Burke once commented, "The people never give up their liberties but under some delusion. " Instead of worrying about the pressing issues of the state, the Virginia General Assembly wiled away the hours of session talking about the all- important marriage amendment referendum being put on the ballot in the fall.
COLUMNISTS have a tendency to end up looking like weathermen when they make big predictions: caught in the rain without an umbrella.
THE IDEA of free speech and expression is one of the most cherished and controversial freedoms we share as Americans.
TWO contradicting and intriguing phenomena came to my attention last week. The first was the dedication of a monument to the First Amendment on the Downtown Mall.
A ROOM full of estrogen. Political estrogen. Sounds like a good time, right? This was the case last week at a book discussion and signing sponsored by the Center for Politics' 2006 National Symposium Series on Women and Politics.