Cornell Insider

a blog by the writers of the Cornell Review

Archive for November, 2009

S.A. increases Student Activity Fee by 6%

Posted by jdfarragut on November 30, 2009

In a press release today, the Student Assembly announced that the SAF will be increased from $204 this year to $216 for the 2010-2011 academic year.

Given that inflation is approximately zero right now, we should all expect student group services to be 6% better next year.

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Monday Reading Madness #27

Posted by Cornell Insider Staff on November 30, 2009

- A Cornell professor examines how race, income, and gender shape religion’s effect on American voters.

- Every college seems to be banking on “upping enrollment.”

- Charles Krauthammer on why the health care bill “should be immolated, its ashes scattered over the Senate swimming pool.”

- During the annual turkey pardon, Obama “saved or created 4 turkeys.”

- Research finds that early undergraduate specialization can be beneficial, but students who pick their majors early are also more likely to change majors before graduating.

- An interesting story on a GW freshman who entered college after spending ten years in prison.

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Holiday political smörgåsbord

Posted by Oliver Renick on November 28, 2009

I’ll be too stuffed, but mostly just too lazy, to post something throughout the next couple of days, so here is a developing list of things to read throughout this weekend, (mostly holiday-themed).  Happy Thanksgiving from the Cornell Insider and the Cornell Review!

George Will: Scroogeonomics:

At least the Christmas stimulus strengthens the economy, right? Wrong, says Waldfogel. If all spending justified itself, we would pay people to dig holes and then refill them — or build bridges to unpopulated Alaskan islands. Spending is good if the purchaser, or the recipient of a gift, values the commodity more than he does the money it costs. Otherwise, there is a subtraction from society’s store of value.

Christmas etiquette involves composing one’s face to feign pleasure when unwrapping an unwelcome windfall — say, a sweater of an appalling color and a style that went out of style in the 1940s — and murmuring “Oh, you shouldn’t have” without revealing that you mean exactly that. Price of the sweater: $50. Value to recipient: $0. Actually, less than zero, considering the psychological cost of the forced smile.

Rich Lowry (who was recently in town): Pilgrims Planted the Seeds of America’s Abundance:

As our Founding Fathers knew in their bones, this represented the merest beginning, situated as we were in what George Washington called “a most enviable condition.”

Paul Johnson writes in his magisterial “A History of the American People” that 300 years after Winthrop’s arrival, “the United States was producing, with only 6 percent of the world’s population and land area, 70 percent of its oil, nearly 50 percent of its copper, 38 percent of its lead, 42 percent each of its zinc and coal, and 46 percent of its iron — in addition to 54 percent of its cotton and 62 percent of its corn.”

Posted in Miscellaneous | 1 Comment »

Fudging the Global Warming Data

Posted by Cornell Insider Staff on November 26, 2009

Several weeks ago, someone managed to hack a server of the Climate Research Unit at the University of East Anglia and obtain a number of emails exchanged between prominent climatologists. Many of the emails contained requests to delete data, suppress the publication of certain papers that argued against global warming, and pressure academic journals with which the climatologists did not agree. Basically, the emails are evidence that supporters of the theory that man is responsible for global warming have been fudging data because recent data do not support their theories.

While many global warming skeptics will make a big deal of this and use it as evidence against global warming, I tend to agree with Robin Hanson that this says more about academia than global warming. As Hanson and others have pointed out, while academia has an “overly idealistic public image,” academics are people, too. When competing groups of people have vested interests in defending their opinions- especially in the highly publicized climate debate- it is no surprise that people will go to great lengths to ensure success for their side.

Posted in Miscellaneous, National News | Tagged: , | 5 Comments »

SNL ready for more fact-checking?

Posted by Oliver Renick on November 25, 2009

The last time Saturday Night Live ran a funny skit satirizing the Obama administration, MSNBC reacted by asking for Ray Finkle, and a clean pair of shorts.  It will be interesting to see how the left reacts to the most recent SNL parody about the President’s visit to China, where he ‘made love’ with his counterpart there.  Here it is:

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Staring into ‘the Sun’

Posted by Oliver Renick on November 24, 2009

Today’s editorial in the Daily Stun (no typo) about freedom of speech at Cornell conveys that the editors are on the fence.  It’s as if they almost want to make the right call, but just can’t quite bring themselves to it.  Sure, it’s nice that they remind us how they supported keeping ‘Cornell’ in the Cornell Review‘s name, but this isn’t exactly avant-garde.  With the exception of an extremely vocal and demonstrative minority, everyone up to Skorton knows that removing the ‘Cornell’ title is absurd, baseless, and inhibits freedom of speech and the presses.  For acknowledging this the Stun scores an easy free throw – one point.

But when it’s time to really step out from their comfort zone, to side with a religious (read: Christian) group on an equally obvious call, they fail miserably.  Chi Alpha’s decision to ask their homosexual leader to step down is completely legitimate and in line with everything that is University, religious freedom, non-discriminatory, free expression, speech, love, you name it.

The situation is simple: there is a religious fellowship group on campus / the group elects a leader, expects them to be a beacon of said religion’s beliefs / the leader openly fails to follow one of those beliefs / group decides leader is not shining beacon / leader is asked to step down.  Where is there discrimination or bias? Traditional Christian doctrine states that homosexuality is sodomy and forbidden.  One may find this facet of the religion archaic and absurd, or timeless and logical.  One may argue that this is not even traditional doctrine.  Not the point.  The point is that upon announcing that he is a homosexual, and lives his life in line with that preference, he publicly contradicts one aspect of the group’s doctrine he agreed to uphold.

If Chris Donohoe was subject to a barrage of slurs and ‘hate speech’ from Chi Alpha upon coming out, there would be substantial room for criticism and controversy.  If Donohoe was a minority and denied his position based on race, then there would be both a breach of the group’s integrity and an episode of prejudice.  If either of these were the case, then maybe Cornell’s unfortunately over-broad and vague campus code would warrant backlash against the student group.  Fortunately, there has been no such discrimination by the Christian fellowship.

Allow me to present a few analogies to make this overwhelmingly simple situation even more fundamental.

Another Christian doctrine is to not covet one neighbor’s wife and commit adultery, or to lust and satisfy one’s immoral sexual desires.  If Donohoe were married, and it became public information that he was cheating on his wife through various confidential orgies, he would be asked to step down.  Would there be a campus-wide initiative to protect ‘discrimination’ against the sexually promiscuous and orgy-inclined community? Probably not, but you never know.

Another situation: the leader of a Muslim Fellowship on campus is publicly known to be a drunkard, party animal, and wayward alcoholic – characteristics incompatible with someone who volunteers to be a beacon of Islamic thought.  If such a person would be asked to step down, I can confidently say that the Daily Stun would not dedicate its editorial page to railing against the rampant discriminatory speech at Cornell that threatens the safety of Cornell’s drinking community.

The fact is that an organization removed its leader because the leader didn’t adhere to that organization’s principles.  It is this same train of thought that causes politicians to resign, athletes to go on suspension, presidents to be impeached, and, surprise, religious leaders to step down from their roles.  Yet certain students, and now our flagship newspaper, have erupted into a violent storm, flinging ‘discrimination’ accusations every which way.

One last hypothetical situation – a particularly radical one.  Let’s say the leader of the LGBTQ club had a dramatic transformation of ideology and decided he no longer supported gay marriage, and was a straight man.  My assumption is that if he tried to retain his position, he would be removed.  Would the Stun’s editorial pages be littered for months with diatribes against discrimination towards heterosexuals? Doubtful…probably not…no.

Chi Alpha retains every right to have members, choose members, choose leaders, and remove leaders.

So if the editors at the Cornell Daily Sun so adamantly carry the torch of this country’s citizens’ inalienable right to free speech, religion, and assembly, then why do they manipulate the Chi Alpha debacle into a discrimination case?  Judging by today’s editorial it’s to garner support for the implementation of an inherently unconstitutional campus code bylaw which would forbid ‘discriminatory speech.’

But since there is clearly no discrimination in Chi Alpha’s choice, then – to speak mathematically – there is an irremovable discontinuity in the editorial’s logic.  A hole, if you will, that can’t be filled.  The writers have no foundation upon which to levy their attacks against Chi Alpha or their support for our school’s flawed ‘speech codes.’  They need the Chi Alpha situation to be one of discrimination in order to legitimize the speech code clause.

So their qualm here must be with something deeper – they apparently support freedom of speech and expression, but only under particular circumstances.  Their real objection then must be with the tenants of a particular religion or student group that chooses to embrace those beliefs that clash with the campus status quo.  The editorial says at one point that Chi Alpha “excluded and silenced [student] voices based on [the organization’s] beliefs.”  The editors are clearly aware that Donohoe was removed because of his conflicting beliefs, yet oppose the removal.

In essence, they oppose a religious group upholding their religious beliefs.  What the writers really find objectionable and regressive, then, are the specific beliefs of the religion.  They believe student groups acting on such beliefs are contradictory to Cornell’s mission and are deserving of castigation.  If there is not an infringement on freedom of speech by the Student Assembly attempting to inhibit Chi Alpha’s presence on campus, then there is an infringement on the freedom to exercise one’s religion.

Such decisions are not for any student or newspaper to meddle in.

Posted in Campus Insiders | Tagged: , | 2 Comments »

ObaMao a Hit in China

Posted by Lucia Rafanelli on November 23, 2009

According to the Associated Press and the Houston Chronicle, President Obama’s recent visit to China  prompted a controversy over certain lines of Obama memorabilia sold there.

Liu Minjie owns a shop in China that (once) sold T-shirts and other merchandise decorated with a likeness of Obama manipulated to look like Mao Zedong, the architect of the PRC’s infamous Cultural Revolution. These items were wildly popular, but, one day, Minjie suddenly stopped selling them. Although he refused to answer a reporter’s questions about the incident, nearby shop workers claim that Beijing Industry and Commerce Administration officials ordered them to stop selling Obama merchandise, especially the so-called “ObaMao” items.

However, one Beijing store that specializes in political merchandise, was allowed to continue selling an Obama Superman action figure.

This double standard is almost as intriguing- though perhaps not as disturbing- as the great popularity the ObaMao products were met with in the Chinese marketplace. (Although, some Industry and Commerce Administration said shop owners were never prohibited from selling Obama products.)

The development of such popular Obama products is perhaps not a surprising result of the positive reception Obama has received in several places around the world. The controversial nature of the ObaMao items, though, along with the alleged response of Chinese authorities, is indicative of China’s continuing struggle to adapt its society and political attitudes to a more modern world, and to balance the influences of its socialist history with contemporary reform movements.

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Monday Reading Madness #26

Posted by Cornell Insider Staff on November 22, 2009

- Bilmes has the scoop on new vice president for budget and planning Elmira Mangum.

- The father of a 9/11 victim says that Attorney General Eric Holder did not reassure families of 9/11 victims about why KSM deserves a criminal trial.

- An interesting piece that defends lectures over discussion-oriented seminars. Similar discussion about the Socratic method in law schools.

-  Review alum Paul Ibrahim has a summary of Obama’s dropping poll numbers.

- CUPD addresses the recent Cornell “crime wave.”

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New Cornell Review Vol XXVIII Issue 5 Available!

Posted by Oliver Renick on November 20, 2009

In the most recent issue of the Review, Cornell’s conservatives take on the topic of diversity at Cornell.  A subject ripe with publicity and continued debate, we look at the Ken Glover removal, how proponents and critics of program houses can find common ground, and reveal a shocking email sent on the Akwe:kon list serve around Columbus Day.  You make the call: click the link below to view the PDF!

Also in this issue:

- Guest speaker at Cornell on the politics of religious freedom.

- Congress’s new health care bill – what’s in it and what does it mean for the future?

- More guest lecturers on: Sudan, African aid, and the cost of higher education.

 

Posted in Campus Insiders | Tagged: | 3 Comments »

Long Health Care Bill is Long (Really, Really, Really Long)

Posted by Joe Bonica on November 19, 2009

HR 3590, the Senate version of the congressional health care bill drafted by Harry Reid, is now available online. A word of warning for those who want to read it: it is immense. In fact, it eclipses the 2,000 page mark, longer even than the House version of the bill (1,990 pages). Highlights include a public option which states can opt out of–although details on that appeared to be sparse on a very preliminary skim-through, Medicare and Medicaid cuts to pay for the thing, a provision preventing illegal immigrants from receiving benefits, a mandate for all Americans to purchase insurance, and of course, tax increases of all kinds (examples are a 0.5% increase in Medicare taxes to single people making $200,000/yr or more and couples making $250,000/yr or more, and taxes on cosmetic procedures). Unnecessarily long winded details here.

P.S. WARNING: The link is the actual bill. Loading takes a pretty long time for a .pdf file, probably because of its gargantuan length.

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