| Genocide: "Why Does 'Never Again' Happen Again?" |
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| By Katharine Joiner, Martha Orlet, Jenny Starrs and Lucy Short, Special to the Beacon | |
| Posted 2:56 pm Tue., 03.02.10 | |
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On Feb. 19-20, 24 high school students from 11 area high schools gathered in an attempt to find a cohesive resolution to genocide. The conference, "Why Does Never Again Happen Again," was sponsored by Active Citizen360. Students submitted the articles below to The Beacon. The discussion While students had no problem talking about genocide, the core issues of the discussion were how to define genocide and how to intervene in the event of genocide. Some students felt superpowers such as the United States and Europe have a responsibility to stop genocide, while others said a country's sovereignty is undeniable. What is Active Citizen 360
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On taxes, economics and other issues, American politics is just plain dumb: Can a nation remain a superpower if its internal politics are incorrigibly stupid? | E.J. Dionne/Washington Post
This nation needs a slow-news movement: We have collectively blundered into a P.T. Barnum media age when being first trumps being accurate. | Walter Shapiro/Politics Daily
Democracy doesn't work on its own: It's hard to imagine anyone graduating from high school today, much less college, without being computer literate; but civic literacy is another matter. | Susan Estrich/Rasmussen Reports
Leaked documents on Afghanistan don't say anything new: We already knew that Afghanistan's army and police would be reformed and able to stand up to the Taliban some time around when pigs fly or Washington balances the budget. | Richard Cohen/Washington Post
Lessons from Blago's trial : The verdict for or against former Gov. Rod Blagojevich has to wait, but lessons about synchopants and elections can be learned now. | editorial, Chicago Tribune
Veto pen's the wrong way to open primaries : Removing the requirement that voters declare a party to vote in a primary election might be a good idea. But the case should be made in the legislature, not written in by Gov. Pat Quinn to a bill to set up an internet voters guide. | editorial, Bloomington Pantagraph
Missouri special session was a sad spectacle : Too much of what happened in Jefferson City was a show of political power that allowed for little serious discusssion. The pass-it-now-fix-it-later philosophy is discouraging. | editorial, Jefferson City News Tribune
Gov. Quinn's furlough plan is flawed : Making some state employees take off 24 unpaid days a year will result in more overtime and/or less productivity. | editorial, Springfield State Journal Register
The battle in Bangkok : The immediate crisis in Thailand seems to have cooled, but the danger of a civil war is far from other. | editorial, The Economist
Lonely times for German chancellor : Other EU leaders are no longer cheering Angela Merkel on and popularity within Germany is declining. What happened? | Philipp Wittrock and Severin Weiland, Der Spiegel
British election has lessons for American political parties: Heavy government spending is not a political winner when the private sector economy is ailing, and flashy political newcomers better have some substance. | Michael Barone/Rasmussen Reports
What future for the Lib-Dems : Will an alliance consume the party? Would letting the conservatives govern as a minority party give the upstarts more leverage? | Anne Perkins, The Guardian
On July 29, St. Louis reopened a two-block stretch in Old North St. Louis that also opens possibilities for more development.(Photos by Rachel Heidenry | Beacon intern)
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To read Carl Bearden's article supporting Proposition C, click here .
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From Andrew Breibart's misleading editing of a speech to a crackdown on behavior around some St. Louis clubs, race remains in the news. M.W. Guzy says he's abandoned his hopes that an African-American president would ameliorate problems.
Missouri Supreme Court decision should prompt legislative action, says Earl Simms, to increase charter schools, to make it easier for people to get private tuition assistance and permit open enrollment.
In this week's Beacon Roundtable, Dick Weiss, Dale Singer, Jo Mannies, Mary Delach Leonard and Robert Joiner sit down to talk about upcoming elections in Missouri including candidates and propositions,…
Read more...A trip to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame came with the added bonus of discovering that Cleveland -- even without LeBron James -- is a vibrant, entertaining city.
Read more...Beacon General Manager Nicole Hollway has been chosen to participate in USC's Knight-McCormick Leadership Institute, joining other news organization executives in shaping the future of journalism.
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