Comments

  • Sending Harper back to school

    In a country that usually values its students, its universities and does everything and anything to encourage more young people to seek higher education, you would assume that the knowledge and critical thinking that university graduates acquire would be promoted, applauded and respected.

  • Hands off my Beaver

    Canada’s second-oldest magazine, The Beaver, announced last week that it will be changing its name in an effort to connect with a new generation of readers.

  • Friendship in the modern age

    In our over-mediated social landscape our understanding of friendship is growing thinner than a Ralph Lauren model. As our global community diversifies, we diversify and reshape. Our relationships take the brunt of it, whether we realize it or not.

  • May I take your order? One degree coming up

    How many of you heard from a young age that if you want to get a good job, you have to obtain some sort of post-secondary education?

  • Mexican myth-busting

    Hey gang! I hope you all had a great holiday. I sure did!

    I spent the week after Christmas in Mexico with my girlfriend and her family. The weather was really great and we all had tonnes of fun.

  • Silencing the other

    In the Nov. 26 edition of The Uniter, an article appeared which was written by Ashley Faintuch who had visited Sderot, Israel. The student wrote how the residents of Sderot live in constant fear from terrorist rocket attacks.

  • The ultimate crime against humanity

    Fifteen genocides have been committed since 1900.

    To paraphrase Article Two of the United Nations Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, genocide is any act committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group. Genocide includes killing members of the group, causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group, deliberately inflicting on the group conditions aimed at a group’s physical destruction and forcibly transferring children of the group to another group or preventing births.

  • Prorogation nation

    A year after the word “prorogation” came into vogue after the great coalition fiasco of ’08, nostalgia seems to have gotten the better of Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s judgment. Hours before the calendar turned to 2010, Harper decided his last act of the first decade of the 21st century should encompass everything his legacy has been indicative of to this point.

  • Lament for a bookstore

    I’m another one of the many people who are sad and disheartened that McNally Robinson at Polo Park is gone. Personally, I would have preferred to see Chapters Polo Park leave the area because I, like many Manitobans, have a soft spot for McNally. But when I take a step back to compare the two bookstores, there’s really not that much difference between the two.

  • When unicorns attack

    Lately, there has been a lot of advice bandied about regarding the best way to survive a zombie attack. I’m not against having a little fun, but I’m getting really sick of all this zombie-related advice.

  • The MTS Centre has not revitalized downtown

    You might have noticed a glossy brochure in the Winnipeg Free Press recently promoting the success of the MTS Centre during the five years it has been in operation.

  • The state of philosophy at the U of W

    It is inevitable that, at some point, every philosophy student must answer this question: “Why study philosophy?” This is usually followed by a second common question: “What kind of job does that degree get you?”

  • Disputing the legitimacy of ‘enhanced interrogation’

    Recently, The Uniter ran a comment article asserting that enhanced interrogation does not qualify as torture and should therefore be used as a legitimate method of forcing information from detainees. While it was not written by a student at the University of Winnipeg, I still felt compelled to write a response to such a downright ignorant assertion.

  • Corrupted Christmas

    I’m not sure about you, but I think it’s a little strange that most people, regardless of religious affiliation or lack thereof, have adopted Christmas as their own personal gift-giving holiday.

  • ’Tis the season for conspicuous consumption

    Last Christmas, I witnessed a random but inspiring political protest at the Polo Park mall. It happened on Dec. 23, the busiest shopping day of the year.

  • Harry Potter and the Scourge of Douchiness

    For some reason, I’ve been getting a lot of e-mails recently, all asking me the same question.

  • A pitfall of cultural appropriation

    Recently in Phoenix, Arizona, 19 people became sick and three died after attending an “aboriginal” sweat box. At least, that is what some of the local media referred to it as.

  • Fifteen seconds in Sderot, Israel

    This past August I happened to find myself in Sderot, Israel, a city located one kilometre from the Palestinian territory of Gaza. At first it seemed like a normal Israeli city, but I quickly realized there was no one walking the streets, there were very few cars driving and the playgrounds were empty.

  • The simplicity of the CBC debate

    CBC Television recently underwent a makeover. Apparently, the reasons for the brand update were the result of, in the words of Friends of Canadian Broadcasting spokesperson Ian Morrison, “moving in the direction of the private sector,” where the style of news delivery frequently overtakes its substance.

  • It’s the economy, stupid

    Karl Marx. Maybe there should be three Xs after his name, because I’m sure I’ve lost (or gained) a lot of readers already.

Newer Articles »

« Older Articles