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...issue of sexual violence at Harvard has been the subject of heated debate for over a decade. In 1990, a Date Rape Task Force, convened in response to student activism, proposed a “Policy Statement on Sexual Misconduct” that required affirmative consent (a spoken “Yes”) before sex. However, after review by the then-Dean of the College, L. Fred Jewett ’57, the statement was changed to require “expressed unwillingness” or an inability to give consent due to drugs or alcohol for an incident...

Author: By Sarah B. Levit-shore and Jared M. Slade, S | Title: It's Time for a (Culture) Change | 4/21/2003 | See Source »

...government is crucial in understanding what I believe to be the definition of patriotism in a democracy. According to the Declaration of Independence—the fundamental document of democracy—governments are artificial creations, established by the people, “deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed,” and charged by the people to ensure the equal right of all to “life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.” Furthermore, as the Declaration says, “whenever any form of government becomes destructive of these ends...

Author: By Howard Zinn, | Title: Thoughts of a Patriot | 4/18/2003 | See Source »

Worse than the way in which the act was drafted are the unnecessary encroachments upon civil liberties that citizens and non-citizens would suffer should the bill be passed into law. Personal security, for one, would be greatly diminished. Without either court order or consent, innocent Americans could have their genetic information sampled and catalogued. Further, a new category of governmental spying—“domestic security surveillance”—would be created, permitting electronic eavesdropping of exclusively domestic activity under standards looser than those used for ordinary criminal surveillance. Americans would even have...

Author: By Dustin A. Lewis and Brian J. Wong, S | Title: Goose-Stepping to Security | 3/4/2003 | See Source »

...only major country that indulges in diplomatic ostracism (although most Arab states don't recognize Israel). This policy was invented, appropriately enough, by the arch-idealist Woodrow Wilson, who said that diplomatic recognition should depend on the "existence of a just government ... resting upon the consent of the governed." Wilson refused to recognize the Soviet Union in 1917. That ban was lifted in 1933, but Wilson's policy was resurrected in 1949 when the communists conquered China. America's nonrecognition of China, which lasted nearly 30 years, was an unmitigated disaster. "If we had not ostracized the Chinese, we might...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Why Not Kill Dictators with Kindness? | 3/3/2003 | See Source »

While life tenure reflects the distinctiveness of judging, in contrast to legislating or executing, the mode of appointing judges reveals a political connection. The framers deliberately vested the appointment power in the single President, giving the senate the power to advise and consent, i.e. to say no. This was said to combine the benefits of placing responsibility for the choice in one person with a check to “prevent the appointment of unfit characters from State prejudice, from family connection, from personal attachment or from a view to popularity” (Federalist...

Author: By Murray Dry, | Title: Federalists on the Estrada Nomination | 2/24/2003 | See Source »

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