The Twentieth Anniversary of the Fall of the Wall

berlin wall 2

Chances are if you’re currently in college, you don’t remember the collapse of the Berlin Wall, but you know about it. Or should. (Stop skipping class!)

Well today, November 9th, marks the twentieth anniversary of the wall coming down; leading to the end of the Cold War.

In honor of this monumental event, artists around the world have created musical performances and art installations. There is even a Berlin Twitter Wall for people to share their thoughts on the fall of the wall and how our world has changed since then.

In case you aren’t totally familiar with the history, let me give you the Cliff’s Notes (or Leah’s Notes) version: Read More »


Nowhere to Run: Stories of Iraq Refugees (Part II)

refugees.jpgIn my last post I discussed how, despite President Bush’s claims of success within Iraq, secretarian violence continues to force Iraqis to leave their homes in fear of their lives. At least four million Iraqis have left their home country since the beginning of the war.

Leaving Iraq is only the beginning of their problems. Thanks to this large number, it is increasingly difficult for an Iraqi to gain asylum.

How difficult you may ask? Read on:

→ According to the Independent, Iraqi asylum applicants within the European Union rose by 98% between 2006 and 2007. In 2006 there were 19,375 and in 2007 there were 38,286.

→ Within many countries traditionally known for their openness to refugees such as Sweden, the saturation of the system brought on partly by the deepening Iraqi refugee crisis, is resulting in a backlash. Read More »


Water-boarding: Everything You Didn’t Want to Know

36546011.jpgIs it just me or have we all entered some kind of Twilight Zone in which torture and terror are okay as long as the defenders of freedom and democracy are using them?

This past Saturday, March 9th, President Bush exercised his veto on a piece of legislation that would have banned interrogation techniques used by the CIA, such as waterboarding. In his weekly radio address he stated,

“The bill Congress sent me would take away one of the most valuable tools in the war on terror […] so today I vetoed it”

What is Waterboarding?

This incredibly controversial interrogation technique/ form of torture, depending on who is talking, originated in the 16th century during the Italian inquisition.

A bound and gagged prisoner is immobilized on his back, head tilted downward. Water is then poured over him, causing an immediate gag reflex and simulating drowning. Often, cellophane is also placed over the prisoner’s face—further preventing him from taking any air. (remember how your parents told you not to place saran wrap over your face when you were little….) Read More »