Uneasy Lies the Head: MBS and US-Saudi Relations

June 21st will mark the fourth anniversary of Mohammed Bin Salman’s ascendancy to the title of Saudi Crown Prince. His relatively short tenure as de-facto ruler has proved to be an unprecedented one, for no previous Saudi ruler in recent memory has been as bold or nakedly ambitious as this one. Now trying to untangle the Gulf Crisis, the question inevitable emerges for the Biden Administration: what to do with MBS?

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Taiwan Leadership in Times of a Pandemic: President Tsai Ing-Wen

On the night of January 11, 2020, Taiwanese people, regardless of each individual’s political leaning, huddled in front of TVs, phones, and out in the cold in wait for the presidential election results. After four years of leadership under President Tsai Ing-wen, whose Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) suffered a crippling defeat in regional elections two years prior, the next president was surely going to change the political direction of Taiwan.

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Total Recall: What Can the Gavinator Learn from the Governator

As of March 26, 2021, the effort to recall Governor Gavin Newsom appears to have made it onto the ballot. California will see its second gubernatorial recall election in under two decades. The Golden State is a very different place than it was in 2003, when Governor Gray Davis was defenestrated in favor of movie star Arnold Schwarzanegger, and betting markets show Newsom as the strong favorite — but Davis was expected to sail out of the recall at the beginning, too. Why was Davis an easier target, and should Newsom worry that he too will be “sent to the cooler”?

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#IamVanessaGuillen: We the Victims of Military "Justice"

On April 22, 2020, 20-year-old US Army Private First Class Vanessa Guillen, stationed at Fort Hood, Texas, received a text asking for assistance in the armory from a colleague. Once she entered the armoury, she was never heard from again. When she didn’t report to work the next day, her command did what was expected of them, and started an investigation into her disappearance. The painful irony is that if Vanessa had believed her command would also do what was expected of them in the case of sexual assault and harassment, a different investigation would have taken place, one that most likely would have prevented her death.

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If Roe Goes: What Will We Do if Roe v. Wade is Overturned?

When it comes to the debate over the powers of the Supreme Court few have considered the advantages of opening up the floor to the general public. Especially in the case of Roe v. Wade, which a majority of the Court now wishes to overturn, a decision that would influence people’s lives, bodies and futures, should be dealt with democratically, meaning that everyone’s input should be heard.

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Felony Murder: A Legal Doctrine Under Scrutiny

Under the felony murder rule, which applies in more than 40 U.S. states, a person can be found guilty of murder if they participate in any felony that leads to a death. In some states, the felony murder rule makes criminals responsible for murder if their co-conspirator in a lesser felony, or even a responding police officer, kills someone while the crime is taking place. Some of the people convicted for felony murder did not intend for the killing to take place, or did not know it was happening.

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It’s Just the Kurds Against the World: How the West and the Middle East have failed the Kurdish Nation

On October 6th 2019, then-President Donald Trump made the decision to withdraw United States military troops and aid from northeastern Syria, leaving the Kurds, an essential ally in the fight against the Islamic State, on their own and at the mercy of attacks from Turkey. This sudden step back from the West was another move in destabilizing an already fragile geopolitical climate in the region. Indeed, in the days that followed US withdrawal, the Turkish military attacked Kurdish territories in Turkey and northern Syria. This was another episode in the ongoing struggle of the Kurdish nation, scattered across four countries with borders arbitrarily drawn by former colonial powers.

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Is SALT Kosher? Democrats’ Favorite Tax Cut for the Rich

In a 2017 reconciliation bill, Congress imposed a strongly progressive tax increase on the wealthiest Americans, which was unanimously opposed by the minority opposition. In a bygone era of income-polarized politics, one might have expected Democrats to support such an increase while Republicans vehemently opposed it. Instead, it was proposed by Speaker Paul Ryan (R-WI) while Democrats in the House and Senate made the increase a target for their (wildly successful) 2018 campaigns. The increase came in the form of a cap on the esoteric SALT deduction, but what does the deduction actually do, and why are Democrats from Katie Porter to Nancy Pelosi so eager to see it restored?

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The Supreme Court is Set to Determine The Scope of Public School Speech Rights

Recently, the Supreme Court granted review of 14 new cases, ranging from sentences for drug crimes to the cleanup of hazardous waste in Guam. Despite a lack of high-profile cases on the docket, including a challenge to Mississippi’s 15-week abortion ban, there is one case that will play a pivotal role in defining the First Amendment rights of public school students.

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CPAC and the Future of Trumpism

A golden statue of Trump. Rampant conspiracies regarding voter fraud circulating. Potential candidates seeking to succeed Trump. As much as the Trump presidency seems like a fever dream in light of the perceived return to normalcy under Biden, the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) demonstrated that Trumpism, and perhaps Trump himself, will remain mainstays in American politics and have supplanted the traditional conservative establishment as the face of the Republican Party.

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Social Media and the First Amendment

Whether we like it or not, it is hard to deny that social media has transformed our modes of communication, in ways that were unheard of 20-30 years ago. Former Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy recognized this point, affirming that “…social media in particular…” has been one of “…the most important places (in a spatial sense) for the exchange of views.” Jack Dorsey, the founder and CEO of Twitter, reflected this when he referred to his platform as a “digital public square” in a 2018 Senate Intelligence Committee hearing. Despite the monumental impact these platforms continue to play, they have also faced unmistakable backlash from prominent users, and several high-ranking politicians, over the implementation of their content-moderation policies

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The Section 230 Wars

Republicans in Congress act with the goal of repealing an obscure piece of legislation called Section 230, part of the Communications Decency Act of 1996. The law is composed of two portions: a shield and sword. The shield defends Internet companies from liability for the content posted on their platforms. The sword allows such companies to moderate their services however they would like, permitting them to remove pornography, spam, and other posts that would hamper the user experience. These protections have allowed the Internet to flourish, such that Section 230 was dubbed “the law that created the Internet.” With recent events, however, Section 230 has come under fire by politicians on both sides of the aisle.

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Erdoğan’s Cities: Who Are They For?

“Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s AK Party may lack a substantial number of qualities that one might hope for in an elected government, but one thing cannot be denied, they possess an unyielding ambition to reform Turkey (some might argue, beyond recognition). This claim does not merely refer to more obvious shocks (the radical constitutional referendum in 2017, or the countless activist, and often provocative, foreign policy initiatives), but specifically to urban policy – yet another arena manifesting Erdoğan’s excerption of power.”

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