The Warfighter's Dilemma
by Wyatt Studniski | You were best friends in grade school and did everything together. Joined the military together, went to boot camp together, deployed together. It was fun at first and it felt just like the vacations of your childhood. The ride there never seemed to end, but when you arrived it was like it never happened at all.
On the Necessity of Government
by Emily Kennedy | In a world of vast resources, humanity is still beset by starvation, poverty, and suffering. The masses still toil for barely enough to sustain themselves while others must do without entirely. In the midst of this suffering, still others live in luxurious excess with wealth that could not be spent in a lifetime.
On the Necessity of Government
Our Blue Planet
by Bridgette Mullinax | Great white sharks, coral reefs, Morgan Freeman, and phytoplankton-what do they all have in common? They all share the same ecosystem. This answer might seem obvious, but I believe this is not how most people view their lives and their connection to nature, and more specifically to our ocean. The fact is, it doesn鈥檛 matter where someone lives, whether surrounded by an abundance of wildlife or in a big busy city with traffic and tall skyscrapers.
A Major Consequence of the War on Terror: The Growth of ISIS
by Lyndsey Mros | 鈥淥ur enemy is a radical network of terrorists and every government that supports them. Our war on terror begins with al Qaeda, but it does not end there. It will not end until every terrorist group of global reach has been found, stopped and defeated,鈥 declared President George W. Bush on September 20, 2001 to the American people during a presidential address.
A Major Consequence of the War on Terror: The Growth of ISIS
Can Buying a New Product Solve Climate Change?
by Neeyra Estrada Pena | If climate change continues at the current rate, Minnesota will have an estimated average of 42 days with temperatures above 95 degrees (F) by the year 2100, compared to the average from 1990-2010 being 0. If you think that is bad, Dallas will have an estimated average of 133 days above 95 degrees by 2100, compared to their average of 44 days from 1990-2010.