Monday, September 26, 2011

Groupthink

In an attempt to quell alleged discrimination of non-protected classes, Vanderbilt University now may discriminate based on religion.

Political scientist and Vanderbilt law Professor Dr. Carol Swain revealed that certain student groups, including five religious groups, are now on what the university calls “provisional status” and being threatened disbandment.

The school's reasoning, according to a Fox news article published today:

"Vanderbilt says the student organizations cannot require that leaders share the group’s beliefs, goals and values.” 

Note that student organizations such as Christian Legal Society are not denying any person enrollment, only placing certain necessary restrictions on leadership. Appallingly, they expect Christian organizations to have Christian leaders.

This is in direct opposition to Vanderbilt’s policy, in which, in direct and complete application “an atheist could lead a Christian group, a man a woman’s group, a Jew a Muslim group or vice versa.”

No common interests, no collective beliefs, no shared values. What’s the point of a group again?

Sunday, September 25, 2011

Second star to the right and straight on till morning.

Love without commitment. Freedom without responsibility. Innovation without action. Contradictions or the characteristics of the new status quo? In an alluring article, the New York Times dared to budge the boulder of a question that produced an avalanche of answers: what is it about twenty-somethings?

Aptly dubbed “the peter pan generation” because of their unhurried attitudes and leisurely ascension into adulthood, the offspring of the gen x baby boomers have also been called echo boomers, millennials, and generation y.

But it’s easy to bestow titles; it’s harder to decide what those titles mean. What the Times, and everyone else struggles with, is defining a postmodern (or post-postmodern, if you wish) generation by postmodern terms. What we need for this current generation is new and clear definitions. (And, hey, by the time we figure them out, we can move on to exploring the post-post-postmodern generation z.)

Why does it matter? Because people want to know about the future of their world. Because this new generation affects everyone now. From marketers to mothers, the echoes of this generation reverberate to pockets and hearts across the board.

So, what is it about twenty somethings? As a twenty year old, I’m not sure yet. But I’m in no hurry: I have a decade to figure it out. 

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

PILOT

FADE IN:


EXT. WORLD


KARISSA (20) 
Student. Barista. Daughter. Sister. Friend. Aspiration: to be anything but an echo.



FADE OUT