Wednesday, January 15, 2014

Free Speech v.s. Hate Speech

Whenever I think of the 1st amendment, I think of South Park. It may not seem like a natural connection, but for me, it is. For the last 20 or so years, South Park has been the envelope-pushing show. Over the time it has been the air, the show has constantly gotten more vulgar and inappropriate, which causes many fans and critics to ask, what's ok to say? I thoroughly believe in the right to free speech, so when people criticize South Park for using crass language or enacting a disgusting scenario, I often scoff and point them in the direction of the Bill of Rights. But free speech has its pitfalls. When any TV show, movie, or song uses language that could be thought of as un-allowable, I ask myself, could they, or more importantly would they, do that on South Park?

Recently I read a blog post by my friend Erik in which he talked about the rapper Eminem and his new album. Erik listened to the album and heard many anti-gay slurs and wrote a blog post in response to that. He singled out the song "Rap God," in which the rapper uses the word "faggot" several times, and on top of that, specifically makes a threat (though presumably an empty one) against a homosexual person in the lyrics. The point he makes in the post is that Eminem should most definitely not be using this language, not only because it is hateful, but because it sets a bad example for a younger generation of listeners. I wanted to agree with Erik, but I was conflicted. Free speech is such an important right, but unfortunately, it can't only be applied to certain cases. You've either got it or you don't. I obviously didn't want to condone Eminem's hateful lyrics, but at the same time, I didn't agree limiting free speech only in certain cases. So I thought about it in the context of South Park. It's a show about a bunch of foul-mouthed, vulgar kids, but you would never hear them going around saying "faggot" (unless it was being used ironically, in Cartman's case.) Why? It's hateful. South Park may be a racy show, but it isn't a discriminatory one.

If there's a lesson to be learned from this, it's that free speech does NOT include hate speech. Just because you have the right to free speech, you can't go around saying whatever you want. People who bash homosexuals, people of different races, and just about anyone who is different from them are not protected by the 1st amendment. And with that being said, I've come to the conclusion that Erik was right. Eminem may just be trying to regain some of his old audience or trying to sound angrier than he really is, but it doesn't justify the type of homophobic language he uses.

Monday, January 13, 2014

The American Sports Craze (Is Destroying Our Schools)

China. Singapore. Finland. South Korea. These are the countries that score highest every year on advanced placement tests and academic assessments. The U.S. is not mentioned in the same breath as these nations. Why? Because of tests like this one, where America scores 25th out of 34 countries math/science test. Politicians and education officials offer various reasons for this. Not enough money, uncooperative parents, and uninterested students are among the many. But in this discussion. one sacred topic is left untouched: sports. They're expensive, time consuming, and dangerous, but everybody loves them. On average, the U.S. spends $1300 per football player, but only $618 per math student. It's this kind of gap that is holding our schools back, and sports are a big factor.

The high school in the town of Premont, Texas, is a perfect example. I read about this school in a recent article in the Atlantic, and the data was stunning. The school was hemorrhaging money and was on the verge of shutdown, so an outside superintendent, Ernest Singleton, was brought in to rescue the district. He described it as the worst school he had ever seen. The teachers had no power, students were cursing in the classroom, and everything was in a state of chaos and disarray. The most striking fact to me, though, was that even after the school had laid off employees, closed the middle school, and sealed off science labs, the school still competed with teams for more than 7 different sports. In fact, the school used over $150,000 every year just on sports. This disgusted me; the school just competitive sports over a good, useful education. So Singleton did what had to be done: he cut all the sports team. To many of my competitive peers this may seem like a drastic reaction, but the results justify it completely. 80% of students passed classes, instead of the previous year's 50%, and during parent teacher conferences, 160 people attended, compared to laughably low attendance of only six parents the year before.

These are just a few examples, and the article goes much further in depth. Sports are clearly embedded in American culture and are a big part of our education system (despite their near non-existent educational value.) With this data, I'm surprised more struggling schools don't cut sports, but at the same time I see why they might not. Kids love to compete. But do the pros of school organized sports really outweigh the cons?

Wednesday, January 8, 2014

Colorado's Green Initiative

In case you didn't get the joke in the title, I'm not referring to an environmentally friendly program, but rather to Colorado's recreational marijuana. In recent years (despite California being the first state to make the drug available medically and Oregon being the first to decriminalize it,) Colorado has been the marijuana trendsetter. And that role gained new meaning when, on November 6th, 2012, Colorado voted in favor of Amendment 64, making marijuana legal in the recreational sense. On January 1st, 2013, dispensaries opened across the state to anyone 21 and over. And while many people oppose this decision, what can't be argued is that it's going to make Colorado a lot of money. In just the first day, 37 or so operating dispensaries reported collective sales of over $1 million, despite the 25% sales/excise tax. What does this mean for the Colorado government? The state is projected to rake in $70 million in tax revenue from weed sales this year, much of which is going to fund schools.

Despite the enormous tax revenue, many disagree with the decision to legalize marijuana, and both sides of the argument have strong points. However, in my opinion, the pros far outweigh the cons. I could go on for days and days about pro-legalization arguments, so I'll just give what I believe to be the three most important ones: racial profiling, tax revenue, and freedom. Two of those are very general, so I'll elaborate, starting with the least vague of the three, tax revenue. I've already spoken briefly about this, but the bottom line is that marijuana will make millions, possibly billions, for the government, which it desperately needs. The $70 million figure is just the very beginning, and the good that money can do in schools is near incalculable. In a down economy, and one in which marijuana users have been willing to pay absurdly high prices illegally, the government can throw very high taxes on legal weed and still see business boom.

My other two arguments, racial profiling and freedom, seem very vague at first glance, so I'll begin with the former. The U.S.'s draconian drug laws are something I have written about before, and they have an impact on more than just the big drug dealers. These drug laws have an extremely negative impact on casual drug users, especially with a drug as commonly used as marijuana. And when the criminal possession amount is so low, it's very easy to pick and choose who is persecuted for possession and who isn't. And often, the people who are "chosen" are poor minorities. Drug laws are, frankly, abused. They are abused to constrain minorities, and without these laws, the rate of minorities (and people in general) who are jailed for non-violent offenses will go way down, saving lives, and saving the state a lot of money. My final point, very blatantly put, is freedom, and this argument is backed by a very libertarian philosophy; people should be able to do what they want, as long as they don't hurt others, and this includes the use of marijuana. The government shouldn't be making our decisions for us. If people want to use a drug, especially that is less harmful than legal drugs such as alcohol and tobacco, they should be able to, plain and simple.

Colorado made history last November, and we are seeing the effects very clearly already in the new year: legalization is working. The state is making money, people are happy with their new found freedom, jobs and being created, and Colorado jails will soon be without many non-violent offenders. We'll have to wait and see how this turns out, but so far, the forecast is sunny (green) skies ahead.

For more info on how legalization is working so far, click here.