If there's one thing the Students' Society's biannual General Assembly does a good job of, it's helping to discredit - on both an intellectual and a practical level - direct democracy, or at least the twisted, substandard version we will once again be exposed to tomorrow afternoon.
"SSMU further resolves to condemn any group, student association, or organization whose goals and methods compromise the safety and health of any person or engage in acts of discrimination such as, but not limited to, pro-life groups; SSMU will not grant full or interim club status to any such group.
Although I've played team sports since I was old enough to don a pinny, I'm usually quite awkward in locker rooms. Part of it has to do with my upbringing. My family was never a particularly naked one - we didn't do a lot of topless sunbathing in the backyard or play nude family Monopoly - so nakedness has always startled me.
Irony's a funny thing. And whether it's a minority-elected government preaching democracy to the global south or an American-educated, torture-supporting opposition leader speaking about returning Canada to its place of soft-power prominence in the world, Canadian politics is ripe with irony.
PSYCH 213: Cognition is like most 200-level psychology courses: it's straightforward, chock-full of interesting studies that explain human behaviour, and it's in Leacock 132. But unlike most large science classes, it's not recorded. Among the many redundant questions posted on WebCT, there have been well over 100 requests to record Cognition lectures - in addition to dozens of emails and in-class appeals about the same subject.
From February 1-7, the McGill chapter of Solidarity for Palestinian Human Rights staged Gaza Remembrance Week to mark the one-year anniversary of the bloody conflict between Israel and Hamas in the Gaza Strip. Earlier in January, SPHR organized a "Public Commemoration of the Gaza Massacre" in downtown Montreal.
There are few parts of the legislative process as controversial as the "rider." Riders are unrelated provisos typically attached to bills that are politically impossible to veto or postpone, usually in order to pass unpopular legislation that would not get approval by itself.
Re: "Pop Rhetoric: Fist-pumping IQs away" by Bianca Van Bavel (02.02.10) Dear Bianca Van Bavel, I'm writing in response to your article on Jersey Shore, MTV's newest reality show. You seem to be upset that, as "young impressionable intellectuals," we (speaking on behalf of non-closet Shore fans) have decided to spend some of our free time being entertained.
The singular noun "transparency" can mean many things. The quality of being clear and transparent is the most important. But this quality depends on the material's capacity for allowing electromagnetic radiation to be transmitted. Materials that allow transmission in the range of human visibility are called transparent.
At Wednesday's Students' Society Winter General Assembly a motion entitled "The Defence of Human Rights, Social Justice, and Environmental Protection" will be presented. The core of this motion reiterates SSMU's longstanding commitment to human rights. In addition, it calls for the expansion of the Financial Ethics Review Committee mandate, or the creation of a Corporate Social Responsibility Committee, in order to investigate any investments in corporations that operate outside international law and profit from human rights violations.
Tomorrow's Students' Society Winter General Assembly is an opportunity for McGill undergraduate students to decide what we believe in and what policies SSMU should abide by. The GA is a venue to propose positions, in the form of resolutions, for our community to debate and decide on together.
Re: "Opting out of QPIRG" by Brendan Steven (26.01.10) In his article "Opting out of QPIRG," Brendan Steven claims that "controversial groups" should go directly to students for their funding, instead of receiving it through the McGill chapter of the Quebec Public Interest Research Group.