ED, Inc: Profile of Betsy DeVos

Betsy DeVos was the most (empirically) controversial nomination of president Trump’s cabinet and the most controversial education nomination in history. After exhausting democratic filibusters and rounds of hearings, DeVos was confirmed as Secretary of Education on February 7, 2017, with a split vote 50-50, requiring vice president Mike Pence to step in and tip the scale in her favor. She is the only nomination to have required the assistance of the VP’s vote. But why?

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Editor In ChiefComment
Uber: BC Edition

The phenomenon of start-ups using innovative methods to respond to consumer demand is not new. What started in 2008 as an app by two men who had trouble hailing a cab in Paris, is today a multinational corporation valued at $62.5 billion. Uber is an online transportation network company, which currently has operations in 528 cities around the world. Its growing presence worldwide has been met with both successes and difficulties in its introduction. 

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Sarayu KanthetiComment
Jefferson Beauregard Sessions III

Jeff Sessions, the current Attorney General of the United States, was born in the now historical city of Selma, Alabama in 1946. A Distinguished Eagle Scout and son of parents with primarily English ancestry, Sessions’ early story makes him a competitive candidate for any Republican ticket. 

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Editor In ChiefComment
US-Russia Relations Part I: Communism Versus Democracy

During the Second World War, there was already a rift in relations between the allied Soviet Union and the United States. Near the end of the war, the Soviets accused America and Britain of purposely not opening a new front in Eastern Europe, ensuring that the Soviet Union would be weakened at the end of the war. Historians have also argued the American use of atomic weapons against Japan was also a warning to the Soviet Union of their might if they were to engage in future armed conflict.

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Sean Wu Comment