Column: Kamala Harris and the failures of identity politics
India is in crisis.
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India is in crisis.
Picture this: It’s 9 p.m. on a Thursday night in 2012. The world is ending, apparently, according to the Mayan calendar. People can’t stop singing “Call Me Maybe” by Carly Rae Jepsen. Meanwhile, you’re watching the latest episode of “Glee” on FOX.
A few days ago, I suddenly realized I have never taken a French class at UNC with more than two other people of color.
In January 2020, Meghan Markle and her husband, Prince Harry, announced that they would be stepping back from their senior roles in the royal family. I was supportive, but not shocked. Usually, I don’t really have strong feelings about what celebrities are doing in their personal lives, but I love "Suits" and hate Britain, so this situation was the perfect combination to hold my interest.
In early April of last year, I was scrolling through social media and saw somebody my age lamenting, “I’m wasting the best years of my life in this pandemic!”
Last week, it was my 22nd birthday! But nobody cares about that. Here’s something more intriguing: two weeks ago, Kim Kardashian turned 40. That’s what people care about!
Sen. Thom Tillis, R-N.C., made national news last week after one of his staffers was recorded telling a cancer survivor that finding affordable healthcare was something she would “have to figure out” and comparing health care to a dress shirt.