February 2013
Volume 46 Issue 5
Freedom High School - 3149 Chester Avenue - Bethlehem, PA 18020 - www.fhsforum.com - @fhsforum
INSIDE THIS ISSUE Clinton’s Blood Clot (p. 2) Underage Drinking (p. 4) Senioritis (p. 5) Les Miserables Review (p. 10) Superbowl Results (p. 11)
President Obama appoints new CIA director Counterterrorism expert John Brennan is named CIA director.
In the aftermath of Gen. David Petraeus’ extramarital affairs, President Obama named John Brennan as the new Director of the Central Intelligence Agency. Brennan has worked at the CIA for 25 years and is, in President Obama’s words, “one of the hardest working civil servants I’ve ever known.” Since 2009, Brennan has served as the President’s Advisor for Counterterrorism and Homeland Security. He is noted for his role in the campaign of unmanned drone strikes against key al Qaeda
John Brennan, CIA Director
By Bill Leeson News Editor
operatives in Pakistan and Yemen. The drone campaign itself has drawn immense controversy and scrutiny from the entire world, and certainly from citizens and political figures in Pakistan, who assert that the drones may be responsible for civilian
deaths. In contrast, Yemeni President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi expressed his support of the CIA drone strikes in an interview with the Washington Post. He acknowledged their precision and reliability in eliminating threats, saying “The drone technologically is more advanced than the human brain.” Framed by this information, it is unsurprising that CIA drone attacks have been occurring less frequently in Pakistan and more frequently in Yemen. However, as a CNN report suggests, the declining anti-terrorist activity in Pakistan may be because they have nearly been
hunted to extinction. The report says “at least 36 militant leaders have been reported killed by drones in Pakistan since Obama took office.” Keep in mind that it was John Brennan overseeing the drone campaign from the White House’s perspective that whole time. Brennan’s role in the United States’ national security is undeniably important, but already controversy is building around his appointment to an even more powerful role in potential drone campaigns. For example, some citizens in Yemen have protested a drone strike that allegedly killed seven civilians. In fact, American human rights groups have also protested some of the drone at-
tacks. A major player in al Qaeda named Anwar alAwlaki was killed in a drone strike, but so was his teenage son. Clearly there are viable ethical questions raised by pursuing this avenue toward American security. Brennan made his intentions and his perspective on drone usage clear last April: “[Never] before has there been a weapon that allows us to distinguish more effectively between an al Qaeda terrorist and innocent civilians.” That is a stance that puts American interests above all others. Time will tell if it is the right one.
Education in America: a failing grade “Students First” is trying to reform American education systems. By Kate Dawson Editorial Editor
U.S. Capitol Building in Washington, D.C. “At the edge of the fiscal cliff” article on page 2.
Q and A article about the BASD mini-THON on page 9.
Photos courtesy of wikimedia.org
Students First gave a poor review to American education policies.
Students First, an independent organization for reforming education.
It is no shocking fact that the United States' education system as a whole is lacking from a global perspective in some, if not many, areas. However, to what extreme should we be taking measures to fix this? What measures need to be taken in the first place? Many educators and students have their own opinions, and agreeing upon any specific set of variables is a controversial task. In 2010, former Chancellor of D.C. public schools, Michelle Rhee, founded the nonprofit organization "Students First" in order to advocate the types of education policies which she and many others felt would improve the U.S. school system insofar as their growth and well-being on a national level as well as their competitiveness on a global
level. Each year the organization gives every state a ranking determined by how closely their education system compares to the Students First platform by assigning grades A through F. The idealistic school system for the "graders" at Students First would be one that is working to abolish or greatly decrease the number of tenured teachers and recognize excellence in teachers, provides many schooling options aside from public, such as charter schools, and increases parent awareness and involvement.
(continued on page 2 EDUCATION)