Highlander October 2014

Page 1

October 2014 Vol VI Issue II

the H GHLANDER www.scotscoop.com @scotscoopnews

What’s inside

Homecoming pg20

Women: better safe than sorry

VERONIKA DVORAKOVA

Jessica Adair Staff Writer

It’s dark, and the girl is walking to her car with her key in between her knuckles, ready to strike if someone approaches. Every noise she hears makes her jump, and she walks to her car a little bit quicker. When she gets to her car, she checks in the back seat and under the car for any intruder. Then she starts her long drive home, looking in the rearview mirror every chance she gets. Every two minutes another American is sexually assaulted. Six hundred and seventy-three thousand women currently attending U.S. colleges and universities have experienced rape at some point in their lifetime, and 97 percent of rapists will never spend a day in jail, according to Rape, Abuse and Incest National

Network (RAINN). With these statistics in mind, women are going to great lengths to make themselves feel safe. “I don’t really go to many places by myself if I’m not familiar with the place, but if I do decide to go somewhere, I always carry two cans of pepper spray in my purse,” said senior Kirra Loucks. In addition to these statistics, popular TV shows with frightening attack scenes like “Law & Order: Special Victims Unit” or “Criminal Minds” also increase fear among females. “After I watch “Criminal Minds” I’m afraid to walk around my house at night because it all just seems so real,” said Loucks. In junior Gabriela Dimick’s case, she took her frightening experience of watching a kidnapping movie, and turned it into something that would help girls at Carlmont feel a little bit safer. “I started the Carlmont Self Defense

Club after I freaked out when I saw the movie ‘The Call.’ In real life, if someone were to grab me I would have no knowledge of how to get out of that situation. There are so many girls I know that I would be heartbroken if anything were to happen to them, so I took it upon myself to help girls gain knowledge about what to do,” said Dimick. Although Dimick has not been put in a situation that has required self defense, she does have a personal story that she hopes will raise awareness in her club. She said, “One of my family friends had an experience where she was grabbed at the end of her driveway, and the guy held a knife to her throat. She had just recently taken a self defense class, so she knew the importance of screaming and that the likelihood of him actually stabbing her was really low. She was able to get out of the situa-

Halloween pg16&17

Activism pg10&11

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Tasteless costumes ignorantly insult cultures Alisa Takahashi Staff Writer

Are you thinking about donning a kimono to dress like a geisha this Halloween? Or a Mexican mariachi suit? Students from Ohio University have a message for you: "We're a culture, not a costume." Halloween is a holiday about glorifying all things spooky and scary, a day to dress up in a costume for the sake of having fun. Unfortunately, sometimes the “fun” comes at the expense of others, and the scariest thing is how rampant racism is on Halloween. It's a seasonal point of controversy, but even after widely publicized controversies such as the "Ghetto Fab" wig at Kohl's and Target's illegal alien jumpsuit, costumes of stereotypes are able to be seen at every costume store during October. “To treat a character like Batman or Superman as a Halloween costume is one thing, but to treat an entire ethnicity as a costume is something else. It suggests that people equate the actual broad diversity of a culture with a degrading costume," said junior Sydney Cho. One example is Julianne Hough’s dressing up as the black character Crazy Eyes from “Orange is the New Black.” Many people thought that she was clever that she darkened her face to portray the actress’s complexion. “Crazy Eyes’s skin color is not some type of costume accessory, and that’s completely ignorant and wrong of Julianne Hough to do,” said Cho. Another example is Trayvon Martin. A new trend has turned the despicable murder of the 17-year-old into a Halloween costume, featuring blackfaces, hoodies, and

Students wearing culturally significant outfits incorrectly can be insulting. fake blood stains. In one now-viral picture of a couple of Virginia teens, the costume is even accompanied by a white male friend dressed as “Neighborhood Watch,” making a gun gesture at the fake Trayvon’s head. Many racially, ethnically, or culturally based costumes are meant to be humorous or sexy. The question then rises: what about an ethnic group makes them exotic or sexual? The answer is this: nothing. To condense an entire ethnic group with so many cultural aspects into a kimono with chopsticks in the hair or a Mexican donkey costume is degrading and uncalled for.

VERONIKA DVORAKOVA

“When how funny or pretty a costume is solely based on race, ethnicity, or culture, those people’s human elements are being compensated for the sake of bringing ignorant people laughter, which shouldn’t be happening,” Cho said. “Those ethnicities and races are not yours, so while you think it’s a funny costume, it’s other people’s lives you are wearing,” said freshman Cameron Ho. Dressing up as "another culture," is racist, and an act of privilege. “In this age, that’s exactly what Halloween has turned into: an ugly parade of cultural appropriation, racism, and

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