Activist wants students to organize and ‘change the world’ see FEATURES / PAGE 3
SPORTS FEATURE
The rise of college football: Tufts, Dartmouth
‘Kiss’ co-director hopes audience will feel Syria’s distance after seeing film see ARTS&LIVING / PAGE 5
SEE SPORTS / BACK PAGE
THE
INDEPENDENT
STUDENT
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TUFTS
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T HE T UFTS DAILY
VOLUME LXXIV, ISSUE 48
tuftsdaily.com
Thursday, November 16, 2017
MEDFORD/SOMERVILLE, MASS.
Tanden and Kristol debate present, future of politics
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Neera Tanden, the president and CEO of the Center for American Progress, addressed members of the Tufts community on the state of American politics in ASEAN Auditorium on Nov. 15. by Robert Katz News Editor
Policy advisor Neera Tanden and political commentator William Kristol discussed the state of the country and civil discourse in the Cabot Center’s ASEAN Auditorium on Nov. 15 as the final event in the Jonathan M. Tisch College of Civic Life’s Distinguished Speaker Series. The talk, entitled “Resistance and Persistence: Civil Debate in Divided Times,” was moderated by Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter and columnist Farah Stockman. Tanden, the president and CEO of the Center for American Progress, and Kristol, a conservative and the founder and editor of The Weekly Standard, discussed such topics as the 2016 presidential election, the causes of public mistrust for the government, the future of both parties, the GOP’s current proposed tax plan and voter engagement. The two took questions from various members of the crowd as well. The talk was cosponsored by the Department of Political Science, CIVIC, Tufts Republicans and Tufts Democrats, according to Tisch College Dean Alan Solomont. “There may be no more pressing issue in America today than the state of civil discourse and what it’s doing to our politics and to our democracy. It’s a problem that shows up everywhere, on college campuses, on Facebook and Twitter, and in the halls of Congress,” Solomont said. “When do we uncompromisingly resist ideas that we find harmful, and when do we persist in seeking dialog and common ground?” Among the questions posed was why both speakers felt that the 2016 presidential election ended in President Donald Trump’s victory. “I think the inability of Washington to do anything in the last six years of the Obama
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administration … which I put completely at the feet of Mitch McConnell, did actually create a sense amongst a large swath of voters, both some on the left and many on the right, that created an anti-Washington fervor that many candidates tried to tap into: essentially, that Washington is broken and needed fundamental fixing, which to be honest is hard to argue with,” Tanden said. “Washington isn’t fixing the country’s problems.” Kristol believed that the public’s anti-establishment feeling was demonstrated by the support of Bernie Sanders and Trump during the primaries, as they marketed themselves as insurgent candidates. “We should have seen this coming a little more, politically,” Kristol said. “I think from a social science point of view, the fact that Bernie Sanders got 45 percent of the vote on the Democratic side and Donald Trump got 45 percent of the vote on the Republican side is the fact about 2016.” When asked about the fate of the Republican Party, Kristol was split. “[Someone] asked me yesterday, ‘What are the chances you’ll be voting Republican in 2020,’ and I said, ‘I don’t know, fifty-fifty maybe?,'” Kristol said. “I won’t vote for Trump if he’s renominated; can you beat Trump in a primary? Could the congressional party really separate from a president of that party? That’s very rare.” Tanden appeared to downplay the importance of fractures within the Democratic Party, citing the success of Virginia’s Governor-Elect Ralph Northam, a Democrat, as proof of the party’s cohesion. “I think we’re learning as we’re going,” Tanden said. “I think there’s anger at everyone in the political system. The question is, [are the dissidents] a majority of your party or not?” Additionally, Stockman brought up the topic of public dissatisfaction with the United
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States’ involvement in the globalization of free trade. Kristol maintained that free trade, while not guaranteeing equality of outcomes, was a boon to the world and U.S. economies. Also, he attributed lowered rates of poverty and starvation worldwide over the past half-century to the growth of free trade. “[People have voted against globalization] because nobody made the case for it, because people were intimidated by the case against it, because there were people who were hurt and it’s hard to stand up to the politicians,” Kristol said. “Still, more people are benefitting than are hurt by it.” For Tanden, while free trade can be beneficial to some, it is critical to support those who it marginalizes. “Too many people in the democratic establishment said that trade is a win-win,” Tanden said. “That can be true and it is true. Overall, trade is a win for the country. But lots of people lose in trade and people in the United States who lose from trade are the least capable. We give them the fewest tools.” Among the questions asked by audience members, one was how to treat the issue of the Tufts Republicans’ request for Tufts Community
Union Senate to provide funding for former Breitbart editor Ben Shapiro to speak on campus. Kristol believed that Shapiro should be permitted to speak once invited. “It’s a free country,” Kristol said. “I think people’s rights should be respected once invited and it’s up to educational institutions, especially private ones to have their own rules about who can be invited and who shouldn’t. Ben Shapiro strikes me as being way within the pale of respectability. I differ with him on some things, but the idea that he would not be permitted to speak on a campus is wrong.” While Tanden agreed that Shapiro should be permitted to speak on campus, she also compared the situation to the response of many Boston residents to the Charlottesville, VA riots, as thousands appeared at Boston Common to counter-protest a conservative rally. “My basic take is, in America we have to struggle with people who think very differently from ourselves and deal with that struggle,” Tanden said. “I guess it’s fine to have these people and then massively protest them. That is the right thing, which is to have massive, large scale protests against the abhorrent ideas that see TISCH DEBATE, page 2
Disaster relief event opens new period of Buddhist activism at Tufts by Aneurin Canham-Clyne News Editor
Tufts Mindfulness Buddhist Sangha hosted a disaster relief event on Nov. 5. The event, co-hosted with Jumbo Hurricane Relief, the Jonathan M. Tisch College of Civic Life and Public Harmony, included live music, food and an open-mic. The event, named “Disaster Relief and Compassionate Action” was meant as a response to “all the recent catastrophe” according to an email from the Tufts Chaplaincy. This includes natural disasters such as Hurricane Maria and the California fires, as well as domestic incidents such as the Las Vegas massacre, according to Sangha members. According to Ann-Marie Lee, a sophomore and Sangha’s lead organizer, the event opens a new period of Buddhist activism at Tufts. Harsha Menon, a graduate student active in the Mindfulness Buddhist Sangha, told the Daily that the group has ties to these disasters. “Three of the Sangha leaders are from Northern California, and the fires came close to their homes. We realized that was another disaster,” Menon said. “We were reacting to
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those and the hurricanes, and the shootings in Las Vegas. We wanted to know what we could do collectively and put together an event to raise awareness and stand in solidarity with the people who were suffering and participate in our own healing.” This healing process occurred through art and expression, including remarks from the events organizers, according to Menon. Associate Director of Administration for Health and Wellness Jennifer Berrios was one participant. She shared that many of her family members live in Puerto Rico and suffered as a result of the hurricane and subsequent federal neglect. According to Priya Sraman, the Buddhist in Residence for the Tufts Chaplaincy, this event marked a new period for the group. “This is the first event of its kind organized by the Buddhist Sangha. This is a very young group, still,” Sraman said. The event attempted to provide a holistic response to disaster, Lee said. The Mindfulness Buddhist Sangha invited Tzu Chi, an international Buddhist disaster see MINDFULNESS BUDDHIST SANGHA, page 2
NEWS............................................1 FEATURES.................................3 ARTS & LIVING.......................5
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