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	<title>High School Confidential</title>
	<link>http://theblogcabin.com/homebase/hsc</link>
	<description>A Community room at TheBlogCabin.com</description>
	<pubDate>Thu, 23 Apr 2009 15:06:16 +0000</pubDate>
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		<title>The Asian Mystique</title>
		<link>http://theblogcabin.com/homebase/hsc/2008/03/26/the-asian-mystique/</link>
		<comments>http://theblogcabin.com/homebase/hsc/2008/03/26/the-asian-mystique/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 26 Mar 2008 20:51:59 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>blogmaster</dc:creator>
		
		<category><![CDATA[March 2008]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://theblogcabin.com/homebase/hsc/2008/08/14/the-asian-mystique/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[By Laya Rajan
They&#8217;re smart, they&#8217;re overachievers, and they&#8217;re bound to  take over your school&#8217;s orchestra. That&#8217;s the general consensus of Asians. There  is a wealth of stereotypes out there; everything from how strict the parents  are, to how unathletic the children can be.    From an Asian perspective, here&#8217;s the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>By Laya Rajan</p>
<p>They&#8217;re smart, they&#8217;re overachievers, and they&#8217;re bound to  take over your school&#8217;s orchestra. That&#8217;s the general consensus of Asians. There  is a wealth of stereotypes out there; everything from how strict the parents  are, to how unathletic the children can be.    From an Asian perspective, here&#8217;s the truth behind the veil.</p>
<p>Asians are smart. This is one of the most overused phrases  when our generation thinks of Asia. This is <em>the</em> most irksome thing a person can  hear. There&#8217;s no gene for intelligence.   There are over two billion people on the Asian continent itself, not  including the millions of people of Asian descent elsewhere. Every single one  cannot be, and certainly is not, brilliant. We&#8217;re not any more intelligent than  any other ethnic group.</p>
<p>The secret lies in our upbringing. In Asian countries,  during our parents&#8217; time, everything was radically different from the way it is  here in America.  No one lived in a commodious environment. My grandparents were in their 20s at  the time of India&#8217;s independence.  They  worked hard, harder than anyone could imagine, supporting their families. My  parents understood that to make a better life for themselves, they would have  to search out every opportunity and exploit it to its fullest. The only way to do  that was through education. The learning system in Asian countries is very  different from here in America.  While we are playing with blocks and taking  naps, over in Asia, children are memorizing  their multiplication tables up to 12. Education is a very strong priority in  Asian households. Thus, the children work hard to attain academic  excellence.</p>
<p>Asians are un-athletic nerds. This makes me laugh. While  this may have been true several years ago, in today&#8217;s world, Asia  is a strong contender in global sports. It&#8217;s not evident, because Americans don&#8217;t  generally hear about the sports in which Asians excel. China especially is producing  athletes that are the class of the field. At the last World Gymnastics  Championships, China  won both the men&#8217;s and women&#8217;s team competitions.  The reigning men&#8217;s all-around champion is  Chinese, and four out of the top six finishers in the all-around competition  were Asian. While people don&#8217;t take pingpong seriously as an Olympic sport,  Asian pingpong players train as hard as anyone else, and should in no way be  considered a lesser achievement. They are considered some of the greatest  players of all time, with incredibly impressive resumes. Contrary to what one  might believe, athletes from China  and India  excel in weight lifting. In addition, in figure skating today, Chinese pairs  and Japanese singles skaters are the athletes to beat in a sport traditionally  ruled by Russia, Europe, and  America.</p>
<p>&#8220;I got a 97. I am so dead.&#8221;  Ah, yes: The myth of pushy parents. If  someone were to ask me if my parents were pushy, my answer would have to be  most emphatically no. Asian parents are not pushy; they&#8217;re just incredibly involved  in what their kids do. While it is true that anything below an A is considered  an abysmal grade by Asian standards, the ideology is not, &#8220;either get a  100 or we disown you,&#8221; or &#8220;until every subject is perfect, you will  sit in your room and do nothing but study.&#8221;  It&#8217;s more like, &#8220;Get a good grade in  everything, or else you&#8217;ll have to work harder.&#8221;</p>
<p>When I hear people saying that they get MySpace and post  pictures on the Web without their parents&#8217; knowledge, or throw parties and go  out with their friends behind their parents&#8217; backs, I am truly astounded. It&#8217;s  unimaginable for me not to tell my parents what I&#8217;m doing and what grades I get  on every single test, not because my parents would kill me if I didn&#8217;t, but  because that&#8217;s the way I&#8217;ve been raised.</p>
<p>I have a laundry list of activities that I&#8217;ve been pursuing  since a very young age. I&#8217;ve also tried just about everything under the sun.  Dance, check. Singing, check. Instruments of all descriptions, yup. Gymnastics,  swimming, ice skating, horseback riding. You name it, I&#8217;ve done it. And why did  my parents put a slightly ungainly 5-year old into so many activities? Don&#8217;t be  fooled. My parents didn&#8217;t have any visions of me being the next Yo-yo Ma or  Nadia Comaneci. They just wanted me to have every possible opportunity.  Every parent wants to ensure their child  succeeds, with whatever their definition of success is.</p>
<p>This mentality is exemplified in all immigrant groups, not  just Asians. My parents&#8217; generation came to this country with very little, and  worked their way up to be able to live the way they dreamed of. They wanted us  to start off on a better plane of life than they did, reaching higher. For  Asians, the only surefire way they know is education. To this end, every piece  of homework has to be done with a sharpened pencil, every line measured, and  penmanship exquisite. But there is no &#8220;you failed&#8221; mentality when  something goes wrong, rather a &#8220;what did <em>we</em> do wrong together&#8221; question. Our parents just want the very  best for us. They want to see what we can accomplish that they weren&#8217;t able to.</p>
<p>I love my iPod. I love to dance. I can&#8217;t wait for the next  episode of &#8220;The Amazing Race.&#8221;   I&#8217;m just another teenager, but I come with a tag that reads:  Asian-American Overachiever. A-plus or bust. The tag is acquired so easily, and  it sticks even more easily.</p>
<p>Living up to that label, however, is a different story. But  the way I&#8217;ve grown up has taught me valuable life lessons. I&#8217;ve been taught to  dream deep and reach high, because nothing is impossible. You can achieve  anything if you want it badly enough, because if it wasn&#8217;t possible, you wouldn&#8217;t  want it so badly.</p>
<p>With a book in hand and violin strapped to my back, I am  making my journey towards success.  And  you know what?  I wouldn&#8217;t have it any  other way.</p>
<p><em>Laya Rajan is a senior at Yorktown High School  and the opinion editor of its student newspaper, </em>The Voice<em>. </em></p>
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		<title>Rock the vote, don&#8217;t sway it</title>
		<link>http://theblogcabin.com/homebase/hsc/2008/03/19/rock-the-vote-dont-sway-it/</link>
		<comments>http://theblogcabin.com/homebase/hsc/2008/03/19/rock-the-vote-dont-sway-it/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 19 Mar 2008 20:57:20 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>blogmaster</dc:creator>
		
		<category><![CDATA[March 2008]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://theblogcabin.com/homebase/hsc/2008/03/19/rock-the-vote-dont-sway-it/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[By Jordan Teicher



Jordan Teicher


In 1992, a slew of  popular celebrities, including Madonna, Donny Osmond, and members of the  Ramones, encouraged eligible youths to &#8220;Rock the Vote.&#8221;  In  2004, the voting-advocacy effort continued under the pretense of dumbfounding  logic – the threat of imminent death – in rapper P. Diddy&#8217;s &#8220;Vote [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>By Jordan Teicher</p>
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<th scope="col" valign="middle" align="center"><span><em><font color="#FFFFFF">Jordan Teicher</font></em></span></th>
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<p>In 1992, a slew of  popular celebrities, including Madonna, Donny Osmond, and members of the  Ramones, encouraged eligible youths to &#8220;Rock the Vote.&#8221;  In  2004, the voting-advocacy effort continued under the pretense of dumbfounding  logic – the threat of imminent death – in rapper P. Diddy&#8217;s &#8220;Vote or Die&#8221;  campaign.</p>
<p>Now, in 2008, most  graduating high school seniors are members of that key 18- to 24-year-old  voting demographic and they, too, have come under the radar of today&#8217;s  celebrity activists.  The question this  time, however, is not &#8220;should we vote?&#8221; but rather, &#8220;for whom  should we vote?&#8221;</p>
<p>As early as May  2007, talk show host and super-celebrity, Oprah Winfrey, set a precedent for  the upcoming election by making her political convictions known, throwing her support  behind Senator Barack Obama in an interview on &#8220;Larry King Live.&#8221;   From there, the trend of celebrity endorsements of political candidates  exploded, and we soon witnessed the emergence of Chuck Norris, Robert DeNiro,  the Black Eyed Peas, George Clooney, Whoopi Goldberg, and the like in campaign  headlines.</p>
<p>As part of a 10-question  interview with Natalie Portman in <em>Time</em> magazine&#8217;s March 10 issue, a subscriber-submitted letter inquired if the  actress would ever consider running for office. For sensible readers who may  remember Portman best as an alien queen sporting a gigantic hairdo in the &#8220;Star  Wars&#8221; films, this question should give pause for thought.  Granted,  Portman is a smart girl – a graduate from Harvard University  with a bachelor&#8217;s degree in psychology, and a talented actress who has landed  some important roles. Nonetheless, we should still be asking ourselves, &#8220;Do  these career attributes qualify her to pursue a career in politics?&#8221; Just  because Portman is a public figure, should she be in a position to influence  public affairs? Frankly, asking a movie star about politics seems about as  logical as asking a mechanic for a medical consultation.</p>
<p>The fact that <em>Time</em> magazine even considered publishing  that reader&#8217;s question illustrates the utter confusion of today&#8217;s news audience  – the extent to which the conflicting interests of want and need have blended such  that the media now needs to satisfy the public&#8217;s every whim and its desire to  hear reports on both Britney Spears and the war in Iraq in the same two-hour  time block.</p>
<p>In a political  environment in which an endorsement from Oprah can carry as much weight as one  from a powerful senator, in which Al Gore can appear on MTV without much to-do,  and Barack Obama can take home a Grammy, it is no wonder that the political  arena is so befuddled. Today, politicians are celebrities, and celebrities  are politicians. The juices on the proverbial dinner plate are mixing together,  and it is because we haven&#8217;t been able to create proper barriers.</p>
<p>The consequences  of this situation vary, from the good – celebrity-politician Arnold  Schwarzenegger, who shocked critics nationwide with his commendable performance  as California&#8217;s leading executive – to the bad – celebrity-political activist  Rosie O&#8217;Donnell, boisterous former-host of &#8220;The View,&#8221; whose views,  arguably should never have left her mouth, no less been broadcast to the  general public.</p>
<p>A truth that seems  to have escaped our star-struck proponents of celebrity endorsements is that  some of these political activists who are treated with such reverence – Paris Hilton  and 50 Cent for instance – are not nearly as active as they are political. Both  &#8220;Vote or Die&#8221; figureheads, whose public support of the organization  may have been responsible for sending thousands of young voters to voting  booths, were notably absent when the time came to cast their own votes. Mr. 50  Cent could not vote because he is a former convict, while the infamous Hilton heiress  did not because, well, she&#8217;s Paris Hilton.</p>
<p>It turns out that  hypocrisy is another thing that celebrities and politicians have in  common.</p>
<p>And that&#8217;s just  the point. Our stars may have strong political convictions, and they may, sometimes,  be intelligent individuals in their own right, but in the end, they are merely  performers. Their reasons for supporting a particular candidate can be just as  shallow as anyone else&#8217;s. Just because they have a platform for their opinions  does not necessarily mean they are better informed.</p>
<p>Ultimately, pride  for one&#8217;s country, the desire to exercise one&#8217;s constitutional right to vote,  or concern for one&#8217;s future in the United States of America should be  enough motivation for citizens to cast their ballots. But, if the sole factor  in deciding to participate in the election process is that P. Diddy, Justin  Timberlake, Scarlett Johansson, or Oprah said to, then so be it.</p>
<p>For the sake of politics, and the sovereignty of  the American voter, however, their power should stop at that. Celebrities have  all the show business credibility to help &#8220;rock the vote,&#8221; but they  have no business governing it.</p>
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		<title>Politics and pent-up frustration</title>
		<link>http://theblogcabin.com/homebase/hsc/2008/03/12/politics-and-pent-up-frustration/</link>
		<comments>http://theblogcabin.com/homebase/hsc/2008/03/12/politics-and-pent-up-frustration/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 12 Mar 2008 21:02:12 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>blogmaster</dc:creator>
		
		<category><![CDATA[March 2008]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://theblogcabin.com/homebase/hsc/2008/08/14/politics-and-pent-up-frustration/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[By Leigh Garcia



Leigh Garcia is a junior at Hendrick Hudson High School.


Many people view teenagers as ignorant and close-minded  towards the rest of the world.  With the 2008 presidential election  approaching and politics invading our lives from all angles, I can&#8217;t help but  agree.
I am shocked and appalled at the amount [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>By Leigh Garcia</p>
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<th scope="col"><img src="http://www.ncnlocal.com/hsc/leighgarcia.jpg" alt="Leigh Garcia" width="152" align="left" height="210" /></th>
<th scope="col" valign="middle" align="center"><span><em><font color="#ffffff">Leigh Garcia is a junior at Hendrick Hudson High School.</font></em></span></th>
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<p>Many people view teenagers as ignorant and close-minded  towards the rest of the world.  With the 2008 presidential election  approaching and politics invading our lives from all angles, I can&#8217;t help but  agree.</p>
<p>I am shocked and appalled at the amount of high school  students who are in the dark when it comes to politics and world issues. They  can tell you who was voted off &#8220;American Idol&#8221; and what happened on &#8220;<em>Lost&#8221;</em>or in the sports world, but they can&#8217;t  tell you who won the Wyoming  primary or what happened this week in the White House. I don&#8217;t think that  all teenagers should know everything about politics, but when they don&#8217;t know  the difference between Democrat and Republican or liberal and conservative, I  worry about the future of this country.</p>
<p>We are the ones who are going to run the country in a few  decades. We are the future senators, governors, cabinet members,  presidents. We are the future of this nation, and I really fret at that  thought when I find more and more people my age who don&#8217;t have a clue about the  world.</p>
<p>Granted, things do change and one day my generation will wake  up and realize that politics – even though anyone born after today&#8217;s date in  1990 can&#8217;t vote – affect <em>everyone</em>. I also recognize that there <em>are</em> high school students who love politics and are even more informed than I am,  but that&#8217;s a small minority (or just the debate team). I am not the ignorant  teenager who finds politics boring. I think it&#8217;s absolutely fascinating! It disappoints  me that I am unable to speak about it with my peers.</p>
<p>It is so frustrating that not enough teenagers care about or  are aware of politics. With so much technology in our lives, I feel like  it&#8217;s inevitable that we become aware of what&#8217;s happening in our nation and  world. Political information blares at me from my home page every time I  sign on the Internet (and just reading headlines gives information!). It&#8217;s all  over my Facebook news feed via polls and debate coverage, and is all over the  radio and TV. Unless you live under a rock (which I guess the majority of  my classmates do), there is no excuse for not being politically aware.</p>
<p>Another issue I am frustrated about with teenagers and politics  is that so many teens &#8220;support&#8221; a politician and don&#8217;t know why. They  do so based on race, gender, age, or how expensive their haircut is, not the  major issues of each candidate. That frightens me. If young people  are going to vote, will they <em>really</em> make the best choice for our  nation? Or will they pick the candidate who looks best on the cover of a  magazine?</p>
<p>What are worse than that are the remarks I hear and the  looks I receive when I say that I am a Republican. I am met with a glare and, &#8220;So  you like Bush?&#8221; How ignorant can they be!?One man does not serve as  the basis of an entire party. Oh, wait, that&#8217;s right. They actually don&#8217;t  know the difference between the parties.</p>
<p>What has this country come to?</p>
<p>I am fed up with the &#8220;It doesn&#8217;t affect me&#8221;  attitude. I am tired of hearing, &#8220;I can&#8217;t vote yet – why does it matter?&#8221;   I loath to hear, &#8220;Politics is only  for adults.&#8221; Politics affects everyone, no matter the age. We  teenagers are going to be running the country soon. At what point will  politics go from &#8220;boring&#8221; and &#8220;useless&#8221; to &#8220;fascinating&#8221;  and &#8220;essential?&#8221;</p>
<p>I myself do not know, but I hope it&#8217;s soon. The fate of  the country rests on our shoulders.</p>
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