Being Intentional: Simple Sources of Happiness

By: Morgan Jacobus, Editor in Chief

Take a moment and think to yourself, ‘What makes me happy?’ Don’t overthink it, it can be as simple as mac and cheese (yes, that is on my list).

Now I want you to think of how you can bring more of what makes you happy into your life. The important thing here is just being intentional with how you bring happiness into your life. Something that has taken me a while to accept is that you make time for what is important to you. If it is important, make time. Maybe watch one less episode of Netflix or spend 30 minutes less on your phone. There is time, you just have to find it, and put it toward what is important to you.

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Flying to See Harry Styles

By Alaina Valdespino, Staff Writer and Photographer

“After everything we as individuals... and as a collective have experienced this past year and a half, the least we can do is Treat People with Kindness.” -Harry Styles Love on Tour SA 2021

Harry Styles took the stage at the AT&T Center in San Antonio, TX on the eve of September 9, 2021, marking his third performance on his highly anticipated Love on Tour. For a vast majority of concert goers, me included, this tour was the first live and in-person musical experience in nearly 2 years, making it a highly anticipated event and performance. The eagerness to see an in-person concert added to the existing hype surrounding Harry Styles’ tour contributed to make this performance a night to remember.

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Start Strong in Class: A Guide to Professors

By: Kira Oviedo, Staff Writer

One of the most common misconceptions spread by high school educators is that college professors are more or less hard-headed. As a first-year student, it is reasonable to prepare for this type of environment, but is that the reality? Fortunately enough, I believe this to be a myth. On the contrary, I have found that professors encourage inclusivity and understanding. Despite this comforting fact, there is still action that can be taken to form a good relationship with your professor.

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Raising the Minimum Wage: A Must to Recover from COVID

Alongside stimulus checks and small business loans, the federal minimum wage has been a topic of popular discussion amidst the COVID-19 pandemic. Conservatives argue it is not the time to raise the minimum wage, and progressives argue it is long overdue. As we’ve watched our economy crumble over the course of one hectic year, we’ve all come to the same conclusion: something needs to change. One of those things is the minimum wage.

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Going Vegan

By: Alaina Valdespino, Staff Writer and Photographer

According to Vegan News, over 9 million people identify as vegan or plant-based in the United States and that number is only increasing. In the past year alone, there has been more than a 300% increase in the amount of people that are vegan in America. As astonishing as those numbers are, the reasons why are even more so. From health benefits to environmental reasons, going vegan is trending, and will continue to do so for years to come.

The most common questions asked by non-vegans to vegans is why? Why change my entire lifestyle in order to avoid things I’ve been eating my whole life?

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Urge Legislators to Better Address QAnon

By: Jason Hansen, Guest Writer

My first job out of college was working as a community organizer for a small environmental group. We’d head out twelve deep in a beat-up old van and spend hours going door to door, canvassing for petition signatures and letters from entire communities to their elected officials about issues directly affecting them. I learned a lot on that job, but one of the most important things was that questions can sometimes be better than answers when trying to connect with people. If someone answered the door and I started telling them why I was there, it could turn into a standoff. If someone answered the door and I asked them what they thought about something, it might turn into a conversation. Sometimes, those conversations would blossom into a true exploration of an issue of importance. Rarer still, they might even change their mind.

Over time, I saw how our day-to-day work came together. Letters and petitions were sorted based on topic and district. People who received responses from their representatives sent them back to our office, allowing us to allocate resources based on legislative support. Lobbyists would use them in meetings with legislative staff to show support for an issue with their constituents. Towards the end of my time there, I got to sit in on of these meetings. I saw the effect that those letters can have first-hand, especially in mass. To a politician, a letter from a constituent doesn’t just represent the views of an individual in their district. It represents the views of someone motivated enough to write them, and certainly motivated enough to vote. When this is compounded, it gets their attention.

The last job I had before coming back to Regis was as a MI Systems Maintainer/Integrator in the Army. The position involved setting up and repairing different computer systems, and I had a lot of training on how they worked. One thing that was constant, regardless of the platform, was the way we were taught to fix problems. Figure out the logical flow of a fault, and then start at an end until you identify the issue. Particularly talented soldiers could even recognize which end to start on based on the symptoms. Applying this method saved hours of work, as another technician could trace through an entire system before ending up at the same place these soldiers were starting. Moreover, there were some problems that could only be fixed from one end. Simply put - if a computer is shooting sparks, it might be easier to start with the power cord than the keyboard.

Now, as I get ready to graduate again, I’ve been thinking these lessons and how they might be applied to the problems of the present. There is certainly no shortage of them. However, there is one that I would like to focus on, because you are uniquely suited to do something about it. Namely, the role of objective truth in our society, undermined by movements such as QAnon (If you have not heard of QAnon, I recently published a piece on it that can be found here). Considering one-in-three Americans believe at least some QAnon tenants[i], it may seem like an impossible task. However, I would argue that efforts may be better spent on the other end of the problem.

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