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A looming trade war

ColumnMarch 15, 2025
Why can’t I buy groceries at a normal price?   By NEVAEH KARRAKER— nakarraker@ucdavis.edu   An empty wallet is something all college students carry. However, it may soon be possible to possess not just an empty wallet, but a negative wallet — a direct result of the wave of tariffs currently unfolding upon consumers who […]

Why you should write to your 13-year-old self

ColumnMarch 15, 2025
The unexpected benefits of showing love to the ‘you’ of the past   By NATALIE SALTER — arts@theaggie.org    During the 13th track of her 2023 album “Bewitched,” Icelandic-Chinese singer-songwriter Laufey turns deeply introspective. “Letter To My 13 Year Old Self” is everything the title suggests — a melodic message backwards through time to her […]

Graphic design is my passion

ColumnMarch 14, 2025
Please follow my new Etsy shop: “Designz by Designer”   By ALLISON KELEHER — adkeleher@ucdavis.edu   I recently got Canva Pro, and it has changed my life. Now that I have so much power at my fingertips, I sometimes get overwhelmed by all of my creative ideas. Not to sound cocky, but graphic design may […]

Moderation is the new excess

ColumnMarch 14, 2025
Microtrends are a big, fat fallacy   By ABHINAYA KASAGANI— akasagani@ucdavis.edu   In an age where microtrends permeate every aspect of daily life, allow me to let you in on a secret: You do not need five iterations of the same thing to feel a sense of joy and there is no “shiny new thing” […]

A tale as old as time

ColumnMarch 14, 2025
Have all of the stories already been told?   By MOLLY THOMPSON – mmtthompson@ucdavis.edu   On the surface, our modern media landscape might seem like it’s full of new ideas and fresh stories. But in reality, we’re essentially rehashing the same classic themes time and time again, with the occasional twist. There’s a theory in […]

The successful, the worthless and the artificially intelligent

ColumnMarch 13, 2025
Exploring how society perpetuates the manifestations of its own fears about AI    By VIOLET ZANZOT— vmzanzot@ucdavis.edu   Artificial Intelligence (AI) — it does your homework, makes your workouts and explains whether you should “text them back” or not. It feels limitless, and if you do happen upon what feels like a limit, you can […]

Object Permanence 101: Hiding a problem does not make it disappear

ColumnMarch 13, 2025
How state and local efforts to forcibly remove encampments and enforce Proposition 36 fail our unhoused communities   By TARA ROMERO— tcrome@ucdavis.edu   On July 26, 2024, California Governor Gavin Newsom enacted Executive Order N-1-24, which allows and encourages local law enforcement to forcibly evict unhoused people from their encampments. “It is imperative to act […]

The rise and impact of climate guilt

ColumnMarch 10, 2025
Concerns regarding the severity of the climate crisis and how to stay resilient   By ELLIE NOH — eenoh@ucdavis.edu   As the effects of global warming increase in severity, their current and future environmental impacts have caused many individuals to experience anxiety about their futures. This anxiety is further fueled by others’ ignorance towards understanding […]

Dear Democrats, please learn to throw punches

ColumnMarch 10, 2025
The Democratic Party needs to start fighting harder for our democracy and the people they represent   By SABRINA FIGUEROA — sfigueroaavila@ucdavis.edu   The past two months have been marked by chaos and political rhetoric that sounds like it came straight from the 1940s. If you’re exhausted, anxious, angry or upset, chances are you are […]

Running on caffeine and regret

ColumnMarch 10, 2025
How midterms expose our crippling procrastination   By NEVAEH KARRAKER— nakarraker@ucdavis.edu   It’s midnight already. After burning through an entire pencil in three days and chugging energy drinks, time is nothing more than an abstract concept. Yet, as the hours blur together, I’ve barely finished a single assignment.  It’s a never ending cycle of work […]

How to (not) do friendship

ColumnMarch 10, 2025
“Louis, I think this is the dissolution of a beautiful friendship”   By ABHINAYA KASAGANI— akasagani@ucdavis.edu   The collapse of an “everyday friendship” is unlike the dissolution of any other relationship. One must procedurally split their assets, sign papers agreeing on an amicable separation system that is fair to both parties, chronicle their collapse of […]

There’s no ‘genius contest,’ so stop competing like there is

ColumnMarch 10, 2025
Breaking down the social pressures to appear smart   By TARA ROMERO— tcrome@ucdavis.edu   In every single class across campus, there will inevitably be that one student (sometimes two or three) whose sole desire is proving that they are smarter than everyone else in the room. You can all imagine exactly who I’m talking about: […]