Trump Administration Strips Women’s Reproductive Rights

By Mkaylee Gillenwater, 10th Grade

Title X is a program that provides affordable healthcare options to people with low incomes. Title X was put in the system to give women a right to their own bodies. Donald Trump is now trying to silence women’s voices by taking away the choice of birth control options. Birth control was made for the sole reason to let women choose the option of safer sex and allow more control over their bodies; without it women will no longer have that power within their own skin. 98% of women who have been sexually active have used birth control at one point in their lives.

Trump is trying to criminalize abortions and miscarriages. Back in the day, before birth control methods, some women who got pregnant would use a clothes hanger to abort the fetus because abortion was illegal. It was extremely dangerous but their only option. With abortion now legalized, it gives women a safe way to make their own choices about their bodies. If Donald Trump takes away birth control and makes abortion illegal, it makes women completely stuck.

Planned Parenthood is also at stake. Planned Parenthood helps provide physical, emotional, educational and sexual health care to those who might not be able to afford those services elsewhere. Donald Trump is taking away $60 million in Planned Parenthood funding. If they lose too much money, prices will start going up for patients who already can not afford higher medical prices to begin with.

These laws were put in place to give women their rights to their own bodies. Women who get pregnant should have the right to multiple choices on which way they would like to handle it. Women should also have the right to choose not to get pregnant if that’s where they’re at in their life. But ultimately, it is the woman’s choice. Donald Trump has no right to take away rights that do not affect him.

Student Hunger on U.S. College Campuses

By Dylan Borne

36% of students are food insecure, according to a national study published by the Wisconsin HOPE Lab in April of this year. Out of the 40,000 students surveyed at 66 schools, another 36% are housing insecure and a full 9% of university students and 12% of community college students are homeless.

This means tens of thousands of students nationally have to pick between food, a roof, and textbooks. In other words: either you get a meal now or a paycheck later.

On a historical level, what these numbers show is that greater numbers of working class people are attending college. Being a student isn’t just for the privileged anymore, and bosses are becoming more and more demanding for workers with degrees.

But while colleges might be opening their doors to low-income youth, they’re not lowering tuition for them. In fact, they’re taking advantage of working class students’ desperation. Tuition rates are skyrocketing and university administrators are raking in 6 figures or more. The UL system’s President makes $400,000, and at the highest end Tulane’s last president stepped down with an ending salary of $1.6 million.

Pretending they’ve found the end-all solution, some colleges, like Southeastern and LSU, have set up food pantries. But these are just breadcrumbs. LSU only lets students use their food pantry twice a week (when their president is bringing home a $600,000 salary!).

Even with food pantries, what will students do about housing? Healthcare? Crushing debt?

Pantries are surely helpful, but they’re clearly not enough– they don’t grasp the root of the problem.

When schools are run like businesses for administrators’ profit, working class students suffer. Colleges should be run to provide education before anything else, and students need real decision-making power to make sure that happens. A Students’ Assembly should have a say in whether or not a tuition hike or food limit gets passed. It’s impossible to get a real education while you can’t even meet your basic needs, and the school leadership’s greed shouldn’t be getting in the way.