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The Latest: Ryan, Trump at odds on birthright citizenship
FTA:
House Speaker Paul Ryan says President Donald Trump cant end birthright citizenship on his own.
The top Republican tells WVLK radio in Kentucky, Well you obviously cannot do that. You cannot end birthright citizenship with an executive order.
Ryans comments Tuesday offered a rare challenge to the president from his own party.
Cultural appropriation turns Halloween into a nightmare
FTA:
Halloween is again upon us. Across the United States, the prospect of frightening images have some pledging to skip the holiday or closely shield their children. It is not the scary decorations or costumes but cultural appropriation that has triggered a tradition of recrimination and anger. Colleges and universities have warned students not to dress as Indian chiefs or Mexican bandits, while parents have publicly debated whether they can allow their children to dress as the Black Panther or Moana without being accused of cultural appropriation or racism.
Cultural appropriation has become a common term on campuses and is receiving broader meaning with each passing year. In Utah, a high school student was denounced for wearing a Chinese dress to her prom. White students wearing hoop earrings or dreadlocks have been denounced, while there have been protests over serving sushi at Oberlin College, holding yoga classes at the University of Ottawa or having a Mexican food night at Clemson University. The reason behind such limitless forms of cultural appropriation is its limitless meaning. Fordham University law professor Susan Scafidi has defined the term as encompassing the unauthorized use of another cultures dance, dress, music, language, folklore, cuisine, traditional medicine, religious symbols and more.
That makes Halloween a nightmarish orgy of cultural appropriation. Colleges and universities now post warnings not to dress as Native Americans, geishas, samurai or other stereotypes. Syracuse University even threatened a few years ago to have its campus police force students to remove offensive costumes. There is remarkably little debate over such directives because many faculty members fear being labeled as racist or insensitive. What is increasingly rare is any dialogue or willingness to accept that people can hold good faith views on both sides.