For Holmgren, it’s been a long road to the top

Nation’s top recruit credits work, listening, mindset, mentors for his rise

For the last few years, Minnehaha senior Chet Holmgren and former-teammate Jalen Suggs, now a freshman guard for top-ranked Gonzaga, have dominated state championships, AAU showcase tournaments, and ESPN rankings. Now, ESPN projects Suggs to be a top-five pick in the 2021 NBA draft, while they rank Holmgren as the number-one prospect in the Class of 2021.

But their paths to the top were not so similar.

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Addressing the storming of the Capitol

A failure in execution and preparation allowed the “Stop the Steal” protesters to breach the Capitol building on Jan. 6.

It’s not clear whether the Capitol Police treated the protesters passively because they were white or rather because officers have become ambivalent about using force since the events last summer.

Sympathizers of the people who caused January 6th’s chaos have also compared the protests and conflict last summer to the insurrection at the Capitol. This argument fails to account for the reasoning behind both protests (racial injustice vs. a disproved conspiracy theory), not to mention that it was an attack on democracy.

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A vast number of media outlets have banned President Donald Trump and content supporting him from their platforms after the January 6 storming of the US Capitol. The list includes Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, Instagram, Snapchat, Reddit, Twitch, TikTok, Shopify and even Apple, who banned Parler, an app that had been used to coordinate violence on January 6. 

President Trump has been tweeting inflammatory remarks since Barack Obama’s presidency. Trump hasn’t changed; only his circumstances have. Guess when these tweets were made:

 

“This election is a total sham and a travesty. We are not a democracy!”

-@realdonaldtrump

“We can’t let this happen. We should march on Washington and stop this travesty. Our nation is totally divided!”

-@realdonaldtrump 

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Larry Jacobs on voting behavior

Lawrence R. Jacobs is McKnight Presidential Chair in Public Affairs, the Walter F. and Joan Mondale Chair for Political Studies, and director of the Center for the Study of Politics and Governance in the Hubert H. Humphrey School and the Department of Political Science at the University of Minnesota. The Center is a pre-eminent hub for political and policy analysis in the Midwest. (hhh.umn.edu)

The Talon‘s opinions editor Beck Westrem interviewed Jacobs on Oct. 2, 2020.

I have to ask you about your thoughts on Trump testing positive for COVID. How do you think this will affect the election?

First off, it’s obviously bad news. It’s a horrible disease. As President of the United States, this could affect the country. You know, I think the big thing about it is the President is behind in the election. And the President needed something to catch up. And this is not going to help him catch up. I think it’ll just kind of, eat up time that he desperately needed to try to convince voters. So, it’s not good news for the president in terms of his health obviously, but also for his political survival.

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For a century of U.S. history, Western movies reveal American values: good, bad and ugly

Are you starting to get claustrophobic, having now spent weeks confined to your home? Social isolation will likely continue for the time being, but there is still an activity you can do in your own home that will surely alleviate your cabin fever: watch a Western.

If someone unfamiliar with American culture wanted to know about the nation’s folklore, cowboys on the frontier would be a good place to start. For more than a century, the Western movie genre has told these stories in a variety of ways, and all of them have reflected contemporary American values, which have not always been admirable.

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Volunteering from a distance

Health officials are not wrong that one of the best things you can do right now for both yourself and others is to simply stay at home and distance yourself. However, with so many communities struggling with finances and health, just a little bit of service can greatly impact someone in need by providing them with necessities or even just promoting positivity. Students at Minnehaha have been getting themselves involved in a variety of different projects.

Senior Avery Lehr and sophomore Will Lehr organized a food drive for the residents of their high rise in Saint Paul, and donated more than 500 pounds of food to the Hallie Q. Brown Food Shelf.

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Three new books forecast key shifts high-school students should know about

Knowing about the magnitude of previous technological revolutions, many experts think we are currently experiencing another historical upheaval, known to some as the Fourth Industrial Revolution. Many workers face uncertainties about the consequences of this revolution, but one known tech development is artificial intelligence.

Artificial intelligence is a recent innovation that makes tasks more efficient by learning from information it is provided. Most computers only know what is coded into them, or taught to them by humans. Artificial intelligence, on the other hand, involves computer systems that have the ability to learn by themselves.

One of the main worries surrounding the development of artificial intelligence, a component in the Fourth Industrial Revolution, is the automation of jobs. Many Americans who perform routine tasks for their jobs, such as manufacturing or data organizing, are supposedly at risk of losing their jobs to machines that are programmed to work cheaper and more efficiently. This raises questions about which jobs specifically are in danger of automation, what those workers will do if they lose their jobs and if there will be new jobs created from this revolution.

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Indie studio A24 quickly establishes reputation for high-quality, entertaining films

Winter break is just around the corner, and there is no better time to stay home and watch some movies. Maybe you’re tired of the Christmas reruns, in which case you should consider trying something new.

An understated movie studio, A24, has become one of the most successful film companies in the last couple of years, and almost any of their moves are worth a watch.

A24 is an independent film studio, and since its start in 2012, it has produced and distributed an astonishing number of successful movies. One of these movies, Moonlight, even won Best Picture at the 2017 Oscars.

So how has an independent film company become a rival of studios owned by large corporations like Warner Bros, Paramount and 20th Century Fox?

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Will individuality erode community?

 

Rutger Hoekstra, a junior, considers patriotism, having children and religion as “very important” values. These views actually put Hoekstra in the minority among his generation.

According to an August 2019 poll by The Wall Street Journal, young generations consider values like those much less important than older generations do.

Views varied sharply by age. Nearly 4 out of 5 people (79%) who were 55 or older said patriotism was very important, compared with 2 of 5 people (42%) aged 18 to 38; two-thirds of people (65%) aged 39 to 54 said patriotism was very important.

Two-thirds of the older group recognized religion as very important, compared with fewer than one-third of the younger group.

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Complex laws, uneven enforcement creates confusion for teens

 

Aidan Phelps and Asa Wold, two 15-year-old freshmen, want to see the new movie Deadpool 2 this week. They could see it at Rosedale, Southdale or the Mall of America.

They decide to meet Friday for the 9:45 p.m. showing at Rosedale AMC. The movie ends at 11:45, and they plan to take an Uber home.

Since they would be in Ramsey County, and they are both 15 years old, they could be arrested for violating the curfew law.

But if they had seen the 9 p.m. showing at Southdale, they wouldn’t have to take that risk, because they would be in Hennepin County, where the curfew is midnight, though they’d violate curfew if they saw the same movie on Thursday night.

Any after-school movie at the Mall of America would violate curfew on Friday, when anyone under 16 is required to have a 21-year-old guardian with them after 4 p.m.

Curfews have been used since the Civil War and were revived in the 1950s and ‘60s, but it wasn’t until recent decades that most cities had imposed a juvenile curfew.

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