scope features | anita nielsen (editor) kelsie realf (sub-editor) georgia hick (sub-editor) music&arts | dylan hans (editor) maggie munn (sub-editor) sport | james cornish (editor) jessica drummer (sub-editor) student life | ellen kaldis graphic designer | geordi avila
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Week 9, Sem 131 | Scope Magazine
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positive change deaducation greetings overrated photos sport music/arts/reviews student life cdc corkboard will argue for
contents
from the
editor
Caroline Stanley
from the
President
Matthew McLean Changes For You And Your Student Experience. Your Bond University Student Association has been working hard to secure the changes that you have asked for. Whether it is changes we have made internally or changes we have successfully advocated for the University to make, we have been burning the candle at both ends to make your great student experience even greater.
Hi Bondies! Welcome to Week 9. I hope everyone made it through mid-semester bash and has had a well-deserved break before the end of semester slog begins.
I went with a vibrant colour theme this week to try and bring everyone’s Multimedia Learning Centre 24/7 spirits up - my theme for this week is positivity. The torrential rain has Last year BUSA’s Teaching with Technology Position Paper called for increased opening finally stopped (yay!) and the campus hours for the Main Library and Multimedia Learning Centre. These calls have been answered with extended library access commencing in 2012 and the recent anis lovely to be around. Whilst study nouncement of 24/7 MLC access for the remainder of this semester. is continually stepping up, we still have plenty of fun things going on Brasserie Opening Hours around us and I am loving being In our last meeting with the Vice-Chancellor we raised some concerns about Food and Beverage at uni. This fresh perspective may opening hours. With classes commencing each day at 8am, the 730am opening make it hard for have come from a week’s break students to order and eat their food in time for a morning lecture. This call for change has been answered and starting Monday March 25 the Brasserie will commence trading each weekday at spent interstate (sometimes a 7am. mother’s love is the only cure for life) but it’s great to remember Elections how good Bond is. BUSA elections have changed. Following the review of elections to the Bond University Student Association, we have resolved to adapt a partial ticket system for 2013. This abolishes the existing full ticket system and in its place will be a system where candidates run in small groups or as individuals.
There are some really enlightening articles this week. The 2013 BUSA elections will see students nominate individually or as a part of one of the following first one, over the page, is a groups: great new initiative started by Executive – President, Treasurer and Secretary Education – Vice-President (Education), Advocacy and Special Interests Bond students to tackle bulRecreation – Vice-President (Recreation), Social, Campus Life and Cultural Clubs lying - you should definitely Sport – Vice-President (Sport), Sporting Clubs and Events and Sporting Projects and Development check out their video if you Administration – Corporate Relations, Communications, Publications and IT and Multimedia have the chance. FollowCall for Applications - National Student Leadership Forum ing that is an article about whether tertiary education Bond has been invited to nominate two young people from our University to participate in the 15th National Student Leadership Forum. The National Student Leadership Forum is a nation-leading forum designed to is necessary (you would inspire youths to use their gifts and energies to serve others. hope so). Check out page 15 for the BDU’s first Hosted by Federal Parliamentarians from the Government and Opposition, this initiative seeks to cultivate and inspire leadership ethic in young people between 18-26 from 30th May – 2nd June, 2013. ‘will argue for’ segment, and don’t forget to subThere is a delegate registration fee of $1078, which includes food, accommodation, transport during the forum mit to their topic for and the cost of activities but does not include flights to and from Canberra. Nominees are eligible to apply for funding from the Student Opportunity Fund which last year supported our delegates to attend. next week. To apply please send a one page cover letter outlining why you would like to attend and a copy of your resume to President of the Bond University Student Association Matthew McLean at president.busa@bond.edu.au
Love, Caro x
Scope Magazine | Week 9, Sem 131
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Photo from left to right: Samantha Sestito, Perri Blain, Alaster Radford, Hannah Fitzpatrick, Alyssa Landolt
POSITIVE CHANGE Starts with You 4
Week 9, Sem 131 | Scope Magazine
“I sometimes wonder why anyone would bother to use their most precious resources: time and energy to make another person feel anything but content.�
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et, it happens. Everyday. All over the world. People are bullied at every age and unfortunately these ‘bullies’ cannot ascertain that they are wasting their time and seriously affecting the lives of others.
This is why Samantha Sestito is excited to have become part of a program: “One Goal, One Community: Moving Beyond Bullying and Empowering for Life.” Samantha is working with four other Bond University students (Alyssa Landolt, Alaster Radford, Hannah Fitzpatrick and Perri Blain) through a service-learning project in their negotiation class, which began three years ago. To her knowledge, this program is the largest student-led, commitment-based, community-oriented anti-bullying awareness initiative in the world! The current One Goal, One Community group is actively working on outreach for this project every day. The program is run out of the Bond University Centre for Applied Research in Learning, Engagement, Andragogy and Pedagogy (LEAP) and was designed using a ‘student as agent of change’ framework where students are empowered with information and initiative to begin a ripple effect of positive change in communities. Samantha and her team are working with Professor Amy Kenworthy (Director of the LEAP Centre at Bond) to create and disseminate program outreach materials. To date, the program has created three videos, commitment sheets and booklets, canvases for signatures, and homework to be completed by students working with their parents. Since the Australian National Day of Action Against Bullying and Violence is on March 15th, these Bond students helped to create the latest anti-bullying awareness video in an attempt to spread awareness for the big day. In this video, real members of our community share their stories and create a powerful and relatable message. So far, the program already has commitments from over 15 program partners to show the video this week in the lead up to the big day! More commitments are coming in every day and, according to Samantha and her team, people are loving it! They have had over 500 downloads on iTunes and nearly 300 hits on YouTube in less than one week!
accessible information about bullying through the voices of people who have been affected by it. Each of our videos has real people telling real stories; we believe messages are much more powerful when they are genuine. Our hope is that every person who watches the videos will begin a ripple effect of positive change with those around them. Ghandi once famously said “we should be the change we would like to see in this world.” This video encourages each of us to do just that... to take a stand, join “One Goal,” move beyond bullying and empower people for life. As the theme of this new video so clearly highlights - positive change starts with every one of us.” The video encompasses some really powerful messages; it’s worth checking out! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5jmL8nmzoEM
CALL TO ACTION WE NEED TO OFFER A HELPING HAND AND REACH OUT IF WE NEED HELP WE NEED TO TAKE ACTION TO BECOME ONE COMMUNITY WE NEED TO MOVE FORWARD BEYOND BULLYING AND EMPOWER PEOPLE FOR LIFE JOIN US WITH ONE GOAL, AND MAKE SURE A POSITIVE CHANGE STARTS WITH YOU
DID YOU KNOW - In Australia and the US, a minimum of one in every four students is affected by bullying - Verbal bullying includes name calling, insults, teasing, intimidation, homophobic or racist remarks or verbal abuse - Covert bullying is often hard to recognize. It is designed to harm someone’s social reputation or cause humiliation.
The founder of ‘One Goal’ Amy Kenworthy is an inspirational woman who hopes to provide the resources to enable recognition of bullying, and how to act in positive ways to work to eradicate it.
- With cyber bullying, the majority of victims and bullies know each other, go to the same school, are the same gender, and describe themselves as friends not acquaintances
“This new video, “Positive Change Starts With Me,” is the third in a series of videos designed to provide critical yet
- 85-90% of the time, bullying happens in the presence of others, yet 20% of bystanders actually try to stop it
Scope Magazine | Week 9, Sem 131
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“Deaducation?” By Charlie Sutcliffe
It has come to my attention that there is a large amount of society who regards educationparticularly tertiary education-, as unimportant, or even detrimental. I am going to dispute this assertion with respect, but not before I inform you of exactly what is being said here. Certain people have publically declared that education is a waste of time. An example is “Why I hate School,” a video posted on youtube, securing two million views. The presenter in the video speaks about how fantastic achievers, such as Bill Gates and Mark Zuckerberg, didn’t even graduate from university. The irony here is that they were both educated people, highly ambitious and intelligent, who were also provided with opportunities 90% of the world can only dream of. The second irony is that the presenter of the video had also attended university. My suspicion is that the only reason he is able to assert his views on tertiary education so eloquently is because he had been subject to intelligent and challenging conversation inspired by university itself. This is the reason why he is able to articulate these views with such clarity and conviction; he has been there and done that. He has been educated. University is an indulgent and enriching place of learning. And don’t laugh at that, because you’re here too, so you obviously share my views. If you don’t, give your place to someone else. University is a place where ideas are welcomed. One statement made in this video is that professors have criteria where, if your ideas don’t fit, they put a cross next to your work, effectively rejecting freeflowing ideas that contradict their ideals. In response to that, I say that if your work doesn’t fit the criteria, it’s wrong and you’ve either misinterpreted the task, you’re in the wrong degree, or you’re simply just an idiot. Controversial or contrary views and opinions are always welcomed in university. They just require a particular time and place. By the way, if anyone wants to argue with me about these issues, I’d love a converse or contrary opinion. Just catch me on my student email. Either way, I’d rather be wrong and defiant than right and submissive. Another assertion is that university education provides little or no relevance to graduates’ ultimate career choice. Firstly, it has been my experience that most people pick absolutely useless degrees that can be summed up in a couple of books (written by either John Mill or David Icke), and discussed over an hour of cheese and wine. This is because they feel obliged to study upon graduating school. They then spend those years at university drinking goon, and then suddenly find themselves in a gown, being handed a piece of paper. They then have the audacity to blame the university for the fact that they have wasted their time, and now cannot attain any job, never mind their “dream job”. Don’t be that guy! Secondly, it is my view that not only does a university degree give you credibility, but also perspective. It is also a great networking experience. It is what a person does with both their time at university and their ultimate degree that matters. So, ultimately I’d like to say that we’re all very fortunate people to have been given the university opportunity, and it is up to us to determine what we value and where we want to go. You will never be immune to screw ups, but you can choose to be bitter about the fact that university didn’t buy you a golden office and dream career; Or, you can man up, be all that you can, and do everything that you think matters. At the end of the day, it’s you and your eighty (or so) years of life.
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Week 9, Sem 131 | Scope Magazine
H
ave you ever seen someone at a bar and thought to yourself, “Do I know this person well enough to go for a kiss on the cheek?” Are you one of the worst hand-shakers in the world? Well if either of these things give you a stress itch in your bum then we should be best buddies, or you may just have worms.
wisen me up a bit.
I had to go out for dinner with my girlfriend’s grandparents just the other night, and I was getting a little stressed over how I should greet her grandma. I had met them once before on a similar outing. I know they loved me when they met me (because everyone does), but am I worthy of the kiss on the cheek with her?
Being a talented researcher, I went straight to Wikipedia to look up where handshakes came from. Of course it was the Greeks. Apparently they would shake hands as a sign of peace because it meant they didn’t have a weapon in that hand.
I factored in the fact that I am a good 50 years younger and that grandparents do love to give handsome young boys a kiss ;). I also noted that we had shaken hands on the first encounter and this could be sign of continuation of the handshaking tradition at least until they invite me to Christmas lunch. So what happened? I went for the handshake and she went for the cheek. Yes a true forehead slapping moment! With an awkward laugh to match. God, what was I thinking?! Did I not learn rules number 1, 2 and 3 in social greetings? Worst of all, I am so embarrassed by the awkwardness that I am perpetually unsure whether the other person finds it just as awkward or whether I am particularly sensitive to this type of embarrassment. My therapist tells me the lack of abuse and neglect I had as a child makes me less resilient to these awkward types of situations. Perhaps a catholic priest or two in my life would
So my question after this is, why do we need to have a social greeting? If it’s good no one cares, if it’s bad people get embarrassed, and if it’s non-existent people think your rude. So it’s a no win situation.
So next time at Don’s if you don’t shake my hand I am going to assume you want to stab me at East later that night. (Disclaimer: please note in no way do I consider the alleyway outside East as a likely place to be stabbed, nor do I implicate East in any stabbings occurring outside their nightclub). If I was running for parliament currently, I would be pushing forward a nation wide thinktank, then a royal commission and fuck it why not get Gonski to do a review, so we can create a general consensus on a standard greeting for everyone and anyone. In the meanwhile they should have compulsory ‘How to greet someone’ classes for high school students, the first lesson being ‘how to keep your wrist firm in a handshake.’ I mean Sex-Ed is compulsory, and you can’t fuck someone until you greet them (on a side note could be a good form of contraception, government conspiracy much?). For now, I will just continue to overthink these situations, and remain the most awkward of turtles. So please, avoid greeting me the next time you see me…
Why Greetings Are
Overrated By Sam Murphy
Scope Magazine | Week 9, Sem 131
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week nine Photographers: Kari Grace | Kate Darlington | Ben Thangkam Events: BARC Colour Run | Mid-semester bash
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Week 9, Sem 131 | Scope Magazine
Scope Magazine | Week 9, Sem 131
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FROM THE
SPORT OFFICE GC SUNS International Program for Students On Thursday 7th March international students at Bond learnt about the Australian sport of AFL as part of the Gold Coast SUNS International Program for Students.
SPORTS
The Gold Coast SUNS have specifically designed this program to help integrate international students into the wider Gold Coast community and increase their knowledge of AFL. The program is completely free and students can register at any stage. The program includes: • FREE tickets to a Gold Coast SUNS home game (Game on the 8th June V North Melbourne) • The chance to meet GC SUNS players • Help the SUNS Screamers make the banner for match day • Tour of Metricon stadium and training facilities If you are new to Australia and would like to be a part of the Gold Coast SUNS International Program for Students it’s not too late to register. Simply complete the online form located on the SUNS website http://www.goldcoastfc.com.au/community/international-students-form To view photos from the AFL Explained session, like ‘Bond University Campus Life’ on Facebook.
Sign up for Northern University Games 2013! NUG in 2013 offers students the chance to compete in 16 sports over 5 days of competition, including an action packed social program. Bond University will compete against Universities from all over Queensland and northern New South Wales! Date: Sunday 7 July - Thursday 11 July, 2013 Location: Brisbane, QLD Ten reasons why you should sign up for Northern University Games. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
Sports:
AFL 9’s, Baseball, Basketball, Netball, Rugby Union 7s, Tennis – singles, Squash, Volleyball, Beach Volleyball, Football (soccer), Golf, Hockey, Lawn Bowls, Tenpin Bowling, Touch Football & Water Polo
You get to play the sport you love or improve/learn a new sport Get to know people at Bond outside of your social circle and from all different faculties. Get fit while having the best week away from Uni. A week of no work. You will be representing your Uni at a prestigious sporting event. This year it will be in Brisbane- much cheaper compared to interstate travel Brisbane holds some of the best clubs in Australia. Get to know other students that study in Queensland and share the same interest in the sport you enjoy. Great themed parties at night. When else will you be able to spend five days playing your favourite competitive sport a few times a day and then mingle and go out at night?
So go and sign up and trial for this years Northern University games in Semester 132. Join a sport you love or try a sport you have never played before!
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Week 9, Sem 131 | Scope Magazine
Basketball fans, this one is for you. Dennon provides an in-depth analysis as to who is the greatest basketball player of all time, if there can be crowned one. LeBron James is clearly currently the league’s best player. He has won the MVP award three of the last four years and led the league in most advanced metrics over the same period of time. He can run, pass, shoot, rebound and defend as well or better than any of his peers. An important question lingers: is LeBron the Greatest of All Time, or GOAT?
Kalb ranked Shaq number one in part because the big man had just won three straight NBA Finals MVP awards, a feat matched only by Michael Jordan. Shaq, who had played 11 seasons at that moment, had dominated the league for half a decade and seemed poised to reign for years to come, but his steep decline started immediately. Compared to Shaq, LeBron, in his 10th season, seems even more dominant. Like Shaq, he appears to be the strongest player in the NBA, and, unlike Shaq, he has incredible touch and body control.
SPORTS
A decade ago, Elliot Kalb authored a book titled Who’s Better, Who’s Best in Basketball? that explored that question. Kalb asserted that Shaquille O’Neal was the best basketball player ever. A decade later, Shaq is not even mentioned in the discussion of the NBA’s GOAT. Bill Simmons ranks Shaq 12th, below peers Hakeem Olajuwon, Tim Duncan, and Kobe Bryant. How could Kalb, a behindthe-camera legend in sportscasting, be so wrong?
With so many players, All-Stars and even Hall-of-Famers, how do we possibly begin to define the GOAT of this sport? One option is turning to the numbers. Even so, there are so many stats collected from the court. The field of statistics searches for meaning in datasets, even when they are quite large. The question now becomes: can we find the right statistics to clarify an answer to our question? It is unlikely that one stat will unquestionably crown the GOAT. Stats often sketch an outline of reality. We often need several, particularly in sports, to see consistency and better understand the underlying phenomenon. Can we use statistics to recognize and enjoy the GOAT in real time or will we always overrate the best active player? Just this week, LeBron became the first NBA player ever to score at least 30 points and shoot over 60 percent from the field in six straight games, another sign of his greatness. This record alone doesn’t answer the question of LeBron’s status among the greatest. In Sunday’s game, can we sit back and enjoy watching the GOAT or, even with this current dominance, is LeBron enacting the next scene in his own version of Shaq’s cautionary tale? Let’s dig deeper. Among the stats, some which may come to mind quickly for you, let’s look at perhaps the most amazing of all about LeBron: he has been in the NBA for 10 years, and his shooting percentage has improved from the prior season in every year but one. Check out this progression: .417, .472, .480, .476, .484, .489, .503, .510, .531, .547. During his rookie season, LeBron shot .290 from 3-point range, this year, his 3-point FG % is .403. That is a 39 percent improvement. He is now truly one of the best shooters in the league. He has worked hard to make it look this easy. Any historical argument about the NBA’s GOAT will quickly narrow to four players: Bill Russell, Wilt Chamberlain, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, and Michael Jordan. Wilt, Kareem, and Michael entered the NBA essentially fully formed, especially as shooters. A fascinating aspect to this discussion is that most people focus on career numbers. How does your data look when you retire? How many points? How many titles? How many MVPs? Using that approach will not allow us to witness the GOAT in real-time. Why not reorient the discussion around peak value and measure a player’s dominance of his era along with the strength of that era? In those terms, LeBron has few peers in the history of the NBA. LeBron has led the league in Win Shares -- perhaps the best advanced metric -- four times. Only Michael Jordan [nine times], Kareem Abdul-Jabbar [nine times], and Wilt Chamberlain [eight times] have done it more often. Amazingly, each member of this elite led for the fourth time during the season when they turned 27 years old. LeBron is just reaching his peak and likely has another decade when he will perform at or very close to his current levels.
GOAT
Written by Dennon Clamp
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I will be the first to admit I have a bit of an eclectic taste in music, but club/Techno/House music has never once tickled my fancy until I discovered Yellow Claw. To use the words of Fist in the Air | Fresh New Music – “Yellow Claw takes the newest sounds from the club, and drives them off a cliff.” Featuring just 4 tracks, as a standard EP usually will – guaranteed fun times, sick bass drops, and great predrinks tracks. Yellow Claw, a 3 man Dutch party brings your standard House and Electro with a touch of R&B and some smooth Hip-Hop and creates – for want of a better phrase – a “disco inferno.”
I recommend hooking yourself up with Yellow Claw on soundcloud and going crazy with the replay button. You will not regret it. Europe has been popping out the talent of late what with Swedish House Mafia, De La Soul, Caspa, Foreign Beggars and now Yellow Claw. I’m pretty excited to see what comes of these lads – they produce some funky fresh tunes and though they’ve only got 4 tracks at the mo, they hold a bucket load of potential for “sick beats brah” in the future!
Kicking off with ‘Kaolo’ has its influence in eastern beats and incorporates some cool Tibetan monk bells and even some prayers. Gets you hooked from the get go, and what a top way to start the album. It’s off the chain. W.O.L.F follows with a phrase that one would think would get pretty old pretty quickly, but “Turn up the volume, watch the bass get open” just gets you hyped to the max. ‘4 In The Morning’ features at track #3 and is fucking brilliant. I was reading this fresh music blog earlier this week and it describes ‘4 In The Morning’ perfectly: “huge trap selection with a perfect R&B hook. The drop sounds like a murder scene from an all cyborg version of Psycho.” That says it all, as if you need any more incentive to listen. The fourth and final track ’21 Bad Bitches’ rounds out their package and it is a great choice to end the EP with – admittedly sounds a bit like something GirlTalk would produce, but it brings its own “swag” and chucks a fresh take on Hip-Hop remix anthems.
Film Review
THE PRESTIGE
By Matt Jones
MUSIC, ARTS & REVIEWS
The Amsterdam Trap Music EP
Yellow Claw
Album Review
Let’s go back to the future motherlickers and bake a fucking cake. We’ll only need three ingredients; Wolverine, Batman and some pot...jks but we’ll need some magic which you can get from Woolworth’s for $5.99 a kilo. Step 1). Add Wolverine and Batman - two up and coming magicians - to a large bowl. Step 2). Wait for the relationship between Wolverine and Batman to turn toxic. Step 3). Enjoy the subsequent magic battle royale.
Film Review The Prestige
For those enlightened Bond folk who are trained in the art of magic, you would know that I am writing about one of the greatest movies of all time - The Prestige. In typical Christopher Nolan “I’m going to mind fuck you till you permanently see goats”, The Prestige takes you on journey between the lives of master magicians...nay, wizards, Robert Angier (Hugh Jackman) and Alfred Borden (Christian Bale). Determined to outshine one another, the tricks that these gentlemen pull make Harry Potter look like a gypsy. While the magic is an obvious instant attraction, the interaction between Angier and Borden is what makes this film a masterpiece. Hugh Jackman was outstanding as Angier, and manages to channel that aggression and passion of Wolverine into the obsessive nature of Angier. Christian Bale was superb, with his often bipolar and erratic performance as Borden definitely cementing his spot as one of films best male actors. Not content with Jackman and Bale, Nolan added some class with the inclusion of Michael Caine (as if the film didn’t have a strong superhero presence) as Cutter - and with Caine class is permanent. While many would feel that Nolan’s best work was casting Scarlett Johansson, Piper Perabo and Rebecca Hall as the gorgeous female counterparts, his true genius was evident in the construction of the film’s climax. While making you see goats permanently, Nolan also leaves you with this feeling that you’ve been hit in the face with an invisible Arnold Swartznegger - you know something big is heading your way, but you never see it coming. In summary, The Prestige is the greatest fucking cinematic cake you will eat in a long time. 10/10. Abra Kadabra motherlickers.
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Week 9, Sem 131 | Scope Magazine
STUDENT LIFE
WEEK NINE New club BARC held a colour run on Sunday morning for all Bondies
Initiate (HSA) and Frat Party-
what a great start to the week
No better way to spend a
Sunday than at the BSA’s End of Summer Sunday Sesh
Experienced a taste of
Prohibition in the roaring 1920’s at Midsem Bash Scope Magazine | Week 9, Sem 131
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CDC Corkboard
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Week 9, Sem 131 | Scope Magazine
‘Will Argue for Food’ Brought to you by the BDU We should all eat more horse meat...
FOR Horses have been given an over romanticized image. We should not deny that they have been a great contribution to mankind, being at one point a serious contender for the title of ‘man’s best friend’. However it is unreasonable to conclude merely that this grants them a status quo over other species in the animal kingdom. In the absence of anything better, these beasts are made only good for the deplorable purpose of satisfying man’s need for sport or to contribute to the world’s supply of fresh manure. To save ourselves the awkwardness of just having them around, we should grant them the dignity of Boxer from Orwell’s “Animal Farm”. Horse meat would be a convenient and most needed entry into our diet in view of the global food shortage. It is also one of the very few meats that can actually be agreed upon by people from various religious backgrounds. Of course, vegetarians and animal cruelty advocates are an exception to this, simply because arguing with them on any topic concerning meat would be asinine. - Raul James
AGAINST Australia’s largest agricultural export is that of beef. Cattle farmers across the nation slave day and night to deliver some of the highest quality, most scrumptious steak products in the world. The economic detriment aside, encouraging the consumption of horse meat across the globe would be a disastrous event for humanity. There is a reason the Melbourne Cup is not run by cows; horses are among some of the most intelligent and powerful animals in the world. They are much more valuable as stock horses, dray horses, dressage or race horses then they would be as slaughter. Further, this means that if horse meat was to become a commodity, horse farmers would turn, as all business people do, to what makes the greatest profit. Horses would be more valuable in their prime for any use other than slaughter, so the horses eventually ending up next to your salad and chips would be old, chewy, stringy and generally foul equines that had already spent many years on the planet servicing humans. For these reasons, horse meat should most definitely not be eaten by humans. - Anon Next week’s topic will be “That the UK should invade the Falklands again”
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submit to ‘will argue for ...’
the bdu’s new segment in scope. write 100 words either for or against the topic: “that THE UK SHOULD INVADE THE FALKLANDS AGAIN.” submit to bonddeatingunion@gmail.com 20
Week 9, Sem 131 | Scope Magazine