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InFlux Magazine

InFlux Magazine, Spring 2021, Hubbard School of Journalism and Mass Communication, University of Minnesota

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influx influx<br />

influx influx<br />

Katie Swartzer<br />

4<br />

5<br />

Letter from the Editor<br />

Staff page<br />

Jackie Crawford<br />

6<br />

Written in the Stars<br />

Skylar Wolfe<br />

9<br />

Y2K Trends are Back – but where did they<br />

come from?<br />

Eric Servatius<br />

10<br />

From Henry Ness to George Floyd: The<br />

limits of government reform in Minneapolis<br />

Alex Strangman<br />

14<br />

Hashing it out: Minnesota<br />

lawmakers clash over legal marijuana<br />

Anna Keck<br />

Amy Halbmaier<br />

Kathryn Richner<br />

18<br />

Visual Editorial: Nowhere to Go<br />

Samantha De Leon<br />

24<br />

The Ups and Downs of OnlyFans<br />

Reece Economides<br />

26<br />

Young Moguls: The new generation of<br />

investors<br />

Natalie Ryder<br />

28<br />

An Uphill Battle Worth Fighting<br />

Published by The Hubbard School of<br />

Journalism and Mass Communications<br />

The University of Minnesota<br />

Murphy Hall<br />

206 Church Street SE<br />

Minneapolis, MN 55455<br />

Printed by Modern Press<br />

808 First St SW<br />

New Brighton, Minnesota 55112<br />

On the Cover Illustration by Madeline Hillman<br />

influxumn.wordpress.com<br />

For more information, contact Sara Quinn at squinn@umn.edu<br />

© 2021 The Hubbard School of Journalism and Mass Communications, University of Minnesota<br />

All Rights Reserved<br />

No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means without the prior written permission<br />

of the publisher, excepting brief quotes within bounds of fair use: copyright.gov/fls/fl102.html<br />

influx<br />

2 3


Letter from the Editor<br />

When we began planning the spring 2021 issue of <strong>InFlux</strong>,<br />

we kept circling back to the same idea: duality. The idea<br />

that no story holds a single narrative. We didn’t want to<br />

focus on duality as being good or bad, day or night, love<br />

or hate. It’s more multifaceted than that.<br />

We wanted to create a magazine that didn’t entirely<br />

focus on the pandemic, but still stayed true to the state<br />

of our current world. The legalization of marijuana,<br />

police brutality, sex work, these are all topics I’ve<br />

had discussions about with my friends and peers. A<br />

visual editorial featuring people dressed up, with<br />

nowhere to go...an all too familiar theme from the<br />

past year.<br />

These things seem different on the surface, but<br />

they’re all tied together through the idea that<br />

stories exist beyond the frame of our own<br />

opinions. And now they’re here for you<br />

to read, think about, and discuss with<br />

your friends and peers.<br />

We operated online for the majority of the<br />

semester, only coming on campus towards<br />

the very end while wearing masks and<br />

staying socially distanced. But even then, it<br />

felt so good to work, talk, laugh (and cry)<br />

together in person.<br />

This has been an exceedingly difficult<br />

semester, in an even more difficult year. This isn’t the<br />

ending to our college experience that we thought we’d be<br />

having, but it’s an ending nonetheless. It’s been an honor to<br />

work with this team and to be a part of the conceptualization and<br />

creation of the magazine you are currently holding.<br />

Editor in Chief: Katie Swartzer<br />

Design and Graphics Editor: Sydni Rose<br />

Brand Manager: Sarah Heinrich<br />

Writing Editor: Rita-Marie Chediac<br />

Photo and Video Editor: Anna Keck<br />

Web Editor: Hannah Olund<br />

Social Media and PR Editor: Bethany Hiltbrand<br />

Innovation and Podcast Team: Tina Nguyen and Skylar Wolfe<br />

Design and<br />

Graphics:<br />

Madeline Hillman<br />

Sydney Manning<br />

Madeleine Melloy<br />

Social Media<br />

and PR:<br />

Macy Gill<br />

Hannah Ihekoronye<br />

Jasmine Webber<br />

Photo<br />

and Video:<br />

Amy Halbmaier<br />

Kathryn Richner<br />

Web:<br />

Hannah McCurley<br />

Photos by<br />

Anna Keck<br />

Writing:<br />

Jacqueline Crawford<br />

Samantha De Leon<br />

Reece Economides<br />

Natalie Ryder<br />

Eric Servatius<br />

Alex Strangman<br />

Copy Editing:<br />

Zach Batia<br />

Collin Haws<br />

Emily Nutter<br />

Influx Staff<br />

We hope these stories push you to examine the world around<br />

you with a different lens. We hope that you walk away<br />

having learned something, just as we have. Duality is<br />

a concept that is constantly ‘in flux.’ We as people<br />

are constantly ‘in flux.’ The world is ‘in flux.’ It’s<br />

a push and pull that never stops. But then<br />

again, why would we want it to?<br />

Thanks for being here.<br />

Editor-in-Chief<br />

4<br />

5


As Generation Z maneuvers through life, many<br />

are looking toward astrology to guide them<br />

and answer questions about who they are and<br />

who others are around them.<br />

By Jackie Crawford<br />

Kianna Helmin has a ready<br />

answer when asked if there<br />

are people she won’t date<br />

because of their astrological<br />

sign: She thinks of her former<br />

boyfriend.<br />

“Learned from that one, a Gemini,” Helmin,<br />

a 19-year-old Scorpio, said. “He was extremely<br />

stubborn and two-faced with his friends.”<br />

She said he also flirted with others right in<br />

front of her and said he didn’t understand why<br />

it bothered her. “Or he would just stop listening<br />

when I would try to explain why I can’t just get<br />

over something,” Helmin said.<br />

She says it all started making sense when<br />

she later used astrology to think back on the<br />

relationship. “He was very logical, while me,<br />

being a water sign, was all emotion,” she said.<br />

From TikTok to Twitter, astrology is being<br />

used everywhere, particularly by members of<br />

Generation Z. Some are looking for simple<br />

escapism, but others are picking it up to<br />

understand themselves and others around them,<br />

including in their dating lives.<br />

While astrology is not their only tool, several<br />

agree with Helmin that it offers insight into a<br />

partner’s personality.<br />

“I use it for fun a lot of the time,” Lacie<br />

Hines, a 22-year-old Libra, said. Helmin<br />

explained how she uses astrology as an outline<br />

to a person since you still have to take into<br />

account experiences growing up and the rest of<br />

someone’s chart to gain a full understanding as<br />

to who someone is.<br />

“It gives you a good insight into how<br />

somebody might act or their emotional state,”<br />

said Paige Kringle, a 21-year-old Aquarius that<br />

also uses astrology for fun. She said it’s a way<br />

for people to guess or judge a person based on<br />

their sign.<br />

Likewise, Jake Hoffman, a 21-year-old Leo,<br />

explained how his girlfriend has opened him up<br />

more to astrology.<br />

“I like having fun with it and reading how<br />

certain stereotypes really fit me well,” Hoffman<br />

said. “I’ve been learning more about my moon<br />

and rising and thinking, wow, that really makes<br />

sense.”<br />

In most cases, people look into their big<br />

three, which are the sun sign, moon sign<br />

and rising sign. The sun sign relates to your<br />

personality or identity, the moon sign relates to<br />

your emotional state and the rising sign relates<br />

to your social personality.<br />

“I think it’s really interesting how the different<br />

combinations come together” and align with<br />

someone’s personality, Kringle said. “I really<br />

do think it fits like at least 85% of the time.”<br />

When dating with astrology and finding<br />

star compatibility, people seem to approach<br />

the process in two different ways. To find<br />

the best matches, they are either looking for<br />

compatibility based on like elements (fire,<br />

water, air and earth) or compatibility based on<br />

the opposite element.<br />

Sawyer Kallroos, Hines’ boyfriend of almost<br />

four years, is an Aries. “We are on opposite<br />

sides, so we’re super compatible,” Hines said,<br />

explaining in awe how her prior relationships<br />

with signs near her element haven’t been as<br />

compatible.<br />

“My girlfriend and I are very compatible,”<br />

Hoffman said. His girlfriend and a Taurus, Libby<br />

Johnson, added, “When we first started talking,<br />

we hit it off right away. So I immediately<br />

checked our compatibility.”<br />

Some Generation Zs even display their<br />

sign(s) on their dating app profiles to give<br />

others a further glimpse into who they are.<br />

“I feel like it kind of gives people a little<br />

taste of what I’m like, a little bit of insight into<br />

my personality because that’s really hard<br />

to portray across the screen, especially just<br />

through pictures,” Helmin said.<br />

Unfortunately, no one is going to be<br />

compatible with everyone. When it comes to<br />

dating, Kringle thinks “there’s always those<br />

red flag signs that everybody has because of<br />

a past experience with that sign.” For many<br />

Generation Z, dating a specific sign could cause<br />

them to become wary of that sign from then on<br />

out.<br />

Kringle explained how her past relationships<br />

with Scorpios have been bad, so when she<br />

found out her current boyfriend was a Scorpio,<br />

she said “Oh man, he’s going to be like the<br />

rest of them.” She took a few steps back before<br />

trying to step outside of astrology. Fortunately,<br />

her current boyfriend is “great” and they have<br />

been dating for over six months, she said.<br />

“I don’t have good experiences dating Leos,”<br />

Caitlin Kosec, a 22-year-old Capricorn, said.<br />

She explained how her first relationship was<br />

with a Leo, and after meeting more Leos, she<br />

knew they were not for her. She won’t date a<br />

Gemini either, because “Geminis love talking,<br />

and I talk a lot, so it’s kind of like battling<br />

talking over each other.”<br />

However, if Kosec liked someone enough,<br />

she wouldn’t let their sign deter her, but “if<br />

something bad happened, I would blame it on<br />

their sign,” Kosec said.<br />

Kringle also explained how she and her<br />

friends would blame someone’s actions on their<br />

sign. After her first relationship and on, her<br />

friends would say, “Oh, it’s because they’re<br />

Scorpio or they’re Taurus, like that’s why,”<br />

Kringle said. But “as I got older,” she said, “I<br />

found myself using it more as an excuse for<br />

their actions.”<br />

While many same signs may act similarly,<br />

everyone’s combinations come together<br />

differently.<br />

“<br />

When we first started<br />

talking, we hit it off right<br />

away. So I immediately<br />

checked our compatibility.<br />

”<br />

Reading into someone’s sign too early can<br />

create false assumptions and expectations.<br />

By reviewing someone’s full chart, it can<br />

reveal a lot of information many people may<br />

miss or overlook. It can also give people a clear<br />

idea that not every same sign is going to act or<br />

be the exact same person.<br />

Whether the cliche “What’s your sign?”<br />

gets used or some secret searching happens,<br />

Generation Z is taking this trend further.<br />

“On a scale out of 10, I would say that<br />

it’s probably like a six to seven importance<br />

range,” Helmin said, describing how important<br />

her partners’ sign compatibility is within a<br />

relationship. “It’s not the only thing I’ll look at,<br />

but it’s pretty high up there.”<br />

6 7


WATER<br />

Pisces, Cancers, and Scorpios tend to be known<br />

as the most emotional elements. They can be a<br />

little mysterious, but are incredibly observant<br />

and notice everything around them at all<br />

times – so careful what you say! Water signs<br />

are creative to the max, and often have wild<br />

imaginations.<br />

AIR<br />

Aquarians, Geminis, and Libras are the signs<br />

that value intelligence the most among the<br />

zodiac. Air signs tend to lead with their heads<br />

and not their hearts, which can make them<br />

seem a little emotionless. However, they are<br />

also excellent communicators, and are always<br />

up for a spontaneous adventure.<br />

popular styles from when they were born. Of course,<br />

TikTok has been a major player in popularizing and<br />

reinventing trends of the past. But how did these trends<br />

get started? Here’s a look back at the history behind<br />

some of today’s hot items.<br />

Baggy jeans<br />

Google searches for baggy jeans have skyrocketed,<br />

Fashion Network reported. Jeans have been around<br />

since the mid-1800s, worn by miners and other workers<br />

who needed sturdy pants. Growing through the years<br />

from a uniform essential to a closet staple, it wasn’t<br />

until the mid-1960s that jeans started to take the shape<br />

of today’s trendy cuts.<br />

Form-fitting waists and flared legs remained popular<br />

through the 1970s, but the rise of hip-hop in the ‘80s<br />

brought new, oversized silhouettes. High-waisted styles<br />

also became popular in the ‘80s, kicking off the “mom<br />

jean” trend that remains a classic. Denim cuts took<br />

multiple forms in the 2000s, but many of the low-cut<br />

styles, flared legs and printed designs are reminiscent<br />

of today’s jeans.<br />

Baby tees<br />

Crop tops have been a “key runway trend” this<br />

season, Fashion Network said. However, the origin of<br />

baby tees can be traced back to stylist Linda Meltzer,<br />

who developed an early obsession with “children’s size<br />

French-cut T-shirts from the 1970s,” Vogue reported.<br />

Celebrities like Winona Ryder, Drew Barrymore and<br />

the cast of “Friends” donned the style, leading to its<br />

widespread popularity that never seemed to fade.<br />

“Baby tees are both classic and innocent, which I<br />

think resonates in these unstable times,” Meltzer told<br />

Vogue.<br />

EARTH<br />

Capricorns, Tauruses, and Virgos are the most<br />

grounded and stable signs of the zodiac. Earth<br />

signs make loyal, patient, and sensual partners.<br />

It can take a lot to anger an earth sign, but if<br />

you do – watch out.<br />

FIRE<br />

Aries, Leos, and Sagittariuses are the largerthan-life<br />

elements of the zodiac. They are<br />

extremely passionate, and know how to have<br />

a good time. Expect spontaneity in your<br />

relationship with a fire sign, as well as a partner<br />

who is independent.<br />

A brief history behind some of today’s most<br />

popular clothing items that were popular in<br />

the early 2000s.<br />

By Skylar Wolfe<br />

Fashion trends always seem to find a way to<br />

creep back into style. According to the Fashion<br />

Industry Broadcast, trends tend to revolve<br />

around a 20-year cycle – just enough time to<br />

forget about the trends you regretted before maybe,<br />

just maybe, thinking they’re cool again.<br />

It makes sense, then, that Y2K fashion is back in full<br />

force and 20-somethings can be caught sporting the<br />

Sweater vests<br />

Ah, the sweater vest. Originally worn in the late<br />

1800s by rowers and football teams, according to<br />

Jezebel, today they are donned by nerds and VSCO<br />

girls alike. The design became a menswear staple in<br />

the 1930s and evolved each decade to meet the trends<br />

of the moment. Today’s styles are anything but stuffy,<br />

featuring bright colors and cropped silhouettes.<br />

Matching sweatsuits and tracksuits<br />

This one probably has something to do with the fact<br />

that many of us have not left the house for the past<br />

year. Nonetheless, many project that sweatsuits will<br />

remain popular even as the pandemic subsides.<br />

First introduced in the mid-1960s to be worn by<br />

athletes, tracksuits made their way into mainstream<br />

fashion in the ‘70s, Complex reported. As hip-hop<br />

gained popularity as a musical genre, so did these<br />

matching sets, before fading away in the 2000s.<br />

Who knows, maybe this time sweatsuits will be here<br />

to stay. If not, you might want to hang on to today’s<br />

hot items anyway – they might just come back in 20<br />

years.<br />

8<br />

Illustration by Olympia Villagrán 9


This photo was taken by Guillaume<br />

Issaly at a Black Lives Matter<br />

protest in Brest, France following<br />

the murder of George Floyd.<br />

From Henry Ness to George Floyd:<br />

The limits of government reform in Minneapolis<br />

Nearly a century apart, Minneapolis witnessed two of the most important mass movements<br />

around social change in U.S. history. The similarities between the two are many, and perhaps,<br />

so are the lessons that can be learned.<br />

By Eric Servatius<br />

George Floyd in 2020. Henry Ness in 1934.<br />

The deaths of two men at the hands of<br />

Minneapolis police 86 years apart served as the<br />

catalysts of mass movements for social change.<br />

While there are important differences between the two<br />

events—namely, the critical role of race in the death of<br />

Floyd compared to the Teamsters’ strikes in which Ness<br />

died—the similarities, and the lessons drawn from them,<br />

are numerous.<br />

Those who have studied and participated in such<br />

movements say real change comes from making demands<br />

in the streets, not the ballot box—something strikers knew<br />

well, and today’s activists need to keep in mind.<br />

In both cases, a severe economic downturn<br />

exacerbated disparities between a privileged upper class<br />

and a repressed underclass. A history of tense relations<br />

between the community and the Minneapolis Police<br />

Department and its corporate allies provided fertile<br />

ground for movements demanding change.<br />

“This kind of use of police force…has almost always<br />

happened when there has been very little means of<br />

oppressed people recording it, seeing it, understanding<br />

it for what it is,” said Bryan Palmer, professor emeritus<br />

at Trent University in Ontario, Canada, and author of<br />

“Revolutionary Teamsters: The Minneapolis Truckers’<br />

Strikes of 1934.”<br />

Despite their best efforts, police couldn’t spin the<br />

deaths of Ness and Floyd. Thanks to the public nature of<br />

each, and the video recording of the latter, people saw<br />

the events for what they were.<br />

“In that sense,” Palmer said, “as martyrs of these<br />

mobilizations, both Ness and Floyd are, I think, reflective<br />

of an important reality, which is that those fighting back<br />

are often subjected to the unequal treatment of the law in<br />

terms of violence.”<br />

As was most of the country during the 1930s,<br />

Minneapolis was devastated by the Great Depression.<br />

During the winter of 1932-33, nearly 70,000 people<br />

were unemployed and a further 120,000 dependent on<br />

public assistance.<br />

Making matters worse, Minneapolis was an<br />

infamously anti-union city, meaning workers found it<br />

nearly impossible to advocate for better pay or working<br />

conditions. Those attempting to do so were quickly dealt<br />

with by the Citizens’ Alliance, an organization funded by<br />

the city’s wealthiest bankers and industrial magnates.<br />

These conditions launched protests by labor and<br />

community organizers—particularly the International<br />

Brotherhood of Teamsters (IBT) Local 574 strikes, of<br />

which Ness was a member.<br />

Similarly, in May 2020, Minneapolis experienced<br />

its worst economic crisis since the Great Depression, as<br />

pandemic-related shutdowns caused the unemployment<br />

rate to spike to 10.1% and thousands to apply for<br />

unemployment. Among those hardest hit were the<br />

city’s Black, Indigenous, and people of color (BIPOC)<br />

communities—a population that is disproportionately<br />

lower-income and all too familiar with being monitored<br />

by the police and corporate elite intent on creating a<br />

more friendly environment for business and gentrification.<br />

In both 1934 and 2020, when citizens took to the<br />

streets to advocate for their rights, they were met with an<br />

outsized display of force by law enforcement.<br />

For Cherenne Horazuk, President of AFSCME Local<br />

3800 and the granddaughter of 1934 strike participants,<br />

this was no surprise.<br />

10<br />

Left image above: Funeral of Henry Ness, a striker killed during the strike, in front of strike<br />

headquarters at 215 S 8th St, Minneapolis. (Sourced from Minnesota Historical Society)<br />

11


“The police are not a neutral force,” Horazuk said.<br />

“They are there to enforce property interests.”<br />

A lesson, she argues, that was demonstrated in 1934<br />

as police opened fire on strikers, killing Henry Ness.<br />

And again in 2020, when George Floyd was killed for<br />

allegedly using a counterfeit bill, and police prioritized<br />

the protection of businesses in areas such as Nicollet<br />

Mall over those on Lake Street.<br />

Scholars and activists say the events of 1934 offer<br />

another lesson: Don’t trust elected officials, no matter<br />

how progressive they appear to be.<br />

Minnesota’s governor in 1934, Floyd B. Olson, was<br />

a Farmer-Laborite with a long history of advocating for<br />

workers’ rights. Despite past support, as tensions grew<br />

he declared martial law, detained union leadership and<br />

effectively broke the strike. But this was something union<br />

leadership had prepared for.<br />

“[They] always recognized that Olson was a slippery<br />

kind of character and that his rhetorical radicalism<br />

would very quickly slip into defense of the status quo,”<br />

Palmer said. “I think it is very important that groups like<br />

Black Lives Matter and people who are protesting what<br />

happened to George Floyd have a similar perspective<br />

with the political figures in power in Minneapolis.”<br />

A case in point is the Minneapolis City Council. After<br />

initially rallying around protesters’ demand to defund<br />

the police, the council’s support has seemed to dwindle.<br />

Mallory Ferguson, a 25-year-old student at Augsburg<br />

University, photographed the protests this summer and<br />

shared them on social media to show what happened in<br />

Flag erected at spot where Henry Ness, a striker, was slain during the riot on<br />

July 20, 1934. (Sourced from Minnesota Historical Society)<br />

his community. Now, the soon-to-be graduate, who<br />

has dedicated his time to helping feed the homeless<br />

and establishing a scholarship in his name, has seen<br />

enough. He’s frustrated with local government and<br />

plans to leave after graduation.<br />

“There is really no trust left for me here in<br />

Minnesota,” Ferguson said. “I love the people — but<br />

it’s not enough to sustain me.”<br />

“The police are not a neutral<br />

force. They are there to enforce<br />

property interests.”<br />

Cherenne Horazuk, president of AFSCME<br />

Local 3800 and granddaughter<br />

of 1934 strike participants<br />

Horazuk’s union has actively supported protests<br />

for racial justice in Minnesota for years, often in<br />

spite of threats from the local police federation.<br />

“I think change comes on the streets and on the<br />

picket lines. Electoral and political changes come in<br />

response to that, not as a driving force,” Horazuk<br />

said.<br />

August Nimtz, professor of political science<br />

and African American and African studies at the<br />

University of Minnesota, said bluntly that the<br />

Democratic Party is the “graveyard of progressive<br />

social movements.”<br />

Nimtz, who grew up under Jim Crow in Louisiana<br />

and was barred from voting when he first tried,<br />

often tells his students that he was only able to gain<br />

the right to vote because he and others in the Civil<br />

Rights Movement took to the streets. The role of the<br />

government, as he sees it, is to usher the people<br />

“out of the streets,” where they have collective<br />

power, and “into the suites,” where movements<br />

become housebroken.<br />

Again, the events of 1934 serve as an example.<br />

Local 574 successfully brought about substantive<br />

change for the workers of Minneapolis, gaining<br />

collective bargaining rights, increasing their<br />

minimum wage, and facilitating an 11-state<br />

Teamster drive that quadrupled national<br />

membership.<br />

Yet not even a decade later, the union saw its<br />

legal standing stripped and dozens of members<br />

jailed, as the previously pro-labor government and<br />

conservative factions of the IBT conspired to<br />

eliminate radical voices.<br />

“The question for today,” Palmer said, “is, will<br />

those generalized progressive sensibilities—which<br />

crystallized around George Floyd’s killing, police<br />

brutality and racism—carry things forward to the<br />

kinds of changes that this small group of organized<br />

leftists in 1934 were able to accomplish.”<br />

The photo above was taken by Mike Vonn at a<br />

Black Lives Matter protest in Los Angeles, CA<br />

following the murder of George Floyd.<br />

12


Amidst rising calls for updated legislation, Minnesota Democrats pushed the<br />

marijuana legalization bill through multiple House committees in a first for the<br />

North Star State, but face resistance from the Republican-controlled Senate.<br />

By Alex Strangman<br />

Tim Davis of Minneapolis has a question for his<br />

elected officials. “Canada is legal. Michigan<br />

is legal. Illinois is legal,” he noted at a recent<br />

meeting of the Legal Marijuana Now (LMN)<br />

Party. “Why shouldn’t Minnesota, that brands itself as<br />

a progressive, open state, be accepting of marijuana?”<br />

Supporters of legalization, social justice advocates<br />

and economists across the state have asked similar<br />

questions for years, getting little response from<br />

legislators… until now.<br />

On Feb. 17, a bill proposing the legalization of<br />

adult-use recreational marijuana in Minnesota passed<br />

in a House committee by a vote of 10-7, a first for the<br />

state, according to MPR News. House Majority Leader<br />

Ryan Winkler and Speaker Melissa Hortman, among<br />

others, co-authored the bill.<br />

Since the proposal first cleared the House<br />

Commerce Finance and Policy Committee, it has gone<br />

on to pass in three more committees of the Democraticcontrolled<br />

House.<br />

The bill is slated next for a series of hearings in<br />

front of other House committees that must approve<br />

the legislation before it can land in the Republicancontrolled<br />

state Senate. Only two Republican<br />

legislators have voted for the bill so far, so it faces a<br />

tough road in the Senate. Should the bill be approved<br />

there, it would head to Gov. Tim Walz, who would<br />

be expected to sign it, based on his past support for<br />

marijuana legalization.<br />

Unlike other states that have passed adult-use<br />

recreational marijuana laws in recent years, such as<br />

Colorado, Montana and South Dakota, Minnesota’s<br />

constitution does not allow for direct initiatives<br />

— meaning Minnesotans who support marijuana<br />

legalization cannot bypass legislators and place a<br />

proposed law or constitutional amendment on the<br />

ballot. Rather, all proposed laws and amendments<br />

must be approved solely by state legislators.<br />

The lack of direct initiatives in Minnesota is a major<br />

roadblock on the path to legalization, according to<br />

LMN party member Dennis Schuller, who ran for state<br />

representative in Minnesota’s District 63B in 2020.<br />

In recent years, Minnesotans have shown increasing<br />

support for marijuana legalization, with 64% of<br />

respondents in favor of legalization according to a<br />

recent poll from data firm Civiqs, up from 30% of<br />

respondents in a 2014 poll from the Star Tribune.<br />

Minnesota has a complicated history with legal<br />

marijuana. Getting a progressive start, it was one<br />

of the first states to decriminalize small amounts of<br />

marijuana in the ‘70s, passing the amendment in 1976.<br />

But then the North Star State slowed its roll,<br />

shelving marijuana until 2014 when Minnesota<br />

legalized limited forms of medical marijuana.<br />

Subsequent bills to legalize recreational-use marijuana<br />

were shot down in a Senate committee two years ago<br />

and a House committee last year.<br />

The new legislation would remove marijuana from<br />

Minnesota’s list of schedule I drugs and make it<br />

legal for persons 21 and older to possess, purchase,<br />

transport and consume marijuana. The current bill<br />

also establishes a Cannabis Management Board,<br />

tasked with establishing policy and regulating both the<br />

medical and adult-use cannabis markets.<br />

The establishment of a Cannabis Expungement<br />

Board (CEB) is also included in the bill. The board<br />

would review marijuana possession-related charges<br />

and determine whether or not the crimes would be<br />

a lesser (nonfelony) offense, or no longer a crime,<br />

resulting in automatic record expungement or sentence<br />

reduction, according to the bill.<br />

During a House committee hearing on Feb. 23,<br />

Winkler highlighted the need for updated marijuana<br />

laws.<br />

“The fact of the matter is that our laws are the part<br />

of this system that doesn’t work,” Winkler said. “We<br />

criminalize responsible adults who use cannabis for<br />

their own purposes. We criminalize people who use<br />

cannabis for their health benefits. We criminalize<br />

veterans who use cannabis as an alternative to<br />

opioids. And we criminalize countless African<br />

Americans because of their use of a substance that is<br />

common.”<br />

Minnesota ranks eighth in the nation for largest<br />

racial disparities in marijuana possession arrests, with<br />

Black people 5.4 times more likely to be arrested for<br />

marijuana possession than their white counterparts,<br />

according to a 2018 report from the American Civil<br />

Liberties Union (ACLU).<br />

The proposal comes at a time when race is at the<br />

forefront of American politics, especially in Minnesota,<br />

with former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin,<br />

a white man, standing trial for his role in the death of<br />

George Floyd, a Black man, who died in police<br />

custody in May of 2020.<br />

“The fact of the<br />

matter is that our<br />

laws are the part<br />

of this system that<br />

doesn’t work.”<br />

House Majority Leader Ryan Winkler<br />

Eva Berezovsky, a second year student at the<br />

University of Minnesota who doesn’t use marijuana,<br />

supports legalization as a non-partisan human<br />

rights issue. If she could speak to legislators about the<br />

issue, racial justice would be at the forefront<br />

of the conversation. “I would want to address how<br />

legalization is a step towards racial justice, and<br />

coming from Minnesota would be really reassuring to<br />

see that response,” she said.<br />

But not everyone agrees. Some worry that<br />

marijuana legalization will lead to increased mental<br />

health issues, addiction rates and drugged driving<br />

incidents.<br />

Ryan Hamilton of the Minnesota Catholic<br />

Conference argued that legalization would have<br />

negative effects on the state during a House hearing in<br />

February.<br />

“It’s a bad bill for adolescents. It’s bad for our<br />

brothers and sisters with substance abuse problems.<br />

It’s bad for those who use our highways, and it’s bad<br />

for the common good,” he said.<br />

Steven, who chose to be identified only by a<br />

pseudonym out of fear of legal repercussions, has sold<br />

marijuana on the state’s black market for over five<br />

years. He supports legalization, but worries that the<br />

less personable approach legal dispensaries will take<br />

could have lasting repercussions in the community,<br />

citing a customer he stopped selling to once he found<br />

out they were going home and smoking with their thenpregnant<br />

partner.<br />

“There’s a lot of mental politics associated with this,<br />

politics dispensaries won’t get into,” he said, adding<br />

that contrary to a lot of pro-legalization rhetoric, he<br />

still sees the marijuana black market existing even after<br />

state legalization.<br />

For Ken Winters, a senior scientist at the Oregon<br />

Research Institute and adjunct faculty member for the<br />

University of Minnesota’s Department of Psychology,<br />

the commercialization of marijuana is a step in the<br />

wrong direction. Winters supports improvement of the<br />

state’s medical marijuana program and review of the<br />

existing decriminalization laws, but argues that making<br />

marijuana readily available to the public will do more<br />

harm than good.<br />

“There is now substantial evidence as to the<br />

negative effects of cannabis use on health and<br />

wellbeing, including risk for addiction, damage to the<br />

developing brains of adolescents, impaired driving and<br />

elevated risk for mental illness,” Winters said during<br />

a House committee hearing on Feb. 23. “I do not see<br />

how it is logical or ethical to commercialize a product<br />

outside of a medical structure to make it easier for<br />

anyone to use it as medicine.”<br />

However, both Winkler and Berezovsky see<br />

legalization as a step towards progress, citing already<br />

widespread marijuana use within the state.<br />

“This bill is not about whether we are pro- or anticannabis<br />

in Minnesota. It’s not a bill to make cannabis<br />

widespread in Minnesota because it already is.<br />

Minnesotans use cannabis for a variety of reasons,”<br />

Winkler said during a remote House committee<br />

hearing on Feb. 23.<br />

Berezovsky compared the push for modernized<br />

marijuana legislation to the battle for non-abstinenceonly<br />

sex education that has taken place in the United<br />

States for years.<br />

“We know that people use marijuana and that<br />

it’s always been that way. And it’s only increasing if<br />

anything, so it doesn’t make sense<br />

to keep suppressing,” she said.<br />

“It’s like the idea that it’s much<br />

more productive to preach<br />

safe sex as opposed to<br />

preaching abstinence.”<br />

14<br />

Photo by Teanna Morgan on Unsplash<br />

15


NOWHERE<br />

TO GO<br />

NOWHERE<br />

As COVID-19 wove itself into the fabric of the college experience,<br />

we expected to see a reflection of our confusing lives on social media.<br />

While the frustration and chaos of the global pandemic never went<br />

unacknowledged on feeds, we saw younger generations use their<br />

platforms to maintain an image imitating what their lives used to be.<br />

We have nowhere to go. But we still dress up. We still pose.<br />

We still post.<br />

With “Nowhere to Go,” we want to emulate this narrative we’re seeing<br />

college students create. One where diamond necklaces and the newest<br />

trends are no longer reserved for nights out and nightclubs, but rather<br />

are displayed freely in the spaces we’ve been confined to:<br />

front porches, bedrooms, daily walks.<br />

We’re getting all dressed up<br />

with nowhere to go.<br />

TO<br />

GO<br />

Photo (above) by Anna Keck; (on facing page) by Amy Halbmaier


NIGHT’S IN. THE KITCHEN. FRONT PORCH. BEDROOM. ZOOM MEETING. PHARMACY. DRIVE-THRU. WALKING THE DOG. GROCERY STO<br />

Photos (at top) by Amy Halbmaier; (above and on facing page) by Anna Keck<br />

FRONT PORCH. BEDROOM. ZOOM MEETING. PHARMACY. DRIVE-THRU. WALKING THE DOG. GROCERY STORE. PARK. DOCTORS OFFICE


E STILL DRESS UP<br />

WE STILL POSE. WE STILL POST. WE STILL POSE. WE STILL POS<br />

POST<br />

ST. WE STILL POSE. WE STILL POST. WE STILL POSE. WE STILL P<br />

Photo (on facing page and this page, top) by Amy Halbmaier; (at left) by Anna Keck


A social platform revolutionizing creators and fan<br />

interactions, but may also be putting people’s reputations<br />

and personal lives at risk.<br />

By Samantha De Leon<br />

A couple of years ago, asking someone if they knew<br />

anything about OnlyFans would probably have drawn a<br />

blank stare. Not anymore.<br />

The web platform that allows creators to charge for<br />

content – much of it explicit – has grown rapidly in a<br />

year of pandemic, to more than 90 million users by<br />

the end of last year, according to The New York Times.<br />

Many providers have turned to OnlyFans in the hopes of<br />

making some money to help them overcome<br />

job losses; potential subscribers are sitting<br />

home with time on their hands. Beyonce<br />

name-dropping OnlyFans on Megan<br />

Thee Stallion’s “Savage Remix” last<br />

year didn’t hurt.<br />

OnlyFans has helped thousands of<br />

people generate income, but that is by<br />

no means guaranteed. Instead, creators<br />

might find themselves with few followers<br />

and a host of problems including unauthorized use<br />

of their photos and videos, and the possibility that an<br />

employer or family member may see their content.<br />

Platform managers also have had to take action to try to<br />

prevent minors from posting.<br />

Those who do know of the upsides and potential risks<br />

like Molly Hale and Tate Dyer, two content creators<br />

based in the Twin Cities metro area, say OnlyFans is not<br />

for everyone, but it can be lucrative.<br />

Hale joined in January 2020 and says she is in the<br />

site’s top four percent of earners. It wasn’t much of a<br />

reach, since she already lived an open lifestyle and had<br />

previously made a pornographic film.<br />

“This really felt like an extension of my brand,” Hale<br />

said. “People tend to think if you cross that boundary of<br />

being fully exposed on the internet, that somehow takes<br />

you out of integrity or puts you into a<br />

moral category that’s wrong … I just<br />

don’t agree with that.”<br />

She says the big question for<br />

people is morality, whether they feel<br />

comfortable with what they’re doing.<br />

She didn’t struggle with it as much<br />

because she already did so much of<br />

that work in leaving Christianity.<br />

British entrepreneur Tim Stokley<br />

founded OnlyFans in 2016. Since its<br />

establishment, its user number has<br />

grown exponentially from its first 1,000<br />

users in July 2016. OnlyFans keeps<br />

20% of the fees to cover the cost of<br />

running the site and creators take<br />

the rest, receiving monthly payouts.<br />

OnlyFans has paid out over $3 billion in<br />

creator earnings to date.<br />

The platform based on “creator and<br />

fan connections” isn’t just a site filled<br />

with sexual content, but a platform<br />

where creators can post themselves<br />

doing any number of things that<br />

normally would be censored on other<br />

social media sites. There are creators on the site that<br />

don’t offer adult material – fitness instructors, actors,<br />

artists – who use the site to monetize their content.<br />

But, due to the unrestricted nature, OnlyFans became<br />

a playing field for adult performers, sex workers and<br />

models who share NSFW content.<br />

In contrast to other social media websites, OnlyFans<br />

says it lets creators “monetize their content while<br />

developing real relationships with their fanbase.”<br />

But building a large following online doesn’t happen<br />

overnight; it takes strategy and advertising on social<br />

media. For many, it never happens. Hale, a digital<br />

strategist, says it depends on other platforms.<br />

“You can’t promote yourself within OnlyFans unless<br />

you have over 10,000 followers on either Twitter<br />

or Instagram … It’s all up to you to find people to<br />

subscribe to you,” she said.<br />

Hale said she had a tweet go viral at the end<br />

of December 2020 and strategically launched her<br />

OnlyFans after that. “I gained like 2,200 Twitter<br />

followers,” she said. Hale says she’s already been<br />

cultivating a strong brand to offer OnlyFans to her<br />

audience, so this wasn’t out of the ordinary for her.<br />

Dyer found his way to OnlyFans via friends in San<br />

Diego, where he used to live, who worked in the adult<br />

entertainment industry.<br />

“When people are willing to pay just to see you, it<br />

makes you feel confident and you begin to realize that<br />

people are willing to spend a lot of money just to look<br />

at your body, face and or personality,” Dyer said. He<br />

added that he frequently receives direct messages on<br />

his social media from people who are curious about<br />

starting an OnlyFans or looking to collaborate.<br />

According to The New York Times, “digital sex<br />

The main frame is a photograph of Molly Hale, as well as the second and sixth from the left. Hale’s photos taken by Gabrielle Vandemmeltra-<br />

Dunn. Edits by Sydni Rose.<br />

work can give the illusion of safety and privacy<br />

– content creators can get paid without having to<br />

interact with clients in person.” This doesn’t mean there<br />

isn’t any risk. If creators are simultaneously working<br />

elsewhere, their account might be seen by their<br />

employer.<br />

“You might have your reputation destroyed in the<br />

eyes of some people … are you okay with that?” Hale<br />

said.<br />

Furthermore, creators could potentially be subjected<br />

to “capping,” unauthorized screenshots or recordings<br />

taken by users and shared elsewhere on the internet,<br />

according to The Times. Creators like Hale understand<br />

the risks, but not everyone does.<br />

According to the British website Internet Matters,<br />

the BBC documentary “Nudes4Sale” investigated<br />

the rise of under-18s selling explicit content on not<br />

just OnlyFans but Twitter and Snapchat Premium.<br />

The documentary found that a third of Twitter<br />

users advertising explicit images with hashtags<br />

“#Nudes4Sale” or “#BuyMyNudes” were under 18. A<br />

large number of those underage creators used social<br />

media to sell nudes in exchange for money and gifts.<br />

Under Minnesota law, it is a crime to make any<br />

sexual material involving someone under the age<br />

of 18. It’s also a crime to possess or distribute this<br />

material. If a person is convicted or found guilty, one<br />

may be sentenced to more than seven years of prison<br />

or fined more than $10,000, or both.<br />

In May 2019, OnlyFans introduced a new account<br />

verification process where a creator must provide a<br />

selfie along with their identification in the image to<br />

prove their identity. Under OnlyFans terms of use for<br />

creators, the platform “may ask you for additional<br />

age or identity verification information at any time.”<br />

However, research from Internet Matters and BBC<br />

suggests age-verification is not enough.<br />

Hale said she has had a good experience<br />

with the site, but acknowledges that she<br />

has the benefit of being self-employed.<br />

She said she worries about the people<br />

who posted on the site during the<br />

pandemic to make money.<br />

“I worry about the emotional<br />

implications of that if people<br />

haven’t done the inner work<br />

to decide if this is a decision<br />

they want,” Hale said.<br />

24<br />

25


Young Moguls:<br />

The new generation of<br />

investors<br />

For better or for worse: how cryptocurrency has become<br />

a rabbit hole for the new generation.<br />

By Reece Economides<br />

Young people are finally comfortable with investing in<br />

the finance industry.<br />

This comes off of the recent increase in popularity<br />

of cryptocurrency; a sector of the financial world that<br />

young people feel like they have a leg up on. Young<br />

people often lack the knowledge, motivation or cash, but<br />

the internet is helping remove barriers keeping long-time<br />

stock veterans ahead of the curve, allowing the younger<br />

generation to seize their own destiny.<br />

A 20-year-old Clemson University student named<br />

Logan Dunn boasted of his success with Bitcoin but<br />

acknowledged that he had been a bit lucky, too.<br />

“I made like 10 [thousand] off some bitcoins I bought<br />

back when they were first catching on. I might make even<br />

more than that if prices keep climbing,” he said.<br />

Dunn said he is glad that more young finance<br />

enthusiasts are finding themselves in a similar situation.<br />

“I know I was really lucky, but if nothing else, I’m glad<br />

that this wave of popularity is getting more young people<br />

to take an interest in their finances and think about<br />

investing,” he said. “Some of them might have to learn<br />

some harsh lessons before they really get serious about<br />

it, though.”<br />

Dominic Valentino, a 22-year-old Floridian, is also<br />

enthusiastic about cryptocurrencies but lost more than<br />

$1,400 in day trading.<br />

“I made a few mistakes with committing too much to<br />

obscure, cheap cryptocurrencies. Dogira, for example.<br />

They’re just so cheap that I would lose hundreds at a<br />

time when they went down a few fractions of a cent,” he<br />

said.<br />

Despite the challenges, Valentino maintains his<br />

enthusiasm for the cryptocurrency world, looking for the<br />

next big deal.<br />

At the start of 2021, the stock market experienced<br />

unprecedented shocks to certain stocks, most notably<br />

GameStop and to a lesser extent AMC and Nokia.<br />

Furthermore, in only the way the internet does, young<br />

people built a culture in these online communities; having<br />

a bond by their shared experiences, interests, and of<br />

course, memes.<br />

The movement was fueled by a community on Reddit,<br />

known as r/wallstreetbets, that endlessly studies the stock<br />

market in search of smart, high-reward purchases. Due<br />

to popularity, a bustling community and generally being<br />

an easy movement to latch onto, their efforts became a<br />

mainstream topic.<br />

Their moves became a cultural phenomenon that<br />

introduced the various aspects of the financial sector<br />

to many young adults. This also coincided with record<br />

booms to Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies, which have<br />

on average younger holders.<br />

According to a Gallup poll, in the wake of the 2008<br />

crash, young people’s participation in the stock market<br />

plummeted gradually from 55% at the beginning of the<br />

decade to 40% and has since remained in that range.<br />

That trend saw no sign of stopping until the Redditfronted<br />

internet influence caused massive spikes of<br />

interest in both the stock market and cryptocurrency.<br />

The participation of young, college-educated<br />

people in the financial realm cannot be understated<br />

in its importance. This industry is habitually gate-kept<br />

from younger people due to a lack of knowledge<br />

or motivation. The documented power dynamic of<br />

traditional investing resources adds difficulties for<br />

the next generation to break past the barriers of<br />

entry.<br />

Most importantly, a generation<br />

often disillusioned by their lack<br />

of agency in the world greatly<br />

appreciates the empowering<br />

feeling of making a genuine<br />

impact in the financial<br />

industry.<br />

Young people, especially those<br />

with political leanings, have a tenuous at best<br />

relationship with bankers, hedge fund managers<br />

and the upper class in general. This highlights<br />

the importance of young people getting<br />

involved in the financial industry because it<br />

shifts the power dynamic.<br />

There are, however, valid concerns<br />

about being too ambitious.<br />

Though it might seem right for a young<br />

person to jump on the cryptocurrency<br />

train, it pays for beginners to be cautious.<br />

Many cryptocurrencies are quite volatile and<br />

can massively backfire as large-scale investments.<br />

Thorough research must be done to make sure investors<br />

fully understand how it all works.<br />

Dunn, however, gushes about the world of<br />

cryptocurrency and the potential that it offers. He said<br />

he plans on holding his for the foreseeable future.<br />

“Oh yeah, I’m still just sitting on most of my bitcoins.<br />

I really think the prices are just going to keep climbing,”<br />

Dunn said. “Nobody ever thought they would get this<br />

high, but here we are.”<br />

“Most importantly,<br />

a generation often<br />

disillusioned by their lack<br />

of agency in the world<br />

greatly appreciates the<br />

empowering feeling of<br />

making a genuine impact<br />

in the financial industry.”<br />

Valentino, with less success but similar enthusiasm,<br />

explained his convoluted methods in detail. Dogira<br />

acts as a “middle-man” between the U.S. dollar and<br />

Ethereum, possibly the most popular non-Bitcoin<br />

cryptocurrency. He is counting on spikes in the value of<br />

the two cryptocurrencies to coincide.<br />

Since Dogira is inexpensive, the money invested in it<br />

can grow rapidly. Unfortunately, that hasn’t panned out.<br />

Dogira is near<br />

its lowest<br />

worth of the<br />

year, but<br />

Valentino<br />

holds out<br />

hope because<br />

of the volatility<br />

exhibited<br />

in even a<br />

single day of<br />

trading. He<br />

acknowledged<br />

that this volatility<br />

works both<br />

ways. Valentino<br />

characterized<br />

the trading that<br />

he does on a<br />

large scale as<br />

a complete<br />

gamble and a<br />

“rollercoaster.”<br />

Valentino went<br />

fully down the<br />

rabbit hole of a<br />

particularly complex way to participate in the<br />

cryptocurrency market. He considers himself<br />

knowledgeable about the financial industry, even if<br />

some of his choices have backfired.<br />

“After my first few losses, I was thinking about just<br />

quitting and selling everything,” he said. “I still have<br />

some money in crypto, though. I just try to be a bit<br />

more cautious now.”<br />

For Bitcoin and cryptocurrency to become<br />

as popular as possible in the mainstream, large<br />

conglomerates in the public eye working with the<br />

currency is critically important. This manifests itself in<br />

businesses accepting payment from a Bitcoin Wallet,<br />

pioneered by companies such as Tesla.<br />

However, another way to drive up engagement is to<br />

hold giveaways in the form of cryptocurrency. Michael<br />

Mayfield, the general manager of a Memphis Chipotle<br />

location, explained Chipotle’s newest promotion,<br />

‘Burrito or Bitcoin.’<br />

Participants enter a six-digit hexadecimal code,<br />

similar to how Bitcoin miners work, and they can win<br />

one Chipotle burrito, $50 worth of bitcoin or the grand<br />

prize of $25,000 worth of bitcoin.<br />

“I think that more companies ought to do stuff like<br />

this. It gets young people to do their own research on<br />

the topic to see what their potential prize can be,”<br />

Mayfield said.<br />

26<br />

27


UPHILL<br />

LE<br />

WORTH<br />

FIGHTING<br />

U of M professor and her students reflect on the political<br />

and educational discourse surrounding climate change<br />

It may appear that the generation just graduating from<br />

college is fighting an uphill battle against everything.<br />

While 2020 was a transformative year for addressing<br />

social injustice and the race to combat climate change,<br />

those problems didn’t go away in the new year.<br />

Universities have facilitated sociopolitical change<br />

for decades. However, despite significant recent<br />

activism in younger generations, science denial and<br />

political polarization are deepening in the United<br />

States.<br />

University of Minnesota professor Deena Wassenberg<br />

teaches the course Environmental Biology: Science<br />

and Solutions, covering climate change, toxicology,<br />

environmental racism and more. Although the class<br />

doesn’t force anyone to change their behavior, it does<br />

open a door for students to engage in their communities<br />

and be advocates for change.<br />

The course’s primary goal is research; Wassenberg<br />

wants to better understand how college students<br />

understand and accept difficult concepts like climate<br />

change, evolution and another all-important topic in<br />

2021—vaccines.<br />

She gathers survey data from her students at the<br />

beginning and end of the semester that gauges their<br />

beliefs regarding these topics. The final survey allows<br />

Wassenberg to assess whether students shifted their<br />

thinking when presented with proven scientific data. She is<br />

noticing a change in the decade since she began teaching<br />

the class.<br />

“My perception is that most people were accepting of<br />

climate change, but there was a chunk of students who<br />

were not,” Wassenberg said. “My impression is that<br />

[chunk is] diminishing.”<br />

This change is something Reed Grumann, a University<br />

of Minnesota senior, is grappling with in his thesis. To<br />

better understand science acceptance or denial, he is<br />

trying to explain why someone would accept or deny<br />

proven scientific data.<br />

Wassenberg’s survey data is valuable because it<br />

proves younger people trust the science of climate change<br />

more than in previous years.<br />

Although skepticism of scientific data isn’t a new<br />

concept, Grumann is trying to understand why people<br />

might not trust data, and how to reestablish that trust.<br />

Grumann cites a few different factors in science denial,<br />

but political beliefs are playing a larger role in how<br />

Americans trust and understand data.<br />

“For things like climate change, that I think<br />

are much more divisive politically,<br />

one of the things<br />

”<br />

NONE OF US<br />

ARE IMMUNE TO<br />

THE EFFECTS OF<br />

OUR OWN BIASES<br />

”<br />

I started talking about day one is that<br />

none of us are immune to the effects of<br />

our own biases,” Wassenberg said.<br />

THE POLITICAL<br />

DISCORD<br />

Biases have been influencing views of climate change<br />

for years, and the views are entrenched.<br />

An Elsevier journalistic study that was published in<br />

2011 examines a theory called the “White Male Effect.”<br />

This study compiled public opinion data between 2001<br />

and 2010 related to climate change acceptance or<br />

denial.<br />

Conservative white men self-report their high<br />

understanding of global warming and are more likely to<br />

deny climate change data, according to a peer-reviewed<br />

article in the Journal of Empirical Legal Studies in 2007.<br />

The study says this is an example of identity-protective<br />

cognition—which is essentially a security blanket that<br />

protects your identity by selectively accepting or denying<br />

information perceived as a threat.<br />

Despite the deep divides on partisan issues such as<br />

climate change, governments and politicians have the<br />

ability to enact or hinder change. Wassenberg cites the<br />

ongoing controversy about the Upper Midwest wolf<br />

population.<br />

“I have watched wolves go from being endangered<br />

to having a hunting season on them, to being back on<br />

the endangered species list to now potentially, there’s<br />

currently a hunting season going on in Wisconsin for<br />

them,” Wassenberg said.<br />

Government legislation and regulations have the<br />

power to affect the longevity or impermanence of an<br />

entire species.<br />

28<br />

By Natalie Ryder<br />

Photo by Pascal Bernardon on Unsplash<br />

29


30<br />

LEARN AND ADAPT<br />

Wassenberg’s approach begins with the important<br />

first step of understanding the facts. On average,<br />

Americans contribute 16 tons of carbon emissions into the<br />

atmosphere annually, compared to a global average of<br />

around four tons, according to the Nature Conservancy.<br />

“You don’t have to live in extremes,” Wassenberg said.<br />

“If you can aim to be better than average, that’s a pretty<br />

good aim.”<br />

She said it is important for students to understand<br />

science and adapt their own actions because they are<br />

more likely to get people they associate with to follow<br />

their lead, which has a strong impact.<br />

Brooklyn Lamers, a University of Minnesota<br />

sophomore, took Wassenberg’s course in the fall 2020<br />

semester.<br />

She says that if she hadn’t learned more about how<br />

vegetarianism decreases your carbon footprint during<br />

that course, it is likely she wouldn’t have maintained that<br />

lifestyle.<br />

“Originally it was peer pressure. My close friends were<br />

vegan or vegetarian, and they encouraged me to do it,”<br />

Lamers said.<br />

The willingness to learn and adapt personal behavior<br />

based on new information and data is a primary theme<br />

that Wassenberg wants her students to take away from<br />

the course.<br />

Jayden Sundstrom, a University of Minnesota junior,<br />

took this course in the fall 2020 semester.<br />

“It reiterated everything I already thought. It also gave<br />

me good argument points,” Sundstrom said.<br />

He remembers an instance when he used the data he<br />

learned from the course in a discussion with someone who<br />

denied the science of climate change.<br />

Sundstrom said it was interesting to debate with an<br />

intelligent person who nevertheless believes some of<br />

the scientifically disproven information that circulates<br />

through far-right political groups. He said the viewpoint<br />

the man held is that statistics on the climate that come<br />

from university studies are biased because universities are<br />

primarily liberal.<br />

Sundstrom, however, knew that he could rely on data<br />

from other institutions since the class had taught him how<br />

to interpret statistics.<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL<br />

RACISM<br />

Another issue that Wassenberg covers is how climate<br />

change will affect communities, globally and locally,<br />

that aren’t the primary contributors to the problem. In<br />

a different section of the course, she explored a newer<br />

concept: environmental racism.<br />

“Wherever you go,<br />

there is going to be<br />

a low-income<br />

neighborhood that has a ton of polluting industries in it,”<br />

Madison Romain, a University of Minnesota sophomore,<br />

said.<br />

There are numerous instances of environmental<br />

injustice in the United States that arose from polluting<br />

industries exploiting lower-income areas, leading to the<br />

establishment of the Superfund Program in 1980. The<br />

Superfund Program cleans some of the country’s most<br />

polluted communities to protect the health of its residents.<br />

There are currently 1,327 Superfund sites in the United<br />

States—Minnesota has 25. One of them is located in the<br />

East Phillips neighborhood in South Minneapolis, which is<br />

the lowest-income neighborhood in the city.<br />

Romain took Wassenberg’s course last semester and<br />

volunteers for the Urban Farm organization in East<br />

Phillips. The community developed the idea to refurbish<br />

a 7.6-acre site in their neighborhood by converting it into<br />

a hydroponic farm. The farm created local jobs while<br />

barring another company from exploiting their community<br />

more.<br />

The City of Minneapolis denied the farm’s proposal to<br />

pursue relocating and expanding the water distribution<br />

site, called the Hiawatha Campus Expansion Project.<br />

Social injustice and environmental issues have a causeand-effect<br />

relationship with one another. It is important to<br />

learn and assess where different skills can fit into helping<br />

a problem.<br />

“We’re not going to be able to solve climate change<br />

without addressing the social injustices that go along with<br />

it. Because everywhere you go, like East Phillips, is one of<br />

the countless instances of environmental racism,” Romain<br />

said.<br />

IS OPTIMISM<br />

AN OPTION?<br />

Is this all worth the fight? These three students say yes.<br />

While Romain was enrolled in Wassenberg’s course,<br />

she took local action to combat environmental racism in<br />

the Minneapolis community.<br />

“It just taught me how to be smarter,” Romain said.<br />

“How to be smart about learning about it because there<br />

are so many misconceptions.”<br />

The course also informed and facilitated Lamers’<br />

personal evolution when she decided to continue with<br />

her vegetarianism journey. Learning an array of data on<br />

socially “controversial” topics enables optimism for the<br />

future.<br />

“I feel more optimistic than pessimistic,” Lamers<br />

said. “People are going, shifting more toward<br />

either central or more left kind of views. I<br />

think people will place more emphasis<br />

on fixing the issue of climate<br />

change.”<br />

“WE’RE NOT<br />

GOING TO BE ABLE<br />

TO SOLVE CLIMATE<br />

CHANGE WITHOUT<br />

ADDRESSING<br />

THE SOCIAL<br />

INJUSTICES<br />

THAT GO<br />

ALONG<br />

WITH IT.”<br />

SKOLSTREJK<br />

FÖR<br />

KLIMATET<br />

31

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