Difference between revisions of "International Politics"
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{{CTY Courses}} | {{CTY Courses}} | ||
− | [[International Politics]], formerly Geopolitics, formerly World Geopolitics, is a Humanities course in the CTY program with no prerequisites. Its course code is POLY (formerly WOGE). | + | [[International Politics]], formerly Geopolitics, formerly World Geopolitics, is a Humanities course in the CTY program with no prerequisites. Its course code is POLY (formerly WOGE), and it is offered at [[Baltimore]], [[Carlisle]], [[Los Angeles]], and [[Saratoga Springs]]. |
==Course Description== | ==Course Description== |
Revision as of 17:45, 16 September 2008
International Politics, formerly Geopolitics, formerly World Geopolitics, is a Humanities course in the CTY program with no prerequisites. Its course code is POLY (formerly WOGE), and it is offered at Baltimore, Carlisle, Los Angeles, and Saratoga Springs.
Course Description
International Politics provides a basic overview of many of the problems in the world, such as hunger, genocide, and informational security. The course has been criticized or been given apathetically no consideration by different people considering its pacifist style of conflict resolution.
Class History
At SAR.05.2, Donald Rumsfeld was put on mock trial for war crimes. He was found not guilty.
At CAR.05.1, many complaints were heard about the many useless geography sheets that students were required to complete after looking up large quantities of useless statistics. The same complaints were made next session, with the addition of a number of necessary poetry assignments.
International Politics was taught in Carlisle in 2007 by Dan Mumford and was TA'd by Taku Chakravarti. Taku inspired his own activity, called Taku appreciation. Dan, meanwhile, was in the Peace Corps in Africa and was an actor in an acclaimed World of Warcraft movie. Dan was frequently called D. Mums so as to differentiate between him and Dan Soltis (Diesel/D. Sol/D. Train/Dan). Dan was the RA for all of the guys in International Politics at Carlisle in 2008.1. D. Mums loves the elder god of chaos known as Cthulhu and you 'will grow to love Cthulhu by the end of the session.
At CAR.08.1, there were no more useless worksheets/poetry. The class was very interesting to those who enjoyed history/politics. A word of warning though, many of the arguments do tend to have many different sides with little difference between them and those at either end of the side were usually considered to be wrong by everyone else. As the TA, Megan, said, "There is no black or white there are only shades of gray." Some highlights included a game called Coalitions, a game about International Relations (2008.1 was the first year in which IP A and B failed the game completely resulting in the destruction of the world, a kid named Nate vetoed the peace agreement resulting in utter destruction), reading/discussing the New York Times for the first 2 hours of the day (then discussing the book/other points the teacher wanted to make for the rest of the time (you read the book/various articles during study hall in the evening)), and just the general awesomeness of the class.
At SAR.08.1, one student (also the biggest(both literally and metaphorically) douchebag of the class) discovered that Quake 3 is on the computer he's using, while at Wiecking computer lab(he fell into a destructive obsession over it. He sat on me for taking that computer once, I'm serious). The rest of the class retort by downloading Combat Arms, a free online FPS that his roommate(and one of his many enemies) pulled from an ad in a gaming magazine(its site URL was kept secret). Also, the class was awesome. We saw Karl, the instructor, in a BBC documentary about the Azeri Orange Revolution (he was holding a camera, and was "duly" chased by riot police for documenting the revolt(that's what I think) as he ran around a corner).