


when i was younger, i used to think it was just always wrong and anyone who did it was terrible, but as i get older, i'm starting to realize that topics like cheating are much more complex than i originally thought when i was a child. so i wanted to talk about cheating today because it's a complicated subject. it seems a lot of people have gotten caught cheating recently and because of that, it feels like cheating has been a big topic of discussion on the internet. We're talking about something serious today.anyone who has been on the internet recently has been seeing this conversation about people who cheat on their significant others in a relationship. To hear more audio stories from publications like The New York Times, _download Audm for iPhone or Android_._ _This story was written by Daniel Bergner recorded by Audm. They labeled her “a disgrace,” “a Marxist,” “a traitor.”ĭaniel Bergner, a contributing writer for The New York Times Magazine, wrote about what happened when a superintendent in northern Michigan raised the issue of systemic racism. A letter of praise signed by 200 Leland alumni was published in a peninsula newspaper.īut angry emails, phone calls and letters poured in from within the district and, because Long’s message made the local news and spread over the internet, from across the country. Long typed, “need us to stand with them to clearly state that we condemn acts of systematic and systemic racism and intolerance.” She envisioned profound pedagogical changes in her school she imagined creating illuminating discussions within classrooms and searching, transformative conversations in the community beyond. Haunted by the images she’d seen in the media, she wrote: “Why be in a position of leadership,” she asked herself, “and not lead?” In July 2020, Stephanie Long, the school superintendent in Leland, Mich., wrote a heartfelt letter to her students and their families after George Floyd’s murder by Minneapolis police officers.
