the top 10 stories of 2008

News

tue 12/30/2008

 
the-top-10-stories-of-2008 A man buys a newspaper at a newsstand.

(image by hyperscholar via flickr)

10. Jalapeños cause mass salmonella poisoning

When over 1,250 Americans became sick from salmonella poisoning, authorities suspected tainted tomatoes. But three months after the outbreak began – the largest in over a decade – the true culprit was identified: raw jalapeños. By then, the tomato industry had suffered over $100 million in losses.

9. Natural disasters cause $200 billion in damages

From earthquakes in China to hurricanes in Cuba, from a cyclone in Burma to over 1,700 tornadoes in the United States, natural disasters inflicted over $200 billion in damages this year. One of the world's most important insurance companies suggests the disasters aren't entirely natural, blaming man-made global warming for the increasing ferocity of storms.

8. Daddy Yankee endorses John McCain

In late August, Daddy Yankee endorsed U.S. presidential candidate John McCain, citing the senator's stance on immigration – atypically liberal for a Republican. In the days that followed, Fat Joe called Yankee a sell-out and Pitbull called the endorsement a publicity stunt.

7. Tuition hikes at predominantly Latino colleges

With the U.S. economy in recession, state governments across the country are cutting costs and raising fees to balance their budgets. Among the hardest hit institutions are public colleges. Schools in New York, California, Texas and Colorado, many of which are predominantly Latino, will increase tuition next year, likely forcing some students to postpone their studies just as a college degree becomes even more important.

6. U.S.-México border fence gets started

Years in the planning (and in litigation), construction of the U.S.-México border fence began this year. Whether construction will continue is not entirely clear.

5. Postville, Iowa immigration raids

In May, hundreds of workers at a Postville, Iowa meatpacking plant were detained on immigration charges. It was the largest such raid in years. By late July, many of the detained workers had begun to provide testimony against their former employer, reporting harrowing tales of child labor and unsafe working conditions. In early November, the company filed for bankruptcy.

4. México's drug war escalates

The U.S. remains the largest consumer of illicit drugs and Latin America its principal supplier. Most of those drugs enter the U.S. through México where competition between rival traffickers has claimed the lives of over 4,000 men, women and children. All sectors of Mexican society have come under attack, often through acts of terrorism designed to produce a climate of fear and political paralysis.

3. RBD disbands

Love them or hate them, RBD made bank. In four years, the made-from-Television pop group moved well over 15 million records, sold out dozens of stadiums and made a lasting impression on tens of millions of fans. The group disbanded in August and has just completed its farewell tour.

2. Barack Obama

Less than 50 years after the U.S. abolished laws which prevented African-Americans from voting, the U.S. elected its first Africa-American president. Credited with running the most effective campaign in modern history, Senator Barack Obama will now confront the greatest economic challenge since the Great Depression while managing at least two wars abroad.

1. The Economy

This year, the global economy nearly collapsed after one of its foundations, the finance sector, imploded as a result of the subprime mortgage meltdown in the United States. Every nation has been and continues to be impacted as demand for products and services decreases, companies cut back on production and personnel and governments invest trillions of dollars to keep entire industries, from banks to auto manufacturers, from going bankrupt.

 
 

swollen members

daily dos

mon 12/22/2008

 
daily-dos-swollen-members A hairy, chubby belly.

A Mexican principal is being investigated after he suspended 15 male students for having their eyebrows plucked. The principal deemed it "homosexual behavior." (via Guanabee)

 
 

oopsie baby

daily dos

wed 12/3/2008

 
daily-dos-oopsie-baby Ludacris during a live performance.

(image by Space BarZ via flickr)

Over the last 20 years, college has become more unaffordable for most Americans.

 
 

gobbled up

daily dos

thu 11/27/2008

 
daily-dos-gobbled-up People walk through a busy mall.

(image by Justin Marty via flickr)

Despite increased tuition fees and a struggling economy, early applications for expensive private colleges – and less expensive public universities – are higher than expected.

 
 

caught offsides

daily dos

mon 11/17/2008

 
daily-dos-caught-offsides Mexican pop singer Belinda points toward the camera.

In an effort to speed up the payroll process for bilingual teachers, the Dallas public school system gave 26 foreign citizens fake social security numbers. Debbie Ratcliffe of the Texas Education Agency: "We think it’s certainly wrong. Whether it’s illegal, I’m not sure.”

 
 

ballots and bailouts

daily dos

wed 10/29/2008

 
daily-dos-ballots-and-bailouts The cover of the T.I. album "Paper Trail."

The cost of education continues to rise, with tuition and fees at four-year universities increasing by seven percent at public colleges and six percent at private colleges, according to a report from the College Board.

 
 

on thin ice

daily dos

thu 10/16/2008

 
daily-dos-on-thin-ice A pale face and hypnotizing eyes.

(image by josephp via flickr)

Does paying kids to do well on tests actually work? (via Neatorama)

 
 

can't add it up

daily dos

mon 9/22/2008

 
daily-dos-cant-add-it-up Travis Barker and DJ AM pose together in front of wooden walls.

Eighth graders in the U.S. who perform poorly in math (mostly Blacks and Hispanics) are entering high school unprepared for their studies according to the Brookings Institution: "It's hard to teach a real algebra class if you have kids who don't know arithmetic."

 
 

distortion to static

daily dos

sun 9/14/2008

 
daily-dos-distortion-to-static Jowell y Randy in black outfits.

Workers with college degrees – except for those with professional degrees – earned less last year than they did in 2000 (After adjusting for inflation). Economics professor Matthew J. Slaughter: "A college degree still provides an important security blanket … just how warm this blanket is is now less clear." (via Matthew Yglesias)

 
 

locked up?

daily dos

thu 9/4/2008

 
daily-dos-locked-up A black iPod featuring an image of Akon.

(image jetalone via flickr)

More than 200,000 U.S. school kids were hit by their teachers last year, according to a study by Human Rights Watch and the ACLU. The study concludes that black children in the South are more likely to experience corporal punishment than their white counterparts elsewhere in the U.S..

 
 
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