By the first pregnancy test, you'd started growing and likely had a heartbeat.
#THE AUDACITY FACE SKIN#
In fact, before your mother knew you were there, your DNA detailed your hair color, skin color, eye color, and even some personality traits. She’d have a mezzo-soprano voice with an ear for music and a heart for poetry. One zygote could be a girl who'd have brown hair and green eyes, who would grow to be just about 5’5” if she eats her vegetables. If we could sample and read the DNA of the new zygote we could paint a picture of that person as an adult. It's ready to grow into an adult - now it only needs a safe place to grow, nutrients, oxygen, and time. This unique zygote has a genetic profile that has never existed before and never will again. She frequently volunteers as a sidewalk counselor, standing outside abortion clinics and offering information, help, and compassion to pregnant women.Īt the moment of conception, two specialized cells join to create something entirely new. She’s always had a heart for unborn children, but in the last few months has seen the abortion crisis hit much closer to home. Katie Young is a student at Concordia University in Irvine, president of Every Life Matters Pro-Life club. Capitalism isn't just a system, but an art and a science- an observation of humanity rather than an implementation meant to change it.
Yet capitalism is an art- it’s a reflection of life, a study of the human soul and its tendencies to desire and strive for perfection, no matter how unattainable. That seems like an odd word, doesn't it? Beauty seems like a more fitting descriptor for art than for economics. "All rational action is in the first place individual action. She wishes for the sake of comedy that the Golden Arches Theory of Conflict Prevention were true, but takes it in due course that one cannot have everything that one wants in life.
#THE AUDACITY FACE FREE#
Her love of the free market comes in great part from observing the effects of socialism in Ireland, a country in which she holds dual citizenship, and a particular fondness for the effects of economic factors on historical events. Stephanie Tiedt is in her third year at Concordia University, Irvine, studying History and Secondary Education. But at its core, theorist Michael Newman explains, socialism supports egalitarianism between all classes and attempts to eradicate the “inequalities of wealth and power” that have always been, and are currently still, a part of society. Any economic ideology, be it socialism or capitalism, are just theories on how the wealth in a community should be distributed and like any economic ideology, socialism is a rather complex, far-reaching concept. One of the most common notions about socialism is that it is an alternative to democracy, rather than an economic practice. In the United States, people have largely misconstrued ideas about the economic ideology of socialism. This belief in social equality has only grown during her time as an active student at HSU. Her heart for social equality and justice was born from the teachings of Jesus Christ and a desire to live as the original Believers who, “…had everything in common and sold their property and possessions to give to anyone who had need” (Acts 2:44-45). Chelsea Pulliam is a junior at Humboldt State University studying Environmental Management Protection with an emphasis in Environmental Education and Interpretation.