the handle.

The Handle


Mission: At The Handle, our goal is to provide fresh perspective, analysis, and discussion of national and international events and issues. Our ultimate goal is to educate our readers, provide a forum where they can share, and highlight the quality of our contributors. We provide a happy medium with relevant discussion, we empower and inspire, and most importantly, we share what matters to us.
Description: The Handle Magazine is an independent web-magazine started in spring 2012 when a group of like-minded college students formed an online media venture as an avenue to provide analysis of life, politics, and culture in America with an emphasis on their relation to the Southeast.
SUBMIT AN ENTRY: The Handle is always looking for talent! If you like what we do and want to be a part of it, send us an email and we’ll walk you through the process! We promise to let you write about what you care about if you promise to give us quality material.

If you’re interested in becoming a contributing member of our staff (writing, photography, video) please feel free to email us at oped@thehandlemedia.com; we’re always looking for talent and we’ll explain what you need to do. If you simply want to contribute or write on your own time please drop us a line at oped@thehandlemedia.com and you can write as a “guest”.
You can check out The Handle either at the above link or here!

the handle.
collective-history:

It wasn’t that long ago. Selma Alabama 1963.
Birmingham Needs a Basketball Team
What's So Bad About Immigrants, Anyhow?
The Economics of the Immigration Law
wellesleyunderground:

Alabama Senate Doubles Down on Nation’s Most Draconian Anti-Immigration Law
The Alabama State Senate voted 20-7 today on changes to HB 56, the nation’s harshest immigration law. Unlike the replacement bill passed by the House, the Senate billpreserves most of the law, including a provision that requires schools to check theimmigration status of their students. That provision led to 7% of the Hispanic students in Alabama public schools to miss school the day after the law went into effect for fear that the parents of undocumented students would be deported. Because the bill has scared so many students away from school, Alabama schools may lose funding that is dependent on attendance.
The provision scaring children away from schools is not the only harsh provision left intact by the new bill leaves. Unchanged provisions include one that bars undocumented aliens from renting property and another that allows law enforcement to check immigration status based on a “reasonable suspicion.” It also preserves a section that proscribes a variety of penalties, including permanent loss of license, for businesses that hire undocumented workers. Plus, the new bill piles on by adding another harsh provision requiring the state Department of Homeland Security “to post a quarterly list of the names of any undocumented alien who appears in court for a violation of state law, regardless of whether they were convicted.”
The one bright side of the bill is that it clarifies which “business transactions” undocumented immigrants are prevented from entering into with the state. The new bill only requires proof of citizenship for getting car tags and driver’s, business, and commercial licenses — a change that clarifies a provision that has been used to deny water to immigrants in their homes.
Because the regular session of the Senate ends at midnight tonight, the House and Senate much reach a compromise today for these changes to go into effect. Opponents of the law protested before and after the vote by the Senate, and protests are expected to continue. Four of seven protestors who blocked a Senate hallway were led away in handcuffs.
Alabama vs. Education
The Sorry State of Our State