Below you will find pages that utilize the taxonomy term “Trespass”
The Human Values Behind Drug Compounding
The high cost of medicine affords wealthier people a better opportunity for health than others. The recent “trend” of using Ozempic and other GLP-1 medications for weight loss highlighted this disparity. To prevent increasing costs, should pharmacies and physicians be allowed to compound ingredients of patented drugs owned by pharmaceutical companies even when there is no drug shortage?
By Anne Comcowich
read moreProperty and Civil Liberties...in Space!
The year is 2045, Blue Ivy Carter releases her third studio album, and space suits are in. Elon Dusk and a Jehovah’s Witness land on Mars.
Dusk’s landing on the planet is the first in a series of missions planned by his company SpaceZ that he hopes will make humans an interplanetary species. Dusk’s expansive career as a venture capitalist, entrepreneur, and political benefactor has been characterized by an ethos of bare metal efficiency that his detractors have called a ruthless pursuit of the future at the expense of people. Yet, this ethos has served Dusk well and he has now carried it to the nascent Mars Colony One (MC1) where he hopes to build a long-term settlement. Dusk’s companion is Ann Marsh, great-granddaughter of prominent Jehovah’s Witness Grace Marsh. Marsh has agreed to accompany Dusk as part of his efforts to promote MC1 as a base of intergalactic religious freedom.
By Justin Martin
read moreA Perpetuity Puzzle in the Art Museum
In 1899, Isabella Stewart Gardner purchased a strip of marshland to house the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston. Ninety-one years later, the Gardner hosted the most infamously expensive museum heist ever—$500 million worth of art including a Rembrandt seascape, Degas sketches, a Vermeer, and ancient Chinese pottery was stolen over St. Patrick’s Day weekend in 1990. Despite a Netflix documentary and substantial increases of reward money, the trail remains frigid. To this day, the museum has empty spaces where the art once was, “placeholders” representing the hope that the paintings will return.
By Eliette Albrecht
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