SIEGEL: Restore the Voting Rights Act
By Lucy Siegel | August 29, 2016Every American becomes mute when one of its citizens loses his voice.
Every American becomes mute when one of its citizens loses his voice.
College Republicans have an opportunity to demonstrate a different side of the party
We also have to ask ourselves, do we still want to be a party school?
Our journalists, doctors, lawyers and scientists have spent years practicing in their fields. It’s time we actually listen to them.
It is likely the concert will do more harm than good in the long run.
Critics are too often searching for sexism that may not exist
The board’s in-fighting only serves to distract from the issue of how the University can improve access to resources, financial and otherwise, for students in need.
In order to combat sexual violence, our community needs to respond with a high level of activism.
The worldview offered by “America First” advocates ignores how the policies so derided by Trump and his cohorts benefit Americans.
Many Black Lives Matter supporters utilize divisive and inflammatory rhetoric to advance their own interests
Today, the 1980s increasingly belong to its losers and outcasts.
Characterizing an independent woman as necessarily lewd is not a step up from characterizing her as nonexistent
Society is much harder on women than men when it comes to forgiveness in the wake of an infidelity scandal.
People who imagine themselves above crude bigotry can find themselves its accomplices.
I am deeply skeptical of the notion that citizens need military-grade semi-automatic rifles.
Is our understanding, our science, really as definite and coherent as we consider it to be?
U.S. military intervention is needed to combat the greatest threat to peace and global security, Al-Qaeda and the Islamic State.
Whether you’re a big fish or a small fish, you will not leave as the same fish you were when you arrived.
The battle for queer rights was fought by those who could not afford to stay in hiding: the trans, the poor and people of color.
While we believe McDonnell should serve time for his crime, whether conduct in the same vein should always be subject to prosecution is perhaps a trickier matter than McDonnell’s individual offense.