By Katherine Stiefel Midnight two nights ago, I was walking back to my room with a friend when suddenly our conversation was interrupted – the…
The Prog
Despite disappointing results, and compounded feelings of hopelessness, we cannot afford to give up the fight.
By Nora Schultz ’19 Princeton Citizen Scientists members are expecting big things for their March 6 Day of Action: they’ve booked the entire Frist Campus…
We have to be long distance runners in struggle for truth and justice. I recall in 1980 I felt the same thing when Reagan won. Here we are, thirty-six years later, with the triumph of Trump.
Did Bernie hurt Hillary's chances?
Inside the struggle for grad student unionization.
2016 hasn't been a great year for opponents of the death penalty. But Steffen Seitz blogs about a few reasons for hope, and a way forward.
The Democrats must elect someone who represents the future of the party, rather than someone who embodies the failed policies and mistakes of the past.
Comforting one another is not enough; we must challenge each other to stand in spaces of discomfort and not to indulge in mentalities of ‘self-care’ that, meant to keep us sane, have the potential to make us complacent.
Demonstrations, like the one this past week in support of making Princeton a sanctuary campus, are all we can do, as of now, to resist what a Trump administration might bring. But it would be a mistake to expect Princeton University and its administrators to do anything concrete to protect the people whose lives are stake.