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Category: Politics

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Georgia Canon and the Blue Wave

A writer reflects on his home state’s political climate leading up to the 2020 Senate Runoff Elections.

by Andrew Zacks on January 5, 2021February 14, 2021

Climate reporting in the age of “alternative facts”

On the state of environmental reporting under Trump.

by Katie Massie on October 20, 2019October 19, 2019

Pointing Fingers

“My point that I’m not pointing starts with the Scopes Trial.”

by Sarah Barnette on February 26, 2017February 26, 2017

Brooklyn Nine-Nine and the Limits of the Liberal Imagination

Wherein a Nass writer looks at the popular sitcom from a more radical angle.

by Peter Taylor on November 7, 2021November 6, 2021

Prison Politics

Teaching at Garden State Prison the morning after the election.

by Eliot Callon on December 3, 2016

What We Lose to Lithium

How a lithium mine in Nevada is compromising Indigenous autonomy, and the danger of letting it go on.

by Alex Norbrook on October 12, 2023

I Cannot Take it Anymore

Facing the forces of Trump.

by Kat Powell on November 21, 2016December 3, 2016

Robert George, Polish Law, and the Obsession with Discourse

“It is fantastic that Professor George supports free speech and open discourse—his track record on that subject speaks for itself—and he is correct that this law’s criminalization of speech should be loudly condemned; however, it is not enough to defend free speech by itself.”

by Ethan Sterenfeld on February 25, 2018February 24, 2018

Voices from the Women’s March

Eight Princeton students reflect on protest, identity, and Drumpf’s inauguration.

by Binita Gupta, Katherine Powell, Maddy Pauchet, Megan Tung, Mikaela Gerwin, Nina Chausow, Rachel Stone, Rebecca Ngu on January 31, 2017February 28, 2017

I Was With Her

On Hillary Clinton, after the election.

by Caitlin Quinn on December 3, 2016

My Tenure For A Tweet

After being disinvited from a panel on campus about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, Associate Professor Max Weiss wrote in The Daily Princetonian, “Princeton must remain a place where open debate and academic exchange is encouraged and allowed to flourish, even on the most controversial issues.” It would be a lot easier to take him at his word had he not just convened a panel on academic freedom the week before, to which he invited zero dissenting voices.

by Aron Wander on October 18, 2014October 19, 2014

This Election Thing

On character judgments & choosy politics.

by Eliot Linton on November 7, 2012March 22, 2013


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