Counterpoint: Conservative Criticism of Israel is Unwarranted
Ben Jubas '14 /April 22, 2012Israel has repeatedly extended the olive branch in an attempt to create a Palestinian state, only to be summarily rejected by Palestinian leaders.
Israel has repeatedly extended the olive branch in an attempt to create a Palestinian state, only to be summarily rejected by Palestinian leaders.
Olasky’s definition draws out an aspect of compassionate conservatism that all conservatives agree on—its critique of the welfare state’s failure to help the poor.
The fundamental ways in which you conceive of yourself and other people can be crucially altered—sometimes in less-than-obvious ways—by sexual decisions made in college.
Since I’ll be graduating in a few months, I’ve started thinking recently about the kind of relationship I will maintain with Princeton University once I walk out FitzRandolph Gate.
“Saving the planet” doesn’t require government regulation – often, good old-fashioned market solutions work just fine.
The real risk for conservatives is that this election turns into a referendum on which candidate can better manage an ever-expanding welfare state.
In my interviews with Jewish conservatives on campus, however, I found that faith plays only a marginal role in forming political opinions.
It appears that many of the issues surrounding the keyless locks do not pertain to the locks themselves, but to the lack of clarity on implementation and communication from Housing in the process thus far.
It is this tension between fighting to change one’s condition and accepting one’s situation that forms the central drama Terrance Malick investigates in his Academy Award-nominated film, The Tree of Life.
As the world becomes increasingly globalized, many have argued that it is becoming more important for students to be able to assimilate, respect, and appreciate other cultures.
“It used to be about trying to do something,” says Margaret Thatcher (Meryl Streep) of the political life early on in The Iron Lady. “Now it’s about trying to trying to be someone.”
As our authors show, Princeton students are not absent from these debates; quite to the contrary, there are at the forefront, poised to shape our national discourse for a generation.
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