The Leading Princeton Publication of Conservative Thought

Archive: February 2023

“Unmasking Latino Anti-Black Bias in the Law”: Princeton Progressive Law Society Holds Inaugural Event

/February 11, 2023

On the evening of February 3, around three dozen students gathered to hear Fordham Law Professor Tanya Hernández at the Princeton Progressive Law Society’s first event. Hernández is a Fulbright Scholar and author of Racial Innocence: Unmasking Latino Anti-Black Bias and the Struggle for Equality, and her remarks were titled, “Unmasking Latino Anti-Black Bias in […]

Continue Reading →

My Own Philosophy of Race

/January 17, 2023

  Last semester, I took an African American Studies Class called “The Philosophy of Race.” I’m glad I took the class – it offered me a new perspective and insight into the enslavement of black people in the United States and the current condition of black Americans. I read the best works of black literary […]

Continue Reading →

Characterizing Race by Votes | OPINION

/December 22, 2020

Rep. Michelle Steel, pictured, is representative of a broader rightward shift among American ethnic minorities (Photo Credit: Wikimedia)   The following is an opinion contribution and reflects the author’s views alone.   News of a Biden victory has overwhelmed the airwaves, saturating television chyrons, and appeared across my social media feed. Defeat looks all but […]

Continue Reading →

Princeton and The Battle Over Academic Freedom

/August 18, 2020

Princeton Philosophy Department, Photo Credit: WikiMedia Commons The following is an opinion contribution and reflects the author’s views alone. A recent open letter by the Princeton University faculty has provoked concerns, yet again, that institutions may be encroaching against freedom of thought and expression in their efforts to protect those who are marginalized by racism. […]

Continue Reading →

Don’t Judge Historical Figures through a Modern Moral Lens

/December 27, 2019

Woodrow Wilson School. Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons The following is an opinion contribution and reflects the author’s views alone. With October’s dedication of “Double Sights,” an installation which recognizes Woodrow Wilson’s complex legacy, placed outside of the school named after him, the national debate over the legacy of historical figures has returned to the center […]

Continue Reading →