Butler students expressed hope that the Biden administration will be able to heal a deeply divided country.
Ask Abby: How to Thanksgiving with your family post-election
I think you should skip your family’s Thanksgiving and come to my Friendsgiving instead. It’s Bring Your Own Mask, and there will be more than enough food to go around. Fair warning though, if a Thanksgiving dinner that is both gluten- and meat-free is more offensive to you than your distant cousins’ political beliefs, you may just want to bite the bullet and go home instead.
The Notorious R.B.G.: Remembering a complicated champion of women’s rights
It’s possible to keep Ginsburg’s faults in mind while simultaneously mourning the very real loss of a person whose entire career focused on protecting women and the queer community. It’s vital that we remember her individual activism as flawed and narrow, while acknowledging that rights and freedoms we take for granted could be lost without her.
Keeping the fight alive
Hearing the news that Bernie Sanders suspended his presidential campaign operations was devestating. But his supporters now have a clear mission going forward: don’t give up the fight for progressive reform.
Remember the coronavirus in November
I worry that the facts about this pandemic will be largely forgotten, reducing them — like most facts apparently — to supposedly partisan talking points.
Take a vote on H.R.8, Mitch McConnell
25 years ago, Congress established a background check system. Since the rise of the internet, guns have become accessible to those who shouldn’t have them.
Why Joe Biden is not electable
Columnist Alexandra Cordill argues why Biden’s platform is problematic on many levels.
Surviving politics over the holidays
Why taking a deep breath at the dinner table will serve you well in the long run.
Why you should be protesting on campus
Stop underestimating your power.
Gen Z is doomed, unless…
Photo courtesy of Wikimedia Commons. Zachary Gossett | Opinion Columnist | zgossett@butler.edu As the semester begins and first-years settle into their dorm rooms, there is no better time than now to discuss their impending doom. These first-years, who are the first class to be born entirely in the new millennium, join a campus full of…