Announcing the Volume LXVII Print Edition Two weeks ago, for the first time since the pandemic, the Stanford Review released a print edition. Containing a 20-page collection of the most insightful and impactful articles from the Stanford Review 28 Nov 2023
Opinion Thinking About Rome “How often do you think about the Roman Empire?” This summer, countless TikTok videos and Twitter threads featured American women asking the men in their lives this very question. To Abhi Desai 22 Nov 2023
Opinion You Are Entitled To Nothing: Deconstructing America’s Entitlement Crisis Whether it be the upcoming election or their final exams, members of my generation, Gen-Z, will always find something to complain about. But too often, these day-to-day worries distract us Jack Komaroff 21 Nov 2023
Opinion San Francisco Has Some Serious Explaining To Do The city’s last-minute cleanup prior to hosting this month’s international summit is an outright scandal—not because the effort failed, but because it succeeded. John R. Puri 20 Nov 2023
Opinion The Spirit of the Amateur On May 6th, 1954, the late runner Roger Bannister performed a feat that many world experts believed was impossible. Gliding around the track at a breakneck speed, Bannister crossed the Thomas Adamo 17 Nov 2023
Breaking News The 2020 Stanford Blacklist In the midst of the chaos that defined 2020—the early stages of the pandemic and widespread BLM riots—students at Stanford were at home for a quarter of remote Josiah Joner 16 Nov 2023
Opinion Shackled Stanford’s Regulatory Demise When describing Stanford to others, I always compare it to one place: Disneyland. Just like the theme park, Stanford’s picturesque campus grounds are perfectly maintained at all times, from Dylan Rem 10 Nov 2023
Opinion Femininity, not Feminism Feminism has gone overboard. People claim cheating is feminism, women are encouraged to be the toxic one in the relationship, and we are even warned against dating male feminists. The Sophie Fujiwara 8 Nov 2023
Opinion Abundance: The Deepest Reality The basic reality of this world is abundance, not scarcity. How can this be? There is a new war in Israel, and a long war in Ukraine, both over disputed Bethany Lorden 6 Nov 2023
Breaking News BREAKING: Stanford’s Hit-and-Run “Hate Crime” is Dubious Reported Victim Abdul Omira is Described as “Pathological Liar” by Fellow Students Josiah Joner, John R. Puri 5 Nov 2023
Opinion How Hamas Broke the Progressive Mind A scientific theory of history, which stipulates that stronger, richer nations invariably persecute their weaker, poorer counterparts, cannot apprehend the atrocities committed against Israel. John R. Puri 1 Nov 2023
Opinion Sidetracked and Seduced: Technological Trend Hopping at Stanford Last fall, over three hundred Stanford students squeezed themselves into Skilling Auditorium for the first session of Civil & Environmental Engineering 252: Web3 Entrepreneurship. The scarcity of seats did not curb Kasen Stephensen 31 Oct 2023
Opinion Christian Exclusion in Stanford’s Dining Halls During every winter and spring quarter, Christian students at Stanford observe the Lenten season, commemorating the forty-days in which our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ, fasted in the desert. Lent Joseph Seiba 18 Oct 2023
Opinion This Is Not A Trade School Over the summer I bumped into a senior tech executive at a conference in San Francisco. Being an ardent user and a fan of the technology she works on, I Abhi Desai 17 Oct 2023