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 Kasen Stephensen 31 Oct 2023
Opinion Don't Eat the Rich The habits of the elite are changing from loud luxury to quiet luxury, luxury goods to luxury beliefs, finance guys to tech bros. Nepo babies used to strive for Harvard’ Sophie Fujiwara 26 Oct 2023
Opinion The Flight 93 Indictment “2016 is the Flight 93 election: charge the cockpit or you die. You may die anyway. You—or the leader of your party—may make it into the cockpit and Aditya Prathap 23 Oct 2023
Opinion Keeping the Faith at Stanford Most Christians have valid concerns that elite colleges and universities stifle faith, marginalize Christian viewpoints, and are at times outright hostile towards Christian students. Perhaps that’s part of why Isabella Griepp 20 Oct 2023
Opinion In Defense of the Neighborhood System When Stanford’s neighborhood system was first announced, it was met with a wave of criticism. Students raised concerns regarding the rigid assignment process and its impact on current undergraduates, Ruei-Hung Alex Lee 19 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
Opinion In the House of Representatives, Disgrace is a Bipartisan Affair An utter collapse in the budgeting process. A narrowly averted government shutdown. An empty speaker’s chair with no clear successor. Who in the House is not to blame? John R. Puri 16 Oct 2023
Opinion On Relegation This article is not intended for the average Review reader. I’m not writing for someone who is already contrarian, but for the less common (on this site) but more Joe Civantos 4 Oct 2023
Opinion Being Ugly is a Choice Beautiful women gatekeep beauty by insisting that we only need sleep and hydration to look like them, while in reality, they were just born lucky. Cosmetic and lifestyle conglomerates tell Sophie Fujiwara 3 Oct 2023
Opinion When It’s Time to Choose a Major, Quit Fooling Yourself The best advice I received before freshman year was to study a subject in which I had already demonstrated real interest and aptitude, rather than engage in self-torture. John R. Puri 2 Oct 2023
Opinion A Perfect Week at the Supreme Court In a matter of days, the Court’s originalist majority successfully preserved the Equal Protection Clause, the First Amendment, and the constitutional separation of powers. John R. Puri 3 Jul 2023
Opinion Freshman Year in Review As we come to the end of another year at Stanford, it feels prudent to offer up some of the advice that I wish I had heard upon entering the Cees Armstrong 9 Jun 2023
Opinion Woke Hoover? That’s A Stretch. This piece appears in response to Tuesday's article by Julia Steinberg on the Hoover Institution embracing wokeness. After seven years as a resident senior fellow at the Hoover Niall Ferguson 4 Jun 2023
Opinion The Lost Pursuit of Ataraxia If you were to ask high-achievers whether they would be happy with their lives if they never worked, you would be hard pressed to find a 20-to-30-something year old who Sophie Fujiwara 2 Jun 2023
Opinion Hopeless Presidential Candidates Need Not Be Useless The Republican Party could be a more gracious, optimistic, and honorable place once a handful of primary contenders with little chance of victory leave their mark. John R. Puri 1 Jun 2023
Opinion Decline Without Fall: Tolkien and the Long Defeat Imagine a man born in Rome in 366 AD, a full 110 years before the fall of the Western Roman Empire. He would have matured, married, and died, never knowing Thomas Adamo 31 May 2023