Editorials
EDITORIAL | The Sun Supports Disruptive Protest
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If Cornell has taught us anything, it’s that student protest not only works but that it’s central to learning.
The Cornell Daily Sun (https://cornellsun.com/author/theeditorialboard/page/2/)
If Cornell has taught us anything, it’s that student protest not only works but that it’s central to learning.
We couldn’t be more excited for this new partnership, and we believe that together, we’ll be able to reach new heights in hard-hitting, high-quality pro-administration propaganda.
It’s vitally important that the Cornell campus understands the deliberative process that goes into writing Sun editorials. So here’s what you should know about what a Sun editorial is — and isn’t.
Cutting ties with weapons manufacturers wouldn’t be a radical departure from University policy but instead would uphold principles that the University has for decades applied to its financial dealings.
Time and again, Cornell has disadvantaged its undergraduates, except, of course, the most privileged few.
Congress, stay off our campus. Smith’s thinly veiled political motivations for “serious institutional change” at Cornell also set a dangerous precedent for congressional overreach.
DeLorenzo and his Student Assembly stooges — who care more about the deeply predatory Greek system than the Cornellians they purport to serve — should step down immediately.
Obviously, the administration doesn’t want an ideal campus. What it wants is to pull Cornell as far away from democracy as possible.
At best, Pollack has demonstrated a lack of faith in democracy. At worst, she has taken a page from Big Brother’s playbook.
DACA has been a point of contention for years. Undocumented children, now adults, walk among us at universities like Cornell. But with their status on the line come 2024, many fear being returned to foreign countries full of crime, violence and war.