I must confess: I bandwagon with Democrats and left-leaning people for nearly everything. I march in all the protests, I tweet the trendy hashtags, and I campaign for the people who advocate for the rights of marginalized groups.
Posts published by “Matthew Cunningham”
Matthew Cunningham is majoring in Science and Technology Studies at Stevens. In the past four years, Matthew has reported over 150 articles on metro, university, and campus news; science features and commentary; opinion; and arts and culture features. During his time at the Stute, Matthew has served as a columnist, webmaster, managing editor, and editor-in-chief.
Last summer, when I wasn’t at work or at the gym, I spent nearly every moment on Grindr. For those who don’t know what Grindr is, it’s an app for gay men to find other gay men with whom they can have sex.
This past week, the Stevens School of Business received approval from the Graduate Curriculum Committee of the Stevens Faculty Senate for a new MBA program called the “One-Year MBA.”
I belong to a group of people known as liberals. We go by other names too — Democrats, the left, progressives — but “liberal” seems just fine for me.
On the Friday night before the Nov. 6 Hoboken Mayoral election, an unknown person went around Hoboken distributing racist flyers characterizing then city councilman and mayoral candidate Ravi Bhalla as a terrorist.
I only write this because I believe in disclosure, not because I wish to incite conflict within the Student Government Association (SGA) or at Stevens.
Last week, Frank Bruni shocked me with his weekly New York Times column because, in it, he issued an open call to American universities asking that they shut down their fraternity organizations before more pledges die from hazing.
Well, almost.
Last week, on the anniversary of Donald Trump’s election, I joined thousands of “cucks and snowflakes, safe spacers and libtards” at Washington Square Park for the funniest, most cathartic event of 2017.
On Thursday, Amnesty International hosted the Oxfam Hunger Banquet, a dinner and educational event marked by sadness, reflection, and a desire to help people who are most in need.
Budgets and legislation are a reflection of our values, and the latest tax bill introduced to Congress last week shows that Republicans value big businesses and the top 1% of Americans more than the everyday families they represent.