Was PAW really not able to find at least one “reflection” on Trump’s victory that reflected positively on the millions who elected Trump and Republican majorities in the House and Senate (“The Trump Era: Reflections,” March 1)? Do the uniformly anti-Trump perspectives of four of the five reflections (the fifth was largely a neutral data analysis) imply that today’s Princeton students are sequestered in a monolithic edifice of opinion and are not challenged to think critically outside conventional liberal wisdom? Please tell me it’s not so ...
Was PAW really not able to find at least one “reflection” on Trump’s victory that reflected positively on the millions who elected Trump and Republican majorities in the House and Senate (“The Trump Era: Reflections,” March 1)? Do the uniformly anti-Trump perspectives of four of the five reflections (the fifth was largely a neutral data analysis) imply that today’s Princeton students are sequestered in a monolithic edifice of opinion and are not challenged to think critically outside conventional liberal wisdom? Please tell me it’s not so ...