Category: Politics

The Power of Presidential Language

by Hannah Paxton ’19 Asst. Opinion Editor Language matters—especially that of the political leader of this country. Words have the power to build and destroy, to praise and condemn, to confront and evade. With his comment about the statue removal protests in Charlottesville, Virginia, coming from “both sides,” President Trump’s jargon clearly represents the hateful […]

The Cowl Editor

Moving Forward: Remove Confederate Statues

by Kevin Copp ’18 Opinion Staff The decisions of many cities, states, and universities to remove Confederate statues has polarized America. A stone carving of Robert E. Lee in Charlottesville, for instance, still has significant meaning for people from both the North and the South. Riots have broken out and lives have been lost because […]

The Cowl Editor

100 Days of Trump

by Taylor Godfrey ’19 Opinion Co-Editor While it seems like only yesterday everyone watched a very rain-soaked and supposedly well-attended inauguration, we have now reached the 100th (or rather 105th by the date of this publication) day of Donald Trump’s presidency. This is the mark by which a president’s term is often judged and the […]

thecowl.opinion

The Danger Of ‘Making France Great Again’

Carolyn Walsh ’17 Opinion Co-Editor  Emerita In the grand scheme of modern global politics, a presidential election in France might seem insignificant or even mundane compared to the dire situation in Syria and the chaos that is the Trump administration. However, the contest between the centrist and pro-Europe Emmanuel Macron and the far-right and xenophobic […]

thecowl.opinion

A Trump Victory

by Laura Arango ’20 Opinion Staff Donald Trump—many people are already sick of his name only 100 days into his presidency, and many more people do not have positive things to say about him. I am usually one of those people, so one can imagine how shocked those around me were when I told them […]

thecowl.opinion

Politics Vs. Principle

by Kelsey Dass ’18 Opinion Staff “Politics without principle,” is one of the seven dangers to human virtue, as noted by Mahatma Gandhi. It is a danger we have come head to head with at this very moment. Somalia, Nigeria, South Sudan, and Yemen are four countries currently under severe distress. With the combination of […]

The Cowl Editor

PC: Privilege Should Not Mean Ignorance

by Laura Arango ’20 Opinion Staff At Providence College, students live in a bubble. We see, do, and experience similar things every day of the school year. We are blessed with the opportunity to attend classes and receive a higher education that will eventually allow us to have degrees that determine our careers. It is […]

The Cowl Editor

Donald Trump: President for All?

by Katherine Opiela ’20 Opinion Staff Last Tuesday, March 28, Donald Trump signed an executive order which suspends or calls for review on several climate change laws, including Barack Obama’s Clean Power Plan. With his Energy Independence Executive Order, Trump is attempting to reverse much of the recent progress that has been made in regards […]

The Cowl Editor

The Grounds for Impeachment

by Carolyn Walsh ’17 Opinion Co-editor As if it were not obvious enough that the Trump presidency is like a terrifying episode of The Twilight Zone, our Commander-in-Chief has somehow managed to up his insane conspiracy game by accusing former president Barack Obama of wiretapping him during the 2016 election campaign. Trump took to Twitter […]

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