Opinion

A letter from the staff

The Commonwealth Times Staff As many of us prepare to move on from VCU, we, The CT staff, are reflecting on the period of substantial growth and change we have undergone this past academic year — and the meaningful stories you allowed us to retell. We began in August with a staff of almost entirely new faces, hoping to produce a newspaper that would truly reflect and honor our community.  We came together from different backgrounds, majors and experiences. This short-lived staff sought to give a voice to the underrepresented and underserved. We recognize VCU as a unique, nuanced institution that exists within the boundaries of a beautiful, growing Richmond. To the people of RVA, thank you for tolerating us. We hope our reporting reflected those sentiments. This era of The CT ushered in new ideas across every corner of the publication. We initiated a streamlined hard news operation to promptly deliver vital information to our readers. We translated stories into Spanish in a principled step to broaden our reach, promote language access and fill news gaps. We found new ways to tell stories in an evolving world; our four sections became six with “Features,” where we examined stories with deeper,

As a prospective teacher, RPS budget cuts are disheartening

Katie Meeker, Opinions & Humor Editor When I first received my acceptance letter for VCU’s masters in teaching program, I was so excited to finally be getting a foothold in my future.  I’d struggled all through undergrad trying to figure out what exactly I wanted to do with my English degree. I knew I wanted to do something that gave back to my community, and after much soul searching, I realized education was a perfect way to fulfill that need.  Beyond the specific appeal of VCU’s program, I was thrilled to have the opportunity to continue to live and work in Richmond — I’ve grown very fond of the city and its people, and student teaching would allow me to give back to the place that has become my home.  However, I quickly realized that recently, Richmond hasn’t been too kind to its educators. In January, the proposed Richmond Public Schools budget for the coming fiscal year included plans for more than 40 layoffs, raise delays for staff, the elimination of summer school programs for all non-high school students, a reduction in mental health programs for students and the termination of the district’s online learning program.  There are certainly a

10 reasons why you should delete Instagram

Kylie Grunsfeld, Staff Columnist I have deleted Instagram — my primary vice — many times, and each time I’ve felt my body become instantly lighter, my energy increase and my anxiety ebb, even if only slightly.  I’ve gone weeks and months without Instagram. Its absence makes me better for reasons I need to constantly remind myself of, because otherwise I become tempted to return to the very thing that steals so much of my life.  Being offline forces you to be present How many times has someone had to repeat themselves because you were so busy scrolling that you forgot to listen? How many times have you been in the car, the bus, the train or even walking and you’ve missed a chance to connect with your surroundings? I notice so much more when my attention is not being monopolized by Instagram. Little sights that enrich my days despite their briefness — a squirrel digging in the mulch, a baby smiling at me, a piece of beautiful architecture. These moments are what make life. These opportunities to appreciate our humanity are often lost when we choose to let algorithms snatch our awareness.  You’ll become a more patient person You can

The CT seniors say farewell

Andrew Kerley, Executive Editor I came to VCU lost, dazed and enthralled — a freshman with no concrete major who questioned: “What the hell am I gonna do for the next four years?”  One week and a signed clipboard later, the answer to that became journalism, as well as my unofficial second major: a Bachelor of science in The Commonwealth Times. One semester later, that answer became “News Editor for The Commonwealth Times.” One rejected application later, it became “Audience Editor for The Commonwealth Times” — a happy accident through which I forged new, and sometimes bad, ideas as the only freshman on staff. One year later, the answer became “fired from The Commonwealth Times.” Yeah, it wasn’t pretty. I failed a bunch of classes too. I made a lot of mistakes. It took a lot of time and some excruciating soul searching to learn from them — but I’d like to say I came around. One more year later, the answer to my question became “Executive Editor of The Commonwealth Times.” Being a journalist means being a lifelong learner. You have to become an expert on something different every week. In another sense, you have to keep pushing and

A letter from the staff

The Commonwealth Times Staff As many of us prepare to move on from VCU, we, The CT staff, are reflecting on the period of substantial growth and change we have undergone this past academic year — and the meaningful stories you allowed us to retell. We began in August with a staff of almost entirely new faces, hoping to produce a newspaper that would truly reflect and honor our community.  We came together from different backgrounds, majors and experiences. This short-lived staff sought to give a voice to the underrepresented and underserved. We recognize VCU as a unique, nuanced institution that exists within the boundaries of a beautiful, growing Richmond. To the people of RVA, thank you for tolerating us. We hope our reporting reflected those sentiments. This era of The CT ushered in new ideas across every corner of the publication. We initiated a streamlined hard news operation to promptly deliver vital information to our readers. We translated stories into Spanish in a principled step to broaden our reach, promote language access and fill news gaps. We found new ways to tell stories in an evolving world; our four sections became six with “Features,” where we examined stories with deeper, more extensive reporting, and “Multimedia,” where we widened our digital footprint with new video and audio content.  As full-time college students, many of whom work other jobs or internships, each and every member of The CT staff showed commitment and care with every piece published. Everyone brought something unique to the table. We kept our ears to the ground. We kept our fingers on the pulse. We sent reporters, photographers, producers and contributors of all types to key university and city happenings — from the boards and committees running VCU, to the clubs and communities keeping it alive.  We made editorial stances that reflected the needs and voices of VCU. We broke from AP Style by referring to the conflict in Gaza as what it is: a genocide. We advocated for the Free Press and student media as tools for both record keeping, and change — meeting the moment Americans are living through.  By the numbers, The CT has grown wildly. We doubled how much we print as we returned to weekly issues. Our website visitation tripled. We branched out to new social media platforms. We gained more followers on Instagram in nine months than in the entire previous decade. 

As a prospective teacher, RPS budget cuts are disheartening

Katie Meeker, Opinions & Humor Editor When I first received my acceptance letter for VCU’s masters in teaching program, I was so excited to finally be getting a foothold in my future.  I’d struggled all through undergrad trying to figure out what exactly I wanted to do with my English degree. I knew I wanted to do something that gave back to my community, and after much soul searching, I realized education was a perfect way to fulfill that need.  Beyond the specific appeal of VCU’s program, I was thrilled to have the opportunity to continue to live and work in Richmond — I’ve grown very fond of the city and its people, and student teaching would allow me to give back to the place that has become my home.  However, I quickly realized that recently, Richmond hasn’t been too kind to its educators. In January, the proposed Richmond Public Schools budget for the coming fiscal year included plans for more than 40 layoffs, raise delays for staff, the elimination of summer school programs for all non-high school students, a reduction in mental health programs for students and the termination of the district’s online learning program.  There are certainly a

10 reasons why you should delete Instagram

Kylie Grunsfeld, Staff Columnist I have deleted Instagram — my primary vice — many times, and each time I’ve felt my body become instantly lighter, my energy increase and my anxiety ebb, even if only slightly.  I’ve gone weeks and months without Instagram. Its absence makes me better for reasons I need to constantly remind myself of, because otherwise I become tempted to return to the very thing that steals so much of my life.  Being offline forces you to be present How many times has someone had to repeat themselves because you were so busy scrolling that you forgot to listen? How many times have you been in the car, the bus, the train or even walking and you’ve missed a chance to connect with your surroundings? I notice so much more when my attention is not being monopolized by Instagram. Little sights that enrich my days despite their briefness — a squirrel digging in the mulch, a baby smiling at me, a piece of beautiful architecture. These moments are what make life. These opportunities to appreciate our humanity are often lost when we choose to let algorithms snatch our awareness.  You’ll become a more patient person You can

The CT seniors say farewell

Andrew Kerley, Executive Editor I came to VCU lost, dazed and enthralled — a freshman with no concrete major who questioned: “What the hell am I gonna do for the next four years?”  One week and a signed clipboard later, the answer to that became journalism, as well as my unofficial second major: a Bachelor of science in The Commonwealth Times. One semester later, that answer became “News Editor for The Commonwealth Times.” One rejected application later, it became “Audience Editor for The Commonwealth Times” — a happy accident through which I forged new, and sometimes bad, ideas as the only freshman on staff. One year later, the answer became “fired from The Commonwealth Times.” Yeah, it wasn’t pretty. I failed a bunch of classes too. I made a lot of mistakes. It took a lot of time and some excruciating soul searching to learn from them — but I’d like to say I came around. One more year later, the answer to my question became “Executive Editor of The Commonwealth Times.” Being a journalist means being a lifelong learner. You have to become an expert on something different every week. In another sense, you have to keep pushing and

The courts don’t need to revoke birthright citizenship — our culture already has

Shiny Chandravel, Assistant Opinions Editor  People ask me where I’m from all the time. If you look anything like me, they ask you too.  I think people expect me to tell them my exotic stories of living in the Indian subcontinent, stories they’ve seen in movies like “Slumdog Millionaire” or in Nick Jonas and Priyanka Chopra’s viral wedding video. But the truth is much more anticlimactic. I’ve lived in Richmond my whole life, born and raised.  I’ve learned to meet people halfway with my response: “I’m from here, but my parents are from India.” For a long time, that response did the trick. It equally satisfied their curiosity, my heritage and my stubbornness to be truthful to the city I’ve spent my life calling home.  I was recently asked this question again at the hospital where I work. In my rounds, I met an older patient who, like many before him, asked me where I was from. But when I gave him my usual response, I was thrown off when he pressed his investigation.  “What do your parents do?” he asked abrasively.  I responded that my dad worked in a pharmacy while my mom was a stay-at-home mom. Hearing this,

All CPR dummies should have breasts

Maya Kamat, Contributing Writer The first time I learned CPR, I was sitting shoulder-to-shoulder with my peers in a dimly lit classroom as an earnest gym teacher played a video about Automatic External Defibrillators (AEDs) and chest compressions. I was watching the video intently when my friend tapped my shoulder. “They take your shirt off to put on an AED?” she said with disgust. “I would rather they just let me die.”  I remember feeling distinctly horrified. Why would she say that? How did we get to the point where the female breast had become so sexualized that women are uncomfortable with receiving life-saving care? I don’t remember what I said to my friend then, but I would say this — with the way people treat female bodies, they probably would have let her die.  Women are 27% less likely than men to receive basic CPR in out of hospital cardiac arrests, according to a 2024 study. CPR can nearly double a person’s chances of survival. All 50 states as well as D.C. have good samaritan laws that protect bystanders performing CPR. And yet, women across all racial backgrounds are consistently less likely to receive this life-saving care. As an

My fear of a campus shooting has permeated my everyday life

Kylie Grunsfeld, Staff Columnist I was sitting in the Student Commons a week ago when someone stood up and started shouting. I didn’t hear much of what came out of their mouth, but I didn’t need to; my mind had already gone to the worst possible place. I was bracing myself for what feels more and more inevitable with every day — a mass shooting at our very own school.  Any chaos or disruption in a public place or any loud, sudden noise triggers the fear that lives perpetually inside me. In every classroom, I map out my theoretical escape plan. In every movie theater, I take note of the exits. In my own bedroom, I wonder how quickly I could spring up and block the door with my heavy wooden furniture.  It’s extremely unfortunate that these are things a college student must take into consideration. A mass shooting could happen anywhere at any time, but shootings at college campuses often dominate the news; it’s only natural a student would be on edge.  In the past few years alone there have been major shootings at the University of Virginia, Brown University and Old Dominion University, the latter occurring only last

Rage against the streaming machine, buy physical media

Emma Conroy, Contributing Writer You don’t own a single song on your phone. Not one. That precious playlist you’ve spent years curating? Rented. Your “Spotify Wrapped,” telling you who you are based on what you listened to? That’s not actualization —  that’s a corporation selling your listening habits back to you as identity. You’ve spent thousands on streaming subscriptions and you own nothing. Your music library could evaporate tomorrow. We are all responsible for  this. We traded ownership for convenience and called it progress. Streaming didn’t just change how we consume music — it stole music from us. It sanitized it, commodified it, optimized it for skip rates and playlist placement. Devaluation of art is just the start.  But in a studio on VCU’s campus, a small group of college radio DJs are staging a quiet rebellion. WVCW, VCU’s internet-only radio station, is one of the last places where students still spin physical media like vinyl records and CDs. Every week, these DJs make a choice about how to broadcast. Some, like Eric Wiggins, stream from the catalog VCU has provided with digital uploads. Others, like Alexis and Lana Waters, refuse to play anything that isn’t physical media. The format

Academic elitism is doing nothing to stop conservative lies

Emily McFarland, Contributing Writer VCU labels its students as “UNcommon” — different and better than our peers. Our college education grants us a degree, but more importantly, assurance that our superiority complex is grounded in reality.  Within the masters in social work program, I have heard that same elitist perspective being used to dehumanize those swayed by conservative rhetoric.  These future social workers decry “I could never work with a Trump supporter!” They giggle when a conservative is harmed by the policies their president instated. They point at research and ask how anyone could be so ignorant to disregard it.  Yes, the conservative coal miner with a bootstrap mentality and half a working lung is the pinnacle of societal evil. And yes, it is totally moral for future social workers to hypothetically deny service to ne’er-do-wells like him.  There seems to be a tendency to villainize those who do not trust science’s holy truth, framing them as simply stupid. We find it difficult to grant people the benefit of the doubt, to consider that they might just be less privileged people and equally capable of change as you and I. In actuality, academic elitism is just a consequence of improper

CT seniors say farewell

Sarah Hagen, Managing Editor This whole semester, I have hounded staff and contributors about getting their articles in on time. It only makes sense that

Stop being weird about Rama Duwaji

Katie Meeker, Opinions & Humor Editor The recent New York City mayoral election has caused quite a stir not only in the city but across