TheSequitur.com is a nationwide
network of students and young professionals devoted to bringing refreshing
wisdom and well-reasoned insights to a nation seemingly divided.
Our mission is
to educate, persuade and entertain by joining a moderate editorial philosophy
with persuasive young minds from all political persuasions to reshape the
agenda of the future.
TheSequitur.com offers a fresh
approach to reporting and commentary that reflects the reality that reasonable
people can productively disagree. By
providing a forum where tomorrow’s leaders may convene for fruitful debate, TheSequitur.com
will show that great compromises are not only possible in modern politics, but
necessary.
Visit TheSequitur.com daily for articles,
cartoons and commentary about culture, technology and the polis; and watch closely
as we quickly develop our Web presence and grow our national network of
contributors.
TheSequitur.com Submission Policy
TheSequitur.com welcomes submissions
of original, well-researched and thoughtful commentary, enterprise reporting,
art and literary critique and images. Interested in contributing? Contact us at
All eligible submissions will
include the contributor’s name, address, telephone number, e-mail address and a
brief biographical statement. AP style is recommended for written submissions. Contributors
whose work is considered for TheSequitur.com will be contacted by an editor
prior to publication and should be prepared to electronically transmit research
material, notes, etc. for review if necessary.
With an eye toward accountability, TheSequitur.com
attributes all published work to the contributor by name, city and state with a
short biography and e-mail contact, but will withhold e-mail contacts upon reasonable
request. TheSequitur.com will never disclose a contributor’s address or
telephone number to a third-party absent the contributor’s express prior
consent or an overriding operation of law.
All published articles are subject
to revision for accuracy, content, libel and grammar.
All submissions become the property
of TheSequitur.com and, aside from fair use under United States copyright laws,
cannot be published elsewhere without the express, written consent of the Publisher.