<p>I am a member of my university's secular humanist philosophy club, and the LGBT/Straight alliance. Seeing as these could be potentially controversial, should I just leave them out?</p>
<p>Personally, neither of these seem particularly controversial but I’m just one person.
If it was a video game, porn or magic the gathering club, It’d be another story.</p>
<p>Unless you are applying to an extremely conservative institution (Liberty, Oral Roberts, Hillsdale), no one should find these groups controversial. Many colleges slant pretty liberal anyway.</p>
<p>Do not see a problem. Might actually help.</p>
<p>Not controversial t most schools</p>
<p>I actually think they would be beneficial. Especially the LGBT one, from what I’ve seen.</p>
<p>They might be beneficial for diversity reasons.</p>
<p>I ask because I am getting my resume ready to apply for a summer IB internship. Do IBs tend to lean left?</p>
<p>Investment banks? No, they tend to lean right.</p>
<p>But here’s the crucial question: if you have to hide or change who you are, what you think, and what you value in order to have a career in investment banking, it is worth it to you?</p>
<p>^Ding ding ding!</p>
<p>A future for which you alter yourself or your personality isn’t worth it.</p>
<p>Investment banks lean right fiscally, but socially, they don’t really care. They even have LGBT program.</p>
<p>[J.P</a>. Morgan | Careers | J.P. Morgan Proud to Be | Proud to Be in the U.S.](<a href=“http://careers.jpmorgan.com/student/jpmorgan/careers/proudtobe/us]J.P”>http://careers.jpmorgan.com/student/jpmorgan/careers/proudtobe/us)</p>
<p>I’ve met some people who have gone through this program. Investment banks want the best talent they can get, regardless of orientation.</p>
<p>^That is really cool.</p>