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How trade and immigration are colliding with our two-party system

  • Written by Mark Aspinwall, Professor of International Relations, Centro de Investigación y Docencia Económicas
imageAre drawbridge issues challenging our two-party system?pixabay.com

This year, much interest is focused on what The Economist calls drawbridge politics.

Voters who believe in leaving the drawbridge down, so to speak, see opportunities in open borders for immigrants and trade. Voters who believe in pulling the drawbridge up see these as threats.

Durin...

Read more: How trade and immigration are colliding with our two-party system

The curious origin of the double-conk theory for curing amnesia

  • Written by Mary Spiers, Associate Professor of Psychology, Drexel University
imageImage of head bandage engraving via www.shutterstock.com.

You’re probably familiar with the TV or movie plot device where a character is conked on the head, loses memory or identity and then gets conked again and memory is restored. Classic examples are in the 1951 Tom and Jerry Cartoon Nit-Witty Kitty and the movie “Clean Slate.”

T...

Read more: The curious origin of the double-conk theory for curing amnesia

Déjà vu: Positive train control could have prevented Hoboken accident as officials run out of track on excuses

  • Written by Jeffrey C. Peters, Systems thinker in energy, electricity, and transportation, Stanford University

On the morning of Sept. 29, a packed New Jersey Transit commuter train crashed into the Hoboken Terminal where other commuters were waiting at the platform at the busy transit hub. Initial reports indicate that at least one person has been killed and over 100 injured.

Sadly, but also tellingly, the majority of the following paragraphs comes...

Read more: Déjà vu: Positive train control could have prevented Hoboken accident as officials run out of...

Putin’s cyber play: What are all these Russian hackers up to?

  • Written by Ryan C. Maness, Visiting Fellow in Political Science, Northeastern University
imageRussia is pressing its national interests online.Flags and keyboard via shutterstock.com

Russia has been implicated in many breaches of U.S. networks in recent months, most notably the Democratic National Committee and the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee hacks, whose data were subsequently dumped to the whistleblowing site WikiLeaks. On...

Read more: Putin’s cyber play: What are all these Russian hackers up to?

Why the pundits are wrong about Hillary Clinton dominating the debate

  • Written by Gleb Tsipursky, Assistant Professor in History of Behavioral Science, President of Intentional Insights, The Ohio State University

The vastmajority of punditsdeclared Hillary Clinton the decisive winner of this week’s debate.

This includes both conservative and liberal pundits. For instance, Douglas Schoen of Fox News wrote:

“She was ready for all of his quips with a litany of detail that may have bored the viewer at points, but showed why she is winning on...

Read more: Why the pundits are wrong about Hillary Clinton dominating the debate

Why dementia burden may be less than feared

  • Written by Roger L. Albin, Professor of Neurology, University of Michigan
imageHappy-looking seniors via Shutterstock.From www.shutterstock.com

It is a truism that aging of populations will result in large and potentially unmanageable increases in the number of older adults with dementia.

Michael D. Hurd, a senior researcher with RAND, and colleagues estimated the present annual financial burden of dementia care in the United...

Read more: Why dementia burden may be less than feared

The psychology behind why clowns creep us out

  • Written by Frank T. McAndrew, Cornelia H. Dudley Professor of Psychology, Knox College
imageSometimes you don't know whether to laugh or cry.'Clowns' via www.shutterstock.com

For the past several months, creepy clowns have been terrorizing America, with sightings of actual clowns in at least 10 different states.

These fiendish clowns have reportedly tried to lure women and children into the woods, chased people with knives and machetes,...

Read more: The psychology behind why clowns creep us out

Making college affordable: Eight essential reads

  • Written by Kalpana Jain, Editor, Education, The Conversation

Editor’s Note: The following is a round-up of archival stories on college affordability.

In the debate on Monday, Sept. 26, Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton listed “making college debt free,” as part of her plan to build the economy. She said,

“I think building the middle class, investing in the middle class,...

Read more: Making college affordable: Eight essential reads

The U.S. economy is in desperate need of a strong dose of fiscal penicillin

  • Written by Christian Weller, Professor of Public Policy and Public Affairs, University of Massachusetts Boston
imageThe U.S. could do with a shot in the arm too.Bear syringe via www.shutterstock.com

Despite six years of “recovery” from the Great Recession, America’s middle class still struggles financially amid sluggish economic growth and middling job creation.

The Federal Reserve’s near-zero interest rates have helped stabilize the...

Read more: The U.S. economy is in desperate need of a strong dose of fiscal penicillin

Climate change and the presidential race: Lessons from the Reagan years

  • Written by Andrew J. Hoffman, Holcim (US) Professor at the Ross School of Business and Education Director at the Graham Sustainability Institute, University of Michigan

Climate change did not come up in the first presidential debate – well, not in any real sense. Hillary Clinton jabbed at Donald Trump for claiming that “The concept of global warming was created by and for the Chinese in order to make U.S. manufacturing non-competitive.” He denied that he said it, but his tweet on November 6,...

Read more: Climate change and the presidential race: Lessons from the Reagan years

More Articles ...

  1. Underwater robots help scientists see where marine larvae go and how they get there
  2. If you want to publish a truly subversive novel, have a main character who's fat
  3. Alexander Hamilton and the new Supreme Court term
  4. Feed a virus but starve bacteria? When you're sick, it may really matter
  5. Why America needs the virtues of humility
  6. What drives lone offenders?
  7. Group work gets kids more engaged in STEM
  8. When did Che Guevara become CEO? The roots of the new corporate activism
  9. Four quotes from the first Clinton-Trump debate, explained
  10. Will driving your own car become the socially unacceptable public health risk smoking is today?
  11. Addicted to oil: US gasoline consumption is higher than ever
  12. Removing gender bias from algorithms
  13. Why a Zika vaccine is a long way off
  14. Trump, Clinton and the future of global democracy
  15. What's behind America's insistence on instilling grit in kids?
  16. Will Colombia's peace deal get the people's vote?
  17. How the Jim Crow internet is pushing back against Black Lives Matter
  18. Trump and Clinton debate strategies that can make anyone a better public speaker
  19. Five key debate moments that altered the course of a presidential race
  20. Public universities are under threat – not just by outside reformers
  21. Can public transit and ride-share companies get along?
  22. How do antibiotic-resistant bacteria get into the environment?
  23. Is Philippine President Duterte a threat to the peace in Southeast Asia?
  24. Feds: We can read all your email, and you'll never know
  25. The NFL joins the data revolution in sports
  26. Refugees, migration addressed in first-time UN summit: What was accomplished?
  27. Scientist at work: Tracking melt water under the Greenland ice sheet
  28. Here's how to raise a child to be sympathetic
  29. Was the Fed right to delay raising interest rates? Two scholars react
  30. Police shootings and race in America: Five essential reads
  31. How corporate America can curb income inequality and make more money too
  32. Why isn’t science better? Look at career incentives
  33. Harvard study: Policy issues nearly absent in presidential campaign coverage
  34. To curb North Korea's nuclear program, follow the money
  35. How the American online sex trade continues to thrive
  36. How can we get pharma companies to do more for global health? Try ranking them
  37. The rise of a conspiracy candidate
  38. How ZIP codes nearly masked the lead problem in Flint
  39. Why teen brains need later school start time
  40. Memo to next president: Here's how to avoid our history of energy policy mistakes
  41. Psychology expert: Why extremists use violence in their quest for significance
  42. Suffering from Fed rate hike anxiety? You're not the only one
  43. What is terrorism, and is it getting worse?
  44. 'Snowden,' a picture of the cybersecurity state
  45. Taking the GUESSwork out of video game satisfaction
  46. How Congress is failing on Zika
  47. How random is your randomness, and why does it matter?
  48. Should Wells Fargo execs responsible for bilking customers be forced to return their pay?
  49. Black Americans may be more resilient to stress than white Americans
  50. Why the Native American pipeline resistance in North Dakota is about climate justice