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‘Safe route’ or ‘sushi route’ − 2 strategies to turn yuck to yum and convince people to eat unusual foods

  • Written by Alexandra Plakias, Associate Professor of Philosophy, Hamilton College
imageBy the 1980s, many New Yorkers were all in on sushi, a food that seemed weird just decades before.Allan Tannenbaum/Getty Images

What will the diets of the future look like? The answer depends in part on what foods Westerners can be persuaded to eat.

These consumers are increasingly being told their diets need to change. Current eating habits are...

Read more: ‘Safe route’ or ‘sushi route’ − 2 strategies to turn yuck to yum and convince people to eat...

How to overcome your device dependency and manage a successful digital detox

  • Written by Kelley Cours Anderson, Assistant Professor of Marketing, College of Charleston
imageGetting outside – without your phone – is one way to disconnect.We Are/DigitalVision via Getty Images

Life in the digital world can be rewarding. It’s convenient to order groceries for pickup, share photographs or music, and keep in touch with family and friends, no matter the distance. However, it can also be draining. The...

Read more: How to overcome your device dependency and manage a successful digital detox

St. Augustine was no stranger to culture wars – and has something to say about today’s

  • Written by Michael Lamb, Executive Director of the Program for Leadership and Character, Wake Forest University
imageTiffany stained-glass window of St. Augustine, in the Lightner Museum in the Florida city that bears his name.Daderot/Wikimedia Commons

Americans are deeply divided, and the results of the 2024 presidential election are unlikely to heal these divisions. If the 2020 election is any indication, they might even become worse.

As a scholar of character...

Read more: St. Augustine was no stranger to culture wars – and has something to say about today’s

The colonial legacy lurking beneath economic unrest in the French Caribbean

  • Written by David A. Vivian, Visiting Assistant Professor of French Language and Culture, Soka University of America
imageMembers of the French union CGT Martinique perform a go-slow protest on the ring road leading to the airport in Fort-de-France, on the French Caribbean island of Martinique, on Oct. 15, 2024.Philippe Lopez/AFP via Getty Images)

For weeks, the French Caribbean island of Martinique has been the site of at-times violent protests over high living costs...

Read more: The colonial legacy lurking beneath economic unrest in the French Caribbean

Monkeys know who will win the election – primal instincts humans share with them shape voters’ choices

  • Written by Michael Platt, Professor of Marketing and Psychology and Neuroscience, University of Pennsylvania
imageWould you and this rhesus macaque choose the same candidate?EcoPic/iStock via Getty Images Plus

As Election Day looms with Kamala Harris and Donald Trump locked in a dead heat, pollsters and pundits are scrambling for clues to predict the outcome.

But what if the answer lies not in political data or campaign strategies, but in the instincts of a...

Read more: Monkeys know who will win the election – primal instincts humans share with them shape voters’...

No, America’s battery plant boom isn’t going bust – construction is on track for the biggest factories, with over 23,000 jobs planned

  • Written by James Morton Turner, Professor of Environmental Studies, Wellesley College
imageWorkers install battery packs in a BMW X5 in South Carolina. A new battery plant under construction nearby will supply BMW factories.BMW

The United States is in the midst of the biggest boom in clean energy manufacturing investments in history, spurred by laws like the bipartisan Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act and the Inflation Reduction Act...

Read more: No, America’s battery plant boom isn’t going bust – construction is on track for the biggest...

No, America’s battery plant boom isn’t going bust – construction is on track for the biggest factories, with thousands of jobs planned

  • Written by James Morton Turner, Professor of Environmental Studies, Wellesley College
imageWorkers install battery packs in a BMW X5 in South Carolina. A new battery plant under construction nearby will supply BMW factories.BMW

The United States is in the midst of the biggest boom in clean energy manufacturing investments in history, spurred by laws like the bipartisan Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act and the Inflation Reduction Act...

Read more: No, America’s battery plant boom isn’t going bust – construction is on track for the biggest...

For one survivor, the 1920 Election Day massacre in Florida was ‘the night the devil got loose’

  • Written by Jerald Podair, Professor of History, Lawrence University
imageDescendants of July Perry attend a 2019 ceremony unveiling a historical marker of his lynching. AP Photo/John Raoux

Mose Norman, a Black registered voter, was ready to cast his ballot for presidential candidate Warren G. Harding.

But when he arrived at his polling place on Election Day, Nov. 2, 1920, in the orange grove town of Ocoee, Florida,...

Read more: For one survivor, the 1920 Election Day massacre in Florida was ‘the night the devil got loose’

Elon Musk misses Philly court date, stalling ‘illegal lottery’ case against him − an expert on Philadelphia politics weighs in

  • Written by Richardson Dilworth, Professor of Politics, Drexel University
imageElon Musk is still doling out $1 million a day to contestants in swing states.Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post via Getty Images

On Oct. 28, 2024, just over a week before Election Day, Philadelphia District Attorney Larry Krasner filed a civil lawsuit against Elon Musk to stop his US$1 million voter sweepstakes from continuing in Pennsylvania....

Read more: Elon Musk misses Philly court date, stalling ‘illegal lottery’ case against him − an expert on...

Trump’s Detroit insults are based on old narratives local media are rewriting every day

  • Written by Danielle K. Brown, Professor of Journalism, Michigan State University
imageIt's been a war of words − and T-shirt slogans − in Detroit this campaign season.Dominic Gwinn/Middle East Images/AFP via Getty Images

Michigan’s swing-state status means people are talking about Detroit.

Some have been saying unpleasant things.

Addressing the Detroit Economic Club on Oct. 11, presidential candidate Donald Trump...

Read more: Trump’s Detroit insults are based on old narratives local media are rewriting every day

More Articles ...

  1. Denver slaughterhouse ban could affect food systems in Colorado and beyond
  2. Denver voters reject slaughterhouse ban, allowing Superior Farms to continue selling lamb in Colorado and nationwide
  3. International election monitors can help boost people’s trust in the electoral process − but not all work the same way
  4. Who formally declares the winner of the US presidential election?
  5. Sudan’s civil war has left at least 62,000 dead by our estimate − but the true figure could be far higher
  6. With Tucker Carlson, Elon Musk and Donald Trump, Republicans’ ‘strict father’ has become the creepy uncle
  7. Independent voters think for themselves and stay out of politics – 3 essential reads
  8. Tariffs are back in the spotlight, but skepticism of free trade has deep roots in American history
  9. New Orleans schools still separate and unequal 70 years after Brown v. Board of Education
  10. In Hawaii, parasites and viruses team up in the battle against fruit flies – an entomologist explains the implication for global pest control
  11. Rust Belt voters aren’t all white, but election coverage of the region often ignores the concerns of people of color there
  12. The next president will play a key role in shaping US trade policy – here’s what voters need to know
  13. Americans own guns to protect themselves from psychological as well as physical threats
  14. Fear, hope and the economy: what is motivating Americans as they decide who to vote for – podcast
  15. Slow vote-counting, flip-flopping leads, careful certification and the weirdness of the Electoral College – people who research elections look at what to expect on election night
  16. ‘Each bears his own ghosts’: How the classics speak to these days of fear, anger and presidential candidates stalking the land
  17. A new president will be elected − but it may take some time to determine who wins
  18. The ‘Courage Tour’ is attempting to get Christians to vote for Trump − and focused on defeating ‘demons’
  19. Religion in the workplace is tricky – but employers and employees both lose when it becomes a total taboo
  20. Simple science summaries written by AI help people understand research and trust scientists
  21. Fighting antibiotic resistance at the source – using machine learning to identify bacterial resistance genes and the drugs to block them
  22. Scholar’s new rap album seeks to turn the tables on the ‘masters’ from the Old South
  23. Time to freak out? How the existential terror of hurricanes can fuel climate change denial
  24. People with blindness and low vision are squeezed by high costs of living − new research
  25. What the presidential candidates have done − and where they stand − on education
  26. Nationalism is not patriotism: 3 insights from Orwell about Trump and the 2024 election
  27. Why vote for Harris or Trump? A cheat sheet on the candidates’ records, why their supporters like them and why picking one or the other makes sense
  28. Misinformation is more than just bad facts: How and why people spread rumors is key to understanding how false information travels and takes root
  29. Abortion and marijuana ballot measures may bring out Florida Democrats, but the GOP has 1M more active voters in the Sunshine State
  30. Why Pennsylvania’s election results will take time to count
  31. Defender su voto: Pasos a seguir si su derecho al voto es cuestionado el día de las elecciones
  32. Cannabis legalization may hit a ‘red wall’ at the ballot box
  33. Making a Snickers bar is a complex science − a candy engineer explains how to build the airy nougat and chewy caramel of this Halloween favorite
  34. The ancient Irish get far too much credit for Halloween
  35. Grow fast, die young? Animals that invest in building high-quality biomaterials may slow aging and increase their lifespans
  36. On foreign policy, Trump opts for disruption and Harris for engagement − but they share some of the same concerns
  37. Beyond bottled water and sandwiches: What FEMA is doing to get hurricane victims back into their homes
  38. How Trump’s racist talk of immigrant ‘bad genes’ echoes some of the last century’s darkest ideas about eugenics
  39. Corporate social responsibility disclosures are a double-edged sword, new research suggests
  40. RFK Jr.’s pivot to Trump is a journey taken by many populists swept along the left-to-right alternative media pipeline
  41. For an estimated 4 million people with felony convictions, restoring their right to vote is complicated – and varies state by state
  42. Israel’s ban on UNRWA continues a pattern of politicizing Palestinian refugee aid – and puts millions of lives at risk
  43. Rising partisanship is making nonprofits more reluctant to engage in policy debates − new research
  44. What to do if your vote is challenged: Practical advice from a civil rights attorney for Election Day
  45. My family lived the horrors of Native American boarding schools – why Biden’s apology doesn’t go far enough
  46. Vampire bats – look beyond the fangs and blood to see animal friendships and unique adaptations
  47. LGBTQ+ voters in these 4 states could swing the 2024 presidential election
  48. Michiganders or Michiganians? A linguist explains why the answer is clear
  49. Trump’s anti-Haitian rhetoric reflects America’s long-standing racism against Haiti and its people
  50. Why do we use gasoline for small vehicles and diesel fuel for big vehicles?