NewsPronto

 
The Times Real Estate

.

The Conversation

23andMe is potentially selling more than just genetic data – the personal survey info it collected is just as much a privacy problem

  • Written by Kayte Spector-Bagdady, Associate Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Michigan
imageFor companies like 23andMe, consumers are as much the product as the DNA test kits.Veronika Oliinyk/iStock via Getty Images Plus

As soon as the genetic testing company 23andMe filed for bankruptcy on March 23, 2025, concerns about what would happen to the personal information contained in its massive genetic and health information database were...

Read more: 23andMe is potentially selling more than just genetic data – the personal survey info it collected...

Research shows that a majority of Christian religious leaders accept the reality of climate change but have never mentioned it to their congregations

  • Written by Stylianos Syropoulos, Assistant Professor of Psychology, Arizona State University
imageA multi-faith assembly of religious leaders and lay people in Manhattan in 2023 protest investments in fossil fuel.Erik McGregor/LightRocket via Getty Images

Nearly 90% of U.S. Christian religious leaders believe humans are driving climate change. When churchgoers learn how widespread this belief is, they report taking steps to reduce its effects,...

Read more: Research shows that a majority of Christian religious leaders accept the reality of climate change...

The never-ending sentence: How parole and probation fuel mass incarceration

  • Written by Lucius Couloute, Assistant Professor of Sociology, Trinity College

The U.S. operates one of the largest and most punitive criminal justice systems in the world. On any given day, 1.9 million people are incarcerated in more than 6,000 federal, state and local facilities. Another 3.7 million remain under what scholars call “correctional control” through probation or parole supervision.

That means one...

Read more: The never-ending sentence: How parole and probation fuel mass incarceration

In Israel, calls for genocide have migrated from the margins to the mainstream

  • Written by Tamir Sorek, Liberal Arts Professor of Middle East History, Penn State
imageA Palestinian woman cries while sitting on the rubble of her home, which was destroyed in an Israeli strike on March 18, 2025.Eyad Baba/AFP via Getty Images

Thirty years ago in Israel, advocating for genocide could land you in prison.

In April 1994, an Israeli rabbi named Ido Alba published an article that read, in part, “In war, as long as...

Read more: In Israel, calls for genocide have migrated from the margins to the mainstream

With its executive order targeting the Smithsonian, the Trump administration opens up a new front in the history wars

  • Written by Jennifer Tucker, Professor of History, Wesleyan University
imageA portrait of President Donald Trump in the 'America’s Presidents' exhibition at the Smithsonian Institution's National Portrait Gallery.Win McNamee/Getty Images

I teach history in Connecticut, but I grew up in Oklahoma and Kansas, where my interest in the subject was sparked by visits to local museums.

I fondly remember trips to the Fellow-Ree...

Read more: With its executive order targeting the Smithsonian, the Trump administration opens up a new front...

Christian Zionism hasn’t always been a conservative evangelical creed – churches’ views of Israel have evolved over decades

  • Written by Shalom Goldman, Professor of Religion, Middlebury
imageParticipants in a 'United for Israel' march, led by The Pursuit NW Christian Church, stand on the University of Washington's campus in May 2024.Jason Redmond/AFP via Getty Images

During confirmation hearings, Mike Huckabee, President Donald Trump’s nominee as ambassador to Israel, told senators that he would “respect and represent the...

Read more: Christian Zionism hasn’t always been a conservative evangelical creed – churches’ views of Israel...

Schools and communities can help children bounce back after distressing disasters like the LA wildfires

  • Written by Rita V. Burke, Associate Professor of Clinical Population and Public Health Sciences, University of Southern California

The 2025 Los Angeles wildfires reduced more than 15,000 structures to ash in a matter of days. Among the devastation were 11 public and private schools and 30 child care facilities. In all, the fires disrupted the education and daily lives of over 700,000 students.

The fires first erupted on Jan. 7, 2025, in the Pacific Palisades, a small enclave...

Read more: Schools and communities can help children bounce back after distressing disasters like the LA...

Why a presidential term limit got written into the Constitution – the story of the 22nd Amendment

  • Written by Mark Satta, Associate Professor of Philosophy and Law, Wayne State University
imageNo president other than Franklin D. Roosevelt has held office for more than two terms. Walter Leporati/Getty Images

Only one person, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, has ever served more than two terms as president of the United States. This is for two reasons.

First, prior to Roosevelt’s election to a third term in 1940 there was a longstanding...

Read more: Why a presidential term limit got written into the Constitution – the story of the 22nd Amendment

America the secular? What a changing religious landscape means for US politics

  • Written by David Campbell, Packey J. Dee Professor of American Democracy, University of Notre Dame
imageConventional wisdom about nonreligious Americans' voting misses some important distinctions.Sarah Rice/Getty Images

After climbing for decades, the percentage of Americans with no religion has leveled off. For the past few years, the share of adults who identify as atheist, agnostic or “nothing in particular” has stood at about 29%,...

Read more: America the secular? What a changing religious landscape means for US politics

Land reparations are possible − and over 225 US communities are already working to make amends for slavery and colonization

  • Written by Sara Safransky, Associate Professor, Department of Human and Organizational Development, Vanderbilt University

Ever since the United States government’s unfulfilled promise of giving every newly freed Black American “40 acres and a mule” after the Civil War, descendants of the enslaved have repeatedly proposed the idea of redistributing land to redress the nation’s legacies of slavery.

Land-based reparations are also a form of redres...

Read more: Land reparations are possible − and over 225 US communities are already working to make amends for...

More Articles ...

  1. Planned blackouts are becoming more common − and not having cash on hand could cost you
  2. GOP lawmakers eye SNAP cuts, which would scale back benefits that help low-income people buy food at a time of high food prices
  3. US earthquake safety relies on federal employees’ expertise
  4. Stone tool discovery in China shows people in East Asia were innovating during the Middle Paleolithic, like in Europe and Middle East
  5. Trump’s use of the Alien Enemies Act to deport Venezuelans to El Salvador sparks legal questions likely to reach the Supreme Court
  6. Doctor shortages have hobbled health care for decades − and the trend could be worsening
  7. Bird flu could be on the cusp of transmitting between humans − but there are ways to slow down viral evolution
  8. Measles can ravage the immune system and brain, causing long-term damage – a virologist explains
  9. Massive cuts to Health and Human Services’ workforce signal a dramatic shift in US health policy
  10. Jets from powerful black holes can point astronomers toward where − and where not − to look for life in the universe
  11. Why do dogs love to play with trash?
  12. What is a ‘revisionist’ state, and what are they trying to revise?
  13. As ‘right to die’ gains more acceptance, a scholar of Catholicism explains the position of the Catholic Church
  14. The Panama Canal’s other conflict: Water security for the population and the global economy
  15. How is classified information typically shared and can officials declassify secrets whenever they want? A national security expert explains
  16. ‘Everyday discrimination’ linked to increased anxiety and depression across all groups of Americans
  17. From censorship to curiosity: Pope Francis’ appreciation for the power of history and books
  18. Cuts to science research funding cut American lives short − federal support is essential for medical breakthroughs
  19. Chronic kidney disease often goes undiagnosed, but early detection can prevent severe outcomes
  20. As federal environmental priorities shift, sovereign Native American nations have their own plans
  21. Want to stay healthier and fulfilled later in life? Try volunteering
  22. We analyzed racial justice statements from the 500 largest US companies and found that DEI officials really did have an influence
  23. First year of Georgia’s ‘foreign agent’ law shows how autocracies are replicating Russian model − and speeding up the time frame
  24. Myanmar’s civil war: How shifting US-Russia ties could tip balance and hand China a greater role
  25. What ‘The White Lotus’ gets wrong about the meaning and goals of common Buddhist practices
  26. Women are reclaiming their place in baseball
  27. Ecological disruptions are a risk to national security
  28. Wild marmots’ social networks reveal controversial evolutionary theory in action
  29. Signal is not the place for top secret communications, but it might be the right choice for you – a cybersecurity expert on what to look for in a secure messaging app
  30. Losing your job is bad for your health, but there are things you can do to minimize the harm
  31. From Greenland to Fort Bragg, America is caught in a name game where place names become political tools
  32. US swing toward autocracy doesn’t have to be permanent – but swinging back to democracy requires vigilance, stamina and elections
  33. Trump’s tariffs on Canada and Mexico could spell trouble for distilled spirits
  34. With Hooters on the verge of bankruptcy, a psychologist reflects on her time spent studying the servers who work there
  35. Mississippi’s education miracle: A model for global literacy reform
  36. Medetomidine is replacing xylazine in Philly street fentanyl − creating new hurdles for health care providers and drug users
  37. Maritime truce would end a sorry war on the waves for Russia that set back its naval power ambitions
  38. Sudan’s civil war: What military advances mean, and where the country could be heading next
  39. Deep-sea mining threatens sea life in a way no one is thinking about − by dumping debris into the thriving midwater zone
  40. The solution to workplace isolation might be in the gap − the generation gap
  41. Trump is not a king – but that doesn’t stop him from reveling in his job’s most ceremonial and exciting parts
  42. Trump’s desire to ‘un-unite’ Russia and China is unlikely to work – in fact, it could well backfire
  43. Engineering students explore how to ethically design and locate nuclear facilities in this college course
  44. Amid a tropical paradise known as ‘Lizard Island,’ researchers are cracking open evolution’s black box – scientist at work
  45. Mae Reeves used showstopping hats to fuel voter engagement and Black entrepreneurship
  46. Rethinking repression − why memory researchers reject the idea of recovered memories of trauma
  47. Ukraine will need major rebuilding when war ends − here’s why the US isn’t likely to invest in its recovery with a new Marshall Plan
  48. How many types of insects are there in the world?
  49. Genomic sequencing reveals previously unknown genes that make microbes resistant to drugs and hard to kill
  50. Poor neighborhoods, health care barriers are factors for heart disease risk in Black mothers