NewsPronto

 
Men's Weekly

.

The Conversation

How Trump might target DACA recipients and other immigrant groups

  • Written by Jean Lantz Reisz, Clinical Associate Professor of Law, Co-Director, USC Immigration Clinic, University of Southern California
imageMigrants attempting to illegally cross the U.S. border from Mexico are detained by Border Patrol officers on June 4, 2024. Katie McTiernan/Anadolu via Getty Images

Donald Trump has promised voters that he would carry out a range of immigration actions, including deporting, with the help of the National Guard or military, millions of immigrants...

Read more: How Trump might target DACA recipients and other immigrant groups

How Trump won Pennsylvania − and what the numbers from key counties show about the future of a pivotal swing state

  • Written by Daniel J. Mallinson, Associate Professor of Public Policy and Administration, Penn State
imagePeople gather at McGillin's Olde Ale House in Philadelphia as election results trickle in. Ed Jones/AFP via Getty Images

Pennsylvania was for months considered the key swing state that would decide the 2024 election. Candidates, political parties and advocacy groups spent over US$1 billion courting the commonwealth’s small number of...

Read more: How Trump won Pennsylvania − and what the numbers from key counties show about the future of a...

What Trump can do to reverse US climate policy − and what he probably can’t change

  • Written by Gautam Jain, Senior Research Scholar in Financing the Energy Transition, Columbia University
imageDonald Trump tours a liquefied natural gas terminal under construction in Louisiana in 2019.AP Photo/Evan Vucci

As the U.S. prepares for another Trump administration, one area unambiguously in the incoming president’s crosshairs is climate policy.

Although he has not released an official climate agenda, Donald Trump’s playbook from his...

Read more: What Trump can do to reverse US climate policy − and what he probably can’t change

The 4 ‘ashramas’ of Hinduism and what they can teach us about aging gracefully

  • Written by Nandini Bhattacharya, Professor of English, Texas A&M University
imageWhat's the secret to aging well?FG Trade/Collection E+ via Getty images

Aging is often feared, resisted, and in the cruelest of cases, mocked and even punished.

Louise Aronson, a geriatrician and author of the book “Elderhood,” puts it well when she says older people who seek health care are often made to feel superfluous even if the...

Read more: The 4 ‘ashramas’ of Hinduism and what they can teach us about aging gracefully

Religions talk about the value of humility − but it can be especially hard for clergy to practice what they preach

  • Written by Elise Ji Young Choe, Psychology Researcher, the Danielsen Institute, Boston University
imageIt can be hard to be humble when people look to you for answers.pastie/E+ via Getty Images

Being a religious leader means wearing many different hats. At times, their congregations expect them to convey passionate confidence – to be models of faith and strength. But wise leadership also means listening and being willing to change your mind:...

Read more: Religions talk about the value of humility − but it can be especially hard for clergy to practice...

Ballot measures to legalize recreational use of cannabis fail in Florida, North Dakota and South Dakota

  • Written by William Garriott, Professor of Law, Politics and Society, Drake University
imageFlorida's marijuana measure needed 60% of the vote to pass and got only 56%.Tina Russell for The Washington Post via Getty Images

Nov. 5, 2024, was a tough day for cannabis legalization supporters.

Recreational legalization ballot questions in Florida, North Dakota and South Dakota all failed.

Two medical measures passed in Nebraska but face legal...

Read more: Ballot measures to legalize recreational use of cannabis fail in Florida, North Dakota and South...

‘Yellowstone’ highlights Montana’s long-forgotten connection to the Confederacy

  • Written by Randi Lynn Tanglen, Professor of English and Vice Provost for Faculty Affairs, University of North Dakota
imageDuring and after the Civil War, thousands of Confederate soldiers resettled in the Big Sky State.Donovan Reese/Photodisc via Getty Images

The popular “Yellowstone” TV series, set and filmed in Montana, taps into a lesser-known chapter of the state’s history: its settlement by Confederates and ex-Confederates during and after the...

Read more: ‘Yellowstone’ highlights Montana’s long-forgotten connection to the Confederacy

Military veterans are disproportionately affected by suicide, but targeted prevention can help reverse the tide

  • Written by Jordan Batchelor, Research Analyst at the Center for Violence Prevention and Community Safety, Arizona State University
imageMounting evidence shows that veterans need targeted suicide prevention services.adamkaz/E+ via Getty Images

America’s military veterans make up about 6% of the adult population but account for about 20% of all suicides. That means that each day, about 18 veterans will die by suicide.

In the U.S., the overall rate of suicide has largely...

Read more: Military veterans are disproportionately affected by suicide, but targeted prevention can help...

Microplastics promote cloud formation, with likely effects on weather and climate

  • Written by Miriam Freedman, Professor of Chemistry, Penn State
imageGiant cumulonimbus clouds in Australia.Steve Christo - Corbis/Corbis via Getty Images

Clouds form when water vapor – an invisible gas in the atmosphere – sticks to tiny floating particles, such as dust, and turns into liquid water droplets or ice crystals. In a newly published study, we show that microplastic particles can have the same...

Read more: Microplastics promote cloud formation, with likely effects on weather and climate

America’s glass ceiling remains − here are some of the reasons why a woman may have once again lost the presidency

  • Written by Farida Jalalzai, Professor of Political Science; Associate Dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Human Sciences, Virginia Tech
imageA hand fan depicting Kamala Harris lies on the sidewalk in Washington, D.C., on Nov. 6, 2024. Bastien Inzaurralde/AFP via Getty Images

Kamala Harris was a candidate of many firsts, including the first Black and South Asian woman to run for president as the Democratic nominee.

Her resounding, swift loss in the presidential race to Republican Donald...

Read more: America’s glass ceiling remains − here are some of the reasons why a woman may have once again...

More Articles ...

  1. Iran’s currency was already tumbling − and then news of Trump’s victory broke
  2. Now the Electoral College votes for president – 4 essential reads
  3. What Buddhism can teach in this moment of deep divisions: No person is ‘evil,’ only ‘mistaken’
  4. This course uses crime novels to teach critical thinking
  5. Trump’s comeback victory, after reshaping his party and national politics, looks a lot like Andrew Jackson’s in 1828
  6. What is ‘ballot curing’? Election expert explains the method for fixing errors made when voters cast their ballots
  7. 2024’s quick win for Trump will go down in the history books alongside 1964 and 1980 Election Day landslides
  8. Will the lights go out on Cuba’s communist leaders? With fewer options to prop up economy, their future looks dimmer
  9. Kristallnacht’s legacy still haunts Hamburg − even as the city rebuilds a former synagogue burned in the Nazi pogrom
  10. Carl Sagan’s scientific legacy extends far beyond ‘Cosmos’
  11. Cells have more mini ‘organs’ than researchers thought − unbound by membranes, these rogue organelles challenge biology’s fundamentals
  12. Only 5.3% of welders in the US are women. After years as a writing professor, I became one − here’s what I learned
  13. Beefing up Border Patrol is a bipartisan goal, but the agency has a troubled history of violence and impunity
  14. Is the election making you feel adrift and wobbly? That’s ‘zozobra’ – and Mexican philosophers have some advice
  15. How Native Americans guarded their societies against tyranny
  16. Quincy Jones mastered the art of arrangement, transforming simple tunes into epic soundscapes
  17. The 27 Club isn’t true, but it is real − a sociologist explains why myths endure and how they shape reality
  18. What poll watchers can − and can’t − do on Election Day
  19. Political bickering and policy uncertainty take a toll on business investment, research shows
  20. I’m a Muslim immigrant and a psychiatrist living in Michigan – I haven’t decided how to vote yet
  21. How can Jupiter have no surface? A dive into a planet so big, it could swallow 1,000 Earths
  22. As the stars of hip-hop’s golden age approach their golden years, some confront questions about whether old blood can make new music
  23. Svalbard Global Seed Vault evokes epic imagery and controversy because of the symbolic value of seeds
  24. Osteoporosis, the silent disease, can shorten your life − here’s how to prevent fractures and keep bones healthy
  25. The racist ‘one-drop rule’ lives on in how Trump talks about Black politicians and whiteness in America
  26. Undoing the ‘deep state’ means Trump would undo over a century of progress in building a federal government for the people and not just for rich white men
  27. Election anxiety doesn’t need to win − here are 3 science-backed strategies from a clinical psychologist to rein in the stress
  28. Massachusetts could be the next state to get rid of the ‘subminimum wage’ for tipped workers
  29. Massachusetts votes to keep its ‘subminimum wage’ for tipped workers
  30. Jobs report gives a final lackluster snapshot prior to election − but overall, the economy under Biden has been a tale of 2 eras
  31. US government tries to rein in an out-of-control subscription economy
  32. ‘Safe route’ or ‘sushi route’ − 2 strategies to turn yuck to yum and convince people to eat unusual foods
  33. How to overcome your device dependency and manage a successful digital detox
  34. St. Augustine was no stranger to culture wars – and has something to say about today’s
  35. The colonial legacy lurking beneath economic unrest in the French Caribbean
  36. Monkeys know who will win the election – primal instincts humans share with them shape voters’ choices
  37. No, America’s battery plant boom isn’t going bust – construction is on track for the biggest factories, with over 23,000 jobs planned
  38. No, America’s battery plant boom isn’t going bust – construction is on track for the biggest factories, with thousands of jobs planned
  39. For one survivor, the 1920 Election Day massacre in Florida was ‘the night the devil got loose’
  40. Elon Musk misses Philly court date, stalling ‘illegal lottery’ case against him − an expert on Philadelphia politics weighs in
  41. Trump’s Detroit insults are based on old narratives local media are rewriting every day
  42. Denver slaughterhouse ban could affect food systems in Colorado and beyond
  43. Denver voters reject slaughterhouse ban, allowing Superior Farms to continue selling lamb in Colorado and nationwide
  44. International election monitors can help boost people’s trust in the electoral process − but not all work the same way
  45. Who formally declares the winner of the US presidential election?
  46. Sudan’s civil war has left at least 62,000 dead by our estimate − but the true figure could be far higher
  47. With Tucker Carlson, Elon Musk and Donald Trump, Republicans’ ‘strict father’ has become the creepy uncle
  48. Independent voters think for themselves and stay out of politics – 3 essential reads
  49. Tariffs are back in the spotlight, but skepticism of free trade has deep roots in American history
  50. New Orleans schools still separate and unequal 70 years after Brown v. Board of Education