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The most serious Trump indictment yet – a criminal law scholar explains the charges of using ‘dishonesty, fraud and deceit’ to cling to power

  • Written by Gabriel J. Chin, Professor of criminal law, immigration and race and law, University of California, Davis
imageSpecial Counsel Jack Smith announces the second federal indictment of Donald Trump on Aug. 1, 2023.AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin

The Justice Department announced its second federal indictment of former president Donald J. Trump on Aug. 1, 2023. The charges are groundbreaking and not just because a former president is facing multiple criminal charges.

It...

Read more: The most serious Trump indictment yet – a criminal law scholar explains the charges of using...

Trump indicted in Jan. 6 case – but his 3 upcoming trials may not keep him off the campaign trail

  • Written by Stefanie Lindquist, Foundation Professor of Law and Political Science, Arizona State University
imageFormer U.S. President Donald Trump on June 13, 2023, after being arraigned in Miami. Stephanie Keith/Getty Images

Most commentators who have discussed Donald Trump’s pending criminal trials in New York, Florida and – with the late-day revelation on Aug. 1, 2023, that he has been indicted by a Washington, D.C., grand jury – in...

Read more: Trump indicted in Jan. 6 case – but his 3 upcoming trials may not keep him off the campaign trail

A chatbot willing to take on questions of all kinds – from the serious to the comical – is the latest representation of Jesus for the AI age

  • Written by Joseph L. Kimmel, Part-Time Faculty Member (Theology Department), Boston College
imageOn AI Jesus’ Twitch channel, chatbot Jesus answers questions on personal and spiritual matters.Twitch user ask_jesus

Jesus has been portrayed in many different ways: from a prophet who alerts his audience to the world’s imminent end to a philosopher who reflects on the nature of life.

But no one has called Jesus an internet guru –...

Read more: A chatbot willing to take on questions of all kinds – from the serious to the comical – is the...

Trump facing multiple criminal charges, investigations: 44 articles explain what you need to know

  • Written by Jeff Inglis, Freelance Editor, The Conversation US
imageFormer President Donald Trump is under legal scrutiny.AP Photo/Gerald Herbert

The Conversation U.S. has commissioned more than three dozen articles relating to the various criminal investigations into the activities of former president Donald Trump before he took office, while he was in the White House in office, and since he left office.

There are...

Read more: Trump facing multiple criminal charges, investigations: 44 articles explain what you need to know

Sexual violence is a pervasive threat for female farm workers – here's how the US could reduce their risk

  • Written by Kathleen Sexsmith, Assistant Professor of Rural Sociology, Penn State
imageMexican migrant workers harvest parsley on a farm in Wellington, Colo.John Moore/Getty Images

Television crime shows often are set in cities, but in its third season, ABC’s “American Crime” took a different tack. It opened on a tomato farm in North Carolina, where it showed a young woman being brutally raped in a field by her...

Read more: Sexual violence is a pervasive threat for female farm workers – here's how the US could reduce...

Is Congress on a witch hunt? 5 ways to judge whether oversight hearings are legitimate or politicized

  • Written by Claire Leavitt, Assistant Professor of Government, Smith College
imageCongressional staffers stand beneath a monitor showing House Oversight and Accountability Committee Chair James Comer, R-Ky., in a hearing, July 19, 2023. AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite

Since Republicans regained the majority in the House of Representatives in the 2022 midterm elections, they have initiated a flurry of investigations. Among their...

Read more: Is Congress on a witch hunt? 5 ways to judge whether oversight hearings are legitimate or...

Sinead O'Connor was once seen as a sacrilegious rebel, but her music and life were deeply infused with spiritual seeking

  • Written by Brenna Moore, Professor of Theology, Fordham University
imageIrish singer Sinead O'Connor performs at Paradiso in Amsterdam in March 1988.Paul Bergen/Redferns via Getty Images

When news broke July 26, 2023, that the gifted Irish singer Sinead O’Connor had died, stories of her most famous performance circulated amid the grief and shock.

Thirty-one years ago, after a haunting rendition of Bob...

Read more: Sinead O'Connor was once seen as a sacrilegious rebel, but her music and life were deeply infused...

Millions across the world live with low back pain, but addressing major risk factors like smoking, obesity and workplace ergonomics could curb the trend, research shows

  • Written by Jaimie Steinmetz, Lead Research Scientist in Population Health, Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, University of Washington
imageWorldwide, close to twice as many women as men report low back pain.RealPeopleGroup/E+ via Getty Images

The Research Brief is a short take about interesting academic work.

The big idea

Low back pain is the leading cause of disability in the world, with over 600 million people living with the condition. This is one of the key takeaways of our June...

Read more: Millions across the world live with low back pain, but addressing major risk factors like smoking,...

Why Dunkin' and Lego rebrands succeeded – but X missed the mark

  • Written by Matthew Pittman, Assistant Professor of Advertising and Public Relations, University of Tennessee
imageSo far, Twitter's rebrand = X + why?Lorenzo Di Cola/NurPhoto via Getty Images

Twitter has swapped the fluffy bird that used to symbolize the social media platform for a spindly black X. Ditching the company’s well-known logo and changing its name to a letter often associated with danger, death and the unknown is only the latest...

Read more: Why Dunkin' and Lego rebrands succeeded – but X missed the mark

Giuliani claims the First Amendment lets him lie – 3 essential reads

  • Written by Jeff Inglis, Freelance Editor, The Conversation US
imageRudy Giuliani admits to lying but says the Constitution protects him.AP Photo/Patrick Semansky

In his response to a lawsuit filed by two Georgia election workers who said Rudy Giuliani harmed them by falsely alleging they mishandled ballots in the 2020 presidential election, Giuliani has admitted lying. But he says the women suffered no harm...

Read more: Giuliani claims the First Amendment lets him lie – 3 essential reads

More Articles ...

  1. To get rid of hazing, clarify what people really think is acceptable behavior and redefine what it means to be loyal
  2. Just about anybody in America can officiate a wedding, thanks to the internet – and one determined preacher
  3. Alabama is not the first state to defy a Supreme Court ruling: 3 essential reads on why that matters
  4. Federal government is challenging Texas's buoys in the Rio Grande – here’s why these kinds of border blockades wind up complicating immigration enforcement
  5. Your genetic code has lots of 'words' for the same thing – information theory may help explain the redundancies
  6. I've taught in prisons for 15 years – here's what schools need to know as government funding expands
  7. Hypocrisy penalty: Investors especially hate companies that say they're good then behave badly – unless the money is good
  8. Progressives' embrace of Disney in battle with DeSantis over LGBTQ rights comes with risks
  9. Deaf rappers who lay down rhymes in sign languages are changing what it means for music to be heard
  10. 4 factors driving 2023's extreme heat and climate disasters
  11. Hunter Biden's plea agreement renegotiation is rare – a law professor explains what usually happens
  12. Sen. Tuberville's blockade of US military promotions takes a historic tradition to a radical new level – and could go beyond Congress' August break
  13. As witchcraft becomes a multibillion-dollar business, practitioners' connection to the natural world is changing
  14. Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts uses conflicting views of race to resolve America's history of racial discrimination
  15. Where the government draws the line for Medicaid coverage leaves out many older Americans who may need help paying for medical and long-term care bills – new research
  16. Do smartphones belong in classrooms? Four scholars weigh in
  17. In search of the world's largest freshwater fish – the wonderfully weird giants lurking in Earth's rivers
  18. How well-managed dams and smart forecasting can limit flooding as extreme storms become more common in a warming world
  19. Women can now undertake Islamic pilgrimages without a male guardian in Saudi Arabia, but that doesn't mean they're traveling alone -- communities are an important part of the religious experience
  20. Horse health research will help humans stay healthy, too, with insights on reining in diabetes and obesity
  21. Laughter can communicate a lot more than good humor – people use it to smooth social interactions
  22. As contentious judicial 'reform' becomes law in Israel, Netanyahu cements his political legacy
  23. Decades of public messages about recycling in the US have crowded out more sustainable ways to manage waste
  24. Will I ever need math? A mathematician explains how math is everywhere – from soap bubbles to Pixar movies
  25. Massachusetts is updating its sex education guidelines for the first time in 24 years
  26. Blame capitalism? Why hundreds of decades-old yet vital drugs are nearly impossible to find
  27. How book-banning campaigns have changed the lives and education of librarians – they now need to learn how to plan for safety and legally protect themselves
  28. This year's debate over defense spending threatens to disrupt a tradition of bipartisan consensus-building over funding the military
  29. A sculptor of wind explains how to make fiber dance far above city streets
  30. Women's World Cup will highlight how far other countries have closed the gap with US – but that isn't the only yardstick to measure growth of global game
  31. Global diabetes cases on pace to soar to 1.3 billion people in the next 3 decades, new study finds
  32. First contact with aliens could end in colonization and genocide if we don't learn from history
  33. What is a target letter? 3 things to know about how the Justice Department notifies suspects, like Donald Trump, ahead of possible charges
  34. Targeting Trump for prosecution – 4 essential reads on how the Jan. 6 investigation laid the groundwork for the special counsel
  35. Exercise may or may not help you lose weight and keep it off – here's the evidence for both sides of the debate
  36. Registering refugees using personal information has become the norm – but cybersecurity breaches pose risks to people giving sensitive biometric data
  37. 175 years ago, the Seneca Falls Convention kicked off the fight for women's suffrage – an iconic moment deeply shaped by Quaker beliefs on gender and equality
  38. Using green banks to solve America’s affordable housing crisis – and climate change at the same time
  39. 'Zombie fires' in the Arctic: Canada's extreme wildfire season offers a glimpse of new risks in a warmer, drier future
  40. China needs immigrants
  41. FTC probe of OpenAI: Consumer protection is the opening salvo of US AI regulation
  42. Returning to the Moon can benefit commercial, military and political sectors – a space policy expert explains
  43. Actors are demanding that Hollywood catch up with technological changes in a sequel to a 1960 strike
  44. A 1-minute gun safety video helped preteen children be more careful around real guns – new research
  45. Events that never happened could influence the 2024 presidential election – a cybersecurity researcher explains situation deepfakes
  46. Why people tend to believe UFOs are extraterrestrial
  47. What do astronomers say about Moon landing deniers? Batting down the conspiracy theory with an assist from the 1969 Miracle Mets
  48. What the US can learn from affirmative action at universities in Brazil
  49. International African American Museum in Charleston, S.C., pays new respect to the enslaved Africans who landed on its docks
  50. Religion shapes vaccine views – but how exactly? Our analysis looks at ideas about God and beliefs about the Bible