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What public school students are allowed to say on social media may be about to change

  • Written by Scott F. Johnson, Professor of Law, Concord Law School
imageStudent speech in public schools has less protection than speech by adults in the community at large.Noam Galai/Getty Images

After a high school cheerleader in Pennsylvania dropped a series of F-bombs about her school in a Snapchat post over a weekend in the spring of 2017, she was suspended from the cheerleading team and sued the school district,...

Read more: What public school students are allowed to say on social media may be about to change

Giving while female: Women are more likely to donate to charities than men of equal means

  • Written by Tessa Skidmore, Research Associate of Philanthropy, Women's Philanthropy Institute; Doctoral student of Philanthropy, IUPUI
imageWomen who are collectively donating to an all-girls school in Peru discuss their charitable giving in a Vienna, Virginia dining room.Michael S. Williamson/The Washington Post via Getty Images

The American poet Ambrose Bierce wrote in 1906 that a philanthropist is “a rich (and usually bald) old gentleman who has trained himself to grin while...

Read more: Giving while female: Women are more likely to donate to charities than men of equal means

The exercise pill: How exercise keeps your brain healthy and protects it against depression and anxiety

  • Written by Arash Javanbakht, Associate Professor of Psychiatry, Wayne State University
imageThe author, Arash Javanbakht, at his gym. Javanbakht did not like to exercise until he found an activity he enjoyed. Arash Javanbakht, CC BY-SA

As with many other physicians, recommending physical activity to patients was just a doctor chore for me – until a few years ago. That was because I myself was not very active. Over the years, as I...

Read more: The exercise pill: How exercise keeps your brain healthy and protects it against depression and...

Many Black Americans aren’t rushing to get the COVID-19 vaccine – a long history of medical abuse suggests why

  • Written by Esther Jones, Associate Professor of English, affiliate with Africana Studies and Women's & Gender Studies, Clark University
imageBlack patients can be wary of the medical establishment.Maskot via Getty Images

Black Americans have been the least inclined of any racial or ethnic group to say they’d get vaccinated against the coronavirus. The proportion of Black people who said they’ll probably or definitely take the shot has risen over time – but even by...

Read more: Many Black Americans aren’t rushing to get the COVID-19 vaccine – a long history of medical abuse...

What's behind $15,000 electricity bills in Texas?

  • Written by Seth Blumsack, Professor of Energy and Environmental Economics and International Affairs, Penn State
imagePower to the people, but it will cost you.Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

Texans who made it through February’s extreme cold weather without losing power or natural gas must have felt lucky.

But for some, keeping their electricity through the blackout may turn out to be more traumatic than losing it. An undetermined number of homeowners have...

Read more: What's behind $15,000 electricity bills in Texas?

In Texas, price gouging during disasters is illegal – it is also on very shaky ethical ground

  • Written by Elizabeth Brake, Professor of Philosophy, Rice University
imagePrice gouging during disasters further shuts out those living in poverty.AP Photo/Eric Gay

In Houston, as millions suffered power and water outages, food shortages and subfreezing temperatures, another problem confronted families: price hikes.

Steep increases in the price of food, gas and fuel have been reported across Texas. And as millions of...

Read more: In Texas, price gouging during disasters is illegal – it is also on very shaky ethical ground

AI is killing choice and chance – which means changing what it means to be human

  • Written by Nir Eisikovits, Associate Professor of Philosophy and Director, Applied Ethics Center, University of Massachusetts Boston
imageAI promises to make life easier, but what will humans lose in the bargain?AP Photo/Frank Augstein

The history of humans’ use of technology has always been a history of coevolution. Philosophers from Rousseau to Heidegger to Carl Schmitt have argued that technology is never a neutral tool for achieving human ends. Technological innovations...

Read more: AI is killing choice and chance – which means changing what it means to be human

Engineered viruses can fight the rise of antibiotic-resistant bacteria

  • Written by Kevin Doxzen, Hoffmann Postdoctoral Fellow, Arizona State University
imageBacteriophage (yellow) are viruses that infect and destroy bacteria (blue). Christoph Burgstedt/Science Photo Library,Getty Images

As the world fights the SARS-CoV-2 virus causing the COVID-19 pandemic, another group of dangerous pathogens looms in the background. The threat of antibiotic-resistant bacteria has been growing for years and appears to...

Read more: Engineered viruses can fight the rise of antibiotic-resistant bacteria

Relief or stimulus: What's the difference, and what it means for Biden's $1.9 trillion coronavirus package

  • Written by William Hauk, Associate Professor of Economics, University of South Carolina
imageBiden made passing his $1.9 trillion bill one of his top priorities. AP Photo/Evan Vucci

The Biden administration and Congress are fast-tracking a US$1.9 trillion coronavirus package that includes aid for states, cities, individuals, the unemployed, schools and much else. It could become law within weeks.

But is it stimulus or relief?

If...

Read more: Relief or stimulus: What's the difference, and what it means for Biden's $1.9 trillion coronavirus...

Black biomedical scientists still lag in research funding – here's why that matters to all Americans

  • Written by Omolola Eniola-Adefeso, University Diversity and Social Transformation Professor of Chemical Engineering, University of Michigan Medical School
imageBlack biomedical researchers receive less funding than their white counterparts.hyejin kang/iStock via Getty Images Plus

The statistics tell the story. People of color are more likely to be infected, hospitalized and killed by COVID-19 than white, non-Hispanic people. This grim reality is just one more illustration of an unacceptable truth: Science...

Read more: Black biomedical scientists still lag in research funding – here's why that matters to all Americans

More Articles ...

  1. From 'aliens' to 'noncitizens' – the Biden administration is proposing to change a legal term to recognize the humanity of non-Americans
  2. How New York's 19th-century Jews turned Purim into an American party
  3. How Black cartographers put racism on the map of America
  4. When men started to obsess over six-packs
  5. Decision-making experts explain how to avoid arguments over where to get dinner together
  6. Why Black and Hispanic small-business owners have been so badly hit in the pandemic recession
  7. 5 ways parents can help kids avoid gender stereotypes
  8. How Philadelphia's Black churches overcame disease, depression and civil strife
  9. How to really fix COVID-19 vaccine appointment scheduling
  10. Child poverty in the U.S. could be slashed by monthly payments to parents – an idea proved in other rich countries and proposed by a prominent Republican decades ago
  11. Rev. Raphael Warnock's historic US Senate win broke more barriers than you may think
  12. Biden's Cabinet of many women shows other world leaders that US takes gender equality seriously
  13. How safe is your baby food? Company reports show arsenic, lead and other heavy metals – here's what you need to know
  14. An ancient Greek approach to risk and the lessons it can offer the modern world
  15. How safe is your baby food?
  16. What are the origins of Lent?
  17. John Keats' concept of 'negative capability' – or sitting in uncertainty – is needed now more than ever
  18. What I learned when I recreated the famous 'doll test' that looked at how Black kids see race
  19. How do arctic foxes hunt in the snow?
  20. If Big Tech has the will, here are ways research shows self-regulation can work
  21. Keeping trees in the ground where they are already growing is an effective low-tech way to slow climate change
  22. Space Force sounds like a joke thanks to pop culture – that could be a problem for an important military branch
  23. 3 ways companies could offer more father-friendly policies that will help women
  24. Women of color spend more than $8 billion on bleaching creams worldwide every year
  25. Rethinking the US-China fight: Does China really threaten American power abroad?
  26. Why do mass shootings spawn conspiracy theories?
  27. Australia, fighting Facebook, is the latest country to struggle against foreign influence on journalism
  28. How the Texas electricity system produced low-cost power but left residents out in the cold
  29. One month in, how Biden has changed disaster management and the US COVID-19 response
  30. How a mass suicide by slaves caused the legend of the flying African to take off
  31. Americans still need a lifeline despite trillions in coronavirus aid
  32. I interviewed 48 bankrupt Americans – here's who they blame for their financial troubles
  33. Air filters can scrub out pollutants near highways, reduce blood pressure
  34. Election violence spiked worldwide in 2020 – will this year be better?
  35. What belief in extraterrestrial visitors to Earth reveals about trust in elections
  36. 6 important truths about COVID-19 vaccines
  37. Black sororities have stood at the forefront of Black achievement for more than a century
  38. Debunking the myth of legislative gridlock
  39. Taking it to the street: Food vending during and after COVID-19
  40. How the National Guard became the go-to military force for riots and civil disturbances
  41. Faith in numbers: Behind the gender difference of nonreligious Americans
  42. Why Indian farmers' protests are being called a 'satyagraha' – which means 'embracing the truth'
  43. 5 ways for teachers to build a good rapport with their students online
  44. How many people get ‘long COVID’ – and who is most at risk?
  45. How the media may be making the COVID-19 mental health epidemic worse
  46. Power outages across the Plains: 4 questions answered about weather-driven blackouts
  47. 46,218 news transcripts show ideologically extreme politicians get more airtime
  48. 'Indian Country' is excited about the first Native American secretary of the interior – and the promise she has for addressing issues of importance to all Americans
  49. How public schools fail to recognize Black prodigies
  50. Private planes, mansions and superyachts: What gives billionaires like Musk and Abramovich such a massive carbon footprint