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Israeli threats to occupy or annex south Lebanon dust off a decades-old playbook

  • Written by Mireille Rebeiz, Chair of Middle East Studies, Dickinson College
imageA man checks his phone on a beach as smoke rises from Israeli artillery fire on Qlaileh village, near the city of Tyre in south Lebanon. AP Photo/Hussein Malla

A chorus of hawkish Israeli politicians is urging the country’s military to intensify its weekslong ground and air campaign against Hezbollah and pave the way for a more permanent...

Read more: Israeli threats to occupy or annex south Lebanon dust off a decades-old playbook

Presidential words can turn the unthinkable into the thinkable − for better or for worse

  • Written by Stephanie A. (Sam) Martin, Frank and Bethine Church Endowed Chair of Public Affairs, Boise State University
imagePresident Donald Trump's rhetoric has grown increasingly violent.wildpixel/iStock via Getty Images Plus

Among the most disorienting things about President Donald Trump’s public language is how easily it can feel numbing and shocking in the same moment. He says something outrageous, the country recoils, and then the recoil itself begins to...

Read more: Presidential words can turn the unthinkable into the thinkable − for better or for worse

Philadelphia’s 40-year history of protecting undocumented immigrants began with churches hiding refugees from El Salvador

  • Written by Menika Dirkson, Associate Professor of History, Morgan State University
imageSupporters visit Javier Flores, right, while he lived in sanctuary at Arch Street United Methodist Church in downtown Philadelphia in 2017.Bastiaan Slabbers/NurPhoto via Getty Images

In the midst of a civil war, married couple Ernesto and Linda Fuentes fled their home country of El Salvador and headed for Philadelphia, via Mexico, in November 1983.

E...

Read more: Philadelphia’s 40-year history of protecting undocumented immigrants began with churches hiding...

Mutual aid and self-sufficiency are key to life near USSR’s contaminated nuclear test zone in Kazakhstan

  • Written by Magdalena Stawkowski, Associate Professor of Anthropology, University of South Carolina
imageFour decades of tests had a total explosive yield of 2,500 Hiroshimas.Magdalena Stawkowski

About a year into my field research in Kazakhstan, I went to the city of Kurchatov, once the secret command center of the Soviet nuclear program, to make some photocopies. On the ground floor of an apartment building I found a store whose owner had a copy...

Read more: Mutual aid and self-sufficiency are key to life near USSR’s contaminated nuclear test zone in...

City animals act in the same brazen ways around the world

  • Written by Daniel T. Blumstein, Professor of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Institute of the Environment and Sustainability, University of California, Los Angeles
imageA monkey swipes a soda in Thailand.Saeed Khan/AFP via Getty Images

The urban monkeys in New Delhi are so bold they’ll steal the lunch right off your plate. If you’ve spent time in New York, you’ve probably seen squirrels try to do the same. Sydney’s white ibises got the nickname “bin chickens” for stealing trash...

Read more: City animals act in the same brazen ways around the world

Water conservation works, but climate change is outpacing it: Phoenix, Denver and Las Vegas offer a glimpse of the future

  • Written by Renee Obringer, Assistant Professor in the Earth and Environmental Systems Institute, Penn State
imageThe Denver suburb of Castle Rock, Colo., limits water use in future developments. Homeowners are embracing water-efficient yards.RJ Sangosti/MediaNews Group/The Denver Post via Getty Images

When a drought turns into an urban water crisis, a city’s first step is often to limit lawn watering and launch a campaign to encourage everyone to...

Read more: Water conservation works, but climate change is outpacing it: Phoenix, Denver and Las Vegas offer...

From a vaccine mascot to business leadership, lessons for the US from Brazil’s public health system in building public trust and keeping it

  • Written by Jessica A.J. Rich, Assistant Professor of Political Science, Marquette University
imageBusiness leaders and community groups across Brazil stepped in to counter the government's anti-vaccine messaging and to help develop and distribute vaccines. Wang Tiancong/Xinhua via Getty Images

Public health institutions are under threat by populist governments across the globe.

From Budapest to Jakarta, Indonesia, public health agencies are...

Read more: From a vaccine mascot to business leadership, lessons for the US from Brazil’s public health...

Why Americans are buying $22 smoothies despite feeling terrible about the economy

  • Written by Yuanyuan (Gina) Cui, Assistant Professor of Marketing, Coastal Carolina University
imageA selection of smoothies are listed in front of the high-end grocer Erewhon in Culver City, Calif., on July 17, 2024.Photo by Dania Maxwell/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images

Americans are skipping restaurant dinners, delaying car purchases and scouring for grocery deals. Amid tariff anxiety and broader stress over affordability, consumer...

Read more: Why Americans are buying $22 smoothies despite feeling terrible about the economy

When a president is unfit for office, here’s what the Constitution says can happen

  • Written by Kirsten Matoy Carlson, Professor of Law and Adjunct Professor of Political Science, Wayne State University
imagePresident Donald Trump mimics an Iranian protester being shot while holding a news conference in the White House on April 6, 2026.Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images

Bipartisan calls for President Donald Trump’s removal from office increased on April 7, 2026, after he issued threats to destroy “a whole civilization” if...

Read more: When a president is unfit for office, here’s what the Constitution says can happen

Why the Persian Gulf has more oil and gas than anywhere else on Earth

  • Written by Scott L. Montgomery, Lecturer in International Studies, University of Washington
imageOil wells in the Persian Gulf region are among the most productive in the world.Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto via Getty Images

It has been said that Persian Gulf countries are both blessed and cursed by their vast oil and gas reserves. Geologic forces over millions of years have meant the region is an energy-rich global flash point, as it is now with a...

Read more: Why the Persian Gulf has more oil and gas than anywhere else on Earth

More Articles ...

  1. ¡Ándale! ¡Arriba! Speedy Gonzales set to make his triumphant return to the silver screen
  2. Hosting the NFL draft is less about weekend beer sales and more about long-term brand value
  3. Israel’s death penalty law has little to do with criminal justice and everything to do with ethno-nationalism
  4. 1776’s Declaration of Independence inspired Washington’s troops to fight against the odds – and also helped bring in powerful allies
  5. US refugee policy for white South Africans is part of a century-long effort to keep some English-speaking nations white
  6. AI is reengineering drug discovery by speeding up testing and scanning petabytes of data for connections between diseases
  7. Massive eye drop recall reflects ongoing issues with manufacturing and FDA inspection
  8. We teach at a Florida university that agreed to cooperate with ICE – and we worry that it is making our students feel less safe
  9. How does spider venom damage human cells? Researchers uncover the killer mechanism of recluse spider toxin
  10. Hormuz closure threatens the global food supply – why grocery price hikes are coming
  11. Philadelphia’s founding years were rife with conspiracy fears about ‘godless’ Freemasons and the Illuminati
  12. What is CREC and how does it shape Pete Hegseth’s religious rhetoric?
  13. What I learned from analyzing 789 ‘Shark Tank’ pitches: Narcissists get funding if they’re not arrogant or defensive
  14. About 80% of breast cancer biopsies turn out benign – new imaging tool promises clearer diagnoses and fewer biopsies
  15. Teenagers and younger kids are learning coded predator phrases like ‘MAP’ online, long before their parents have even heard of it
  16. What gig workers and employees who get tips need to know about the new no-tax-on-tips tax break
  17. Lebanon’s political elites are using displacement and humanitarian crisis to delay elections again
  18. US and Iran: A brief history of how decades of mistrust and bad blood led to open warfare
  19. What a US attorney general actually does – a law professor spells it out
  20. Toxic dust from California’s shrinking Salton Sea is harming children’s lung growth – our study tracked the impact in 700 kids
  21. The two lives of Chuck Norris
  22. Supreme Court ruling on Colorado conversion therapy case is not a clear win for conservatives
  23. Why the manosphere has an antisemitism problem
  24. Why Americans give: New research finds 5 distinct profiles for generosity
  25. The costume maker who convinced Hersheypark to embrace candy mascots and ‘chocolatize’ their old-timey theme park
  26. Pam Bondi’s extreme political loyalty to Trump wasn’t enough to save her job
  27. Iran’s president appeals to Americans − but does his office still hold any real power?
  28. The nonprofit status of NCAA athletic departments is starting to raise questions
  29. Kratom poisonings surged 1,200% over the past decade, and regulators are struggling to keep up with the dangers
  30. SpaceX and OpenAI IPOs are unlikely to bring skyrocketing returns that Amazon and Apple did, as companies go public later in life and early investors cash out
  31. For adults with ADHD – or even those with just some symptoms – using smart strategies to start and complete tasks can make all the difference
  32. MLB doubles down on gambling with new Polymarket deal
  33. How Iranian hackers pose a threat to US critical infrastructure
  34. Getting $750 a month didn’t end homelessness – but our study shows it still improved the lives of homeless people
  35. Irresponsible parental gun ownership could become a factor in custody disputes
  36. Better urban design could help save Florida’s threatened Big Cypress fox squirrel
  37. Bypass the Strait of Hormuz with nuclear explosives? The US studied that in Panama and Colombia in the 1960s
  38. AI’s fluency in other languages hides a Western worldview that can mislead users − a scholar of Indonesian society explains
  39. 75 years after she led a student strike that helped end school segregation, Barbara Rose Johns now stands in the US Capitol where Robert E. Lee once did
  40. Trump risks falling in to the ‘asymmetric resolve’ trap in Iran − just as presidents before him did elsewhere
  41. Why Iran targeted Amazon data centers and what that does – and doesn’t – change about warfare
  42. The Department of Justice is suing states for sensitive voter data − an election law scholar explains why federal efforts are facing resistance
  43. Why Michael Jackson’s daughter, Paris, won’t stop ‘til she gets enough from his estate
  44. You’re not going to be alone in national parks this summer – enjoy the company
  45. Winter’s alarmingly low snowpack offers a glimpse of the changing rhythm of water in the western US
  46. Federal election observers once played a key role in securing voting rights for all − but times have changed
  47. The NFL draft brings economic gains – and hidden public safety costs
  48. What Detroit can learn from participatory budgeting processes in NYC, Boston and Brazil
  49. Students were skipping my astrophysics class to play video games – so I turned the class itself into a video game
  50. How long young cancer patients survive often depends on the insurance they have