NewsPronto

 
Men's Weekly

.

The Conversation

In a year of Black Lives Matter protests, Dutch wrestle (again) with the tradition of Black Pete

  • Written by Ayanna Thompson, Regents Professor of English, Arizona State University
imageAn annual tradition or a national embarrassment.AP Photo/Peter Dejong

As Black Lives Matter protests and social uprisings spread across U.S. cities in the summer, the civil rights icon the Rev. Jesse Jackson wrote a personal letter to Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte over an annual tradition that many believe to be racist.

Every Dec. 5, people across...

Read more: In a year of Black Lives Matter protests, Dutch wrestle (again) with the tradition of Black Pete

Tiny treetop flowers foster incredible beetle biodiversity

  • Written by Caroline S. Chaboo, Adjunct Professor in Insect Systematics, University of Nebraska-Lincoln
imageHundreds of beetle species seem to be specialists that feed only from small white flowers on trees.Susan Kirmse, CC BY-ND

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

The big idea

Biologists have long known that rainforest treetops support a huge number of beetle species, but why these canopies are so rich in beetle diversity has r...

Read more: Tiny treetop flowers foster incredible beetle biodiversity

How a flu virus shut down the US economy in 1872 – by infecting horses

  • Written by Ernest Freeberg, Professor of History, University of Tennessee
imageHenry Bergh (in top hat) stopping an overcrowded horsecar, from Harper's Weekly, Sept. 21, 1872. Library of Congress

In 1872 the U.S. economy was growing as the young nation industrialized and expanded westward. Then in the autumn, a sudden shock paralyzed social and economic life. It was an energy crisis of sorts, but not a shortage of fossil...

Read more: How a flu virus shut down the US economy in 1872 – by infecting horses

What makes the world's biggest surfable waves?

  • Written by Sally Warner, Assistant Professor of Climate Science, Brandeis University
imageSome places, like Nazaré Canyon in Portugal, produce freakishly huge waves.AP Photo/Armando Franca

On Feb. 11, 2020, Brazilian Maya Gabeira surfed a wave off the coast of Nazaré, Portugal, that was 73.5 feet tall. Not only was this the biggest wave ever surfed by a woman, but it also turned out to be the biggest wave surfed by anyone...

Read more: What makes the world's biggest surfable waves?

The chattering classes got the 'Hillbilly Elegy' book wrong – and they're getting the movie wrong, too

  • Written by Lisa R. Pruitt, Martin Luther King, Jr., Professor of Law, University of California, Davis

Film critics have had nary a good word to say about Netflix’s new movie “Hillbilly Elegy.”

Reviewers varyingly called it “Oscar-Season B.S.,” “woefully misguided,” “Yokel Hokum,” “laughably bad” and simply “awful.”

I admit to delight when I read professional critics...

Read more: The chattering classes got the 'Hillbilly Elegy' book wrong – and they're getting the movie wrong,...

Vaccines against SARS-CoV-2 will have side effects – that's a good thing

  • Written by Matthew Woodruff, Instructor, Lowance Center for Human Immunology, Emory University
imageA little bit of post-injection soreness is completely normal.Jose Luis Pelaez Inc/DigitalVision via Getty Images

Takeaways

  • Temporary side effects from vaccines are a normal sign of a developing immune response.

  • Vaccines work by training your immune system to recognize and remember a pathogen in a safe way.

  • Expected side effects from a COVID-19 vaccine...

Read more: Vaccines against SARS-CoV-2 will have side effects – that's a good thing

How a troop drawdown in Afghanistan signals American weakness and could send Afghan allies into the Taliban's arms

  • Written by Brian Glyn Williams, Professor of Islamic History, University of Massachusetts Dartmouth
imageAfghan security forces gather near the site of an attack in Jalalabad in August 2020.AP Photo/Rahmat Gul

President Donald Trump’s recent call to withdraw just over half of the 4,500 U.S. troops in Afghanistan has been condemned as an act that “would hurt our allies and delight, delight, the people who wish us harm” by members of...

Read more: How a troop drawdown in Afghanistan signals American weakness and could send Afghan allies into...

A better way for billionaires who want to make massive donations to benefit society

  • Written by Andrew J. Hoffman, Professor of Management & Organizations; Professor of Environment & Sustainability; Holcim (US), Inc. Professor of Sustainable Enterprise at the Ross School of Business and School of Environment and Sustainability, University of
imageJeff Bezos is pouring $10 billion into the fight against climate change.Eric Baradat/AFP via Getty Images

Jeff Bezos, the world’s wealthiest person, announced on Instagram in November 2020 that he was giving 16 organizations a total of about US$800 million for a wide array of climate-protecting work.

This money will help pay to restore and...

Read more: A better way for billionaires who want to make massive donations to benefit society

Cicely was young, Black and enslaved – her death during an epidemic in 1714 has lessons that resonate in today's pandemic

  • Written by Nicole S Maskiell, Assistant Professor of History Peter and Bonnie McCausland Fellow of History, University of South Carolina
imageOver 1.4 million people have died from COVID-19 so far this year. How history memorializes them will reflect those we most value.Author provided, CC BY-ND

What I believe to be the oldest surviving gravestone for a Black person in the Americas memorializes an enslaved teenager named Cicely.

Cicely’s body is interred across from Harvard’s...

Read more: Cicely was young, Black and enslaved – her death during an epidemic in 1714 has lessons that...

Tribes mount organized responses to COVID-19, in contrast to state and federal governments

  • Written by Lisa Hardy, Associate Professor of Anthropology and Director of the Social Science Community Engagement Lab, Northern Arizona University
imageThe Native nations have fought hard to keep the pandemic out of their communities. grand river via Getty Images

As the months roll by, the pandemic continues to hit Indigenous nations hard. But this phenomenon is not new. Epidemics have been part of colonialism since settlers arrived. Health inequities tell us that illnesses have different outcomes...

Read more: Tribes mount organized responses to COVID-19, in contrast to state and federal governments

More Articles ...

  1. AI makes huge progress predicting how proteins fold – one of biology's greatest challenges – promising rapid drug development
  2. The morality of canceling student debt
  3. Global disabilities map visualizes the strength and power of millions of athletes around the world
  4. Socialism is a trigger word on social media – but real discussion is going on amid the screaming
  5. Your brain's built-in biases insulate your beliefs from contradictory facts
  6. Peru's democracy faces greatest trial since Fujimori dictatorship after two presidents are ousted in one week
  7. Rapid COVID-19 tests can be useful – but there are far too few to put a dent in the pandemic
  8. Reckoning with slavery: What a revolt's archives tell us about who owns the past
  9. James Baker's masterful legal strategies won George W. Bush a contested election – unlike Rudy Giuliani's string of losses
  10. NCAA amateurism appears immune to COVID-19 – despite tide in public support for paying athletes having turned
  11. Fences have big effects on land and wildlife around the world that are rarely measured
  12. Nonprofits are struggling to do more with less money, but donors and volunteers can help: 5 questions answered
  13. Why waiters give Black customers poor service
  14. The 2020 Atlantic hurricane season was a record-breaker, and it's raising more concerns about climate change
  15. How Taiwan uses Buddhist literature for environmental education
  16. Parler is bringing together mainstream conservatives, anti-Semites and white supremacists as the social media platform attracts millions of Trump supporters
  17. 57 años después del asesinato de Kennedy, las pistas en México se agotan
  18. 'Constructive arguing' can help keep the peace at your Thanksgiving table
  19. This type of sexual harassment on campus often goes overlooked
  20. Homeless patients with COVID-19 often go back to life on the streets after hospital care, but there's a better way
  21. Will there be a monument to the COVID-19 pandemic?
  22. Janet Yellen and Kamala Harris keep shattering glass ceilings – but global elite boys club remains
  23. Poland's anti-abortion push highlights pandemic risks to democracy
  24. California vetoed ethnic studies requirements for public high school students, but the movement grows
  25. It's not just ABCs – preschool parents worry their kids are missing out on critical social skills during the pandemic
  26. Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine is cheaper than Pfizer's and Moderna's and doesn't require supercold temperature
  27. Testing sewage can give school districts, campuses and businesses a heads-up on the spread of COVID-19
  28. How Biden and Kerry could rebuild America's global climate leadership
  29. 'My vote will be Black' – A wave of Afro-Brazilian women ran for office in 2020 but found glass ceiling hard to break
  30. School suspensions don't just unfairly penalize Black students – they lead to lower grades and 'Black flight'
  31. Republicans didn't lose big in 2020 – they held onto statehouses and the power to influence future elections
  32. These at-home exercises can help older people boost their immune system and overall health in the age of COVID-19
  33. Coronavirus vaccines: health experts identify ways to build public trust
  34. Why do older people heal more slowly?
  35. A century ago, James Weldon Johnson became the first Black person to head the NAACP
  36. Kids as young as 3 years old think YouTube is better for learning than other types of video
  37. Muslim schools are allies in France's fight against radicalization – not the cause
  38. Muslims have visualized Prophet Muhammad in words and calligraphic art for centuries
  39. How George Washington used his first Thanksgiving as president to unite a new country
  40. In the 1620s, Plymouth Plantation had its own #MeToo moment
  41. Ocho meses de confinamiento por COVID-19 y contando: ¿Qué podemos hacer cuando estamos aburridos?
  42. Why nursing home aides exposed to COVID-19 aren’t taking sick leave
  43. China beat the coronavirus with science and strong public health measures, not just with authoritarianism
  44. A brief history of Georgia's runoff voting – and its racist roots
  45. Why do tigers have stripes?
  46. Laughing is good for your mind and your body – here's what the research shows
  47. The rise and fall of Tab – after surviving the sweetener scares, the iconic diet soda gets canned
  48. Opportunities to practice real-life philanthropy bring academic benefits
  49. Biden's ambitious energy plan faces headwinds, but can move the US forward
  50. How Joe Biden did so well in Georgia