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'Sea-level rise won't affect my house' – even flood maps don't sway Florida coastal residents

  • Written by Risa Palm, Professor of Urban Studies and Public Health, Georgia State University
Floods as a result of Hurricane Irma in Fort Lauderdale. Shutterstock.com/FotoKina

Advertisers understand that providing consumers with the facts will not sell products. To get people to stop and pay attention, successful advertising delivers information simply and with an emotional hook so that consumers notice and, hopefully, make a purchase.

Clim...

Read more: 'Sea-level rise won't affect my house' – even flood maps don't sway Florida coastal residents

The Philippines has rated 'Golden Rice' safe, but farmers might not plant it

  • Written by Glenn Davis Stone, Professor of Anthropology and Environmental Studies, Washington University in St Louis
Golden rice, right, compared to white rice, left.IRRI/Wikimedia Commons, CC BY

“Golden Rice” is probably the world’s most hotly debated genetically modified organism (GMO). It was intended to be a beta carotene-enriched crop to reduce Vitamin A deficiency, a health problem in very poor areas. But it has never been offered to...

Read more: The Philippines has rated 'Golden Rice' safe, but farmers might not plant it

The dystopian experience of skiing in New Jersey's new American Dream mall

  • Written by Robert Snyder, Professor of Journalism and American Studies, Rutgers University Newark
Snowboarders and skiers enjoy the grand opening of Big Snow.AP Photo/Seth Wenig

In 50 years of skiing, my first downhill run of 2020 was like nothing I had ever experienced. The 28-degree temperature and machine-made snow were familiar enough, but I ended up skiing through a windowless rectangular box, beneath girders and electric lights, and...

Read more: The dystopian experience of skiing in New Jersey's new American Dream mall

How Trump's proposed benefits changes will create hardship for rural people with disabilities

  • Written by Lillie Greiman, Project Director, RTC: Rural, The University of Montana
Rural Americans are more likely than urban Americans to experience disability.Natee K Jindakum/Shutterstock.com

Changes to the Social Security Disability Insurance program proposed in January by the Trump administration could make it harder for over 8 million Americans with disabilities to maintain federal benefits.

That’s particularly true...

Read more: How Trump's proposed benefits changes will create hardship for rural people with disabilities

Democratic plans for raising taxes on the rich: A guide for the middle class

  • Written by Steven Pressman, Professor of Economics, Colorado State University
Warren and Sanders are the candidates with arguably the most aggressive plans to tax the rich. AP Photo/Meg Kinnard

It’s hardly surprising that if a Democrat wins the White House, taxes on wealthy Americans and corporations will probably go up. How they’ll go up is the more interesting question.

The 2020 Democratic presidential...

Read more: Democratic plans for raising taxes on the rich: A guide for the middle class

What Trump’s picks for the Presidential Medal of Freedom – like Rush Limbaugh and Antonin Scalia – say about him

  • Written by E. Fletcher McClellan, Professor of Political Science, Elizabethtown College
Rush Limbaugh reacts as President Donald Trump delivers his State of the Union address.AP Photo/Patrick Semansky

President Donald Trump awarded his 15th Presidential Medal of Freedom to conservative radio commentator Rush Limbaugh on Feb. 4.

This award was notable for two reasons. First, it was controversial because Limbaugh is a polarizing...

Read more: What Trump’s picks for the Presidential Medal of Freedom – like Rush Limbaugh and Antonin Scalia –...

Deported to death: US sent 138 Salvadorans home to be killed

  • Written by Mneesha Gellman, Associate Professor of Political Science, Emerson College
Street gangs that operate with impunity make El Salvador one of the world's most violent countries. Few murders are ever solved.MARVIN RECINOS/AFP via Getty Images

At least 138 people deported from the United States to El Salvador since 2013 have been killed, according to a new report by Human Rights Watch, which investigates human rights abuses...

Read more: Deported to death: US sent 138 Salvadorans home to be killed

The 6 countries in Trump's new travel ban pose little threat to US national security

  • Written by Charles Kurzman, Professor of Sociology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
The new ban applies to citizens of Eritrea, Kyrgyzstan, Myanmar, Nigeria, Sudan and Tanzania.Ingus Kruklitis/Shutterstock.com

Over the past two decades, how many people have been killed in the U.S. by extremists from the six countries on the Trump administration’s new travel ban list?

The answer is zero, according to data I have collected from...

Read more: The 6 countries in Trump's new travel ban pose little threat to US national security

The secret to the success of two Oscar-nominated scores

  • Written by Michael Slowik, Assistant Professor of Film Studies, Wesleyan University
Randy Newman and Hildur Guðnadóttir have been nominated for their scores for 'Marriage Story' and 'Joker,' respectively.Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP, Hildur Guðnadóttir: Gareth Cattermole/Getty Images

Every year, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences awards an Oscar to the film with the best original score.

The best...

Read more: The secret to the success of two Oscar-nominated scores

Sanders called JPMorgan's CEO America's 'biggest corporate socialist' – here's why he has a point

  • Written by Paul Adler, Professor of Management and Organization, Sociology and Environmental Studies, University of Southern California
JPMorgan's Dimon, center, recently criticized socialism.AP Photo/Haraz N. Ghanbari

Sen. Bernie Sanders called JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon the “biggest corporate socialist in America today” in a recent ad.

He may have a point – beyond what he intended.

With his Dimon ad, Sanders is referring specifically to the bailouts JPMorgan...

Read more: Sanders called JPMorgan's CEO America's 'biggest corporate socialist' – here's why he has a point

More Articles ...

  1. Violence and other forms of abuse against teachers: 5 questions answered
  2. Soil carbon is a valuable resource, but all soil carbon is not created equal
  3. What's a church? That can depend on the eye of the beholder or paperwork filed with the IRS
  4. Re-creating live-animal markets in the lab lets researchers see how pathogens like coronavirus jump species
  5. Fighting coronavirus fear with empathy: Lessons learned from how Africans got blamed for Ebola
  6. This is how ancient Rome's republic died – a classicist sees troubling parallels at Trump's impeachment trial
  7. Civility in politics is harder than you think
  8. Trump's excess and extravagance turned the State of the Union into an action movie
  9. A plasma reactor zaps airborne viruses – and could help slow the spread of infectious diseases
  10. Is the coronavirus a pandemic, and does that matter? 4 questions answered
  11. 'American Dirt' fiasco exposes publishing industry that's too consolidated, too white and too selective
  12. Is online education right for you? 5 questions answered
  13. How the US repeatedly failed to support reform movements in Iran
  14. R0: How scientists quantify the intensity of an outbreak like coronavirus and its pandemic potential
  15. Iowa caucuses did one thing right: Require paper ballots
  16. US could learn how to improve election protection from other nations
  17. Learn to trust immigrants by role-playing in their shoes
  18. Is hiring more black officers the key to reducing police violence?
  19. The Iraq War has cost the US nearly $2 trillion
  20. A clue to stopping coronavirus: Knowing how viruses adapt from animals to humans
  21. Cancer deaths decline in US, with advances in prevention, detection and treatment
  22. At-risk colleges should do what's best for students, alumni, donors, employees – and local communities
  23. 100 years ago, Congress threw out results of the census
  24. US workplaces are nowhere near ready to contain a coronavirus outbreak
  25. What do kids think of the president?
  26. Do authors really put deeper meaning into poems and stories – or do readers make it up?
  27. Quarantines have tried to keep out disease for thousands of years
  28. Catholic investigations are still shrouded in secrecy
  29. Inside Mexico's war on drugs: Conversations with 'el narco'
  30. The Trump administration has made the US less ready for infectious disease outbreaks like coronavirus
  31. The Trump administration has made the U.S. less ready for infectious disease outbreaks like coronavirus
  32. Anthrax vs. cancer – researchers harness the deadly toxin to cure dogs and hopefully people
  33. France-US skirmish over Amazon digital tax shows why the century-old international tax system is broken
  34. Why Italian cinema is starting to glamorize the mafia
  35. Fracking has led to a 'bust' for Pennsylvania school district finances
  36. WHO declares global health emergency over coronavirus: 4 questions answered
  37. Coronavirus grown in lab outside China for first time, aiding the search for vaccine
  38. The Kobe legacy: Should the NBA let high school players skip college?
  39. Why losing Kobe Bryant felt like losing a relative or friend
  40. Iowa caucuses: It's not just candidates who face uncertainty – it's their campaign workers, too
  41. As Democratic primaries near, educators can teach hope to a polarized citizenry
  42. Humans are hardwired to dismiss facts that don't fit their worldview
  43. How do woodpeckers avoid brain injury?
  44. The Senate has actually tied in an impeachment trial – twice
  45. Supreme Court allows public charge clause that kept Nazi-era refugees from the US
  46. Why we knock on wood
  47. Has Trump proposed a Middle East peace plan – or terms of surrender for the Palestinians?
  48. Limiting Senate inquiry ignores Founders' intent for impeachment
  49. Britain's Brexit divorce is here – but the bickering over alimony payments and who gets the house is only beginning
  50. The US economy produced about $21.7 trillion in goods and services in 2019 - but what does GDP really mean?