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Christian sex advice websites offer a peek into evangelical politics

  • Written by Kelsy Burke, Assistant Professor of Sociology, University of Nebraska-Lincoln
imageAdam and Eve, created by Albrecht Dürer, 1471-1528.Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C. 20540 USA

On May 4, President Donald Trump signed an executive order that allows churches and religious leaders to explicitly endorse or oppose a political candidate without penalty to their nonprofit, tax-exempt status....

Read more: Christian sex advice websites offer a peek into evangelical politics

Global ransomware attack reinforces message of Trump's new cybersecurity order

  • Written by Frank J. Cilluffo, Director, Center for Cyber and Homeland Security, George Washington University
imageLocking down the federal government.NicoElNico via shutterstock.com

A cyberattack is sweeping the world, infecting thousands of computers and demanding their owners pay a ransom or risk losing all their data. The threat, which has affected the FedEx shipping company, several hospitals in the UK, a major Spanish telecommunications company, and many...

Read more: Global ransomware attack reinforces message of Trump's new cybersecurity order

Why dads can't be the dads they want to be

  • Written by Kevin Shafer, Associate Professor of Sociology; Faculty Affiliate in Social Work, Brigham Young University
imageIt's about more than gender dynamics: Do social institutions get in the way of dads being dads?Reginald Williams / Pexels, FAL

In most families, mothers and fathers both work hard. Pew Research recently reported that moms and dads in the U.S. work essentially equal hours when paid work hours are combined with household chores and child care hours.

Pe...

Read more: Why dads can't be the dads they want to be

Trump will likely win reelection in 2020

  • Written by Musa al-Gharbi, Paul F. Lazarsfeld Fellow in Sociology, Columbia University
imageTrump seen through a TV camera's viewfinder in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania on April 29, 2017.AP Photo/Patrick Semansky

Most Americans don’t like Trump.

Trump will most likely be reelected in 2020.

How can both of these statements be true? Here’s how:

Even when people are unhappy with a state of affairs, they are usually disinclined to...

Read more: Trump will likely win reelection in 2020

Social media helps officials spot public health threats – but only for the rich?

  • Written by Elaine Nsoesie, Assistant Professor of Global Health, Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, University of Washington
imageCapturing the moment for the internet.astarot/shutterstock.com

Think of the last time you had food poisoning. Did you tweet about it? Did you Google your symptoms? Or did you write an angry review on Yelp?

Every day, people use the internet to seek and share health information. This opens up exciting new ways for scientists to study the health of a...

Read more: Social media helps officials spot public health threats – but only for the rich?

Comey's firing may end other investigations into 2016 election

  • Written by Clark D. Cunningham, W. Lee Burge Chair in Law & Ethics; Director, National Institute for Teaching Ethics & Professionalism, Georgia State University
imageWill the inquiries continue?AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster

There is widespread concern that President Donald Trump’s May 9 firing of FBI Director James Comey is an attempt to stop or delay the FBI’s investigation into Russian interference in the November 2016 presidential election. But little attention has been given to the relationship...

Read more: Comey's firing may end other investigations into 2016 election

Census director's resignation could affect control of Congress after 2020

  • Written by Jay L. Zagorsky, Economist and Research Scientist, The Ohio State University
imageWill the next director ensure everyone is counted? Crowd of people via www.shutterstock.com

John H. Thompson, the director of the U.S. Census Bureau, just resigned amid a funding fight over the 2020 Census.

Since it comes at the same time that the president fired the director of the FBI, why should anyone care about the resignation of just another...

Read more: Census director's resignation could affect control of Congress after 2020

What's behind the fidget spinner fad?

  • Written by Joel Best, Professor of Sociology and Criminal Justice, University of Delaware
imageA flick, a spin and a...fad?Dark Dwarf/flickr, CC BY

When I asked a colleague if he knew about fidget spinners, he responded: “I’d never heard of them until last week, when my daughter told me she had to have one.”

Many parents must be having that conversation with their elementary school-age kids; as of this writing, fidget...

Read more: What's behind the fidget spinner fad?

Five rational arguments why God (very probably) exists

  • Written by Robert H. Nelson, Professor of Public Policy, University of Maryland
imageDoes God exist?Michael Peligro, CC BY-ND

The question of whether a God exists is heating up in the 21st century. According to a Pew survey, the percentage of Americans having no religious affiliation reached 23 percent in 2014. Among such “nones,” 33 percent said that they do not believe in God – an 11 percent increase since only...

Read more: Five rational arguments why God (very probably) exists

Arguments why God (very probably) exists

  • Written by Robert H. Nelson, Professor of Public Policy, University of Maryland
imageDoes God exist?Michael Peligro, CC BY-ND

Editor’s note: This is a revised version of the original piece. We have done so to make explicit the author’s expertise with regard to the subject of this article. We have also incorporated important context that was missing in the original version.

The question of whether a god exists is heating...

Read more: Arguments why God (very probably) exists

More Articles ...

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  2. Why Facebook may fuel new mothers' insecurity
  3. Will Trump give working families a break?
  4. Why big-data analysis of police activity is inherently biased
  5. 'Moonlight' schooled Hollywood on race. Can it take on school discipline, too?
  6. Four challenges for Moon Jae-in, South Korea's new president
  7. To curb climate change, we need to protect and expand US forests
  8. How the refugee crisis is playing out on the German stage
  9. Central American gangs like MS-13 were born out of failed anti-crime policies
  10. Iranian voters' economic gloom may doom President Rouhani's reelection bid
  11. Throwing injuries in young baseball players: Is there something we are not considering?
  12. Brain-imaging modern people making Stone Age tools hints at evolution of human intelligence
  13. In letters from Stalin's labor camps, a window into Soviet political oppression
  14. People don’t trust scientific research when companies are involved
  15. Will optimistic stories get people to care about nature?
  16. How the hijab has grown into a fashion industry
  17. Can we talk about free speech on campus?
  18. Macron beats Le Pen, but can he lead France?
  19. Fake news, echo chambers and filter bubbles: Underresearched and overhyped
  20. How African-Americans disappeared from the Kentucky Derby
  21. How pre-existing conditions became front and center in health care vote
  22. Who are Jehovah's Witnesses?
  23. Court ruling is a first step toward controlling air pollution from livestock farms
  24. Behind closed doors: What the Piltdown Man hoax from 1912 can teach science today
  25. More and more restaurants list calories on their menus. What about salt?
  26. Rewriting NAFTA has serious implications beyond just trade
  27. What makes Kim Jong Un tick?
  28. How did health insurance get so complicated? Here are some answers
  29. The future is in interactive storytelling
  30. How funding to house mentally ill, homeless is a financial gain, not drain
  31. Anti-terror rules are blocking aid to conflict zones
  32. Heroes and American politics
  33. Helping student activists move past 'us vs. them'
  34. Macron and LePen are battling for France’s heart and soul in election runoff
  35. Alphabet's new plan to track 10,000 people could take wearables to the next level
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  45. The long history, and short future, of the password
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  47. Could a doodle replace your password?
  48. Trump's plan to dismantle national monuments comes with steep cultural and ecological costs
  49. Why Dodd-Frank – or its repeal – won't save us from the next crippling Wall Street crash
  50. A 147-year-old dispute between church and state spills onto a school playground