NewsPronto

 
Men's Weekly

.

The Conversation

Why Americans appear more likely to support Christian refugees

  • Written by Joannie Tremblay-Boire, Assistant Professor, School of Public Policy, University of Maryland
About a million Rohingya refugees are living in Bangladesh.AP Photo/Dar Yasin

An estimated 70 million people worldwide have been forcibly displaced, according to the United Nations. Every two seconds, someone in countries like Syria, Afghanistan, South Sudan and Myanmar is being forced to leave their home. Although 24.5 million of these people have...

Read more: Why Americans appear more likely to support Christian refugees

What makes the Impossible Burger look and taste like real beef?

  • Written by Mark R. O'Brian, Professor and Chair of Biochemistry, Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, University at Buffalo, The State University of New York
An Impossible Burger sidewalk sign in San Francisco. Chris Allan/Shutterstock.com

People eat animals that eat plants. If we just eliminate that middle step and eat plants directly, we would diminish our carbon footprint, decrease agricultural land usage, eliminate health risks associated with red meat and alleviate ethical concerns over animal...

Read more: What makes the Impossible Burger look and taste like real beef?

Why it's hard to remove, or even diagnose, mentally ill or unstable presidents

  • Written by John Rogan, Visiting Clinical Professor of Law, Fordham University
Richard Nixon flashes the victory sign on the night he received the Republican nomination for president Aug. 9, 1968 in Miami.AP File/AP Photo

In the wake of President John F. Kennedy’s assassination, members of Congress set out to update the procedures for handling an unable president. They soon realized that some situations would be far...

Read more: Why it's hard to remove, or even diagnose, mentally ill or unstable presidents

Migrants' stories: Why they flee

  • Written by Anthony W. Fontes, Assistant Professor of Human Security, American University School of International Service
A man hugs his family before leaving for the U.S. border with a migrant caravan from San Salvador, El Salvador, Jan. 16, 2019. AP/Salvador Melendez

Massive influxes of Central American families seeking asylum in the United States are overwhelming U.S. immigration facilities.

The crisis along the U.S. southern border led directly to the forced resig...

Read more: Migrants' stories: Why they flee

Does legalizing marijuana help or harm Americans? Weighing the statistical evidence

  • Written by Liberty Vittert, Visiting Assistant Professor in Statistics, Washington University in St Louis
More states are giving marijuana the green light.r.classen/shutterstock.com

The legalization of marijuana has been a topic of contention and confusion for both sides of the debate.

The federal government still deems it illegal. But marijuana has been legalized for recreational use in 10 states and the District of Columbia, and a further 21 broadly...

Read more: Does legalizing marijuana help or harm Americans? Weighing the statistical evidence

An analysis of nearly 4 million pitches shows just how many mistakes umpires make

  • Written by Mark T. Williams, James E. Freeman Lecturer in Management, Boston University
Umpire Quinn Wolcott signals a strike out during an at-bat by Toronto Blue Jays' Josh Thole.AP Photo/Ted S. Warren

Baseball is back, and fans can anticipate another season of amazing catches, overpowering pitching, tape-measure home runs – and, yes, controversial calls that lead to blow-ups between umpires and players.

Home plate umpires are...

Read more: An analysis of nearly 4 million pitches shows just how many mistakes umpires make

For the 'political-infotainment-media complex,' the Mueller investigation was a gold mine

  • Written by Matthew Jordan, Associate Professor of Media Studies, Pennsylvania State University
In the first year of 'Russiagate' coverage, the combined profits from Fox News, MSNBC and CNN increased by 13 percent.Nick Lehr/The Conversation

Almost 60 years ago, President Dwight Eisenhower warned of a new force that fed off and profited from Cold War paranoia: the military-industrial complex.

Over the past couple of years, with Russia...

Read more: For the 'political-infotainment-media complex,' the Mueller investigation was a gold mine

The replication crisis is good for science

  • Written by Eric Loken, Assistant Professor of Educational Psychology, University of Connecticut
Some studies don't hold up to added scrutiny. PORTRAIT IMAGES ASIA BY NONWARIT/shutterstock.com

Science is in the midst of a crisis: A surprising fraction of published studies fail to replicate when the procedures are repeated.

For example, take the study, published in 2007, that claimed that tricky math problems requiring careful thought are...

Read more: The replication crisis is good for science

Don't blame Sharia for Islamic extremism -- blame colonialism

  • Written by Mark Fathi Massoud, Associate Professor, University of California, Santa Cruz

Warning that Islamic extremists want to impose fundamentalist religious rule in American communities, right-wing lawmakers in dozens of U.S. states have tried banning Sharia, an Arabic term often understood to mean Islamic law.

These political debates – which cite terrorism and political violence in the Middle East to argue that Islam is...

Read more: Don't blame Sharia for Islamic extremism -- blame colonialism

Catholic missionaries are evangelizing on college campuses and trying to bring back the 'nones'

  • Written by Katherine Dugan, Assistant Professor of Religion, Springfield College
A group of millennials are working to bring Catholic religious practice to American college campuses.Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Boston , CC BY

More than 20% of all adults and over a third of millennials in the United States are not affiliated with a religion. For at least a decade, this number has been on the rise.

Sexual abuse by clergy and a...

Read more: Catholic missionaries are evangelizing on college campuses and trying to bring back the 'nones'

More Articles ...

  1. Too many airplane systems rely on too few sensors
  2. In the name of 'amateurism,' college athletes make money for everyone except themselves
  3. Nixon and Reagan tried closing the border to pressure Mexico – here's what happened
  4. Climate research needs to change to help communities plan for the future
  5. Putin's plagiarism, fake Ukrainian degrees and other tales of world leaders accused of academic fraud
  6. It can take a village to feed hungry kids in schools
  7. Female astronauts: How performance products like space suits and bras are designed to pave the way for women's accomplishments
  8. An industrialized global food supply chain threatens human health – here's how to improve it
  9. Artificial intelligence can now emulate human behaviors – soon it will be dangerously good
  10. Congressional oversight is at the heart of America's democracy
  11. What parents should do to help students prepare for the first year of college
  12. Pet owners want to be masters, not servants – which is why we value dogs more than cats
  13. Calcium-munching bacteria could be a secret weapon against road salt eating away at concrete roads and bridges
  14. How unjust social structures help some but harm others
  15. Venezuela's power struggle reaches a tense stalemate, as human suffering deepens
  16. Voter ID laws don't seem to suppress minority votes – despite what many claim
  17. What causes greed and how can we deal with it?
  18. Want to understand accented speakers better? Practice, practice, practice
  19. Using computers to crack open centuries-old mathematical puzzles
  20. Genes and genealogy and making the most of famous relations
  21. As climate change erodes US coastlines, an invasive plant could become an ally
  22. The Trump administration's attempts to defund the Special Olympics, explained
  23. Pollen is getting worse, but you can make things better with these tips from an allergist
  24. What your pet's microchip has to do with the Mark of the Beast
  25. How Twitter and other social media can draw the US into foreign interventions
  26. New York gets serious about traffic with the first citywide US congestion pricing plan
  27. 3 times political conflict reshaped American mathematics
  28. Laws are chipping away at democracy around the world
  29. Kids exposed to flame retardant PBDE are at risk for lifelong liver or cardiovascular problems
  30. Did a censored female writer inspire Hemingway's famous style?
  31. So you want to tax the rich – here's which candidate's plan makes the most sense
  32. Brain scan evidence in criminal sentencing: A blessing and a curse
  33. Anti-vaxxers appear to be losing ground in the online vaccine debate
  34. 7 unexpected things that libraries offer besides books
  35. The unique vulnerabilities and needs of teen survivors of mass shootings
  36. Is it the end of 'statistical significance'? The battle to make science more uncertain
  37. As its ruling dynasty withers, Gabon – a US ally and guardian of French influence in Africa – ponders its future
  38. Atheism has been part of many Asian traditions for millennia
  39. Is doing your taxes making you crazy? Here's why it shouldn't
  40. Citizen science shows that climate change is rapidly reshaping Long Island Sound
  41. How state power regulators are making utilities account for the costs of climate change
  42. Rail travel is cleaner than driving or flying, but will Americans buy in?
  43. Microbes that live in fishes' slimy mucus coating could lead chemists to new antibiotic drugs
  44. Last of the giants: What killed off Madagascar's megafauna a thousand years ago?
  45. Data reveals the value of an assist in basketball
  46. What happens to rural and small-town Trump voters after Trump is gone?
  47. Medicaid work requirements: Is there a path forward that could help the poor, not harm them?
  48. Jessie Simmons: How a schoolteacher became an unsung hero of the civil rights movement
  49. For a flooded Midwest, climate forecasts offer little comfort
  50. Want to fix gerrymandering? Then the Supreme Court needs to listen to mathematicians