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With the Supreme Court's pending sports gambling decision, states are already prepping for legalization

  • Written by Jennifer Roberts, Adjunct Professor of Law, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
A screen shows a baseball game next to various betting lines at the Westgate Superbook in Las Vegas, Nevada.John Locher/AP Photo

The gambling world is waiting with bated breath for the United States Supreme Court decision that could result in an expansion of sports betting. The decision could be announced anytime between today and the end of June.

Si...

Read more: With the Supreme Court's pending sports gambling decision, states are already prepping for...

George H. W. Bush has sepsis - why is it so dangerous?

  • Written by Hallie Prescott, Assistant Professor in Internal Medicine, University of Michigan
Former Presidents George W. Bush and George H.W. Bush attend Barbara Bush's funeral service.AP Photo/David J. Phillip

Former president George H.W. Bush was hospitalized April 21 with sepsis, a life-threatening condition caused by complications of the body fighting back against an infection. The former fighter pilot was released from an intensive...

Read more: George H. W. Bush has sepsis - why is it so dangerous?

Internet openness pits collaborative history against competitive future

  • Written by Lorenzo De Carli, Assistant Professor of Computer Science, Colorado State University
Two views of the internet collide in the net neutrality debate.The Conversation composite from Malyugin and AAR Studios/Shutterstock.com, CC BY-ND

The debate about how open the internet should be to free expression – and how much companies should be able to restrict, or charge for, communication speeds – boils down to a conflict between...

Read more: Internet openness pits collaborative history against competitive future

The internet is designed for corporations, not people

  • Written by Gordon Hull, Associate Professor of Philosophy, Director of Center for Professional and Applied Ethics, University of North Carolina – Charlotte
Conversations on Facebook ethics are part of a bigger conversation about information architecture.AP Photo/Alastair Grant

Urban spaces are often designed to be subtly hostile to certain uses. Think about, for example, the seat partitions on bus terminal benches that make it harder for the homeless to sleep there or the decorative leaves on railings...

Read more: The internet is designed for corporations, not people

Want to understand gun owners? Watch their videos

  • Written by Connie Hassett-Walker, Associate Professor of Criminal Justice, Kean University

It was an ordinary day in 2011, when I found myself watching a YouTube video of a gun owner making a semi-automatic rifle discharge bullets rapidly, as if it were an automatic weapon.

My husband, a gun owner, watched firearms videos like this one. But I had never seen one. Intrigued, I sat down on the couch to absorb the imagery.

Hooking his thumb...

Read more: Want to understand gun owners? Watch their videos

As the Royal Wedding approaches, what can one of the world’s greatest novels teach us about marriage?

  • Written by Richard Gunderman, Chancellor's Professor of Medicine, Liberal Arts, and Philanthropy, Indiana University
In Leo Tolstoy's 'Anna Karenina,' each character approaches marriage with a different set of expectations – and many succumb to disappointment.Internet Archive Book Images

You can tell a lot about our culture by the way we talk about marriage. Take the upcoming exchange of vows between Meghan Markle and Prince Harry. Press coverage will focus...

Read more: As the Royal Wedding approaches, what can one of the world’s greatest novels teach us about...

We calculated how much money trees save for your city

  • Written by Theodore Endreny, Professor of Water Resources & Ecological Engineering, State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry
For a megacity, Tokyo is rich in trees.gillyberlin/flickr, CC BY-SA

Megacities are on the rise. There are currently 47 such areas around the globe, each housing more than 10 million residents.

More than half the global population now lives in urban areas, comprising about 3 percent of the Earth. The ecological footprint of this growth is vast and...

Read more: We calculated how much money trees save for your city

Pompeo confirmation makes Mideast war more likely

  • Written by Gregory Aftandilian, Lecturer, Pardee School of Global Studies, Boston University

The United States Senate has confirmed CIA director Mike Pompeo, the hawkish former Kansas congressman, as secretary of state. He replaces Rex Tillerson, who was fired via Twitter on March 13.

As a former Middle East analyst at the State Department, I believe that having Pompeo as America’s top diplomat will endanger the Iran nuclear deal.

In...

Read more: Pompeo confirmation makes Mideast war more likely

3 reasons why teachers are striking right now

  • Written by Deana Rohlinger, Professor of Sociology, Florida State University
Teachers and students wave to motorists in Peoria, Ariz.AP Photo/Matt York

Teachers from Arizona and Colorado are joining teachers in Oklahoma and Kentucky on the picket line.

These teacher strikes will likely intensify the debate among elected officials over where education fits in state budget priorities. They may also prompt Americans to consider...

Read more: 3 reasons why teachers are striking right now

Armenia rejects the 'politics of eternity'

  • Written by Chase Johnson, Research Associate, Frank Church Institute, Boise State University School of Public Service , Boise State University
Russian President Vladimir Putin and Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan in 2017.AP/Alexei Druzhinin, Sputnik, Kremlin Pool Photo

Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia, three countries in the South Caucasus once ruled by the former Soviet Union, still operate in the shadow of what is now called Russia.

The three states are located between Iran and Turkey on...

Read more: Armenia rejects the 'politics of eternity'

More Articles ...

  1. Senate confirmation: The grilling can be grueling
  2. VA nominee debacle may distract from the agency's 3 major problems
  3. Why cities are becoming reluctant to host the World Cup and other big events
  4. An addiction researcher shares 6 strategies to address the opioid epidemic
  5. How transshipment may undercut Trump's tariffs
  6. Melting Arctic sends a message: Climate change is here in a big way
  7. Mother's milk holds the key to unlocking an evolutionary mystery from the last ice age
  8. When college tuition goes up, campus diversity goes down
  9. Female firefighters defy old ideas of who can be an American hero
  10. Invoking noble coal miners is a mainstay of American politics
  11. Beaches are becoming safer for baby sea turtles, but threats await them in the ocean
  12. Immigration policies can make the difference between life and death for newborn US children
  13. Defending hospitals against life-threatening cyberattacks
  14. How the pretzel went from soft to hard – and other little-known facts about one of the world's favorite snacks
  15. How live liver transplants could save thousands of lives
  16. Why this conservative bastion chose a liberal evangelical icon for its commencement speech
  17. Kids of color get kicked out of school at higher rates – here's how to stop it
  18. Why it's so hard for doctors to understand your pain
  19. Fake drugs are one reason malaria still kills so many
  20. What Comey learned from theologian Reinhold Niebuhr about ethical leadership
  21. Self-driving cars and humans face inevitable collisions
  22. Why are some _E. coli_ deadly while others live peacefully within our bodies?
  23. States are favoring school choice at a steep cost to public education
  24. Lynching memorial shows women were victims, too
  25. Lynching memorial will show that women were victims, too
  26. Argentina's abortion legalization debate ignites soul searching on women's rights
  27. Argentinos empiezan a contemplar los derechos de la mujer, comenzando con el aborto
  28. Women in tech suffer because of American myth of meritocracy
  29. Why genetics makes some people more vulnerable to opioid addiction – and protects others
  30. Rap music's path from pariah to Pulitzer
  31. Global timber trafficking harms forests and costs billions of dollars – here's how to curb it
  32. Why does a president demand loyalty from people who work for him?
  33. Aneurysm strikes baseball pitcher, but why? A neurosurgeon explains the mysterious condition
  34. How images change our race bias
  35. Delivering VR in perfect focus with nanostructure meta-lenses
  36. Wind energy's swift growth, explained
  37. Should you insure that trip or TV? Here's what an economist would do
  38. The census will officially count same-sex couples for the first time ever – but that's not enough
  39. Macron-Trump summit has high stakes for France's embattled leader
  40. Comey memos follow tradition of J. Edgar Hoover keeping notes on presidents
  41. What Greek tragedy illuminates about James Comey
  42. Climate change may scuttle Caribbean's post-hurricane plans for a renewable energy boom
  43. Is Earth's ozone layer still at risk? 5 questions answered
  44. Market forces are driving a clean energy revolution in the US
  45. Trump's exports-good, imports-bad trade policy, debunked by an economist
  46. Harvard sexual harassment case scars the institution as well as victims
  47. As marijuana goes mainstream, what's happening to the way we talk about weed?
  48. Why marijuana fans should not see approval for epilepsy drug as a win for weed
  49. Democratic Party's pluralism is both a strength and weakness
  50. Housing discrimination thrives 50 years after Fair Housing Act tried to end it