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5 things to know about Guantanamo Bay on its 115th birthday

  • Written by Jana Lipman, Associate Professor of History, Tulane University

The naval base at Guantanamo Bay is quietly commemorating its 115th anniversary.

On Dec. 10, 1903, the United States established its first overseas military base on 45 square miles of Cuban territory.

Today, the base at Guantanamo Bay is infamously associated with images of Muslim detainees wearing orange jumpsuits – alleged terrorists...

Read more: 5 things to know about Guantanamo Bay on its 115th birthday

The Trump administration is scrapping a collaborative sage grouse protection plan to expand oil and gas drilling

  • Written by John Freemuth, Cecil D. Andrus Endowed Chair for Environment and Public Lands and University Distinguished Professor, Boise State University
Female sage grouse at the Seedskadee National Wildlife Refuge, Wyoming.USFWS/Tom Koerner, CC BY

The Trump administration has released plans to open up nine million acres of sage grouse habitat in six western states to oil and gas drilling. This initiative dramatically cuts back an elaborate plan developed under the Obama administration to steer...

Read more: The Trump administration is scrapping a collaborative sage grouse protection plan to expand oil...

Those designer babies everyone is freaking out about – it's not likely to happen

  • Written by A Cecile JW Janssens, Research Professor of Epidemiology, Emory University
Babies to order. Andrew crotty/Shutterstock.com

When Adam Nash was still an embryo, living in a dish in the lab, scientists tested his DNA to make sure it was free of Fanconi anemia, the rare inherited blood disease from which his sister Molly suffered. They also checked his DNA for a marker that would reveal whether he shared the same tissue type....

Read more: Those designer babies everyone is freaking out about – it's not likely to happen

What French populists from the '50s can teach us about the 'yellow vests' roiling Paris today

  • Written by Charles Hankla, Associate Professor of Political Science, Georgia State University
Demonstrators march down Paris' Champs-Elysees Dec. 8.AP Photo/Michel Euler

The populist protests roiling France remind me of a similar anti-tax revolt that occurred in Paris nearly 65 years ago.

In January 1955, tens of thousands of French men and women gathered at the Porte de Versailles in Paris to express their disgust for the elites who had...

Read more: What French populists from the '50s can teach us about the 'yellow vests' roiling Paris today

Saudi Arabia is allying with Russia to shore up oil prices as OPEC's power wanes

  • Written by Gregory Brew, Postdoctoral Fellow, Center for Presidential History, Southern Methodist University
Saudi Minister of Energy, Industry and Mineral Resources Khalid Al-FalihAP Photo/Ronald Zak

The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries likes to look united.

That’s evident when OPEC leaders meet in Vienna at the end of each year to decide how much oil its members will aim to produce the next year. There is always a show of...

Read more: Saudi Arabia is allying with Russia to shore up oil prices as OPEC's power wanes

John Chau may have been influenced by past evangelical missions and their belief in power of faith

  • Written by William Svelmoe, Professor of History, Saint Mary's College
What might have motivated the young missionary killed on a remote island in India?AP Photo/Sarah Prince

The recent killing of a 26-year-old U.S. missionary, John Allen Chau, on a remote island in India has raised many questions about global evangelical Protestant missions.

Chau was on a personal mission to convert the Sentinelese, a protected tribe...

Read more: John Chau may have been influenced by past evangelical missions and their belief in power of faith

Nominating a crony, loyalist or old buddy for attorney general is a US presidential tradition

  • Written by Austin Sarat, Professor of Jurisprudence and Political Science, Amherst College
Sen. Jeff Sessions and Donald Trump on the presidential campaign trail, February 2016.AP/John Bazemore

With President Donald Trump’s announcement that he would nominate former Attorney General William P. Barr to fill the position again, Trump chose a prominent Republican lawyer with extensive government experience to run the Justice...

Read more: Nominating a crony, loyalist or old buddy for attorney general is a US presidential tradition

Mass protests in Colombia mar president's first 100 days but reveal a nation marching toward peace

  • Written by Fabio Andres Diaz, Researcher on Conflict, Peace and Development, International Institute of Social Studies
University students ask for a higher budget for public higher education.AP Photo/Fernando Vergara

Ivan Duque has only been Colombia’s president since August, but already his government is in crisis.

The country that has been gripped by near-constant protest since the 42-year-old conservative took power. But the mass demonstrations that...

Read more: Mass protests in Colombia mar president's first 100 days but reveal a nation marching toward peace

Beware of natural supplements for sex gain and weight loss

  • Written by C. Michael White, Professor and Head of the Department of Pharmacy Practice, University of Connecticut
Natural supplements may be popular, but they can have dangerous side effects when they include prescription drugs.Oleksandr Zamuruiev/Shutterstock.com

Many consumers consider dietary supplements to be natural and, therefore, safe. In fact, the Council for Responsible Nutrition reported in 2017 that 87 percent of U.S. consumers have confidence that...

Read more: Beware of natural supplements for sex gain and weight loss

Fight for federal right to education takes a new turn

  • Written by Derek W. Black, Professor of Law, University of South Carolina
The nation's founders saw education as key to self-rule.Joseph Sohm/www.shutterstock.com

A new fight to secure a federal constitutional right to education is spreading across the country. This fight has been a long time coming and is now suddenly at full steam.

In 1973, plaintiffs in San Antonio Independent School District v. Rodriguez argued that...

Read more: Fight for federal right to education takes a new turn

More Articles ...

  1. I used facial recognition technology on birds
  2. Hunting for rare isotopes: The mysterious radioactive atomic nuclei that will be in tomorrow's technology
  3. 3 ways Facebook and other social media companies could clean up their acts – if they wanted to
  4. Could a recession be just around the corner?
  5. Zika y embarazo: análisis de sangre prenatal podría predecir malformaciones fetales
  6. Syria may be using chemical weapons against its citizens again – here's how international law has changed to help countries intervene
  7. Why a 14th-century mystic appeals to today's 'spiritual but not religious' Americans
  8. We've been studying a glacier in Peru for 14 years – and it may reach the point of no return in the next 30
  9. From pledges to action: Cities need to show their climate progress with hard data
  10. The John Birch Society is still influencing American politics, 60 years after its founding
  11. The web really isn't worldwide – every country has different access
  12. Countering misinformation about flu vaccine is harder than it seems
  13. Climate change resilience could save trillions in the long run – but finding billions now to pay for it is the hard part
  14. No president should assume office without a 'fitness for duty' exam
  15. La protección estricta del Amazonas fomenta la productividad agrícola en Brasil
  16. Medicaid work requirements: Where do they stand after the blue wave?
  17. Fecal microbiome transplantation shows promise in treating colitis
  18. What Hanukkah's portrayal in pop culture means to American Jews
  19. Why the rise of populist nationalist leaders rewrites global climate talks
  20. Stool transplantation shows promise treating cancer therapy side effect
  21. We asked artificial intelligence to analyze a graphic novel – and found both limits and new insights
  22. George H.W. Bush's overlooked legacy in space exploration
  23. WhatsApp skewed Brazilian election, proving social media's danger to democracy
  24. Chicago's Safe Passage program costs a lot, but it may provide students safer routes to school
  25. El acceso universal a Internet en México reduciría la pobreza
  26. Opening up mosquito research labs to the community
  27. White nationalist groups are really street gangs, and law enforcement needs to treat them that way
  28. What public universities must do to regain public support
  29. Opening up research labs with modified mosquitoes to the community
  30. Switching to electric vehicles could save the US billions, but timing is everything
  31. Why the next two years are critical for the Paris climate deal's survival
  32. I dig through archives to unearth hidden stories from African-American history
  33. CRISPR babies and other ethical missteps in science threaten China's global standing
  34. Spending too much time on your phone? Behavioral science has an app for that
  35. Criticism of Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez's clothes echoes attacks against early female labor activists
  36. Este activista alemán luchó por los derechos gay y trans hace cien años
  37. Scientist at work: To take atomic-scale pictures of tiny crystals, use a huge, kilometer-long synchrotron
  38. George H.W. Bush laid the foundation for education reform
  39. How where you're born influences the person you become
  40. Deepwater corals thrive at the bottom of the ocean, but can't escape human impacts
  41. US-China trade war truce: 2 reasons why it's unlikely to last
  42. 1 in 4 government officials accused of sexual misconduct in the #MeToo era is still in office today
  43. The big lessons of political advertising in 2018
  44. YouTube, persuasion and genetically engineered children
  45. CRISPR babies raise an uncomfortable reality – abiding by scientific standards doesn't guarantee ethical research
  46. Screening the human future: YouTube, persuasion and genetically engineered children
  47. George H.W. Bush understood that markets and the environment weren't enemies
  48. Climate change is shrinking winter snowpack, which harms Northeast forests year-round
  49. How Hanukkah came to America
  50. Why we'll miss George H.W. Bush, America's last foreign policy president