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Rural America, already hurting, could be most harmed by Trump's promise to repeal Obamacare

  • Written by Margaret Greenwood-Ericksen, National Clinician Scholar, Clinical Lecturer, Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Michigan Medical School, University of Michigan
imageA hospital worker removing a plaque from Sac-Osage Hospital, which closed its doors in 2015.Orlin Wagner/AP

The health of rural America is failing, and a repeal of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) without adequate replacement could prove disastrous. A December, 2016 report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention showed that for the first...

Read more: Rural America, already hurting, could be most harmed by Trump's promise to repeal Obamacare

Why the legacy of Shakers will endure

  • Written by Joanne M. Pierce, Professor of Religious Studies, College of the Holy Cross
imageSister Frances Carr, left, and Brother Arnold Hadd of the Shaker Village sing during a rehearsal on Sept. 13, 1995. AP Photo/Adam Nadel

On Monday, Jan. 2, Shaker Sister Frances Carr died at the age of 89. She had been a Shaker for almost 80 years and passed away at the Shaker community at Sabbathday Lake in Maine.

Through my own research interest...

Read more: Why the legacy of Shakers will endure

Using electricity, not molecules, to switch cells on and off

  • Written by William Bentley, Director, Robert E. Fischell Institute for Biomedical Devices, University of Maryland
imageWill your cellphone be able to communicate with bacteria in your body?Bacteria image via www.shutterstock.com.

Microelectronics has transformed our lives. Cellphones, earbuds, pacemakers, defibrillators – all these and more rely on microelectronics’ very small electronic designs and components. Microelectronics has changed the way we...

Read more: Using electricity, not molecules, to switch cells on and off

One way Trump is different from European nationalists

  • Written by Brian Porter-Szücs, Professor of History, University of Michigan

When comparing Europe and America, we frequently overlook differences that hide inside similarities.

There is no doubt that President-elect Donald Trump is surfing the same wave as European authoritarian nationalists like Russia’s Vladimir Putin, Hungary’s Viktor Orbán, France’s Marine Le Pen, Turkey’s Recep...

Read more: One way Trump is different from European nationalists

Trump snubs ethical norms because we've forgotten why they matter

  • Written by Elizabeth C. Tippett, Assistant Professor, School of Law, University of Oregon

Let’s be honest. Conflicts of interest are boring.

The president-elect knows this. In fact, he’s banking on it.

Instead of addressing his conflicts in a meaningful way at his press conference last week, Trump pointed to a stack of folders behind him. He then turned the press conference over to a lawyer, who talked about Trump’s...

Read more: Trump snubs ethical norms because we've forgotten why they matter

How progressives can still make change in the age of Trump

  • Written by Sandra Waddock, Galligan Chair of Strategy and Carroll School Scholar of Corporate Responsibility, Boston College

Things are not looking good for American progressives.

President-elect Donald Trump is poised to put in place many regressive policies in his quest to “make America great again” that are fundamentally at odds with what are generally considered progressive values such as transparency, inclusiveness, equity, fairness and dignity for all....

Read more: How progressives can still make change in the age of Trump

Can marijuana treat MS symptoms? It's hard for researchers to find out

  • Written by Thorsten Rudroff, Assistant Professor and Director of Integrative Neurophysiology Lab, Colorado State University
imageA woman with MS leaves a licensed medical cannabis dispensary in Illinois. AP Photo/Seth Perlman

An estimated 400,000 Americans are currently living with multiple sclerosis, an autoimmune disease where the body’s immune cells attack a fatty substance called myelin in the nerves. Common symptoms are gait and balance disorders, cognitive...

Read more: Can marijuana treat MS symptoms? It's hard for researchers to find out

Detecting methane leaks with infrared cameras: They're fast, but are they effective?

  • Written by Arvind P. Ravikumar, Post-doctoral Fellow: Energy systems analysis and energy policy, Stanford University
imageDamage from a 2010 explosion and fire in San Bruno, California, caused by a leaking natural gas pipeline. The disaster killed eight people.Thomas Hawk/Flickr, CC BY-NC

Methane is the major component of natural gas, which heats our homes and recently surpassed coal as the top fuel for generating electricity in the United States. But methane is also...

Read more: Detecting methane leaks with infrared cameras: They're fast, but are they effective?

Military honor in the age of Trump

  • Written by Andrew Bell, Assistant Professor of International Studies, Indiana University, Bloomington

What impact can Donald Trump have on the U.S. military? A great deal, as I learned while observing combat operations up close in Afghanistan.

In March 2009, I stood in a U.S. military command center at Bagram Airfield and watched what appeared to be the last moments of an Afghan farmer’s life.

U.S. soldiers had targeted a Taliban position for...

Read more: Military honor in the age of Trump

More Articles ...

  1. What does Trump’s election mean for digital freedom of speech?
  2. Can Ryan Zinke balance conservation and development as interior secretary?
  3. What shaped King's prophetic vision?
  4. Obama's legacy in science, technology and innovation
  5. Helping universities combat depression with mobile technology
  6. Electroconvulsive therapy: A history of controversy, but also of help
  7. To honor Dr. King, pediatricians offer four tips to teach kindness to kids
  8. In racially divided times, Obama's farewell address swings for the middle
  9. Influenza: The search for a universal vaccine
  10. Does your smartphone make you less likely to trust others?
  11. How timekeeping software helps companies nickel and dime their workers
  12. Free college explained in a global context
  13. Playing it safe: A brief history of lip-syncing
  14. Faster approval for drugs and medical devices under the 21st Century Cures Act raises concerns for patient safety
  15. Story on gifted children and screen violence removed
  16. Fighting online trolls with bots
  17. Getting a scientific message across means taking human nature into account
  18. What's missing in the teaching of Islam
  19. Why we need to keep an eye on whether a blood infection in cattle is linked to breast cancer in humans
  20. New US seafood rule shows global trade and conservation can work together
  21. A same-sex marriage ceremony in... Renaissance Rome?
  22. Will the 'Trump rally' continue through 2017?
  23. Four key times presidential nominees failed to gain Senate confirmation
  24. Evidence from states shows why Trump’s brand of Carrier-style dealmaking won't work
  25. How bucking climate change accord would hinder fight against HIV/AIDS
  26. Rule by the lowest common denominator? It's baked into democracy's design
  27. Exxon's Rex Tillerson and the rise of Big Oil in American politics
  28. Winning over Congress' key members would spell legislative victory for President Trump
  29. Uncertainty in blood supply chains creating challenges for industry
  30. Who is Betsy DeVos?
  31. Searching deep and dark: Building a Google for the less visible parts of the web
  32. Inside the coal industry's rhetorical playbook
  33. How speeding up payments to small businesses creates jobs
  34. Chicago 1969: When Black Panthers aligned with Confederate-flag-wielding, working-class whites
  35. Static electricity's tiny sparks
  36. Is Google's eagerness to answer questions promoting more falsehood online?
  37. Does nonpartisan journalism have a future?
  38. Want to challenge Trump on immigration? Try a strategy from the antebellum South
  39. How ride-hailing apps like Uber continue cab industry's history of racial discrimination
  40. Why is it so hard to close the racial health gap in the US?
  41. Five reasons why the North Dakota pipeline fight will continue in 2017
  42. The challenge facing libraries in an era of fake news
  43. Attackers can make it impossible to dial 911
  44. Is hunting moral? A philosopher unpacks the question
  45. New study: Did America's growing diversity make voters more xenophobic?
  46. Dengue virus antibodies may worsen a Zika infection
  47. The factories of the past are turning into the data centers of the future
  48. How does a US president settle on his science policy?
  49. How the Berlin Christmas market terror attack affects Chancellor Merkel and Europe
  50. Momentum grows for ocean preserves. How well do they work?