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Basic income after automation? That’s not how capitalism works!

  • Written by Katharina Nieswandt, Assistant Professor of Philosophy, Concordia University
imageIs handing out cash the solution? To what problem?Hand holding money via shutterstock.com

Philosophers, economists and other academics have long discussed the idea of “basic income” – an unconditional monthly check from the government to every citizen, in an amount at least high enough to cover all basic necessities. Recently,...

Read more: Basic income after automation? That’s not how capitalism works!

How Wells Fargo encouraged employees to commit fraud

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

Over the course of four years, at least 5,000 Wells Fargo employees opened more than a million fake bank and credit card accounts on behalf of unwitting customers.

Although many bank accounts were deemed “empty” and closed automatically, employees sometimes transferred customer funds to the new accounts, triggering overdraft fees and...

Read more: How Wells Fargo encouraged employees to commit fraud

A military view on climate change: It's eroding our national security and we should prepare for it

  • Written by David Titley, Professor of Practice in Meteorology & Director Center for Solutions to Weather and Climate Risk, Adjunct Senior Fellow, Center for New American Security, Pennsylvania State University
imageThe guided missile destroyer USS Barry deploys to sea from Naval Station Norfolk ahead of Hurricane Sandy in 2012. U.S. Navy/Flickr

In this presidential election year we have heard much about some issues, such as immigration and trade, and less about others. For example, climate change was discussed for an estimated 82 seconds in the first...

Read more: A military view on climate change: It's eroding our national security and we should prepare for it

Can great apes read your mind?

  • Written by Christopher Krupenye, Postdoctoral Researcher in Developmental and Comparative Psychology, Max Planck Institute
imageBonobo Jasongo at Leipzig Zoo has a hunch about what you're thinking.MPI-EVA, CC BY-ND

One of the things that defines humans most is our ability to read others’ minds – that is, to make inferences about what others are thinking. To build or maintain relationships, we offer gifts and services – not arbitrarily, but with the...

Read more: Can great apes read your mind?

Clinton and Trump need to address police violence in debate

  • Written by Keisha N. Blain, Assistant Professor of History, University of Iowa

On Oct. 9, 2016, Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump will come together for the second presidential debate – taking the stage only eight miles from Ferguson, Missouri.

Since the police shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson on Aug. 9, 2014, the greater St. Louis area has been the epicenter of a national discussion – sometimes loud, often...

Read more: Clinton and Trump need to address police violence in debate

The opioid epidemic: Six essential reads

  • Written by Jessie Schanzle, Desk Editor, Health and Medicine, The Conversation
imageHow did we get here?Pills image via www.shutterstock.com.

Editor’s note: The following is a roundup of archival stories related to opioids.

More people died from drug overdose in 2014 than in any other year, and six in 10 of those deaths involved an opioid, such as a painkiller or heroin.

Hillary Clinton has proposed a US$10 billion plan to...

Read more: The opioid epidemic: Six essential reads

Dear Donald Trump: I treat combat veterans with PTSD, and they are not weak

  • Written by Joan Cook, Associate Professor of Psychiatry, Yale University

Mr. Trump, there’s someone I’d like you to meet.

Well, not one person per se, but the thousands of veterans I’ve had the privilege to work with as a clinical psychologist over the past 20 years. They’ve served this country proudly – shouldering the responsibilities of the world while others went to college or into...

Read more: Dear Donald Trump: I treat combat veterans with PTSD, and they are not weak

Terrorism fallout shelters: Is it time to resurrect nuclear civil defense?

  • Written by Timothy J. Jorgensen, Director of the Health Physics and Radiation Protection Graduate Program and Associate Professor of Radiation Medicine, Georgetown University
imageCould we use Cold War fallout shelters?pigmonkey/flickr, CC BY-SA

Fifty-five years ago, on Oct. 6, 1961, President John F. Kennedy advised Americans to build an underground protective room, commonly known as a “fallout shelter,” in their homes.

At that time – the middle of the Cold War – the U.S. feared that a nuclear attack...

Read more: Terrorism fallout shelters: Is it time to resurrect nuclear civil defense?

Hurricane Matthew approaches the eastern US: Six essential reads

  • Written by Martin LaMonica, Deputy Editor, Environment & Energy Editor, The Conversation

Editor’s note: The following is a roundup of stories related to hurricanes and storms.

Mandatory evacuations have begun in coastal areas of Florida and other southern states as Hurricane Matthew continues its slow ascent from Haiti and Cuba toward the mainland U.S.

Even as we wait to see the effects from this category 4 hurricane, it’s...

Read more: Hurricane Matthew approaches the eastern US: Six essential reads

More Articles ...

  1. What displaced Colombians living abroad think about the peace efforts
  2. What the Trump Foundation controversies reveal about the candidate and his business acumen
  3. The Nobel Prize for Physics goes to topology – and mathematicians applaud
  4. Why one-size-fits-all approach does not work for teacher quality
  5. In parts of the world, bride price encourages parents to educate daughters
  6. Biofuels turn out to be a climate mistake – here's why
  7. How saying you're multiracial changes the way people see you
  8. Should NSA and Cyber Command have separate leadership?
  9. Tired of getting stuck with needles? Ask your doctor to just say 'once.'
  10. Kaine vs. Pence: Two key moments from the debate
  11. Before Nobels: Gifts to and from rich patrons were early science's currency
  12. What Twitter's streaming experiment means for the future of live TV
  13. As Brazil tilts rightward, Lula's leftist legacy of lifting the poor is at risk
  14. Why insurance companies control your medical care
  15. Science is key to U.S. standing, but presidential candidates largely ignore it
  16. The irony of the Anthropocene: People dominate a planet beyond our control
  17. Why the Kaine vs. Pence vice presidential debate matters
  18. Is changing one's race a sign of mental health problems?
  19. What it means to be black in the American educational system
  20. We're failing to solve the world's 'wicked problems.' Here's a better approach
  21. Can Trump create millions of jobs? Don't bet on it
  22. Why Bruce Springsteen's depression revelation matters
  23. Why did Yahoo take so long to disclose its massive security breach?
  24. How to vote for president when you don't like the candidates
  25. Want to understand your child’s test scores? Here’s what to ignore
  26. How trade and immigration are colliding with our two-party system
  27. The curious origin of the double-conk theory for curing amnesia
  28. Déjà vu: Positive train control could have prevented Hoboken accident as officials run out of track on excuses
  29. Putin’s cyber play: What are all these Russian hackers up to?
  30. Why the pundits are wrong about Hillary Clinton dominating the debate
  31. Why dementia burden may be less than feared
  32. The psychology behind why clowns creep us out
  33. Making college affordable: Eight essential reads
  34. The U.S. economy is in desperate need of a strong dose of fiscal penicillin
  35. Climate change and the presidential race: Lessons from the Reagan years
  36. Underwater robots help scientists see where marine larvae go and how they get there
  37. If you want to publish a truly subversive novel, have a main character who's fat
  38. Alexander Hamilton and the new Supreme Court term
  39. Feed a virus but starve bacteria? When you're sick, it may really matter
  40. Why America needs the virtues of humility
  41. What drives lone offenders?
  42. Group work gets kids more engaged in STEM
  43. When did Che Guevara become CEO? The roots of the new corporate activism
  44. Four quotes from the first Clinton-Trump debate, explained
  45. Will driving your own car become the socially unacceptable public health risk smoking is today?
  46. Addicted to oil: US gasoline consumption is higher than ever
  47. Removing gender bias from algorithms
  48. Why a Zika vaccine is a long way off
  49. Trump, Clinton and the future of global democracy
  50. What's behind America's insistence on instilling grit in kids?