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Why the Fed has no choice but to keep cutting interest rates – if it wants to avoid a financial crisis

  • Written by Andreas Kern, Associate Teaching Professor, Georgetown University
This is what a financial crisis looks like on Wall Street.AP Photo/Richard Drew

The U.S. Federal Reserve is stuck between an apparently booming economy and a financial crisis that might be right around the corner.

That’s why its decision to cut interest rates by another quarter point on Oct. 30 – its third reduction in as many months &nda...

Read more: Why the Fed has no choice but to keep cutting interest rates – if it wants to avoid a financial...

What a boycott that never happened can reveal about blame, consumer psychology and the free-market system

  • Written by Brandon Reich, Assistant Professor of Marketing, Portland State University
United Airlines officials testify after United physically forced a customer off a Chicago flight.Reuters/Kevin Lamarque

Imagine that a passenger is asked to leave an overbooked flight. When the passenger refuses, saying he is needed for important work, he is physically assaulted and dragged off the flight.

Imagine that the American public directed...

Read more: What a boycott that never happened can reveal about blame, consumer psychology and the free-market...

Super-soldier T-cells fight cancer better after a transformational DNA delivery

  • Written by Andy Tay, Postdoctoral Research Fellow in Materials Science and Engineering, Stanford University
Delivering DNA to immune cells is the trickiest part of developing new gene-based therapies.SAK Design/SHutterstock.com

I enjoy online shopping. However, I often find myself fussing about the delivery options during checkout. This is because not all delivery services are equally efficient and stress-free.

This personal experience has also inspired...

Read more: Super-soldier T-cells fight cancer better after a transformational DNA delivery

Meditation apps might calm you -- but miss the point of Buddhist mindfulness

  • Written by Gregory Grieve, Head and Professor, Religious Studies Department, University of North Carolina – Greensboro
The market has been flooded with apps related to Buddhism and most of them claim to teach meditation.akiragiulia (pixabay.com)

In today’s stressful world, mindfulness – a type of popular spirituality that strives to focus on the present moment – promises to soothe away the anxiety and stress of modern life. The Internet is full of...

Read more: Meditation apps might calm you -- but miss the point of Buddhist mindfulness

Will killing Al-Baghdadi give Trump a boost in the polls? Probably, but it won't last

  • Written by John A. Tures, Professor of Political Science, LaGrange College

After former Islamic State Group leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi was killed in a U.S military action, speculation began on whether or not President Donald Trump would get a boost in public opinion surveys as a result.

My political science research with my students shows that presidents do enjoy a short-term poll boost after foreign policy raids and...

Read more: Will killing Al-Baghdadi give Trump a boost in the polls? Probably, but it won't last

Democrat or Republican, Americans are angry, frustrated and overwhelmed

  • Written by María Celeste Wagner, Ph.D. Candidate in Communication, University of Pennsylvania
More Americans say they now avoid the news altogether.Christo/Shutterstock.com

As the country looks ahead to President Donald Trump’s possible impeachment proceedings, as social scientists, we anticipate that not only will the Americans’ opinions be polarized, but so will their emotions.

Based on our research, we believe that...

Read more: Democrat or Republican, Americans are angry, frustrated and overwhelmed

At these championship-winning schools, coaches sacrifice time and money for players to beat the odds

  • Written by Rob Book, PhD Candidate, Lecturer, University of Southern Denmark
Coaches say dedication and sacrifice can help low-resource schools overcome the odds.www.shutterstock.com

When high schools compete against each other in sports, often the winner is not the school with the best talent, it’s the one with the most financial resources to help develop and support its athletes.

Perhaps nowhere is that stark reality...

Read more: At these championship-winning schools, coaches sacrifice time and money for players to beat the odds

'The Current War: Director's Cut' shows how the electric power system we take for granted came to be

  • Written by Jay Apt, Professor, Tepper School of Business, Engineering and Public Policy and Co-Director, Carnegie Mellon Electricity Industry Center, Carnegie Mellon University
Buildings at the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago, illuminated by George Westinghouse's alternating current.Field Museum Library/Wikipedia, CC BY

Many experts view the electric power grid as the greatest engineering achievement of the 20th century. But if Thomas Edison, inventor of the first commercial power plant, had had his way, the...

Read more: 'The Current War: Director's Cut' shows how the electric power system we take for granted came to be

Is it ethical for Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg to accept a $1 million prize? Yes, but it's hard to explain

  • Written by Steven Lubet, Williams Memorial Professor of Law, Northwestern University
Associate Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg in her Supreme Court chambers in Washington. AP/Cliff Owen, File

Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg will donate to charity the US$1 million Berggruen Prize for Culture and Philosophy she recently won.

The prize is given annually to a “thinker whose ideas are shaping human self-understanding to advance...

Read more: Is it ethical for Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg to accept a $1 million prize? Yes, but it's hard to...

What western states can learn from Native American wildfire management strategies

  • Written by Kari Marie Norgaard, Professor of Sociology and Environmental Studies, University of Oregon
Aja Conrad, the Karuk Tribe's workforce and internships coordinator, lights a prescribed fire in Orleans, California.Jenny Staats, CC BY-ND

For several months in 2019, it seemed wildfires wouldn’t rage across the West as they had in recent years. But then came the dry autumn and California’s Santa Ana and Diablo winds, which can drive...

Read more: What western states can learn from Native American wildfire management strategies

More Articles ...

  1. Rabies' horrifying symptoms inspired folktales of humans turned into werewolves, vampires and other monsters
  2. Is the US losing the artificial intelligence arms race?
  3. The EPA disbanded our clean air science panel. We met anyway – and found that particle pollution regulations aren't protecting public health
  4. Before Martin Luther, there was Erasmus – a Dutch theologian who paved the way for the Protestant Reformation
  5. Lebanon uprising unites people across faiths, defying deep sectarian divides
  6. Half a billion on Halloween pet costumes is latest sign of America's out-of-control consumerism
  7. Zombie flu: How the 1919 influenza pandemic fueled the rise of the living dead
  8. Why we love big, blood-curdling screams
  9. The scariest part of Halloween may be costume contact lenses, an eye doctor says
  10. A good night’s sleep, a long-sought dream for sleep apnea patients, may be in closer reach
  11. Why 'acting locally' is impossible in an interconnected world
  12. What Trump's travel ban really looks like, almost two years in
  13. Raising the minimum wage in restaurants could be a win for everyone
  14. Making employees feel welcome and valued can pay off – especially for nonprofits
  15. Better batteries are fueling a surge of electric scooters in India and China
  16. Day of the Dead: From Aztec goddess worship to modern Mexican celebration
  17. Argentina elects new president on promises to fix economy and unify a struggling nation
  18. David Lynch's chillingly prescient vision of modern America
  19. 3 global conditions – and a map – for saving nature and using it wisely
  20. Not all genes are necessary for survival – these species dropped extra genetic baggage
  21. WeWork debacle exposes why investing in a charismatic founder can be dangerous
  22. With anti-Semitism on the rise again, there are steps everyone can take to counter it
  23. What is 'dark money'? 5 questions answered
  24. Not all candy is candy – at least for tax purposes
  25. We mapped how food gets from farms to your home
  26. 5 milestones that created the internet, 50 years after the first network message
  27. Trump has upended the long history of US investment in Ukraine's democracy
  28. How steak became manly and salads became feminine
  29. The future of the US workforce will rely on AI, but don't count human workers out just yet
  30. As the climate changes, architects and engineers need to design buildings differently
  31. When Halloween became America's most dangerous holiday
  32. Leaf peep for science – I want your old photos of fall foliage
  33. How forceps permanently changed the way humans are born
  34. In Paraguay, rural communities facing deforestation see power – and profit – in a beloved drink
  35. Why the US has nuclear weapons in Turkey – and may try to put the bombs away
  36. Syrian refugees in Turkey are there to stay, at least for now
  37. ¿Vales educativos suponen una mejor educación? Nuevas investigaciones dejan interrogantes
  38. They're not all racist nut jobs – and 4 other observations about the patriot militia movement
  39. Analyzing online posts could help spot future mass shooters and terrorists
  40. Most witches are women, because witch hunts were all about persecuting the powerless
  41. 5 tips for surviving in an increasingly uncertain world
  42. Oil companies are thinking about a low-carbon future, but aren't making big investments in it yet
  43. Community colleges open the door to selective universities
  44. Sulfur pollution from coal and gas is insanely bad – but a new chemistry innovation could clean it up
  45. A new chemistry innovation could reduce smog, acid-rain and asthma-inducing pollution
  46. What is sex really for?
  47. Deportation to Syria could mean death for women, children and LGBTQ refugees in Turkey
  48. If you’re using 'millennial' as a meaningful measurement, you should probably stop
  49. Voting could be the problem with democracy
  50. Have we become too paranoid about mass shootings?