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US relationship with Mexico more bitter than sweet under Trump

  • Written by Christopher Rudolph, Associate Professor of International Relations, American University School of International Service
imageA protestor burns a figure representing Trump outside the U.S. Embassy in Mexico City.AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell

A war of words has erupted between the United States and Mexico over President Donald Trump’s executive order to build a wall along the border, and his insistence that Mexico foot the bill. When the proposal was first announced...

Read more: US relationship with Mexico more bitter than sweet under Trump

Berkeley, Milo Yiannopoulos and the lessons of free speech

  • Written by Erwin Chemerinsky, Dean of the School of Law, University of California, Irvine
imageProtestors at the University of California, Berkeley campus oppose the appearance of Breitbart News editor Milo Yiannopoulos.AP Photo/Ben Margot

Recent events at the University of California, Berkeley reflect the enormous difficulties that campuses can face when trying to ensure freedom of speech while, at the same time, meeting their duty to...

Read more: Berkeley, Milo Yiannopoulos and the lessons of free speech

Can Facebook be sued for live-streaming suicides?

  • Written by Shontavia Johnson, Professor of Intellectual Property Law, Drake University
imagenshepard/flickr, CC BY-NC-ND

In January, two different suicides were streamed using Facebook Live, a service that allows Facebook users to create and broadcast real-time videos to their followers. At the end of the month, a third was streamed live using a different service and is still publicly available on Facebook.

On January 22, a 14-year-old...

Read more: Can Facebook be sued for live-streaming suicides?

The stress of sitting in traffic can lead to more crime

  • Written by Louis-Philippe Beland, Assistant Professor of Economics, Louisiana State University
imageTraffic in Los Angelesrespres/flickr, CC BY

Society pays a heavy price for traffic. It leads to lost time, more pollution and increased spending on gasoline.

In metropolitan areas, road congestion in 2012 led consumers to waste 2.9 billion gallons of fuel and spend 5.5 billion hours sitting in traffic. According to the Texas A&M Transportation...

Read more: The stress of sitting in traffic can lead to more crime

What is the true meaning of mercy?

  • Written by Mathew Schmalz, Associate Professor of Religion, College of the Holy Cross
imageMercy mattersRomel, CC BY-NC-ND

The world seems to be witnessing increasing levels of violence, fear and hatred that challenge us each day. There are ongoing debates about how or whether to welcome immigrants and refugees to the United States; news headlines remind us about the plight of Syria and about the horrors of the Islamic State.

In such...

Read more: What is the true meaning of mercy?

Syrian refugees 'detrimental' to Americans? The numbers tell a different story

  • Written by Jeffrey H. Cohen, Professor of Anthropology, The Ohio State University

President Donald Trump wants to close the door on Syrian refugees, barring them indefinitely from settling in the U.S.

In an executive order signed on Jan. 27, the president wrote:

“I hereby proclaim that the entry of nationals of Syria as refugees is detrimental to the interests of the United States and thus suspend any such entry until...

Read more: Syrian refugees 'detrimental' to Americans? The numbers tell a different story

Can a dying patient be a healthy person?

  • Written by Richard Gunderman, Chancellor's Professor of Medicine, Liberal Arts, and Philanthropy, Indiana University
imageOlder woman in hospital with man by her side. Via Shutterstock.From www.shutterstock.comr

The news was bad. Mimi, a woman in her early 80s, had been undergoing treatment for lymphoma. Her husband was being treated for bladder cancer. Recently, she developed chest pain, and a biopsy showed that she had developed a secondary tumor of the pleura,...

Read more: Can a dying patient be a healthy person?

Who will pay for Trump’s 'big, beautiful' wall?

  • Written by Wayne Cornelius, Professor of Political Science and U.S.-Mexican Relations, University of California, San Diego
imageA wall to nowhere?Mexico border via www.shutterstock.com

President Donald Trump’s scheme to build a “big, beautiful, impenetrable” wall on the southwestern border – and force Mexico to pay for it – is wildly unrealistic and won’t be effective in keeping undocumented migrants out.

There are good reasons to be so...

Read more: Who will pay for Trump’s 'big, beautiful' wall?

How Obama's presidential campaign changed how Americans view black candidates

  • Written by Evelyn M. Simien, Associate Professor of Political Science and Africana Studies, University of Connecticut
imageBarack Obama at a campaign stop in 2007.AP Photo/Nati Harnik

The relationship between black presidential candidates and potential voters is more complex than it is for their white opponents. My research on historic “firsts” shows that white voters tend to ascribe characteristics to black candidates that place them at a disadvantage.

That&...

Read more: How Obama's presidential campaign changed how Americans view black candidates

Why US should treat Mexico as a vital partner, not a punching bag

  • Written by Earl Anthony Wayne, Visiting Professor of International Affairs, Hamilton College

Mexico is one of the most important countries in the world for the United States. It’s the second-largest buyer of U.S. goods, the third-biggest consumer of U.S. agricultural products and America’s third-most-important trading partner, after China and Canada. We trade over a million dollars of stuff every minute.

So as we prepare to...

Read more: Why US should treat Mexico as a vital partner, not a punching bag

More Articles ...

  1. What Facebook Live means for journalism
  2. Joe Camel in a bottle: Alcohol companies fail to follow their own ad rules during the 2017 Super Bowl
  3. Are you really anonymous online? Your friends on Twitter may give you away
  4. You are the new gatekeeper of the news
  5. The story of Elizabeth Taylor Greenfield, America's first black pop star
  6. History shows Trump will face legal challenges to​ detaining immigrants
  7. Even before sanctuary cities, here's how black Americans protected fugitive slaves
  8. Should scientists engage in activism?
  9. The most important thing you’re not discussing with your doctor
  10. Will Trump's 'color-blind' pro-business policies help black entrepreneurs too?
  11. Detroit's recovery: The glass is half-full at most
  12. Exploiting black labor after the abolition of slavery
  13. Staying politically neutral is more dangerous for companies than you think
  14. What Trump misses about regulations: They produce benefits as well as costs
  15. Does an anomaly in the Earth's magnetic field portend a coming pole reversal?
  16. Uncovering the roots of racist ideas in America
  17. Why do conservatives want the government to defund the arts?
  18. Stories are better than lectures at teaching us about health
  19. Finding the causes of cancer is the first step to prevention ​
  20. Understanding genetic differences between breast cancer tumors is key to better treatment
  21. Immunotherapy: Training the body to fight cancer
  22. Ringling Bros. Circus shutdown is a distraction from the real issue: Eating animals
  23. Why Brazil is winning its fight against corruption
  24. Defining dual-use research: When scientific advances can both help and hurt humanity
  25. Melanoma: Taming a migratory menace
  26. We have a vaccine for six cancers; why are less than half of kids getting it?
  27. The Super Bowl's evolution from football game to entertainment extravaganza
  28. How man's best friend is helping cancer treatment
  29. Dads are more involved in parenting, yes, but moms still put in more work
  30. Many kids still don't report concussion symptoms. How can we change that?
  31. The Conversation US launches Ethics and Religion desk
  32. Is Trump's Supreme Court nominee Neil Gorsuch a judicial or a political appointment?
  33. Stereotypes can hold boys back in school, too
  34. A nomination battle over Neil Gorsuch could slow down Trump's agenda
  35. How 'voter fraud' crusades undermine voting rights
  36. Trump's trade policy is more predictable and less isolationist than critics think
  37. How Planned Parenthood has helped millions of women, including me
  38. Hunting hackers: An ethical hacker explains how to track down the bad guys
  39. Immigration and crime: What does the research say?
  40. National Prayer Breakfast: What does its history reveal?
  41. Sure, pipelines are good for oil companies, but what about jobs related to preserving nature and culture?
  42. Cheerleading's peculiar path to potential Olympic sport
  43. What does 'America first' mean for American economic interests?
  44. Why Bill Belichick cast down his tablet
  45. How the 19th-century rebuilding of Britain's Houses of Parliament made air pollution visible
  46. Donald Trump's tweets are now presidential records
  47. Mary Tyler Moore's death a reminder of the toll of diabetes
  48. The frog tongue is a high-speed adhesive
  49. The best legal arguments against Trump's immigration ban
  50. Trump's immigration ban: Will it undercut American soft power?