NewsPronto

 
Men's Weekly

.

The Conversation

Indigenous people invented the so-called 'American Dream'

  • Written by Lewis Borck, Archaeologist, Leiden University

When President Barack Obama created Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA), the 2012 program that offered undocumented young people brought to the U.S. as children a path into society, for a moment the ideals of the American Dream seemed, at least for this group, real.

We call these kids (many of whom are now adults) “Dreamers,”...

Read more: Indigenous people invented the so-called 'American Dream'

What makes American society so violent? 4 essential reads

  • Written by Emily Costello, Senior Editor, Politics + Society, The Conversation
imageshutterstockimage

Editor’s Note: On Friday, Oct. 6, “Third Rail with OZY” will discuss violence in the United States.

These stories from The Conversation archive explore how violence permeates different aspects of American society.


#1. Kids today

Do American parents teach their kids violent behavior through the use of corporal punishment?...

Read more: What makes American society so violent? 4 essential reads

The 'inevitable sadness' of Kazuo Ishiguro's fiction

  • Written by Cynthia F. Wong, Professor of English, University of Colorado Denver
imageBritish novelist Kazuo Ishiguro listens to a question during a press conference at his home in London on Oct. 5, 2017.Alastair Grant/AP Photo

On a damp October day in 2006, I followed Kazuo Ishiguro and my 10-year-old daughter Grace to a back table at a bustling cafe in London for an interview. As Ishiguro answered my questions, he explained how he...

Read more: The 'inevitable sadness' of Kazuo Ishiguro's fiction

How Columbus, of all people, became a national symbol

  • Written by William Francis Keegan, Curator of Caribbean Archaeology, University of Florida
imageAgricultural Building at the World's Columbian Exposition, Chicago, Illinois, circa 1893. University of Maryland Digital Collections

Christopher Columbus was a narcissist.

He believed he was personally chosen by God for a mission that no one else could achieve. After 1493, he signed his name “xpo ferens” – “the...

Read more: How Columbus, of all people, became a national symbol

Why the Nobel Peace Prize brings little peace

  • Written by Ronald R. Krebs, Beverly and Richard Fink Professor in the Liberal Arts and Professor of Political Science, University of Minnesota

The Nobel Peace Prize for 2017 was awarded to the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons, an advocacy group that has worked to draw attention to their “catastrophic humanitarian consequences.”

Every year, the winners of the Nobel Prizes are announced to great fanfare. And none receives more scrutiny than the Nobel Peace Prize...

Read more: Why the Nobel Peace Prize brings little peace

Bundy trial embodies everything dividing America today

  • Written by Ann Eisenberg, Assistant Professor of Law, University of South Carolina
imageA supporter of Cliven Bundy protests in Nevada. AP Photo/John Locher

It’s that time of year again: The Bundys are going to trial.

This fall, brothers Ammon and Ryan Bundy and their father, Cliven, will face charges over a standoff with federal officials in a dispute over federal lands in Nevada.

Many are wondering if they’ll be let off...

Read more: Bundy trial embodies everything dividing America today

Are self-driving cars the future of mobility for disabled people?

  • Written by Srikanth Saripalli, Associate Professor in Mechanical Engineering, Texas A&M University
imageA self-driving shuttle at Texas A&M.Swaroopa Saripalli, CC BY-ND

Self-driving cars could revolutionize how disabled people get around their communities and even travel far from home. People who can’t see well or with physical or mental difficulties that prevent them from driving safely often rely on others – or local government or...

Read more: Are self-driving cars the future of mobility for disabled people?

Urban noise pollution is worst in poor and minority neighborhoods and segregated cities

  • Written by Joan A. Casey, Postdoctoral scholar, University of California, Berkeley
imageUnder the El tracks, downtown Chicago.Franck Michel, CC BY

Most Americans think of cities as noisy places – but some parts of U.S. cities are much louder than others. Nationwide, neighborhoods with higher poverty rates and proportions of black, Hispanic and Asian residents have higher noise levels than other neighborhoods. In addition, in...

Read more: Urban noise pollution is worst in poor and minority neighborhoods and segregated cities

Blade Runner's chillingly prescient vision of the future

  • Written by Marsha Gordon, Professor of Film Studies, North Carolina State University

Can corporations become so powerful that they dictate the way we feel? Can machines get mad – like, really mad – at their makers? Can people learn to love machines?

These are a few of the questions raised by Ridley Scott’s influential sci-fi neo-noir film “Blade Runner” (1982), which imagines a corporation whose...

Read more: Blade Runner's chillingly prescient vision of the future

Knowing the signs of Lewy body dementia may help speed diagnosis

  • Written by Melissa J. Armstrong, Assistant Professor, Neurology, University of Florida
imageLewy body dementia and other illnesses of aging brains cause immeasurable suffering for patients and their families. sabthai/Shutterstock.com

Lewy body dementia reached the public eye in 2014 after reports that Robin Williams died with diffuse Lewy body disease.

But, despite the fact that Lewy body dementia is the second most common dementia, it...

Read more: Knowing the signs of Lewy body dementia may help speed diagnosis

More Articles ...

  1. Should Uncle Sam 'send in the Marines' after hurricanes?
  2. Catalonia's referendum unmasks authoritarianism in Spain
  3. The opioid epidemic in 6 charts
  4. How the Chinese cyberthreat has evolved
  5. How 'Germany's Hugh Hefner' created an entirely different sort of sex empire
  6. Chilled proteins and 3-D images: The cryo-electron microscopy technology that just won a Nobel Prize
  7. Do tax cuts stimulate the economy more than spending?
  8. The enduring power of print for learning in a digital world
  9. I've spent years looking at what was actually in Playboy, and it wasn't just objectification of women
  10. How inherited fitness may affect breast cancer risk
  11. Why people around the world fear climate change more than Americans do
  12. How fair is it for just three people to receive the Nobel Prize in physics?
  13. After a disaster, contaminated floodwater can pose a threat for months to come
  14. Scientists join forces to save Puerto Rico's 'Monkey Island'
  15. Governments, car companies must resolve their competing goals for self-driving cars
  16. How dangerous people get their weapons in America
  17. Nobel winners identified molecular ‘cogs’ in the biological clocks that control our circadian rhythms
  18. When gun control makes a difference: 4 essential reads
  19. How to talk to your kids about opioids
  20. Don't take opioids off the market - make it harder to abuse them
  21. Dear Elon Musk: Your dazzling Mars plan overlooks some big nontechnical hurdles
  22. Three steps Congress could take to help resolve the net neutrality debate – without legislating a fix
  23. How investing in public health could cure many health care problems
  24. American women died in Vietnam, too
  25. What Gandhi can teach today's protesters
  26. The difference between black football fans and white football fans
  27. The real reason some people become addicted to drugs
  28. Merkel's challenge: Governing Germany in an age of rising nationalism
  29. Why Pope Francis is reviving a long tradition of local variations in Catholic services
  30. Is free speech alive and well? 5 essential reads
  31. Why the FCC's proposed internet rules may spell trouble ahead
  32. Worries about spreading Earth microbes shouldn't slow search for life on Mars
  33. Tax 'reform' for the rich: Trump's plan abandons his working-class supporters
  34. Trump's tax plan would weaken faith in fairness of US tax system
  35. Should we worry that half of Americans trust their gut to tell them what's true?
  36. Why higher ed needs to get rid of the gender gap for 'academic housekeeping'
  37. Shrinking and altering national monuments: Experts assess Interior Secretary Zinke's proposals
  38. Beyond bleach: Mold a long-term problem after flooding and disasters
  39. Healthy choices are neither good or bad; only thinking makes them so
  40. Is partisan gerrymandering illegal? The Supreme Court will decide
  41. Defying Trump, Alabama elects Roy Moore – and embraces the same old politics of rage
  42. Defying Trump, Alabama GOP picks Roy Moore – and embraces the same old politics of rage
  43. Brewing a great cup of coffee depends on chemistry and physics
  44. What it's like to be gay and in a gang
  45. Interior Secretary Zinke invokes Teddy Roosevelt as model, but his public land policies don't
  46. How to select a disaster relief charity
  47. Mexico’s road to recovery after quakes is far longer than it looks
  48. The surprising connection between 'take a knee' protests and Citizens United
  49. Why don't big companies keep their computer systems up-to-date?
  50. How the anal cancer epidemic in gay and bi HIV-positive men can be prevented