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The #iwasfifteen hashtag and ongoing Epstein coverage show how traffickers exploit the vulnerabilities of teens and tweens

  • Written by Anne P. DePrince, Professor of Psychology, University of Denver
imageMarina Lacerda was among the alleged victims of convicted sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein who spoke at a news conference outside the U.S. Capitol on Sept. 3, 2025.Andrew Harnik/Getty Images News

The release of information about the powerful cadre of men associated with convicted sex offender and accused sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein – known...

Read more: The #iwasfifteen hashtag and ongoing Epstein coverage show how traffickers exploit the...

Hacked phones and Wi-Fi surveillance have replaced Cold War spies and radio waves in the delusions of people with schizophrenia

  • Written by Alaina Vandervoort Burns, Assistant Clinical Professor of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences, University of California, Los Angeles
imageEveryday tech of modern life can take on sinister dimensions for people with thought disorders.Busà Photography/Moment via Getty Images

A young woman starts to become suspicious of her cellphone. She notices it listing Wi-Fi networks she does not recognize, and the photos on her contact cards seem to mysteriously change at random times. One...

Read more: Hacked phones and Wi-Fi surveillance have replaced Cold War spies and radio waves in the delusions...

Trump’s second term is reshaping US science with unprecedented cuts and destabilizing policy changes

  • Written by Kenneth M. Evans, Fellow in Science, Technology, and Innovation Policy, Baker Institute for Public Policy, Rice University

Before 2025, science policy rarely made headline news. Through decades of changing political winds, financial crises and global conflicts, funding for U.S. research and innovation has remained remarkably stable, reflecting the American public’s strong support for investing in basic science.

In his first year back in office, President Donald...

Read more: Trump’s second term is reshaping US science with unprecedented cuts and destabilizing policy changes

School shootings dropped in 2025 - but schools are still focusing too much on safety technology instead of prevention

  • Written by James Densley, Professor of Criminal Justice, Metropolitan State University
imageA person mourns at a makeshift memorial outside the Barus and Holley engineering building on the campus of Brown University in Providence, R.I., on Dec. 14, 2025. Bing Guan/AFP via Getty Images

Active shootings represent a very small percentage of on-campus university violence.

But among those that do happen, there are patterns. And as law...

Read more: School shootings dropped in 2025 - but schools are still focusing too much on safety technology...

From record warming to rusting rivers, 2025 Arctic Report Card shows a region transforming faster than expected

  • Written by Matthew L. Druckenmiller, Senior Scientist, National Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC), Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences (CIRES), University of Colorado Boulder
imageAs temperatures rise, the timing of the ice thaw changes.Vincent Denarie via Arctic Report Card

The Arctic is transforming faster and with more far-reaching consequences than scientists expected just 20 years ago, when the first Arctic Report Card assessed the state of Earth’s far northern environment.

The snow season is dramatically shorter...

Read more: From record warming to rusting rivers, 2025 Arctic Report Card shows a region transforming faster...

The North Pole keeps moving – here’s how that affects Santa’s holiday travel and yours

  • Written by Scott Brame, Research Assistant Professor of Earth Science, Clemson University
imageCould this be the next Blitzen? Feeding a reindeer in Lapland, Finland, north of the Arctic Circle.Roberto Moiola/Sysaworld/Moment via Getty Images

When Santa is done delivering presents on Christmas Eve, he must get back home to the North Pole, even if it’s snowing so hard that the reindeer can’t see the way.

He could use a compass, but...

Read more: The North Pole keeps moving – here’s how that affects Santa’s holiday travel and yours

How rogue nations are capitalizing on gaps in crypto regulation to finance weapons programs

  • Written by Nolan Fahrenkopf, Research Fellow at Project on International Security, Commerce and Economic Statecraft, University at Albany, State University of New York

Two years after Hamas attacked Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, families of the victims filed suit against Binance, a major cryptocurrency platform that has been plagued by scandals.

In a Nov. 24, 2025, filing by representatives of more than 300 victims and family members, Binance and its former CEO – recently pardoned Changpeng Zhao – were...

Read more: How rogue nations are capitalizing on gaps in crypto regulation to finance weapons programs

2 superpowers, 1 playbook: Why Chinese and US bureaucrats think and act alike

  • Written by Daniel E. Esser, Associate Professor of International Studies, American University
imageAn official walks past the U.S. and Chinese national flags on April 6, 2024.Pedro Pardo/AFP via Getty Images

The year 2025 has not been a great one for U.S.-Chinese relations. Tit-for-tat tariffs and the scramble over rare earth elements has dampened economic relations between the world’s two leading economies. Meanwhile, territorial disputes...

Read more: 2 superpowers, 1 playbook: Why Chinese and US bureaucrats think and act alike

A, B, C or D – grades might not say all that much about what students are actually learning

  • Written by Joshua Rowe Eyler, Assistant Professor of Teacher Education, University of Mississippi
imageLetter grades have long been part of the fabric of the American educational system. iStock/Getty Images Plus

Grades are a standard part of the American educational system that most students and teachers take for granted.

But what if students didn’t have just one shot at acing a midterm, or even could talk with their teachers about what grade...

Read more: A, B, C or D – grades might not say all that much about what students are actually learning

The next frontier in space is closer than you think – welcome to the world of very low Earth orbit satellites

  • Written by Sven Bilén, Professor of Engineering Design, Electrical Engineering and Aerospace Engineering, Penn State
imageThe closer a satellite − like this telecommunications one − orbits to Earth, the more atmospheric drag it faces. janiecbros/iStock via Getty Images Plus

There are about 15,000 satellites orbiting the Earth. Most of them, like the International Space Station and the Hubble Telescope, reside in low Earth orbit, or LEO, which tops out at...

Read more: The next frontier in space is closer than you think – welcome to the world of very low Earth orbit...

More Articles ...

  1. Gazing into the mind’s eye with mice – how neuroscientists are seeing human vision more clearly
  2. If tried by court-martial, senator accused of ‘seditious behavior’ would be deprived of several constitutional rights
  3. My prescription costs what?! Pharmacists offer tips that could reduce your out-of-pocket drug costs
  4. Chile elects most right-wing leader since Pinochet – in line with regional drift, domestic tendency to punish incumbents
  5. Epstein’s victims deserve more attention than his ‘client list’
  6. The ‘one chatbot per child’ model for AI in classrooms conflicts with what research shows: Learning is a social process
  7. Christmas trees are more expensive than ever in Colorado — what gives?
  8. Pardons are political, with modern presidents expanding their use
  9. How the NIH became the backbone of American medical research and a major driver of innovation and economic growth
  10. Getting peace right: Why justice needs to be baked into ceasefire agreements – including Ukraine’s
  11. From civil disobedience to networked whistleblowing: What national security truth-tellers reveal in an age of crackdowns
  12. Best way for employers to support employees with chronic mental illness is by offering flexibility
  13. How are dark matter and antimatter different?
  14. Coup contagion? A rash of African power grabs suggests copycats are taking note of others’ success
  15. Pandas, pingpong and ancient canals: President Xi’s hosting style says a lot about Chinese diplomacy
  16. 2025’s extreme weather had the jet stream’s fingerprints all over it, from flash floods to hurricanes
  17. Science has always been marketed, from 18th-century coffeehouse demos of Newton’s ideas to today’s TikTok explainers
  18. What’s at stake in Trump’s executive order aiming to curb state-level AI regulation
  19. The Bible says little about Jesus’ childhood – but that didn’t stop medieval Christians from enjoying tales of him as holy ‘rascal’
  20. Whether Netflix or Paramount buys Warner Bros., entertainment oligopolies are back – bigger and more anticompetitive than ever
  21. Sleep problems and depression can be a vicious cycle, especially during pregnancy − here’s why it’s important to get help
  22. Data centers need electricity fast, but utilities need years to build power plants – who should pay?
  23. Can scientists detect life without knowing what it looks like? Research using machine learning offers a new way
  24. How a niche Catholic approach to infertility treatment became a new talking point for MAHA conservatives
  25. Donor-advised funds have more money than ever – and direct more of it to politically active charities
  26. How I rehumanize the college classroom for the AI-augmented age
  27. Sharks and rays get a major win with new international trade limits for 70+ species
  28. Trump administration replaces America 250 quarters honoring abolition and women’s suffrage with Mayflower and Gettysburg designs
  29. A Colorado guaranteed income program could help families, but the costs are high
  30. West Bank violence is soaring, fueled by a capitulation of Israeli institutions to settlers’ interests
  31. Black-market oil buyers will push Venezuela for bigger discounts following US seizure – starving Maduro of much-needed revenue
  32. As a former federal judge, I’m concerned by a year of challenges to the US justice system
  33. Songbirds swap colorful plumage genes across species lines among their evolutionary neighbors
  34. The Ivies can weather the Trump administration’s research cuts – it’s the nation’s public universities that have the most to lose
  35. Polytechnic universities focus on practical, career-oriented skills, offering an alternative to traditional universities
  36. AI-generated political videos are more about memes and money than persuading and deceiving
  37. AI’s errors may be impossible to eliminate – what that means for its use in health care
  38. How one Florida program reduced preterm births – and how it could serve as a model for other communities
  39. Even with Trump’s support, coal power remains expensive – and dangerous
  40. The dystopian Pottersville in ‘It’s a Wonderful Life’ is starting to feel less like fiction
  41. Tariffs 101: What they are, who pays them, and why they matter now
  42. Time banks could ease the burden of elder care and promote connection
  43. Hanukkah celebrates both an ancient military victory and a miracle of light – modern Jews can pick from either tradition
  44. ‘Are you married?’ Why doctors ask invasive questions during treatment
  45. From FIFA to the LA Clippers, carbon offset scandals are exposing the gap between sports teams’ green promises and reality
  46. 2026’s abortion battles will be fought more in courthouses and FDA offices than at the voting booth
  47. Trump administration’s immigrant detention policy broadly rejected by federal judges
  48. Doulas play essential roles in reproductive health care – and more states are beginning to recognize it
  49. From early cars to generative AI, new technologies create demand for specialized materials
  50. Germany’s plan to deport Syrian refugees echoes 1980s effort to repatriate Turkish guest workers