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Michael Cohen’s guilty plea? ‘Nothing to see here’

  • Written by Jennifer Mercieca, Associate Professor of Communication, Texas A&M University

On the afternoon of Aug. 21, when news of Paul Manafort’s conviction and Michael Cohen’s plea deal emerged within hours of one another, the social media channels of Donald Trump’s most vociferous supporters went dark.

The statements of Cohen, Trump’s longtime personal attorney, seemed damaging.

Cohen pleaded guilty to...

Read more: Michael Cohen’s guilty plea? ‘Nothing to see here’

Teens who feel down may benefit from picking others up

  • Written by Hannah L. Schacter, Postdoctoral Research Fellow in Psychology, University of Southern California – Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences
Boosting someone else may deliver a mood boost to you too.Mohamed Nohassi/Unsplash, CC BY

Think about the last time you helped someone out. Maybe you sent a supportive text to a stressed-out friend or gave directions to a lost stranger.

How did it make you feel?

If you said good, happy, or maybe even “warm and fuzzy,” you’re not...

Read more: Teens who feel down may benefit from picking others up

Why the US has the campaign finance laws that Michael Cohen broke and what their history means for Trump

  • Written by Ciara C Torres-Spelliscy, Leroy Highbaugh Sr. Research Chair and Professor of Law, Stetson University

Politics usually takes a summer vacation in August. But not during the Trump administration.

On Aug. 21, Michael Cohen, who until recently was President Trump’s long-time personal lawyer, surrendered to federal prosecutors in Manhattan after months of investigation into tax evasion and other crimes dating back to 2011.

Cohen pleaded guilty to...

Read more: Why the US has the campaign finance laws that Michael Cohen broke and what their history means for...

There's a dark history to the campaign finance laws Michael Cohen broke — and that should worry Trump

  • Written by Ciara Torres-Spelliscy, Leroy Highbaugh Sr. Research Chair and Professor of Law, Stetson University

Politics usually takes a summer vacation in August. But not during the Trump administration.

On Aug. 21, Michael Cohen, who until recently was President Trump’s long-time personal lawyer, surrendered to federal prosecutors in Manhattan after months of investigation into tax evasion and other crimes dating back to 2011.

Cohen pleaded guilty to...

Read more: There's a dark history to the campaign finance laws Michael Cohen broke — and that should worry...

¿Quiere ahorrar en sus viajes? Piense como un economista

  • Written by Jay L. Zagorsky, Adjunct associate professor, Boston University
Un empleado cuenta rublos rusos en un banco.Reuters/Ilya Naymushin

Un número récord de turistas y viajantes de negocios visitaron otro país en 2017, y este año va camino de superar ese cálculo.

Cuando viaja al extranjero, algo que necesita de seguro, además de un pasaporte, es moneda local; es decir, euros...

Read more: ¿Quiere ahorrar en sus viajes? Piense como un economista

A year after Hurricane Harvey, some Texans are using outdated flood risk maps to rebuild

  • Written by Wanyun Shao, Assistant Professor of Geography, University of Alabama
Businesses in Humble, Texas, part of metropolitan Houston, surrounded by floodwater from Hurricane Harvey, August 29, 2017.AP Photo/David J. Phillip, File

One year ago, on August 25, 2017, Hurricane Harvey struck Texas – the first major hurricane to make landfall in the United States since Wilma in 2005. Harvey dumped record-breaking rain and...

Read more: A year after Hurricane Harvey, some Texans are using outdated flood risk maps to rebuild

Despite predictions of their demise, college textbooks aren't going away

  • Written by Norm Friesen, Professor, Boise State University
While textbooks have been said to be on their way, they are still a mainstay in higher education.SayHope/www.shutterstock.com

The textbook has been declared dead many times over. Progressive educator John Dewey decried the “text-book fetish” back in the 1890s. Former U.S. Education Secretary Arne Duncan wished out loud for textbooks to...

Read more: Despite predictions of their demise, college textbooks aren't going away

Child pornography may make a comeback after court ruling guts regulations protecting minors

  • Written by Gail Dines, Professor Emerita of Sociology and Women's Studies, CEO of Culture Reframed, Wheelock College

A federal appeals court judge just made it a lot easier for the pornography industry to abuse and exploit children for profit.

The Aug. 3 legal decision, which has received far less media attention than it deserves, represents the most significant blow to opponents of child porn in decades. We believe it could lead to a sharp increase in the...

Read more: Child pornography may make a comeback after court ruling guts regulations protecting minors

Trump's coal plan – neither clean nor affordable

  • Written by Daniel Fiorino, Director of the Center for Environmental Policy, American University School of Public Affairs
Rather than fade into the night, coal plants could stick around longer under Trump's proposal.Duke Energy, CC BY-NC-ND

Is climate change a problem? Consider the evidence: wildfires in California, Sweden and Siberia; flooding in coastal areas due to sea level rise; droughts in some places and extreme weather and rainfall in others; new and emerging...

Read more: Trump's coal plan – neither clean nor affordable

For some Catholics, it is demons that taunt priests with sexual desire

  • Written by Elizabeth McAlister, Professor of Religion, Wesleyan University
Pennsylvania grand jury accused Cardinal Wuerl of helping to protect abusive priests when he was Pittsburgh's bishopAP Photo/Kevin Wolf

A Pennsylvania grand jury recently released a report on the systematic ways Catholic priests aided and abetted one another to sexually abuse children for 70 years.

It reveals once again how the strict patriarchal...

Read more: For some Catholics, it is demons that taunt priests with sexual desire

More Articles ...

  1. Could college textbooks soon get cheaper?
  2. Would you eat 'meat' from a lab? Consumers aren't necessarily sold on 'cultured meat'
  3. Today’s GOP leaders have little in common with those who resisted Nixon
  4. ¿Qué tan decisivo será el 'voto latino' anti-Trump en las elecciones intermedias de EEUU?
  5. An alternative to propping up coal power plants: Retrain workers for solar
  6. What makes some species more likely to go extinct?
  7. Is China worsening the developing world's environmental crisis?
  8. Venezuela's 'desperate' currency devaluation won't save its economy from collapse
  9. Mentors play critical role in quality of college experience, new poll suggests
  10. How many babies in the US are wanted? Why it's so hard to count unintended pregnancy
  11. Many native animals and birds thrive in burned forests, research shows
  12. The lies we tell on dating apps to find love
  13. Coffee farmers struggle to adapt to Colombia's changing climate
  14. When losing one's research partner is like losing a part of oneself
  15. Venezuelan oil fueled the rise and fall of Nicaragua's Ortega regime
  16. China’s garbage ban upends US recycling – is it time to reconsider incineration?
  17. New antidote could prevent brain damage after chemical weapons attack
  18. Ban 'killer robots' to protect fundamental moral and legal principles
  19. Civil lawsuits are the only way to hold bishops accountable for abuse cover-ups
  20. Swift's telescope reveals birth, deaths and collisions of stars through 1 million snapshots in UV
  21. Saving the brain with a new nerve agent antidote
  22. Turkey's currency collapse shows just how vulnerable its economy is to a crisis
  23. Why it matters that teens are reading less
  24. How the Trump Foundation illustrates the limits of charity regulations
  25. Advertising is obsolete – here's why it's time to end it
  26. Stop worrying about how much energy bitcoin uses
  27. Dangerous stereotypes stalk black college athletes
  28. You don't have to look far to find human trafficking victims
  29. Tons of plastic trash enter the Great Lakes every year – where does it go?
  30. Genetically modified mosquitoes may be best weapon for curbing disease transmission
  31. Three reasons the US is not ready for the next pandemic
  32. 4 reasons why anti-Trump Latino voters won't swing the midterms
  33. How Aretha Franklin found her voice
  34. El largo viaje de la silicona, de los implantes mamarios a la cocina
  35. Celebrating the 150th anniversary of helium's discovery – why we need it more than ever
  36. Black and biracial Americans wouldn't need to code-switch if we lived in a post-racial society
  37. Facebook begins to shift from being a free and open platform into a responsible public utility
  38. Could different cultures teach us something about dementia?
  39. Lost and found in upstate New York: 'Lost Boys' nonprofits latch onto a new objective closer to home
  40. Approval of first ‘RNA interference’ drug – why the excitement?
  41. The plastic waste crisis is an opportunity for the US to get serious about recycling at home
  42. Dr. Droegemeier goes to Washington? What could happen when a respected scientist joins Trump's White House
  43. A bee economist explains honey bees' vital role in growing tasty almonds
  44. Una noche de patrulla en la frontera entre EEUU y México
  45. Trump craves good press from the 'fake news' media – just look at his White House newsletter
  46. Parole and probation have grown far beyond resources allocated to support them
  47. Zimbabwe's coup did not create democracy from dictatorship
  48. What is the Hajj?
  49. Is there such a thing as a stress-free school lunch? Here's how to pack one
  50. What are rare earths, crucial elements in modern technology? 4 questions answered