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'Voodoo economics' makes a comeback in Republican tax plan enriching the rich

  • Written by Christian Weller, Professor of Public Policy and Public Affairs, University of Massachusetts Boston
imageVoodoo doll or an illustration of the Republican tax plan on income inequality?Rainer Fuhrmann/Shutterstock.com

Republicans in Congress recently released more details of their tax plan, which they say would boost economic growth and lower the burden on middle-income households. They hope to pass a bill into law by Christmas.

The reality is that the...

Read more: 'Voodoo economics' makes a comeback in Republican tax plan enriching the rich

As wildfires expand, fire science needs to keep up

  • Written by Albert Simeoni, Professor of Fire Protection Engineering, Worcester Polytechnic Institute
imageWildfire threatens a home near Possum Kingdom, Texas, April 19, 2011.State Farm, CC BY

In the month of October nearly 250,000 acres, more than 8,000 homes and over 40 people fell victim to fast-moving wildfires in Northern California, the deadliest and one of the costliest outbreaks in state history. Now is the time to wrestle with hard questions....

Read more: As wildfires expand, fire science needs to keep up

How does an oppressive government celebrate a revolution?

  • Written by Cynthia Hooper, Associate Professor of History, College of the Holy Cross
imageA worker cleans a statue of Vladimir Lenin in St. Petersburg. But how much Russian history gets whitewashed today?Dmitri Lovetsky/AP Photo

“And what, exactly, is there to be celebrating?” snapped Vladimir Putin’s press secretary on Oct. 25, a little more than a week before the 100th anniversary of what, in Soviet times, was lauded...

Read more: How does an oppressive government celebrate a revolution?

How does an authoritarian regime celebrate a revolution?

  • Written by Cynthia Hooper, Associate Professor of History, College of the Holy Cross
imageA worker cleans a statue of Vladimir Lenin in St. Petersburg. But how much Russian history gets whitewashed today?Dmitri Lovetsky/AP Photo

“And what, exactly, is there to be celebrating?” snapped Vladimir Putin’s press secretary on Oct. 25, a little more than a week before the 100th anniversary of what, in Soviet times, was lauded...

Read more: How does an authoritarian regime celebrate a revolution?

To stop the opioid epidemic, the White House should embrace prevention

  • Written by M. Dolores Cimini, Director for Behavioral Health Promotion and Applied Research, University at Albany, State University of New York
imageAn emergency overdose kit in Providence, Rhode Island.Michelle Smith/AP

There’s an old adage that states “An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.”

President Donald Trump declared a public health emergency on opioid use on Oct. 24. He outlined several strategies to address the crisis, including plans to establish drug...

Read more: To stop the opioid epidemic, the White House should embrace prevention

How dogs and cats can get their day in court

  • Written by Jessica Rubin, Assistant Clinical Professor of Law, University of Connecticut
imageAt least in Connecticut, legal advocates can now represent the interests of abused animals. Spillikin/Shutterstock.com

In 2016, the FBI started to track animal cruelty, including neglect, torture and sexual abuse, because of disturbing connections.

“If somebody is harming an animal, there is a good chance they also are hurting a human,”...

Read more: How dogs and cats can get their day in court

It's mostly mothers who pass on mitochondria – and a new theory says it's due to the first sexual conflict

  • Written by Arunas L. Radzvilavicius, Postdoctoral Researcher of Evolutionary Biology, University of Pennsylvania
imageIs this how we got the sperm and the egg?Sebastian Kaulitzki/Shutterstock

Evolutionary interests of males and females do not always coincide. This is known as sexual conflict: male innovations that allow them to reproduce more sometimes hurt females, and vice versa.

Male fruit flies, for instance, inject their partners with toxic chemicals during...

Read more: It's mostly mothers who pass on mitochondria – and a new theory says it's due to the first sexual...

In Brazil, religious gang leaders say they're waging a holy war

  • Written by Robert Muggah, Associate Lecturer, Pontifical Catholic University of Rio de Janeiro (PUC-Rio)

The expression “evangelical drug trafficker” may sound incongruous, but in Rio de Janeiro, it’s an increasingly familiar phenomenon.

Charismatic Christianity is on the rise across Brazil. Even Rio, a famously libertine city, elected an evangelical mayor last year. Now, evangelical Protestantism is so far-reaching in Rio that even...

Read more: In Brazil, religious gang leaders say they're waging a holy war

On-board computers and sensors could stop the next car-based attack

  • Written by Jeremy Straub, Assistant Professor of Computer Science, North Dakota State University
imageExisting cars can stop when they detect pedestrians.Yauhen_D/Shutterstock.com

In the wake of car- and truck-based attacks around the world, most recently in New York City, cities are scrambling to protectbusypedestrianareas and popular events. It’s extremely difficult to prevent vehicles from beingusedasweapons, but technology can help.

Right...

Read more: On-board computers and sensors could stop the next car-based attack

Trump names 'safe' choice to lead the Federal Reserve: 5 questions answered

  • Written by Greg Wright, Assistant Professor of Economics, University of California, Merced
imageThis man may soon be the world's 'second-most-powerful person.'AP Photo/Andrew Harnik

Editor’s note: Markets breathed a sigh of relief after President Donald Trump named Jerome Powell his pick to be the next chair of the Federal Reserve. If confirmed, Powell – considered a “safe” choice – would take over from current...

Read more: Trump names 'safe' choice to lead the Federal Reserve: 5 questions answered

More Articles ...

  1. Trump picks 'safe' choice to lead the Federal Reserve: 5 questions answered
  2. In America's sandwiches, the story of a nation
  3. Brain science should be making prisons better, not trying to prove innocence
  4. How the crisis in Catalonia is helping Rajoy consolidate power
  5. What the history of iconoclasm tells us about the Confederate statue controversy
  6. Is daylight saving time worth the trouble? Research says no
  7. Venezuela's opposition is on the verge of collapse
  8. Stop doing companies' digital busywork for free
  9. How donors can help make nonprofits more accountable
  10. US shouldn't give up benefits of 'green card lottery' over low risk of terrorism
  11. What draws 'lone wolves' to the Islamic State?
  12. After months of feuding, Ecuador's president is ousted by his party
  13. What ancient cultures teach us about grief, mourning and continuity of life
  14. Surprise! How Obamacare is beginning to look a lot like Medicaid
  15. Guyana, one of South America's poorest countries, struck oil. Will it go boom or bust?
  16. Why tax cuts make us less happy
  17. Beyond October: Things to be aware of all year about breast cancer
  18. In scandal after scandal, NCAA takes fall for complicit colleges
  19. Real security requires strong encryption – even if investigators get blocked
  20. California's higher education: From American dream to dilemma
  21. Imagining the 'California Dream'
  22. What public transit can learn from Uber and Lyft
  23. After tax cuts derailed the 'California dream,' is the state getting back on track?
  24. Synthetic sex in yeast promises safer medicines for people
  25. What Chinese philosophers can teach us about dealing with our own grief
  26. How Lincoln's embrace of embalming birthed the American funeral industry
  27. How has air quality been affected by the US fracking boom?
  28. How has the US fracking boom affected air pollution in shale areas?
  29. What the charges against Manafort, Gates and Papadopoulos could mean for Trump
  30. Will wildfires leave lasting economic scars on California's vital wine country?
  31. How the dead danced with the living in medieval society
  32. Measuring the implicit biases we may not even be aware we have
  33. The misguided campaign to remove a Thomas Hart Benton mural
  34. Why it's time to lay the stereotype of the 'teen brain' to rest
  35. Don't rely on China: North Korea won't kowtow to Beijing
  36. Will the iPhone X be a hit beyond Apple diehards? 3 questions answered
  37. What works in workplace giving
  38. Life after death: Americans are embracing new ways to leave their remains
  39. Understanding Chinese President Xi’s anti-corruption campaign
  40. Want to prevent sexual harassment and assault? Start by teaching kids
  41. Will the AI jobs revolution bring about human revolt, too?
  42. Why were California's wine country fires so destructive?
  43. Soy bibliotecaria en Puerto Rico y sobreviví al Huracán María. Esta es mi historia.
  44. I'm a librarian in Puerto Rico, and this is my Hurricane Maria survival story
  45. The science of fright: Why we love to be scared
  46. Why Puerto Rico 'doesn't count' to the US government
  47. How the US tax code bypasses women entrepreneurs
  48. How the god you worship influences the ghosts you see
  49. Tricking and treating has a history
  50. How I discovered a wellspring of sexual harassment complaints