NewsPronto

 
Men's Weekly

.

The Conversation

How Latin America's protest superheroes fight injustice and climate change – and sometimes crime, too

  • Written by Vinodh Venkatesh, Professor of Hispanic Studies, Virginia Tech
imageAn Argentine justice crusader who calls himself Menganno has been patrolling the streets of the city of Lanus since 2010. Netflix has now picked up his character.Netflix Latinoamérica (screenshot)

Not all heroes wear capes. In Latin America, some real-life icons wear Mexican wrestling masks or arm themselves with shields and herbicide to...

Read more: How Latin America's protest superheroes fight injustice and climate change – and sometimes crime,...

New wave of anti-protest laws may infringe on religious freedoms for Indigenous people

  • Written by Rosalyn R. LaPier, Associate Professor of Environmental Studies, The University of Montana
imageMore than 30 U.S. states have passed laws intended to stop protests like the one against the Line 3 pipeline.Kerem Yucel/AFP via Getty Images

Over four days in June 2021, thousands of protesters attended the Treaty People Gathering in opposition to Line 3, a crude oil pipeline slated to be built across traditional homelands of the Ojibwe peoples in...

Read more: New wave of anti-protest laws may infringe on religious freedoms for Indigenous people

Mindfulness meditation can make some Americans more selfish and less generous

  • Written by Michael J. Poulin, Associate Professor of Psychology, University at Buffalo
imageThe meditation market is expected to grow to over $2 billion by 2022.MR-MENG/Getty Images

When Japanese chef Yoshihiro Murata travels, he brings water with him from Japan. He says this is the only way to make truly authentic dashi, the flavorful broth essential to Japanese cuisine. There’s science to back him up: water in Japan is notably...

Read more: Mindfulness meditation can make some Americans more selfish and less generous

Zaila Avant-garde – 2021 Scripps National Spelling Bee champ – stands where Black children were once kept out

  • Written by Shalini Shankar, Professor of Anthropology and Asian American Studies, Northwestern University
imageZaila Avant-garde is the first Black American to win the Scripps National Spelling Bee. Jim Watson/POOL/AFP via Getty Images

When Zaila Avant-garde, 14, won the 2021 Scripps National Spelling Bee on July 8, 2021, she became the first Black American to win in the competition’s history. Shalini Shankar, a scholar of spelling bees, breaks down...

Read more: Zaila Avant-garde – 2021 Scripps National Spelling Bee champ – stands where Black children were...

3 tips for preventing heat stroke

  • Written by Gabriel Neal, Clinical Associate Professor of Family Medicine, Texas A&M University
imageSeattle experienced record high temperatures in June 2021. AP Photo/John Froschauer

As a primary care physician who often treats patients with heat-related illnesses, I know all too well how heat waves create spikes in hospitalizations and deaths related to “severe nonexertional hyperthermia,” or what most people call “heat...

Read more: 3 tips for preventing heat stroke

What's a suborbital flight? An aerospace engineer explains

  • Written by John M. Horack, Neil Armstrong Chair and Professor of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, The Ohio State University
imageVirgin Galactic's Unity VSS spacecraft went on a suborbital test flight in May 2021.VIrgin Galactic, CC BY

“Suborbital” is a term you’ll be hearing a lot as Sir Richard Branson flies aboard Virgin Galactic’s VSS Unity winged spaceship and Jeff Bezos flies aboard Blue Origin’s New Shepard vehicle to touch the boundary...

Read more: What's a suborbital flight? An aerospace engineer explains

3 billion people cannot afford a healthy diet

  • Written by William A. Masters, Professor of Food Economics and Policy, Tufts University
imageEating well takes money – and also time, wise choices and cooking skills.Nicolas Asfouri/AFP via Getty ImagesimageCC BY-ND

The COVID-19 pandemic has caused price spikes for corn, milk, beans and other commodities, but even before the pandemic about 3 billion people could not afford even the cheapest options for a healthy diet.

Recent analysis of glo...

Read more: 3 billion people cannot afford a healthy diet

The ocean is full of tiny plastic particles – we found a way to track them with satellites

  • Written by Christopher Ruf, Professor of Climate and Space Sciences and Engineering, University of Michigan
imagePlastic fragments washed onto Schiavonea beach in Calabria, Italy, in a 2019 storm. Alfonso Di Vincenzo/KONTROLAB /LightRocket via Getty Images

Plastic is the most common type of debris floating in the world’s oceans. Waves and sunlight break much of it down into smaller particles called microplastics – fragments less than 5 millimeters...

Read more: The ocean is full of tiny plastic particles – we found a way to track them with satellites

Before Shark Week and 'Jaws,' World War II spawned America's shark obsession

  • Written by Janet M. Davis, University Distinguished Teaching Professor of American Studies, The University of Texas at Austin College of Liberal Arts
imageA painting for the U.S. Army's Stars and Stripes newspaper shows a downed pilot fending off sharks with a knife.Ed Vebell/Getty Images

Every summer on the Discovery Channel, “Shark Week” inundates its eager audiences with spectacular documentary footage of sharks hunting, feeding and leaping.

Debuting in 1988, the television event was...

Read more: Before Shark Week and 'Jaws,' World War II spawned America's shark obsession

More Articles ...

  1. Trump can't beat Facebook, Twitter and YouTube in court – but the fight might be worth more than a win
  2. America's founders believed civic education and historical knowledge would prevent tyranny – and foster democracy
  3. As South Sudan turns 10, questions over the role of the church emerge amid anti-clerical violence
  4. Political frustration in Northern Ireland has heightened tension around 'marching season'
  5. Haiti's president assassinated: 5 essential reads to give you key history and insight
  6. From flying boats to secret Soviet weapons to alien visitors – a brief cultural history of UFOs
  7. Do I need a COVID-19 booster shot? 6 questions answered on how to stay protected
  8. Knowing how heat and humidity affect your body can help you stay safe during heat waves
  9. What is cultural appropriation, and how does it differ from cultural appreciation?
  10. Yes, US states did get more money from Washington than they needed for COVID-19 relief
  11. Slain Haitian president faced calls for resignation, sustained mass protests before killing
  12. It's not just bad behavior – why social media design makes it hard to have constructive disagreements online
  13. 5 digital games that teach civics through play
  14. New York defines illegal firearms use as a 'public nuisance' in bid to pierce gun industry's powerful liability shield
  15. US Black and Latino communities often have low vaccination rates – but blaming vaccine hesitancy misses the mark
  16. Should the Supreme Court have term limits?
  17. Por qué algunas personas terminan viviendo en aeropuertos durante semanas, meses e incluso años
  18. Global evidence links rise in extreme precipitation to human-driven climate change
  19. Research shows labor unions help lower the risk of poverty
  20. Fixing America's crumbling physical -- and human -- infrastructure: 3 essential reads
  21. Why reparations are always about more than money
  22. Fixing America's crumbling physical – and human – infrastructure: 3 essential reads
  23. Expanding opportunities for women and economic uncertainty are both factors in declining US fertility rates
  24. 'Landmark' verdicts like Chauvin murder conviction make history – but court cases alone don't transform society
  25. Why vacations feel like they're over before they even start
  26. With support for Bill Cosby, Phylicia Rashad becomes just one of several deans to tweet themselves into trouble
  27. Religion at the Supreme Court: 3 essential reads
  28. While debate rages over glyphosate-based herbicides, farmers are spraying them all over the world
  29. Why Communion matters in Catholic life -- and what it means to be denied the Eucharist
  30. Far more adults don't want children than previously thought
  31. New York City or Los Angeles? Where you live says a lot about what and when you tweet
  32. Supreme Court strikes down California's nonprofit donor disclosure requirements: 4 questions answered
  33. Supreme Court blunts voting rights in Arizona – and potentially nationwide – in controversial ruling
  34. Trump Organization indictment hints at downsides of having no independent oversight – unlike companies traded on Wall Street
  35. 'Megadrought' along border strains US-Mexico water relations
  36. Infighting in the Southern Baptist Convention shouldn't be a surprise – the denomination has been defined by such squabbles for 400 years
  37. A medical moonshot would help fix inequality in American health care
  38. Benjamin Franklin's fight against a deadly virus: Colonial America was divided over smallpox inoculation, but he championed science to skeptics
  39. What's a ghost kitchen? A food industry expert explains
  40. Racism lurks behind decisions to deny Black high school students from being recognized as the top in their class
  41. Trustees' handling of Nikole Hannah-Jones' tenure application shows how university boards often fail the accountability test
  42. 5 children's books that teach valuable engineering lessons
  43. Skip the fireworks this record-dry 4th of July, over 150 wildfire scientists urge the US West
  44. US intelligence report on UFOs: No aliens, but government transparency and desire for better data might bring science to the UFO world
  45. An expert on search and rescue robots explains the technologies used in disasters like the Florida condo collapse
  46. Critical race theory: What it is and what it isn't
  47. China's 'one-child policy' left at least 1 million bereaved parents childless and alone in old age, with no one to take care of them
  48. To make agriculture more climate-friendly, carbon farming needs clear rules
  49. The ethical questions raised by COVID-19 vaccines: 5 essential reads
  50. When a Black boxing champion beat the 'Great White Hope,' all hell broke loose