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  • A (Real) Handmaid’s Tale

    A (Real) Handmaid’s Tale0

    Whether you are pro-this or anti-that, a passionate believer in human dignity, or an ultra-rational utilitarian, your bioethics always has to begin with the facts. While knowledge of consequences is only part of ethical decision-making, it is an essential part. Surrogacy is one issue in which the public gets only a very partial vision of

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  • 5 Scientists Skeptical of Climate Change

    5 Scientists Skeptical of Climate Change0

    We’re often told that the science on global warming is “settled.” Our planet is warming, humans are the primary or sole cause, and something must be done or our planet will soon look like this. But is that really the case? As it turns out, many distinguished scientists are not on board with this assessment.

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  • ‘Deadbeat Dad’ Stigma Should Be Brought Back

    ‘Deadbeat Dad’ Stigma Should Be Brought Back0

    “Deadbeat Dads”—absent fathers who don’t provide financial support for their children—are one of the most significant factors contributing to child poverty in America. So why do some single women have children outside of marriage when they know they will receive little to no support from the child’s father? A 2014 study from the University of Georgia and

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  • ‘Preaching to the Choir’: A New Theory on Why American Politics are So Polarized

    ‘Preaching to the Choir’: A New Theory on Why American Politics are So Polarized0

    There is an enormous body of research out there that explores why modern American politics are so polarized. It’s also a question many Americans are asking. (The question comes up second on Google if one types in “Why is American politics…”.) There are many good theories out there. Bill Bishop’s “big sort” hypothesis suggests Americans

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  • The Disappearing Valedictorian: Another Victim of the Participation Trophy Generation?

    The Disappearing Valedictorian: Another Victim of the Participation Trophy Generation?0

    One of the central plots in Lucy Maud Montgomery’s Anne of Green Gables concerns the fractious relationship between Anne Shirley and Gilbert Blythe. This friction primarily plays out in the classroom where Anne determines to get ahead of Gilbert in every subject even if it kills her: “Now Gilbert was head of the spelling class;

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  • NYT Writer: Cultural Appropriation is the New Blasphemy

    NYT Writer: Cultural Appropriation is the New Blasphemy0

    Whether it’s hoop earrings, dreadlocks, or Taco Tuesdays, America seems to have a fascination with cultural appropriation. So much so, that it appears things are getting a little out of hand, a fact which author Kenan Malik noted in the New York Times the other day. According to Malik, various editors and artists who reference

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