How would the ability to genetically customize children change society? Sci-fi author Eugene Clark explores the future on our horizon in Volume I of the “Genetic Pressure” series.
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“It’s not always about agreement, more often it’s about business.”
Immigrants add way more to the American economy than they take.
What is human dignity? Here’s a primer, told through 200 years of great essays, lectures, and novels.
We tend to promote foreigners by broadcasting their economic and scholarly value, instead of their intrinsic humanity.
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Three decades after the demise of the GDR, its familiar contours keep coming back from the dead.
The world isn’t ending! But we are likely at the beginning of a profound transformation.
Interpreter, Google’s language translating tool, is coming to mobile and it’s poised to change our everyday conversations.
Many of the most popular apps are about self-improvement.
A study of over 100,000 businesses in Oregon uncovered some unsettling news about worker conditions.
Perspective twisting books on biology, social science, medical science, cosmology, and tech.
Would you study abroad online?
Researchers discover government agencies use facial recognition software on photos from local DMVs.
The museum’s important call to document future history.
Despite the negative rhetoric, Europeans are getting more liberal about immigration.
Google’s “Year in Search 2020” results reveal a year when “why” was searched more than ever.
The English Department is instituting a series of reforms that cuts across the entire university.
The welfare state is broken. UBI is the smarter, more effective option.
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Social media posts that evoke strong kama muta often go viral – for example, cute kittens, puppies and special animal friendships.
The ability to interact peacefully and voluntarily provides individuals a better quality of life.
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“People are not commodities!” said Assemblyman Rob Bonta.
Maps show the oldest company in (nearly) every country – and a few interesting corporate trends.
During World War II, the U.S. incarcerated over 100,000 Japanese Americans in concentration camps throughout the West.
The federal government is exploring their options to keep up with the border crisis.
Politically incorrect speakers seem less calculated and more “real,” according to the authors of a new Berkeley study.
Misinformation in political ads bring “significant ramifications that today’s democratic infrastructure may not be prepared to handle,” Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey said.
Over the weekend, Pete Buttigieg warned of the dangers of white national terrorism. Officials in El Paso agree.
A new book by constitutional attorney Andrew Seidel takes on Christian nationalism.
Recognizing the consequences of your actions requires consideration of the long game.
Don’t denigrate immigrants, says Jared Diamond. You are one.
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