No. 57-4-6, April 2025
Index
- A Tech Billionaire Attacks His Own Kind: Alex Karp, CEO of the digital military contractor Palantir, thinks other Silicon Valley behemoths waste their time chasing clicks rather than bad guys--and that the decline of college Western Civ classes is to blame.
- An Abundance of Ambiguity.
- How Khrushchev Underestimated Kennedy: A veteran correspondent's memoir reveals the humanity and misjudgment of the Soviet leader who sparked the Cuban Missile Crisis.
- The Corporate Raid on Campus: Finance industry recruiters are starving critical fields of talent and steering an entire generation into soulless jobs.
- The Long Shadow of Robert Moses: How popular blowback to the New York City planner's excesses led to generations of distrust in government.
- The Meager Agenda of Abundance Liberals: What the Democratic Party's most buzzed-about policy movement gets right--and wrong.
- What America Can Learn From Tulsa: In Oklahoma's second-largest city, a new vision of economic development is being born.
- What Happens to Antitrust Under Trump? From tariffs to deportations, Trump's policies are inflationary--but enforcing antitrust laws could help working families. (Magazine)
- Who Needs College Anymore? Kathleen deLaski asks that question in a new book that asks how to make higher ed not only more accessible but applicable to Americans real lives.
- Why We Need a New Tennessee Valley Authority.
- Will Guam Be America's Next Pearl Harbor? Donald Trump's neocolonial foreign policy could invite a surprise Chinese attack on an underprepared American island in the South Pacific. (Magazine)