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Topic: The Economy & Innovation (page 13)

The Economy & Innovation

Shipping containers are unloaded at the Port of Los Angeles in Long Beach, California on May 14, 2019. (Mark Ralston/AFP/Getty Images)

Trump trade mayhem hurts working class

David Cay Johnston - DCReport
Climeworks C02 Capture Device (Climeworks)

Tech won't save us from climate change

Keith A. Spencer
Chinese President Xi Jinping; President Donald Trump (AP/Salon)

The trade war could be Trump's undoing

Dana Kennedy - DCReport
(Getty/Kevork Djansezian)

Should investors buy marijuana stocks?

Sandra Woien - The Conversation
(AP/Evan Vucci/Getty/honglouwawa/Salon)

US economy showed slower growth in Q2

Alex Henderson - Alternet
Books (Getty/Sandy Huffaker)

How literature perpetuates stereotypes

Nicole Karlis
Jeff Bezos (Getty/Alex Wong)

How Silicon Valley seduced the Pentagon

James Bandler, Anjali Tsui, Doris Burke - ProPublica
(Getty/Johannes Eisele)

Is it time to panic? Insiders dump stock

Matthew Chapman - Raw Story
Co-Chair of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation Bill Gates speaks during a plenary session at the 47th annual meeting of the World Economic Forum, WEF, in Davos, Switzerland, Thursday, Jan. 19, 2017. (Gian Ehrenzeller/Keystone via AP) (AP)

A profit-based approach to education

Julian Vasquez Heilig - The Conversation
(Getty/baona)

What college rankings reveal

Jonathan Wai - The Conversation
(Getty/Salon)

I'm ashamed to love my iPhone

Jane Agler
In this Saturday May 7, 2016 photo by Asst.Prof.Pakarat Jumpanoi, shows a smartwatch used by students caught cheating in exams for admission to medical and dental faculties in Bangkok, Thailand. Glasses with embedded cameras and smartwatches with stored information seem like regular spy equipment for the likes of James Bond, but to three students applying to medical school in Thailand, they were high-technology cheating devices.(Asst.Prof.Pakarat Jumpanoi/Rangsit University via AP) (AP)

It's ridiculously easy for kids to cheat

Christine Elgersma - Common Sense Media

Why are college textbooks so expensive?

Amie Freeman - The Conversation
(Getty/Joe Raedle)

No cushion for the Trump recession

Bob Hennelly
Ilulissat, Greenland (Getty/Sean Gallup)

Why Trump is obsessed with Greenland

Nicole Karlis
(Getty Stock/shironosov)

Canada's school fees: Not really free

Sue Winton - The Conversation
Unemployed man holding "OUT OF WORK" sign (Getty/Spencer Platt)

A likely recession could doom Trump

Matthew Rozsa
(Getty/Jim Watson)

Trump wants to slash Medicare

Jake Johnson - Common Dreams
(Screenshot/Inequality Media)

The 5-step CEO pay scam

Robert Reich - RobertReich.org
A television monitor on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange headlines the rate decision of the Federal Reserve, Wednesday, July 31, 2019. The Federal Reserve is cutting its key interest rate for the first time in a decade to try to counter threats ranging from uncertainties caused by President Donald Trump's trade wars to chronically low inflation and a dim global outlook. (AP Photo/Richard Drew) (AP Photo/Richard Drew)

Financial advice for recessions

Alexander Kurov - The Conversation
Larry Kudlow (Getty/Saul Loeb)

Trump's recession cure: More tax cuts

Igor Derysh
(AP Photo/Chris Post)

Dear politicians: Lower drug prices now

Nancy J. Altman, Alex Lawson - Independent Media Institute
Burning Man festival participants endure a dust storm on the playa at the Black Rock Desert in Gerlach, Nev., on Thursday, Aug. 30, 2007. (AP/Brad Horn)

Has Burning Man fixed its abuse problem?

Nicole Karlis
The aluminum industry helped to modernize warfare, and warfare helped to modernize the aluminum industry. (MIT Press Reader)

The alliance between aluminum & warfare

Mimi Sheller - MIT Press Reader
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