Posts tagged reference
‘Every Parent’s Nightmare’: TikTok Is a Venue for Child Sexual Exploitation

TSOU Episode: Harmful Apps: Balancing Education, Discipline, and Child Safety

FORT WORTH, Texas—A 42-year-old Alabama man uploaded to TikTok videos of himself lip-syncing to music and sharing depressive thoughts. A 14-year-old Texas girl responded. Before long, the two were exchanging romantic notes visible to anyone on the platform.

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The 2024 Election Is a Fight Over America’s Way of Life

TSOU Episode: Left & Right Face a Deep Divide & Loss of Identity

To win Jason Stewart’s vote, a presidential candidate should talk about stopping illegal immigration, taming inflation and keeping academic theories about race out of the classroom. But one overarching task is more important to the 51-year-old Republican than any single issue: rescuing American culture from liberals.

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25 Financial Tips for College Students

TSOU Episode: 8 Essential Tips to Manage Your Money in College

A lot of students aren’t prepared to manage money on their own. Here’s some advice to get them started. Many of this fall’s college freshmen will be managing their own finances for the first time. And a lot of them won’t be ready. So, we asked Wall Street Journal readers to share their best advice for college students handling their finances on campus.

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AMERICA IS WRAPPED IN MILES OF TOXIC LEAD CABLES

TSOU Episode: Toxic Lead Cables Across America - Kids at Risk?

AT&T, Verizon and other telecom giants have left behind a sprawling network of cables covered in toxic lead that stretches across the U.S., under the water, in the soil and on poles overhead, a Wall Street Journal investigation found. As the lead degrades, it is ending up in places where Americans live, work and play.

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Kevin McCarthy Has Just Two Weeks to Soothe GOP Critics and Keep Government Open

TSOU Episode: The Threat of a Shutdown & Powerless Speaker

WASHINGTON—Kevin McCarthy made a series of promises to conservative Republicans to win the House speakership and keep legislation on track. Now, many of them are coming due, with a possible government shutdown and potentially his own job on the line. 

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Ten Questions to Ask Yourself About the Transition to Renewables

TSOU Episode: Six Big Questions to Ask About the Transition to Renewables

The effort to reduce dependence on fossil fuels raises all sorts of issues that won’t be easy to address. But they demand our attention. Should the U.S. speed up the energy transition by becoming more dependent on foreign countries for critical materials for solar panels, batteries and the like?

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Great Books Can Heal Our Divided Campuses

TSOU Episode: Heal Our Schools and Nation With Great Books

Fifty years ago, Allan Bakke, a white military veteran with a solid academic record, was turned down for medical school at the University of California, Davis. Bakke filed suit, claiming that when the university set aside 16 seats for racial minorities, it violated his right to equal protection under the 14th Amendment.

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The Major Supreme Court Decisions in 2023

TSOU Episode: Where Does the Public Stand on Supreme Court Decisions?

The Supreme Court term that ended Friday concluded with a series of muscular 6-to-3 decisions divided along partisan lines, with the court's six Republican appointees in the majority. Those rulings, on affirmative action, student loans and gay rights, were reminiscent of the transformative conservative decisions issued last June on abortion, guns, religion and climate change.

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An Elite School, a Boy’s Suicide and a Question of Blame

TSOU Episode: Kids Can't Read and Schools to Blame for Suicide?

Ellis Lariviere was an eighth grader at Saint Ann’s, an elite private school in Brooklyn Heights, and he had a lot going for him. Teachers praised him as an “abundantly talented” artist, in a school that trumpeted the arts, and they described him as a positive presence in his classes.

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‘Kids Can’t Read’: The Revolt That Is Taking On the Education Establishment

TSOU Episode: Kids Can't Read and Schools to Blame for Suicide?

In suburban Houston, parents rose up against a top-rated school district, demanding an entirely new reading curriculum. At an elementary school in Hutchinson, Minn., a veteran teacher is crusading for reform, haunted by the fear that, for 28 years, she failed children because she was not trained in the cognitive science behind reading.

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Everyone Says Social Media Is Bad for Teens. Proving It Is Another Thing.

TSOU Episode: Does Social Media Harm Teens? It's Difficult to Prove

There have been increasingly loud public warnings that social media is harming teenagers’ mental health — most recently from the United States surgeon general — adding to many parents’ fears about what all the time spent on phones is doing to their children’s brains.

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