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Acton Unwind

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Nov 13, 2023 • 1h 6min

MrBeast of Burden

This week, Eric, Dan, and Noah discuss the philanthropic efforts of MrBeast, the YouTube star with more than 200 million followers, in building wells in Kenya, which has come in for some criticism. Are MrBeast’s efforts making a positive impact, or are they worthy of the criticism they’re receiving? Or both? And what could he and other people with high profiles who seek to do good do differently? Next, the panel discusses the report from the pro-Israel outfit Honest Reporting about freelance photojournalists working for the Associated Press, Reuters, the New York Times, and others being embedded with Hamas on October 7. What questions about ethics in journalism does this raise? And finally, the University of Austin is open for business. But how successful will it be at attracting students and building a different way of providing higher education?MrBeast builds 100 wells in Africa, attracting praise – and some criticism | CNNBroken Borders: AP & Reuters Pictures of Hamas Atrocities Raise Ethical Questions | Honest ReportingIsrael Accuses Freelance Photographers of Advance Knowledge of Oct. 7 Attack | New York TimesMedia watchdog says it was just ‘raising questions’ with insinuations about photographers and Hamas | Associated PressWatchdog accepts news orgs weren’t tipped off about Oct. 7: We just ‘raised questions’ | Times of IsraelTexas Higher Education Coordinating Board gives first go-ahead to new University of Austin | Austin American-StatesmanUniversity of Austin Board of Advisors
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Nov 6, 2023 • 1h 7min

WeWork Don’t Work Anymore

This week, Eric, Dylan, and Emily work over the news that WeWork, a company that provides flexible office workspace, will file for bankruptcy this week. Was it a victim of the pandemic? A creature of a low-interest-rate economy and a venture-capital mentality that said they’d figure out how to be profitable at some point that never arrived? Both? Next, legendary and controversial college basketball coach Bobby Knight passed away last week at the age of 83. What does Knight’s ends-justify-the-means success tell us about civic, economic, and church life? And finally, nearly 3,000 former Morehouse College students had their student debt erased without any government action. Is it true that debt relief is yours if you want it, whether or not Washington intervenes?Subscribe to our podcastsWeWork plans to file for bankruptcy as early as next week, source says | ReutersMonetary Policy Is Working | Dominic Pino, National ReviewLegendary basketball coach Bob Knight dies at 83 | ESPNThe Bobby Knight Problem | “The Rise & Fall of Mars Hill,” Christianity TodayThe Last Days of Knight | ESPN 30 for 30These former HBCU students owed their college nearly $10 million. The debt was just erased | USA TodayStudent Loans and the Sin of Usury | James Caton & Dylan Pahman, Acton Institute
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Oct 30, 2023 • 1h 2min

The Meltdown Over the Robert E. Lee Meltdown

This week, Eric, Dan, and Emily discuss the decision to melt down the statue of Robert E. Lee that was at the center of the 2017 Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia. Is removing statues of Confederate generals erasing history? What is the proper way to memorialize the Confederacy, if there is one? And how should we think about and remember Robert E. Lee? Then the panel turns its attention to engagement farming on X (formerly known as Twitter) and Elon Musk’s announcement that posts with community notes correcting factual inaccuracies would no longer be eligible for the platform’s ad-revenue-sharing program. Is this a good way to fight misinformation online? Or will it just be gamed the same way ad revenue sharing is? And finally, was the Catholic Church's Synod on Synodality really, after all, just the friends we made along the way? How are we to interpret the 21,000-word report from the Synod? And what are we to make of its release coinciding with the news that a (briefly) excommunicated Jesuit priest accused of abuse has been returned to ministry?Charlottesville’s Lee statue meets its end, in a 2,250-degree furnace | Washington PostRemoving statues won’t erase the past, could mar the future | Dan Hugger, Acton InstituteElon Musk on monetization on X | X (formerly known as Twitter)The Internet of Beefs | Venkatesh Rao, RibbonfarmSynod report proposes ways to foster synodal Church | The PillarPope orders Vatican to reopen case of priest accused of adult abuse but allowed to keep ministering | Associated Press
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Oct 23, 2023 • 1h 13min

They Don’t Speaker for Us

This week, Eric, Dan, and Dylan discuss the Speaker of the House of Representatives, or more specifically, the lack of one. What does this situation say about how well-functioning, or not, our system of government is right now? What does it say about a possible decline in civic virtue in the United States? Then the guys turn their attention to the Israel-Hamas war and the Israeli airstrike on a hospital in Gaza that killed 500 people that turned out to not be an Israeli airstrike, that didn’t hit a hospital but its parking lot, and that didn’t kill hundreds of people. What does the way this story evolved reveal about modern media—and the prominence of social media in the news-gathering ecosystem? And finally, Ozempic is a drug that was developed for treating diabetes but is frequently used off-label for weight loss. Is it a miracle? Or should we be more skeptical about something that delivers incredible results without much work on the part of the person taking it?House GOP speaker race balloons to nine candidates | AxiosNYT admits error in Gaza hospital report | PoliticoIt's easy to screw up on breaking news. But you have to admit when you do. | Nate SilverThe Dream of Scalable Democracy | Dylan Pahman, Law & LibertyWhat Is Ozempic and Why Is It Getting So Much Attention? | New York TimesDesperate Indians want Ozempic on prescription. Huge shift from traditional drugs, say doctors | The PrintHow Weight Loss Drugs Stopped a Danish Recession | Apricitas Economics
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Oct 17, 2023 • 1h 3min

Anti-Semitism Rears Its Ugly Head

This week, Eric, Dylan, and Emily examine the purportedly pro-Palestinian rallies and campus protests that took place in the wake of the slaughter of Israeli Jews by Hamas terrorists. How surprised should we be by people chanting “gas the Jews” in Sydney, Australia, or by members of student organizations at Harvard University claiming that “the Israeli regime is entirely responsible for all unfolding violence”? What should be the consequences, if any, for people who have openly supported or defended the murder of Israelis by Hamas? Should universities and corporations end the practice of publishing a statement on every major issue? Then the panel reviews the awarding of the Nobel Prize in economics to Claudia Goldin for her work contributing to a better understanding of women’s participation in the labor force. And finally, is Bigfoot real, and did a couple vacationing in Colorado capture it on video? Probably not. But it’s fun to imagine. A Weekend on the Brink | The Morning DispatchAustralian pro-Palestinian protesters chant ‘gas the Jews’ as police warn Jewish people to stay away from area | Fox NewsCollege campus protests erupt across US ahead of anticipated Israel operation in Gaza | Fox NewsNYU law student group moves to oust president who cheered Hamas attack | New York PostAOC knocks ‘bigotry and callousness’ of Times Square rally for Palestinians | PoliticoA Stanford University instructor has been removed from the classroom amid reports they called Jewish students colonizers and downplayed the Holocaust | CNNStar of David is graffitied on Jewish homes in Berlin after Hamas attacks on Israel — in chilling echo of anti-Semitic persecution of the Jews under the Nazis | Daily MailWhy do some people hate the Jews? | Acton Line PodcastCollege Free Speech Rankings | Foundation for Individual Rights and ExpressionClaudia Goldin Is the Ideal Academic Researcher | Victor V. Claar & Angela K. Dills, Acton Institute‘Feels like a hoax’: Purported Bigfoot video from Colorado attracts skeptics, believers | USA Today
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Oct 9, 2023 • 1h 9min

Saving St. Louis & Terror in Israel

Rachel Ferguson, director of the Center for Free Enterprise and assistant dean at Concordia Uni, discusses saving St. Louis through neighborhood stabilization. They explore trust between citizens and law enforcement. They also discuss the recent Hamas attack in Israel and its impact on peace accords. Overall, they emphasize the importance of holistic approaches to poverty and the need for repentance in society.
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Oct 2, 2023 • 1h 7min

Synodality in Reality

This week, Eric, Emily, and Dylan tackle the Catholic Church Synod on Synodality taking place starting this week at the Vatican. What is the Synod on Synodality all about? What issues facing the Church—the ordination of women, the blessing of same-sex couples, married priests, and more—are on the table? What power does the Synod actually have? And could this Synod have just been an email? Next, the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, or PEPFAR, is up for renewal, and there are some conservative lawmakers who don’t want to renew it because of concerns over potential funding of abortion. Are those concerns valid? And if so, are they valid enough to scuttle what is largely agreed to be one of the most successfully public health programs in recent memory? And finally, California has raised the minimum wage for fast food workers to $20 an hour. What could go wrong? Quite a few things, actually. Say hello to your friendly new robot burger chef! Vatican Assembly Puts the Church’s Most Sensitive Issues on the Table | New York TimesA Public Health Setback | New York TimesPoverty, Inc.PovertyCureHow to Have a Great and Holy Council | Dylan Pahman, Religion & Liberty OnlineNew California law raises minimum wage for fast food workers to $20 per hour, among nation’s highest | Associated PressThe social responsibility of Chick-fil-A is to make delicious sandwiches | Dylan Pahman, Religion & Liberty Online 
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Sep 25, 2023 • 1h 1min

Did Compassionate Conservatism Kill Welfare Reform?

Marvin Olasky joins Eric and Noah this week to discuss his feature essay in the new Fall 2023 issue of RELIGION & LIBERTY, entitled “The Thrill and Chill of Compassionate Conservatism,” in which Marvin revisits two of his books: The Tragedy of American Compassion (1990) and Compassionate Conservatism (1999). What has transpired in terms of poverty intervention and amelioration on the federal, state, and local levels since their publication and the welfare reforms of the 1990s? Where are we doing now to address effectively issues of poverty in America? How has conservatism itself, and its expression through the Republican Party, changed since the compassionate conservatism days of George W. Bush’s first term? Next, the guys examine Sen. Josh Hawley’s proposal to cap credit card interest rates at 18%. How many unintended consequences would this produce if it were enacted? And finally, the headlines about a Canadian study on cash transfers claim it “debunks stereotypes of homeless people’s spending habits” and that cash transfers “reduce homelessness” and will supposedly enable them to save money. Are they sure about that?Subscribe to our podcastsThe Thrill and Chill of Compassionate Conservatism | Marvin Olasky, Religion & LibertySubscribe to Religion & Liberty and get 4 issues for $29.99/yearThe Law of Conservation of Welfare—And What Energy Source Can Transform It | Marvin Olasky @ Acton University 2023‘Americans are being crushed’: Sen. Josh Hawley wants to cap credit card APR at 18%—here’s his plan to help ‘working people’ | Yahoo FinanceUnconditional cash transfers reduce homelessness | Proceedings of the National Academy of SciencesPayday Loans and Predatory Politicians | Eric Kohn, Foundation for Economic Education
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Sep 18, 2023 • 1h 8min

Has Organized Labor Overplayed Its Hand? Again?

The podcast discusses the United Auto Workers strike and the demands made by the UAW. They also analyze the FDA's decision to make Narcan available over the counter for opioid overdoses. The hosts question the motives behind the Mexican government's alien autopsy hearing and discuss the decline of organized religion and the human desire for magic.
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Sep 11, 2023 • 1h 6min

What Is Populism’s Place in American Conservatism?

The podcast episode delves into Mike Pence's speech on the dangers of populism and its contrasting with conservatism. They discuss the historical presence of populism, its influence on both sides of the political spectrum, and the need for a functional Congress. The panel also examines the connection between the Church of Scientology and the rape conviction of Danny Masterson. They explore concerns about other religions losing constitutional protections. Additionally, they reflect on the 22nd anniversary of September 11 and discuss Jimmy Buffett's music and concert experience.

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