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Cato Daily Podcast - A Fight over Federal Supremacy
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the memory palace - Episode 46 (After Party)
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Cato Daily Podcast - Hostile Takeover: Resisting Centralized Government
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Money Girl - 283 MG 7 Things to Know About Adjustable-Rate Mortgages (ARMs)
Go under the hood of ARMs and see how they really work.
Cato Daily Podcast - Good and Bad Trends in State Tax Policy
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Cato Daily Podcast - A Cybersecurity Power Grab?
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Cato Daily Podcast - Chicago Teacher Strike
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More or Less: Behind the Stats - Where are the Paralympics Medals?
Why did the USA top the gold medals league in the Olympics, but not the Paralympics? Ruth Alexander examines the performance numbers of the London 2012 Paralympic Games and discovers which countries are punching above their weight, and which below. And Yan Wong tries to calculate how many opening bars are possible in music. This programme was first broadcast on the BBC World Service.
New Books in Native American Studies - Brendan C. Lindsay, “Murder State: California’s Native American Genocide, 1846-1873” (University of Nebraska Press, 2012)
Brendan C. Lindsay‘s impressive if deeply troubling new book centers on two concepts long considered anathema: democracy and genocide. One is an ideal of self-government, the other history’s most unspeakable crime. Yet as Lindsay deftly describes, Euro-American settlers in California harnessed democratic governance to expel, enslave and ultimately murder 90% of a population on their ancestral homelands in the mid-to-late 19th century.
Murder State: California’s Native Genocide, 1846-1873 (University of Nebraska Press, 2012) is difficult but vital reading for residents of any state. Culling evidence from newspapers, public records, and personal narratives, Lindsay’s lays out an ironclad case that “genocide” is precisely the word to describe to the process faced by Native people in California, despite its rarified usage in academic and public discourse.
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