The Tour de France, we are told, has finally cleaned up its act and clamped down on the use of performance-enhancing drugs. But if it has, should we expect today?s drug-free riders to be slower than their drug-fuelled forebears? Can statistics tell us whether the Tour de France really is cleaner than it was? Also in the programme: does when you retire influence when you die?
Cato Daily Podcast - TSA’s Naked Body Scanners Flout the Law
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New Books in Native American Studies - Christina Snyder, “Slavery in Indian Country: The Changing Face of Captivity in Early America” (Harvard UP, 2010)
Most readers are probably more familiar with the context of slavery or captivity in the context the African slave trade than in the Americas. Some may assume that slavery in the Americas was exclusively a phenomenon that became institutionalized into chattel slavery and racially codified exclusively against African Americans by the seventeenth-century. There has been increased scholarly attention over the last decade to expand our ideas of slavery, including scholarship about enslavement of African Americans within the “Five Civilized Tribes.” However, there has been little focus on the long and nuanced history of Native American captivity practices.
Historian Christina Snyder argues that we have to re-imagine the history of captivity by understanding the evolution of such practices amongst Native Americans in her prize-winning book, Slavery in Indian Country: The Changing Face of Captivity in Early America (Harvard University Press, 2010). Captivity practices existed amongst many indigenous nations from the pre-Columbian era throughout the nineteenth-century. She broadly describes the evolution of these practices from incorporating captives into kin networks, and to shifting notions of slavery that became codified by race. She begins her work by vividly describing Mississippian indigenous cultures of the pre-Columbian era, including the fascinating history of Cahokia, and the captives who were buried in these mounds. She also discusses the roles of Native American women, including Cherokee “beloved women” would were closely involved in determining the fate of captives. Her work is captivating and extensive, and greatly contributes to the historiography.
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Cato Daily Podcast - Gay Rights: A Fundamental Freedom
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Cato Daily Podcast - Obama’s ‘Elizabeth Warren Moment’
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Cato Daily Podcast - Understanding Outsourcing
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The Skeptics' Guide to the Universe - The Skeptics Guide #365 – Jul 14 2012
More or Less: Behind the Stats - Who are the Libor losers?
How much damage did messing with Libor really do to the financial system? And we investigate the claim made by a leading charity that a million British children are "starving".
More or Less: Behind the Stats - More or Less: Who are the Libor losers? (WS)
How much damage did messing with Libor really do to the financial system? After all, most financial trades are two way bets ? and for every winner, there is a loser.
Motley Fool Money - Motley Fool Money: 07.13.2012
China reports its slowest growth in three years. JPMorgan Chase updates investors on its big loss. Bridgepoint Education and SuperValu get slammed. And Microsoft's CEO has some fighting words for Apple. Our analysts discuss those stories and share three stocks on their radar. Plus, Motley Fool retirement expert Robert Brokamp shares some 401K tips.
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