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What Were We Thinking? Selected Schar School Op-Eds (June 18-30, 2020)

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Originally published on July 6, 2020

From Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists:

The Trump administration has turned the gap between science and policy into a chasm. As Congress and the next administration consider reforms in the wake of COVID-19, rebuilding the federal government’s scientific expertise and integrity must be at the top of the agenda. Bridging the gap between science and policy will be necessary to prevent the next pandemic from becoming a public health catastrophe like COVID-19

—Saskia Popescu and Gregory D. Koblentz

From the Hill:

Public trust is hard to achieve but easy to lose, especially now in our 24/7 digital disinformation age. Public perceptions of politicalambition and financial self-interest have long undercut efforts to achieve Dr. [Martin Luther] King’s dream. However unfair, if elected, Joe Biden will inherit it all. Given this reality, we believe the one-term pledge offers the best hope to address those perceptions.

—Mark J. Rozell and Paul Goldman

From the Hill:

The authors said that the shutdown was costing more than $1 trillion a month, and would kill 7,200 of us each month from the economic effects alone. But as we examined their assumptions, the model collapsed like a house of cards.

—Jeremey Mayer and epidemiologist Tracy Mayne

From the Atlantic Council:

And it came as part of Putin’s multi-year campaign to justify what many regard as Moscow’s most notorious foreign-policy action ever: the signing of the Nazi-Soviet pact in 1939, which divided most of Eastern Europe into German and Soviet spheres of influence. Predictably, though, in purporting to set the record straight, Putin pins the blame for this agreement on the West and distorts the historical record.

—Mark N. Katz

From the Hill:

Trump plows belligerently ahead, playing to his base, unaware or unconcerned at how significantly American attitudes on treatment of black people have changed.

—Mark J. Rozell

From Inside Higher Ed:

But the size of the industry isn’t the only reason that colleges are feeling the pressure to reopen in the fall. One of the not-so-openly-discussed motivations may be the nearly$250billionof debt these institutions have amassed in recent years.

—Jim Finkelstein