Wells Fargo isn't the only bank where heavy sales pressure led employees to open fake accounts. A federal review triggered by the Wells Fargo scandal found that "weaknesses" at other banks led employees to open accounts without proof of customer consent — just like Wells Fargo did — according to the Office of the Comptroller... Continue Reading →
Experts say algae is the food of the future. Here’s why.
I have commitment issues -- with my diet. Name the diet, and I've tried it. I'm currently a pescatarian with fish as my main protein source. But I've been a carnivore, vegetarian and vegan, too. Oh, and I dabble in "menu of the future" items such as algae and bugs. In the last month, I've... Continue Reading →
UPS Has 260,000 Union Workers and They’ve Just Authorized a Strike
United Parcel Service (UPS, +0.18%) workers authorized their union to call what would be the first strike since 1997, giving negotiators more leverage in talks to replace a labor contract that expires at the end of July. Of the workers from the package unit who voted, 93% favored the authorization and 91% of UPS freight... Continue Reading →
How To Cure The Range Anxiety Of Electric Cars
The emergence of electric vehicles has potential for impact far beyond the automotive industry. According to data from the United States Environmental Protection Agency, the transportation sector accounts for 14 percent of global emissions and the shift to electric vehicles would significantly reduce that number. Yet for all of the excitement and conversation, electric vehicles made... Continue Reading →
3D-printing is helping to restore the world’s destroyed heritage sites
Monuments that stand as physical reminders of the ancient world and give insights into how our ancestors lived are being destroyed. In 2015, militant group ISIS reduced some of the oldest and most treasured world heritage sites to rubble. The al-Lat Lion, which stood in the Syrian city of Palmyra for around 2,000 years, was... Continue Reading →
Researchers transform human blood cells into functional neurons
Human immune cells in blood can be converted directly into functional neurons in the laboratory in about three weeks with the addition of just four proteins, researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine have found. The dramatic transformation does not require the cells to first enter a state called pluripotency but instead occurs through... Continue Reading →
Why Basic Income Is a Mental Health Issue
Across the Western world, there is a rising epidemic of depression and anxiety—one that disfigured my life for over a decade. For years now, the United Nations has been trying to warn us that these problems are continuing to spike up in part because we have, as a culture, been responding in the wrong way.... Continue Reading →
These drones can plant 100,000 trees a day
It’s simple maths. We are chopping down about 15 billion trees a year and planting about 9 billion. So there’s a net loss of 6 billion trees a year. Hand planting trees is slow and expensive. To keep pace with the tractors and bulldozers clearing vast areas of land, we need an industrial-scale solution. For... Continue Reading →
Why do people get so upset when the government helps the poor?
As reported in The New York Times, farms in Humphreys County, Mississippi have received over $250 million dollars in government subsidies since 1995. Ironically, this is also a county where half of its residents receive food stamps. The farm subsidies are intended to help guarantee farmers a significant portion of their income in case of... Continue Reading →
The True Cost of Incarceration in Pennsylvania
There is a crisis looming in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. GEO Group, a billion dollar for-profit prison conglomerate with a long track record of civil rights abuses, could soon take over all re-entry work for parolees in Lancaster County. Right now, many local non-profit organizations provide services to support former inmates returning to society, including assistance... Continue Reading →