Introducing Intelligence Squared US
I am so excited to share with you Intelligence Squared US, America’s leading platform for fair and balanced debate. I am a huge fan of their work, and have been on the show many times. They always have interesting, meaningful, rigorous discussions about tough subjects. It’s a debate series, and they pull together the world’s top thinkers on each topic to compare and contrast both sides of an issue. The discussions are impartial, informative, and importantly, civil. They’re truly doing great stuff over at Intelligence Squared, bringing reason to controversial topics, and navigating them superbly. I always learn something, whether I’m listening or participating in one of the debates.
It’s a terrific series, an important nonprofit project which the country needs now more than ever, and you should subscribe now. Coming up now, an episode from Intelligence Squared, Is Nationalism a Force For Good? Have a listen. -- Andrew
Aric Prather on The Good Sleep Prescription: Stick Your Head in the Freezer, "Worry Early," and Stop Taking Your Smartphone to Bed
Maud Newton: How to Come to Terms With Troubling Ancestors
Isaac Fitzgerald: What's Wrong (And Right) With American Male Writers
Paul Tucker: What Chinese and American Statesmen Need to Do to Lessen Global Discord
Priyanka Kumar: How "Reading" Nature, Especially Birds, Enables Us to Transcend Ourselves
Ben Kesling: The Gut-Wrenching Story of One U.S. Army Unit's Experience in Afghanistan
Samantha Cole: How Sex Changed the Internet and the Internet Changed Sex
RJ Andrews: Why the Future of Publishing For One Start-Up Entrepreneur is High-End and Analog Books That Visualize Data
Lenore Andreson: How California is Pioneering the Reform of the American Criminal Justice System
Claudia Lux: Imagining a Kafkaesque Hell in Which There Is Only Jägermeister to Drink and the Devil Is a Corporate Bureaucrat
Henrietta Harrison on the 18th-Century China Question: The Perils of Translating Between Qing China and the British Empire
Greg Melville: How Cemeteries Reveal America's Most Hidden and Often Deadliest History
Paul Sexton: Perhaps the Most Remarkable Thing About Charlie Watts Was Just How Remarkably Ordinary He Was