Trump and DACA, Money Can Buy Happiness, Girls Who Code
Top of Mind with Julie Rose - Season 1, Episode 632
- Sep 5, 2017 6:00 am
- 1:42:26 mins
President Trump to End Protection for Dreamers Guest: Carolina Núñez, JD, Professor of Immigration Law, Associate Dean of Research and Academic Affairs, J. Reuben Clark Law School, Brigham Young University President Trump is giving Congress six months to come up with a permanent solution to the status of some 800,000 undocumented immigrants known as “Dreamers,” who were brought to the U.S. as children. “Dreamers” have had access to work permits and protection from deportation under a policy enacted by President Obama in 2012, called Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA. President Trump announced Tuesday he will rescind that policy next March, but hopes Congress will make the policy permanent in the meantime. Money Can Buy Happiness Guest: Ashley Whillans, PhD, Assistant Professor, Harvard Business School How much is your time worth? Specifically, your free time? Experts say that people around the world have worked themselves into a shortage of free time. And now there’s evidence that if we spent some money on services that could buy us a little time – say hiring someone to mow the lawn or run errands for us - we’d be happier. Designer Babies on the Horizon? Guest: John Basl, PhD, Assistant Professor of Philosophy, Northeastern University Individuals with inherited, potentially fatal diseases can find it excruciating to know, as they become parents, that they might be passing these genes on to their children. Scientists have recently been able to edit one of these diseases from a human embryo, which could radically change how we can fight disease. But could the technology also allow people to decide whether their children have curly or straight hair, long eyelashes, or superior math skills? In other words, are that much closer to a world of designer babies? Hackers Take on Hollywood Guest: Michael Orosz, PhD, Research Director of Decisions Systems Group, Information Sciences Institute, School of Engineering, University of Southern California The big concern for Hollywood studios used to b