MS-13 Gang and Trump, Martha Hughes Cannon Legacy, Michal Kosinski and Facebook
Top of Mind with Julie Rose - Season 1, Episode 774
- Mar 22, 2018 6:00 am
- 1:44:26 mins
MS-13 is Not What the Trump Administration Thinks It Is Guest: Steven Dudley, Senior Fellow, Center for Latin American and Latino Studies, American University in Washington DC; Co-Director, Insight Crime President Trump and the Department of Justice have made fighting the MS-13 gang one of their top priorities for law enforcement and immigration policy. “ICE recently arrested 15 MS-13 gang members -- these are not good people, folks. Okay?” said President Trump on Monday in a speech about the opioid crisis. In addition to drug policy, the President also points to MS-13 when he talks about the need to build a border wall, increase deportations, crackdown on sanctuary cities. But what if those policies don’t actually stop MS-13 from committing heinous acts of violence and instead just make the problem worse? The Legacy of Martha Hughes Cannon Guest: Janiece Johnson, Historian, Maxwell Institute of Religion, BYU Right now in the US Capitol Building, there’s a statue of Philo T. Farnsworth – the Utah-born inventor of the television. For 40 years he’s been one of Utah’s contributions to the National Statuary Hall Collection, but soon he’ll be replaced by a different statue. The Utah Legislature has decided that Martha Hughes Cannon is a more deserving of the honor. What did she invent that’s better than TV, you ask? Why Education Reform Consistently Fails Guest: Jack Schneider, PhD, Assistant Professor of Education, College of the Holy Cross Secretary DeVos has invested a lot of her personal wealth in school choice programs to give families an option beyond their neighborhood school. She’s not alone. Billions upon billions of dollars from philanthropists all over the political spectrum have gone toward school reform efforts intended to improve schools, improve teachers, improve student performance. The results have been lackluster. Education professor and historian Jack Schneider at the College of the Holy Cross says that’s because those efforts are typically one-sized-fits-all and come from the top down. The