Capital Punishment, Anxiety, Ransomware, Learning Styles
Top of Mind with Julie Rose - Season 1, Episode 28
- Mar 18, 2015 6:00 am
- 1:43:20 mins
Execution in America (1:03) Guest: Austin Sarat, professor of law and political science at Amherst College and author of the 2014 book Gruesome Spectacles: Botched Executions and America’s Death Penalty Numerous state legislatures are in the process of authorizing alternative methods of executing death row inmates if they run out of drugs used in lethal injection. Those drugs have become increasingly difficult to obtain for a variety of reasons. So, Utah lawmakers last week voted to reinstate the firing squad as a backup plan for execution. Electrocution is the backup plan under consideration in Tennessee, Alabama and Virginia. Oklahoma is considering something even more dramatic – a form of the gas chamber that entails death by nitrogen inhalation. And the irony here, is that all of those methods have fallen out of favor over the years because lethal injection has been seen as more humane. “The method of execution that has proven to be the most problematic has been lethal injection,” says Sarat. Anxiety and Decisions (21:22) Guest: Sonia Bishop, assistant professor of psychology and neuroscience at UC Berkeley We all get a little anxious from time to time. Some 40 million adults in America experience something more than a “touch of nerves” on occasion – they have full-fledged anxiety disorders, such as phobias or panic attacks. And here’s a bit of bad news for those people – new research published in the journal Nature Neuroscience shows anxious people are more inclined to make bad decisions when faced with uncertainty. Ransomware (39:29) Guest: Dale Rowe, IT Professor and head of the BYU’s “cyber security lab” Reports of a terrifying new type of hack called “ransomware” have been increasing lately. It’s a type of software virus that encrypts all of the data on your computer and requires that you pay a ransom before the hackers will release your files. American Heritage (51:45) Guest: Grant Madsen, BYU history professor Of all the aspects of early American history, none seems harder to