Professor Melissa Kearney, talks to me about the overlooked economic and social impacts of marriage and family structures and her book, "The Two-Parent Privilege." Kearney's research reveals the decline in marriage rates, particularly among non-college graduates, as an economic crisis with far-reaching consequences. She argues that the decrease in two-parent households, from 77% in 1980 to 63% today, affects children's behavior, education, and the class divide. Kearney emphasizes the economic imperatives of this issue, moving beyond the traditional cultural and political debates.
How Can We Avoid A New Generation of Brett Kavanaughs and Harvey Weinsteins
Australia's Climate Apocalypse: Up Close and Personal
Silicon Valley and the Quest for Immortality
Saving America From Trump, and Democrats From Themselves
It's Ok To Compromise and Maybe Even to Sellout Sometimes
Human Nature Always Finds A Way
Can the Generational Divide Lead Us Out Of Division?
Do You Need Further Reminders that This Is Not Your Father's Workplace
Why Most Health Care is Barking Up the Wrong Tree
William Greider R.I.P.
Something to Think About As You Eat that Holiday Steak........
Can America's Military Ever Recover?
From Useful Idiot to Working Asset
The Model For Taking It To The Streets
Why Quantum Mechanics Matter and Why You Should Care: A Conversation with Sean Carroll
What Happens to Ancestry Testing DNA?
The Best and the Brightest of America's Diplomats
Kickstarting a Better World
Fake is Sometimes Real
Only Whistleblowers Can Save Democracy
Join Podbean Ads Marketplace and connect with engaged listeners.
Advertise Today
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Jim & Bill (It‘s Another Day)
The Ben Shapiro Show
The Tucker Carlson Show
The Daily
Morning Wire