The Future, Video and Justice, Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood

The Future, Video and Justice, Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood

Top of Mind with Julie Rose

  • Oct 27, 2015 9:00 pm
  • 1:43:50 mins

The Future and Back to It (1:04) Guest: Matt Novak, Writes for Gizmodo  There is lots of geeking out going on over a new installment of Star Wars, due out next month – which technically takes place “a long time ago and far far away.” But it’s pretty futuristic, if you ask me. And we’ve just marked Back to the Future day – October 21, 2015 – the date to which Marty McFly and Doc Brown travelled to in the second installment of the film franchise. In 1985, the movie envisioned a world 30 years in the future where cars and skateboards flew, clothes and shoes automatically adjusted to fit and a thumbprint was all you needed to pay for a cab or open a door.  Social Responsibility Promotes Conservative Risk Behavior (27:41) Guest: Gary Bolton, PhD, Professor of Managerial Economics at the University of Texas at Dallas  If you are a risk-taker, research shows you’ll be a little less-bold in your decisions when other people are involved. The power of the group to push people toward more conservative choices is fairly well documented. The question is, why does it happen?  Apple Seed (42:15) Guest: Sam Payne, Host of BYUradio’s “The Apple Seed”  Sam Payne joins us in studio and captivates us with a new story.  Video and Justice (51:24) Guest: G. Daniel Lassiter, PhD, Psychology Professor at Ohio University  Cellphone camera video of a white school officer upending the desk of a black high school student in South Carolina and dragging her across the floor went viral yesterday. Investigations are underway. It’s just the latest video to prompt debate over race and policing. Police departments across the country are getting federal grants to equip officers with body cameras. Hundreds of jurisdictions already require interrogations of suspects to be videotaped. The general thinking is that the camera doesn’t lie. That when video is available, the truth will out.  Intellectual Arrogance (1:08:41) Guest: Wade Rowatt, PhD, Psychology Professor at Baylor University  Nobody likes a know-it-all, except maybe when that person’s the ringer on your Trivia Night team. Generally, we consider humility better than arrogance.  Is one universally good and the other bad? Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood (1:19:13) Guest: Michele Dunn, PhD, Directs the Middle East Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace  During the 2011 Arab Uprising, massive crowds protesting in the streets of Cairo inspired big hopes for democracy in Egypt. The movement did force the ousting of the long-time dictator Hosni Mubarak. But democracy has not taken hold. Rather, Egypt has since undergone a military coup and the vicious resurgence of authoritarianism. At the center of the drama is a group called the Muslim Brotherhood.  Michele Dunne of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace says the Muslim Brotherhood had a long history as an opposition group Egypt, but only in the days following Mubarak’s ouster did it gain entry into the halls of power. The Brotherhood – which adheres to principles of Islam, but does not advocate the creation of a religious state in Egypt – won hastily-held democratic elections in 2012. A year later, it was overthrown by the military.

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