How to Talk to Your Kids About Mass Shootings (Originally aired: Nov. 7, 2017)Top of Mind with Julie Rose • Season 1, Episode 734, Segment 5
Jan 26, 2018 • 15m
Guest: Brooks Keeshin, MD, Clinician Researcher, Division of Child Protection and Family Health, University of Utah, Child Psychiatrist at the Center for Safe and Health Families at Primary Children’s Hospital, Salt Lake City On Tuesday, two 15-year-olds were killed, allegedly by another 15-year-old, in a school shooting in Kentucky. Over a dozen more students were wounded. It’s a scene that’s becoming almost routine in America. As parents, how do we explain these acts of violence to our children when they are becoming more common? How young is too young for a conversation about an event as unpredictable and terrifying as a mass shooting?

The History of Shutdown PoliticsJan 26, 201819mGuests: Chris Karpowitz, PhD, Associate Professor, Political Science, BYU; Grant Madsen, PhD, Assistant Professor, History BYU Two weeks from today we’ll be back in government shutdown watch mode, unless Republicans and Democrats have come to an agreement on spending and immigration by then. The three-day shutdown that happened over the past weekend was the first to occur with a single party controlling the White House and Congress. But it’s not as if U.S. leaders all the way back to George Washington have managed to pass a budget on time every year. It’s just that until fairly recently, the whole government did not shut down when Congress missed a budget deadline. So why does it happen now? And are we better off for it as a nation?
Guests: Chris Karpowitz, PhD, Associate Professor, Political Science, BYU; Grant Madsen, PhD, Assistant Professor, History BYU Two weeks from today we’ll be back in government shutdown watch mode, unless Republicans and Democrats have come to an agreement on spending and immigration by then. The three-day shutdown that happened over the past weekend was the first to occur with a single party controlling the White House and Congress. But it’s not as if U.S. leaders all the way back to George Washington have managed to pass a budget on time every year. It’s just that until fairly recently, the whole government did not shut down when Congress missed a budget deadline. So why does it happen now? And are we better off for it as a nation?