Approval to Strike Syria, Colonial Cryptography, Pet Food Myths

Approval to Strike Syria, Colonial Cryptography, Pet Food Myths

Top of Mind with Julie Rose

  • Apr 11, 2017 11:00 pm
  • 1:41:25 mins

Did Trump Need Congressional Approval to Strike Syria? Guest: Ryan Vogel, Director of Center for National Security Studies, Utah Valley University Secretary of State Rex Tillerson is in Moscow today where he is calling on Russia’s leaders to stop supporting Syrian President Bashar Al-Assad and help transition the dictator out of power in hopes of ending Syria’s Civil War.  What’s not yet clear, is how far the US is willing to go toward ousting Assad. Until President Trump ordered the missile strike on a Syrian military airbase last week in retaliation for Assad’s chemical weapons attack on civilians, the US had not been directly involved in the Syrian Civil War. US military activity in Syria has been focused on fighting ISIS, not Assad.  If President Trump decides to commit the US military to doing any more in the fight against Assad, a large – and bipartisan – group in Congress says he needs to get their approval first. He didn’t ask for permission to carry out the missile strike last week. And does he really need it when he’s the Commander-in-Chief? Colonial Cryptography  Guest:  Sara Georgini, PhD, Series Editor of The Papers of John Adams, Massachusetts Historical Society It's become popular these days in political and media circles – and even among White House staff, reportedly -  to use one of a growing number of apps, such as What's App or Signal, that allow you to send encrypted messages impervious to hackers and government surveillance and your boss who might not be thrilled that you’re leaking information to the press.  Encrypting messages has a long history in American politics. Many of our founding fathers were avid cryptographers and some of the messages they encoded two-hundred years ago have yet to be deciphered.  Humor in the Workplace Guest: Brad Bitterly, Doctoral Candidate, University of Pennsylvania In the TV show The Office, the manager, Michael Scott, was always telling wildly inappropriate or dumb jokes that nobody thought was funny. But he was convinced his sense of humor was a major reason he was such an effective and beloved boss. He was neither of those things, if you haven’t see the show. In preparing for this next conversation I couldn’t get Michael Scott out of my mind.  Don’t Fall for Pet Food Marketing Myths Guest: Cailin Heinze, VMD, Board Certified Veterinary Nutritionist, Assistant Professor of Veterinary Medicine, Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine, Tufts University Americans spend 60-billion dollars a year on their pets. Veterinary care, grooming, boarding, cute little sweaters and toys – all of it adds up. But the single largest expense of owning a pet is food, and it’s only getting more expensive as pet owners become convinced that their dogs should only eat what they themselves would be willing to eat. Pet food companies play right into this with their ads. Most Bang for Medical Buck Guest: Anupam Jena, Ruth L. Newhouse Associate Professor of Health Care Policy, Harvard Medical School, Physician in the Department of Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital With furniture and shoes, the old adage, “you get what you pay for” applies: A higher price tag typically means higher quality.  This is not the case in medicine, though. Patients that had more expensive hospital stays, because their doctors ordered more procedures and tests, did not have better outcomes. Plainly put, they were not less likely to die or be readmitting to the hospital than patients with doctors who ordered fewer tests and procedures.  From Spinach Leaf to Human Heart Guest: Glenn Gaudette, Professor of Biomedical Engineering, Director of WPI’s Myocardial Regeneration Lab   The science of tissue regeneration has made incredible progress in recent years. Bioengineers can now coax generic cells to specialize into heart cells that beat, for example. But getting those cells to grow into a functioning heart – or even just heart tissue - is a big leap. Researchers at the Worcester Polytechnic Institute think spinach might help. They’ve trained human heart cells to regenerate on a spinach leaf. And no, they’re not trying to create a leafy-green Frankenstein.

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