Currently, it includes a mix of chapters from the first version of Ripped Apart and new material from my second book How Democrats Win. The update will be evolving over the next few months, but the publication date is unpredictable.
Hopefully, it will be in the first half of These will mainly relate to my interests in economics, climate, and international politics. On election night, , with a house full of friends eagerly looking forward to the coming good news, I just kept silent. One bullet, three empty chambers. How did I know? Every day I checked with the smartest polling-stats guy in the country — Nate Silver.
The whole trick is knowing where to get the Facts. Trump took the White House and we took to the streets. I was impressed. It was deja vu all over again. So I left zFacts. So my two books on political polarization focus on how the far-left exacerbates this and feeds into the far-rights efforts to polarize. And the update of Ripped Apart extends this analysis and explains better the urgency of our situation. The good news is that the aspirations of the moderate and extreme Democrats are almost identical.
So read Ripped Apart , and find out how we can put this party back together again. OK, a lot of people ask about this. So if you have a buck to spend on global warming you can get 20 times the bang-for-your buck by building wind and some conservation is even cheaper. Individuals can do better, but only because they get subsidized -- explicitly and by getting retail price for a wholesale product. But that gives greens a bad name -- subsidizing better off folks out of the general fund so they can feel green.
Progressives must learn how to shop wisely. That's good economics and a basic American value and the conservatives are right, that the left often ignores this because they feel their cause is just. In my view that's a sin. Privacy Policy Google, as a third party vendor, uses cookies to serve ads on zFacts. Google's use of the DART cookie enables it to serve ads to zFacts users based on your visits to zFacts and other sites on the Internet.
Users may opt out of the use of the DART cookie by visiting the Google ad and content network privacy policy. Who's building zFacts? About the zFacts approach What's happening at zFacts? Gen Z Hispanics are less likely than Millennial Hispanics to be immigrants, and previous research has shown that second-generation Hispanic youth are less likely to drop out of high school and more likely to attend college than foreign-born Hispanic youth.
Gen Zers are also more likely to have a college-educated parent than are previous generations of young people. Both of these trends reflect the overall trend toward more Americans pursuing higher education.
Perhaps because they are more likely to be engaged in educational endeavors , Gen Zers are less likely to be working than previous generations when they were teens and young adults. The views of Gen Z mirror those of Millennials in many ways. Still, survey data collected in well before the coronavirus outbreak shows that there are places where this younger generation stands out as having a somewhat different outlook.
For example, members of Gen Z are more likely than older generations to look to government to solve problems, rather than businesses and individuals. For the most part, however, Gen Zers and Millennials share similar views on issues facing the country.
When it comes to race relations, Gen Zers and Millennials are about equally likely to say that blacks are treated less fairly than whites in this country. Roughly two-thirds of Gen Zers and Millennials say this, compared with about half of Gen Xers and Boomers and smaller shares among the Silent Generation.
Younger generations also share a different view of the U. Still, pluralities of every generation except the Silent Generation say the U. Among Republicans and those who lean to the Republican Party, there are striking differences between Generation Z and older generations on social and political issues. In their views on race, Gen Z Republicans are more likely than older generations of Republicans to say blacks are treated less fairly than whites in the U.
Views are much more consistent across generations among Democrats and Democratic leaners. Similarly, the youngest Republicans stand out in their views on the role of government and the causes of climate change. Gen Z Republicans are much more likely than older generations of Republicans to desire an increased government role in solving problems. Overall, members of Gen Z look similar to Millennials in their political preferences, particularly when it comes to the upcoming election.
Across a number of measures, Gen Zers and Millennials stand out from older generations in their views of family and societal change. Members of the Silent Generation are the most likely to view this as a bad thing for society. There is a similar pattern in views of people of different races marrying each other, with larger shares of Millennials and Gen Zers saying this is a good thing for our society, compared with older generations.
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