
Today we rely on so much more technology that a major solar flare could be catastrophic. The last time a really big one happened like that, compasses went on the fritz and telegraph communications was out for days. Periodically, the sun burps out giant bursts of radiation, and sometimes they hit the earth dead on. Guest: Justin Kasper, PhD, Space and Planetary Physicist, Professor of Climate and Space Sciences and Engineering, University of Michigan Are those lives worth it? Awful as that calculation sounds, insurance companies and policy makers do something like it all the time. To put it bluntly, the decision will be: Here’s how many lives we can save if we keep everything closed. Kip Viscusi, Professor of Law, Economics, and Management, Vanderbilt University Law School, Author of “Pricing Lives: Guideposts for a Safer Society”Īt some point in the coming weeks, countries will have to decide if the economic toll of pandemic closures and isolation has become more of a problem than the disease itself. How Do You Calculate the Cost of Life? (19:33) Tremendous potential for voter fraud, and for whatever reason, doesn’t work out well for Republicans.” He tweeted earlier today, “Republicans should fight very hard when it comes to state wide mail-in voting. Imagine the challenges we’ll face keeping voters and poll workers safe if the coronavirus pandemic is still ongoing in November? How many people might just opt not to vote because they’re concerned about the close quarters and shared surfaces of their polling location? One solution is to let anyone who chooses, vote by mail instead of in person. Voters donned masks and tried to stay six feet apart.

The coronavirus pandemic did not stop Wisconsin from holding its primary election this week. Guest: Sonni Waknin, Legal Fellow, UCLA Voting Rights Project COVID-19 Will Likely Mean More People Voting by Mail in November (0:32)
