NPR Odds & Ends PDF Print E-mail
Written by Sara   
Monday, 20 August 2007

A few items on NPR have caught my attention recently; here are the links to the stories...

A while back, NPR began a series they're calling The Young and the Godly. Here's how NPR describes the year-long series:

Americans remain largely religious, but their beliefs have grown more diverse. As we follow a new generation of spiritual leaders, we'll explore what draws them to the calling — and what drives the faithful in a world where religion remains a potent force.

So far, they've talked with an Episcopal deacon entering the ministry as her second career, a young United Methodist clergy couple who have just graduated from Wesley, and a young Imam in Virginia. It's pretty interesting. Somehow, it's a bit of a relief to know that moderate religious voices get coverage somewhere in the mainstream media!

Another story - far weirder than the the first - was about the growing trend among America's wealthiest families to have larger numbers of kids. (This is quite a reversal, demographically speaking; typically, as western industrialized folk have gotten richer, their families have gotten smaller.) Some of the ideas on why some are bucking that trend are intriguing. Actually, I found this story a little creepy. NPR didn't publish the entire transcript on their site, but you can read a synopsis and listen to the story on their site.

Last but not least is a conversation that took place on Marketplace. Typically, I rather like that show, in part because I think the host (Kai Ryssdal) does such a good job. But in this story, which I'll just nickname RoboCop Soldiers, there were some downright disturbing ideas about how best to fight a war. Here's what a representative from Taser had to say:

Well, there are an enormous number of advantages in having robotic guards or robotic soldiers. Robots don't get bored. Robots do exactly what they're told. You don't have to write condolence letters for them. They are infinitely brave. When you don't need them, you can shrink-wrap them and put them in storage. They don't have families that need to have housing. And if you put them on a battlefield with lethal weapons, they will kill without remorse. They will kill without pity and without compunction, which is not something that you would say about human soldiers.

Yikes. What do y'all think?

Last Updated ( Monday, 20 August 2007 )
 
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