Author: Kaitlin Hopkins
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Executive Editor JOEL KOTKIN on USA Today regarding migration
“Migration overall is going to slow just for the simple reason that the population is getting older,” says Joel Kotkin, a fellow at Chapman University in Orange, Calif., and author of the upcoming The Next 100 Million: America in 2050. “People will be moving less for lots of reasons.”
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Executive Editor JOEL KOTKIN on California
An alarming graph that every California politician should see was part of a recent North Bay talk by Forbes economics columnist Joel Kotkin. It showed California unemployment rising to 14.4 percent in the first quarter of 2010 and remaining above 12 percent into 2011.
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Contributing Editors MORLEY WINOGRAD and MIKE HAIS on millenials
Morley Winograd and Michael Hais, co-authors of the insightful Millennial Makeover, also want government to do more for young people. Writing on the newgeography.com Web site, they endorse proposals for creating internships, loan forgiveness programs, and “mission critical” jobs in such fields as health care, cyber-security and the environment. Plus, “increased entrepreneurial resources [should] be made available to youth.”
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Executive Editor JOEL KOTKIN on PressPubs regarding cities and mobility
Newsweek ran an article in October by Joel Kotkin suggesting that nothing will be as surprising about the 21st century America as its settledness. For more than a generation Americans have believed that “spatial mobility” would increase and, as it did, feed an inexorable trend toward rootlessness and anomie
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Executive Editor JOEL KOTKIN on Seattle Weekly regarding Seattle
At least according to Joel Kotkin, an expert in urban futures. As Kotkin notes, “smart” is now synonymous with “green.” And while our neighbors to the south are consistently on the top of any list of the greenest cities in the country, Kotkin says that’s a narrow way of defining “smart.” Why? Because commuting to work by bike only does so much when you’ve got fewer jobs to commute to.
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Executive Editor JOEL KOTKIN on Cyberhillbilly regarding industrial America
So who benefits from this collective ritual seppaku? Hegemony-seeking communist capitalists in China might fancy seeing America and the West decline to the point that they can no longer compete or fund their militaries. A weakened European Union or U.S. also won’t be able provide a model of a more democratic version of capitalism to counter China’s ultra-authoritarian version.
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Executive Editor JOEL KOTKIN on United Liberty regarding communities
In an essay for Newsweek, writer Joel Kotkin contemplates the significance of Americans moving at the lowest rate since the 1940s. Deeming this phenomenon “new localism,” Kotkin argues that communities are growing stronger, with a new focus on families and local businesses as a result of economic crunches.
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Contributing Editors MORLEY WINOGRAD and MIKE HAIS on Jill Stanek regarding abortion
If forced to choose, Americans today are far more eager to label themselves “pro-life” than they were a dozen years ago. The youngest generation of voters – those between the ages of 18 and 29, and therefore most likely to need an abortion – is the most pro-life to come along since the generation born during the Great Depression, according to Michael Hais and Morley Winograd, authors of Millennial Makeover, who got granular data on the subject from Pew Research Center.
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Contributing Editor MICHAEL LIND on Humanaturalism regarding the Pledge
Some Americans have problems with the content of The Pledge of Allegiance, and I’m among them, though I won’t admit to any lack of commitment to my country or its founding principles. The Pledge always made me feel conflicted, for reasons I could never articulate well. Now there are some interesting ideas circulating about this, one of which can be summarized by the question: “Shouldn’t the government pledge allegiance to the people rather than the other way around?”