City Journal's 10 Blocks
joins to discuss the impact of drug use and decriminalization on children.
info_outline Cultivating CivilityCity Journal's 10 Blocks
joins to discuss her book .
info_outline Chaos CoordinatorsCity Journal's 10 Blocks
joins to discuss his documentary It Wasn't Fauci: How the Deep State Really Played Trump.
info_outline Gondola DodgersCity Journal's 10 Blocks
joins to discuss the controversial plan to install an aerial transit system connecting Los Angeles’s Dodger Stadium to the city.
info_outline The Will to LibertyCity Journal's 10 Blocks
joins to discuss how we can transcend the pettiness and corruption of our current political moment.
info_outline Harvard’s Unscientific ConsensusCity Journal's 10 Blocks
joins to discuss his firing from Harvard University and the importance of scientific debate.
info_outline Abundance or Extinction?City Journal's 10 Blocks
joins to discuss the potential and danger of artificial intelligence.
info_outline The Future of MobilityCity Journal's 10 Blocks
joins to discuss autonomous vehicles’ potential to remake transportation.
info_outline Chaos and OrderCity Journal's 10 Blocks
joins to discuss his book .
info_outline Dogma of DangerCity Journal's 10 Blocks
joins to discuss the harms of public schools’ transgender secrecy policies.
info_outlineKay Hymowitz joins Brian Anderson to discuss how our social instincts, and especially our social networks, affect our behavior and choices, in areas as wide-ranging as divorce, obesity—and even rioting.
Humans are social animals, as the saying goes. Our social nature, Hymowitz writes in her new story, "The Human Network," makes nearly everything contagious, from viruses to behaviors. For example, new research suggests that people can, in effect, "catch" divorce from their friends or extended family. But while network science can be a useful tool for understanding human action, it cannot explain why some are more susceptible to social pressure than others.