Teleworking
"Web Robinson Crusoe" Finds Limits of Telework on Desert Island

Gauthier Toulemonde was fed up with his commute, so he decided to start teleworking this fall. The decision was unremarkable by itself—telework is gaining momentum as people around the world are starting to realize that that odious daily chore of traveling to and from the office isn’t always necessary. So why focus on Toulemonde? Because he chose to telework from a desert island.

Known Unknowns
Millennials, the ACA, and the Vortex of Ignorance

Two recent polls paint widely varying pictures about whether Gen Yers are likely to sign up for insurance, showing the dangers of expressing confidence about expected public action based on surveys, especially in a system as complex as US health care.

The Ties That Used to Bind
The Decay of American Political Institutions

We have a problem, but we can’t see it clearly because our focus too often discounts history.

The End of History Ends
US Tries to Reassure Jittery Gulf Allies

Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel is working hard these days to reassure jittery allies in Gulf that the US still has their back. It appears that the shock, rage and horror from long time allies about the administration’s negotiations with Iran has concentrated some minds in the US government. The White House does not have total freedom to make any deal it likes with Iran.

You Are My Sunshine
A Lunar Solar Farm

A Japanese company thought way, way beyond the box with this idea: putting a ring of solar panels around the moon’s equator and beaming that energy back down to earth. This idea is much more fiction than it is science, but dreams like this one may be achieved sooner than we might expect.

Medical Money Pits
Medical Purgatories Plaguing Our Health Care System

The US could save anywhere from 1 to 8.5 billion dollars a year by reducing the inefficiencies in hospital waiting rooms. This is an example of the kind of expensive defects in our health care system that aren’t even really on most people’s policy radars, but few reforms will be really achievable until we can a handle on the waste and inefficiencies currently making the system expensive and dysfunctional.

The Francis Era
Vatican Bank Reforms Show a Pope on the Move

A new report on the Vatican Bank shows a church, and a Pope, on the move, but with much left still to do.

Advantage: Russia
Without China, Can Russia Make Ukraine Happen?

Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych is coming down heavily on the side of a “strategic partnership” with Russia, but without aid from China, Putin may have to buy Ukraine on his own.

The Promise of Technology
Driving is Dying, But That Doesn’t Mean the Suburbs Have To

The death of driving doesn’t mean the end of the suburbs. Thanks to computers and mobile devices, people are able to live richer, more social lives in more places than ever.

A Note from WRM
Upgrades at Our Site

As you read this, I’m on a plane somewhere over the Atlantic flying back to the States. I’ve been in Budapest for most of the week completely swamped in meetings, all the while trying to meet several competing writing deadlines. As such, you’ll have to forgive me, dear readers, if my post explaining the site changes you see in front of you is a little brief.

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