Category: Politics & Policy

When Equity Looks Inequitable: the Base-Rate Fallacy
My latest article (or “story,” or “piece” – I can’t figure out the vernacular to save my life) is at FEE. This one is about a common error in our discussions of gender and race, and uses a local/Minnesota example
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Teachers of Color: When More Is Never Enough
As nice as it sounds to spend millions of dollars to recruit more teachers of color, some pesky demographics and arithmetic get in the way. My latest in the Duluth News Tribune. P. A. Jensen (@RuralityChecker) lives in
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A Minimum-Median-Maximum Wage, or Something
A “minimum” wage is hard to define across a country as diverse as ours. A wage that’s truly “minimum” in South Dakota would be sub-minimal in California; a “minimum” wage on the coasts would approach the median in Mississippi. But
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Is affordable housing still a ‘human right’ in an unaffordable place?
My latest opinion column in the Duluth News Tribune raises the point that spending millions on “affordable housing” in unaffordable places is a slap in many rural Americans’ faces. Beware cheesy references to Aesop’s fable about the Country Mouse.
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A Whopper of a Wage
My opinion article in the Duluth News Tribune considers the effects of a “living wage” on multi-earner vs. single-earner families. It also features a slew of bad Burger King puns. P. A. Jensen (@RuralityChecker) lives in Minnesota
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The Progressive Flat Tax
Imagine that we didn’t pay income taxes online, or by check. Imagine that we paid them in person, in cash, on Tax Day. Maybe everybody in town would bring sacks of cash to the Central Tax Pit and dump them
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College Students Are Adults, Right? [Kernel]
This is a new, shorter format: the Kernel (hence the picture). Feedback is welcome, especially on our editor’s Twitter account (@RuralityChecker). As always, thanks for reading. A local car salesman recently offered up this tidbit in casual conversation: “High school
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Amenities of the State [Kernel]
The mayor of Duluth, MN, wants more affordable housing in the city. The idea has at least two problems. The first involves perspective, and the second involves funding. First, perspective. Leaders of cities bemoan high housing costs, but that’s often
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Mind the Gap: Four Solutions to the Education Achievement Gap
C. N. Hughes, Ed.D. Director State Agency on Trends In Race and Education State of Minnesota St. Paul, MN 55155 Dear Dr. Hughes, This letter summarizes the findings of our grant (“Closing Minnesota’s Race-Based Educational Achievement Gap at All Costs,”
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#Equal Pay, Inequality, and Yada-Yada Economics [Kernel]
This is a new, shorter format: the Kernel (hence the picture). Feedback is welcome, especially on our editor’s Twitter account (@RuralityChecker). As always, thanks for reading. After the US Women’s Soccer Team’s World Cup victory this weekend, all-world phenom forward
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“Medicine?” You’re Kidding.
Sit in a coffee shop in middle America and you’ll see, time after time, people waddling away from the counter, with sugar-struck smiles amidst their chins, holding what appear to be quadruple double whipped frappe mochaccinos, liquid chocolate under a
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Rural White Privilege
(First, let’s get this out of the way: Instead of asking whether white privilege exists at all, I’m asking whether it exists uniformly, and what the consequences of that might be.) White privilege, or the notion that white people don’t
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A Bite at the Apple: The Arithmetic of Minority Teachers
Both Democrats and Republicans like to talk about increasing the number of minority teachers. The stated reasons vary, but let’s get right to the specifics: in Minnesota, an education coalition is asking the state for $80m to help increase the
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Sharing Fairly
“You bitch! Just put it in!” Whoa, there. Language. My wife may be misremembering, in no small part because she was sleep-deprived. But there she was, trying to stick a needle into this woman’s spine after being roused from her
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Frame of Preference
Clear, wet grease crawled up the sides of that brown paper bag. It sat on the counter, soggily erect, saturated with calories. A sack of beef. And cheese. And fried, krinkle-kut potatoes. And it was awesome. My life isn’t hard,
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Cents-less: How the Logic of a Living Wage Ignores Household Size
Here’s a counterintuitive idea: progressives must hate diversity. I mean, how else can you explain getting behind the idea of “a living wage,” as in singular? I kid, kinda. But only kinda. In two previous articles I outlined how minimum
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Oh, the Humanities: The STEM of the Problem
A recent bit in the Chronicle of Higher Education highlights one “tortured” fellow’s failure to get any job security in higher education. (Yes, “tortured” is the Chronicle’s word, not mine.) As discussed in a previous article (“Adjuncts Go Marching”), this
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Good Discrimination: Why Feminists Should Oppose Gender Identity in Athletics
She went skittering across the floor. Or, maybe I’m over-remembering a traumatic event. But she did slam into the decades-old, brightly colored vinyl pad against the brick wall, and hard. And the coach did call off practice. Immediately. I was
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The Selfless Selfishness of Parenting
I’m a stay-at-home dad. I care deeply about family. My own, I mean. Yours? Not so much. Sorry. Just being honest. There is a constant refrain from some on the Left—particularly in feminist circles, but in progressive circles generally—that stresses
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A Rural Flavor of CoLA
As legislative bodies get rolling after the new year, we will hear a lot about cost of living and its impact on Americans, particularly “hardworking Americans.” Cost of living is not the sexiest political topic, but it is important because
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