The Christian Science Monitor

Readers write: Electric cars vs. sustainable mobility

Overcoming suspicion

I have just read Shelley Scott’s letter to the editor about the Aug. 16 Q&A with Joe Keohane on his book, “The Power of Strangers: The Benefits of Connecting in a Suspicious World.” That same interview made me want to read the book, which I am now doing, and I am finding

EVs aren’t risk-freeSustainable mobility

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The Christian Science Monitor

The Christian Science Monitor8 min readPolitical Ideologies
Many Americans Don’t Trust Mail-in Voting. What Can Be Done?
“Mailed ballots are corrupt.” They’re a “disaster” and “out of control.” They’re “unsolicited, millions being sent to everybody.” “You’re automatically going to have fraud.” Since his rise to the heights of politics nine years ago, former U.S. Presid
The Christian Science Monitor3 min readIntelligence (AI) & Semantics
AI Could Transform Internet Search. Even Google Is Disrupting Its Own Kingdom.
Some 99,000 times a second, people use a single company’s technology to search the Internet. It’s so commonplace that computer users don’t call it a “search.’’ They “Google” – or “googlear” (Spanish) or “Googul” (Arabic) – a topic.  Now, however, the
The Christian Science Monitor4 min readDiscrimination & Race Relations
Brown V. Board Of Education At 70: Promise For Students, But Still Work To Be Done
I was four years into my tenure at a Black-owned newspaper when the city of Augusta, Georgia, voted to lift a decades-old desegregation order back in 2013. I was skeptical of the move because the promise of progressivism in education had not been ful

Related