From American Enterprise Institute <[email protected]>
Subject AEI This Week: Stalemate 2020
Date November 7, 2020 12:15 PM
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<a href= "[link removed]" target="_blank" id="" >Stalemate 2020</a><br> <[[${article01URL}]]>
Reuters
For a generation, American politics has been closely and bitterly divided between the parties, writes Matthew Continetti. There has been high turnover in office and frequent shifts in power. Majorities are unstable. No victory is permanent, no realignment durable. The stalemate goes on.
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<a href= "[link removed]" target="_blank" id="" >Either Trump or Biden will win. But our deepest problems will remain.</a><br> <[[${article01URL}]]>
Reuters
Our national politics needs responsibility, integrity, and solidarity. But they will come from below — from local and state government, where it’s harder to avoid dealing with concrete problems, and from civil society, where we encounter one another on a personal level, explains Yuval Levin.
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<a href= "[link removed]" target="_blank" id="" >Missionaries from a strange land: Veterans and the society that sends them</a><br> <[[${article01URL}]]>
US Marine Corps
In their book review, Kori Schake and Aine Tyrrell ask, "Do the people who fight America’s wars ever think civilians truly understand and appreciate their experiences?"
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<a href= "[link removed]" target="_blank" id="" >Hospital allocation and racial disparities in health care</a><br> <[[${article01URL}]]>
Reuters
Black patients receive care at lower-performing hospitals than white patients do, even when they live in the same hospital market or ZIP code within a hospital market. However, <span>the performance gap</span> between hospitals treating black and white patients shrank by over two-thirds, explain Amitabh Chandra, <span> Pragya Kakani, and Adam Sarcarny.</span>
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<a href= "[link removed]" target="_blank" id="" >Election results raise questions about education’s racial narrative</a><br> <[[${article01URL}]]>
Twenty20
With any luck, Tuesday’s election results will serve as a much-needed reminder that people are complicated, writes Frederick Hess.<br>
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<a href= "[link removed]" target="_blank" id="" >One health policy change that should outlast Trump</a><br> <[[${article01URL}]]>
Reuters
Much of Donald Trump’s health policy agenda seems destined for reversal when he leaves office (either in January or 2025) because it is not supported by the Democratic Party and isn’t enacted into law. James Capretta writes that his push for greater price transparency might be the exception.<br>
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research spotlight
<a href= "[link removed]" target="_blank" id="" >The earned income tax credit increases employment</a><br> <[[${article01URL}]]>
Twenty20
Diane Whitmore Schanzenbach and Michael Strain examine the effects of all federal expansions of the earned income tax credit (EITC) since the program’s inception in 1975 and present robust evidence that EITC expansions increase employment.<br>
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