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By Ainslie Coughran and Fanney Bjargardottir
The podcast currently has 34 episodes available.
Fanney and Ainslie are back to contextualize moral panics with three historical examples: the Satanic Panic, Stranger Danger, and AIDS epidemic. Listen to find out what a moral panic is, what happened in these panics (were the '80s real?), and what the political implications were. This was also Fanney and Ainslie's first time recording at college, so please don't mind the Berkeley cars zooming by or the Harkness Tower bells ringing in the background.
In the indefinitely final episode of By Young People, For Young People, Fanney and Ainslie get personal as they reveal their top three favorite episodes, share fun facts and stories from the podcast, and explain why this podcast means so much to them.
Fanney and Ainslie fill in the blanks of US History that feature contributions made by the LGBTQ community.
Fanney and Ainslie discuss the historical significance of Juneteenth, along with the controversy and educational reform surrounding critical race theory.
Fanney and Ainslie elucidate Covid-19's effect on the recent fluctuations within the housing market and labor market.
Fanney and Ainslie explore generational differences in the perception of President Ronald Reagan. Why do older generations revere him? Why do younger generations dislike him? What story does the difference in his job approval ratings and favorability ratings tell?
Fanney and Ainslie break down cryptocurrency: what it is, who it appeals to, and how it relates to the American financial system. Listen for analogies, Bitcoin, climate change concerns, and Elon Musk.
Fanney and Ainslie delve into the U.S. homelessness crisis, examining the main causes of homelessness and why the crisis is so extreme in California.
Fanney and Ainslie shed light on the upcoming California recall election, including how recalls work as a model of democracy, why the 2003 California recall was successful, and what voters are considering as they ponder whether to recall Governor Gavin Newsom. They also discuss California's pressing homelessness dilemma.
Fanney and Ainslie break down the new Georgia Election Integrity Act of 2021, delving into all the interesting and controversial sections. Keep listening for an interview with Courtney, who quit her day job to work with political organizations leading up to the 2020 election. She describes her thought process in doing so, what her jobs looked like, and whether the experience was rewarding.
The podcast currently has 34 episodes available.