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  • The Complex Relationship Between Technological Advancement and Humanity “The Impact of Technology: Examining the Positive and Negative Effects on Society”

    For your final exam you are going to write a 4-6 page double spaced size 12 font formal essay that pulls from as much of the course material as possible.
    Prompt: Throughout this course we have discussed both the merits and potential drawbacks of various technology. On the positive side, technology has allowed us to live longer, healthier lives with greater degrees of comfort and global access. On the negative side we have seen the rise of increasingly dangerous wars, global pandemics, environmental damage/climate change, artificial products, and other social drawbacks. After viewing the materials from this course what are your thoughts on technological advancement?
    Do you believe that technological advancement is generally a process that benefits humanity, or do you view it as something that rather contributes to our suffering and environmental destruction? Or do you see it as a complex combination of these two things? Each lecture focuses on some positive and negative components of technological “advancement” for you to consider. If you need more evidence for the potential negatives associated with modern society especially consider the last two lectures–especially the material presented next week in the final mini-lecture on climate change, nuclear energy, artificial society, etc.
    Ultimately, there is no right or wrong answer here because clearly the case could be made for either side. Some historians have pointed to the modern era as the era of mass stress, environmental destruction etc, while others choose to highlight the many ways in which we have become more accepting, healthier, happier, and more comfortable as a species. Your job here is to think about where you stand and more importantly, to find a variety of evidence over different time periods to support your answers. Think about the cultural changes — “us and them”–those with power and those without and what technology has done for this divide. Think about global connectivity and the benefits and pitfalls of this. Think about technology’s role in empire and again the multifaceted legacy of empire/colonialism. On the other hand think about the role that medicine, agricultural advancements, and other scientific advancements have done for humans. There are many ways to look at this question.
    You should aim to include as many pieces of evidence from the course as you possibly can (cited in text or with a footnote, any format you prefer), as this shows us as graders that you have paid attention, and also makes it clear that this was human-created work instead of AI (which is quite talented at answering this question, but of course has no idea many of the specific nuances we have brought to the course).
    Please Note!: All essays will be analyzed using various tools and human-based analysis in order to identify and submit cases of any suspected “AI” use. AI is not allowed to be used on assignments including essays, this includes Grammarly, ChatGPT, Gemini, and even various AI-based translation and “paraphrase” apps that students have told me about. According to COAM, these techs are all banned by OSU (and my personal) policy. 
    On the less scary side, I am here to help you all with any problems or questions you may have, there should never be a need to use AI because I am happy to read essays or theses/outlines in advance, I will not take off for minor grammar/usage issues (so Grammarly should not be necessary), and ALL of the info you need to write an A level paper is right there for you in lectures 1-5 and here in your final exam folder (my video on this essay is the perfect place to start!). I also want to add that it is not my goal to catch and report students to COAM, I would far rather spend this time working with you all to help you earn the grades you deserve, so I ask again that you put some confidence in your own minds and abilities and do your own human-based work, I know you all can do it, I have confidence in your skills!
    —————————————————-
    We do not use a strict rubric with these papers, as it is common to grade history work “holistically,” but here are the main elements we will be looking at as we grade:
    1. Page length–is the paper 4-6 pages long double spaced?
    2. Thesis–is it clear from the first paragraph what you are arguing/are you answering the main bold question from the prompt?
    3. Arguments/evidence: Are you giving SPECIFIC arguments and cited evidence from the course to support your ideas?
    4. Organization: Does each paragraph introduce a new sub-argument and related evidence? Paragraphs should avoid continuing thoughts from previous paragraphs. Instead, you should begin each paragraph with a strong topic sentence that sets the tone for the evidence you will bring in.
    5. Conclusion: Do you wrap up your arguments with a strong summary of your evidence and restatement of the thesis?
    The big points here are to make sure you pick a side –tech good/tech bad and then support this with as much evidence as possible while considering why the alternative argument is less potent based on our evidence.

  • Qualitative Data Analysis: Reflection and Impact on My Work

    For this assignment I do not need a title page, no header footer, and no page numbers. 
    Please see the attachment in attached documents section. This assignment is Entry 2
    Assignments are based on research. 
    Read  Chapters 5 & 6 of the book “Qualitative Data Analysis: A methods Sourcebook(3rd Ed.) By Miles, M. B., Huberman, A. M., & Saldana, J. (2014). London: SAGE”
    **Write paragraphs addressing these topics
    —-What I read that matters to me….
    —-How this might influence/impact my work
    Also, read Chapter 2 & 3 of the book “The Coding Manual for Qualitaive Researchers (3rd. Ed.). London: SAGE”
    **Write paragraphs addressing these topics….
    —-What I read that maters to me…..
    —-How this might influence/impact my work 

  • Title: Forecasting Sales for HeathCo using ARIMA (Box-Jenkins) Model

    Case Study #5 is intended to test your knowledge of how to run and interpret the results of an ARIMA (Box-Jenkins) model.
    HeathCo is a manufacturing company that produces a line of skiwear that is sold under various brand names.  The Product Manager of HeathCo has contracted with you to develop a model to forecast company sales.  You will be supplied with quarterly sales data from 2007 through 2016.  They want a model that will allow them to forecast sales one year (four quarters) out.
    Develop and interpret models using the methods below.  Use the data from the years 2007 to 2015 to develop models.  Evaluate the fit of your models to the data series used to create the model.  Reserve 2016 data as a holdout to evaluate the accuracy of your models.
    ARIMA (Box-Jenkins)
    Submit both the Instructions/Answer sheet and your detailed forecasting model runs. You will submit a single Excel workbook with all relevant sheets.  The first sheet in your workbook will be an answer sheet with clearly labeled answers to all questions and a guide to sheets where supporting Excel information can be found.
    Submit the following two documents:
    Completed Instructions/Answer sheet
    Excel workbook showing forecasting models and formulas used for calculations
    Resources:
    Below is the data file and the Instructions/Answer sheet for the case study.
    HeathCo_Sales.xlsxDownload HeathCo_Sales.xlsx
    Week 6 Case Study Instructions and Answer Sheet – BBA 360.docx Download Week 6 Case Study Instructions and Answer Sheet – BBA 360.docx 
    Rubric

  • “Improving Technical Instructions: Enhancing Clarity and Effectiveness” Spelling Practice

    Clarifying a Technical Document
    Submit the assignment by 11:59 PM PT Sunday of Module 4.
    In this application assignment, you will locate a technical document with poorly written “how-to” instructions. You will rewrite the document to make it more user friendly and to either include graphics or revise the existing graphics. To emphasize the importance of clarity and precise word choice, you will create two short video presentations to illustrate what happens using each set of instructions.
    Step 1. Locate
    Locate a technical writing document with poorly written “how-to” instructions. The writing may be too complex, lack clarity, feature small graphics with difficult-to-read directions, etc. Identify the target audience for the product and its instructions.
    Step 2. Rewrite
    Rewrite the poorly written instructions to increase the clarity and meaning for the target audience. Carefully consider your word choices.
    Step 3. Illustrate
    Include new graphics that illustrate the steps, or clarify the instructions for the graphics provided in the original document.
    Step 4. Create
    Create two brief videos illustrating the outcomes for each set of instructions. Make sure the videos are compatible with Canvas.
    Please read the Assignment GuidelinesLinks to an external site. before you begin working.
    Rubric
    Bachelor’s Assignment Rubric v.3
    Bachelor’s Assignment Rubric v.3
    Criteria Ratings Pts
    This criterion is linked to a Learning OutcomeDemonstrates a Conceptual Understanding
    20 to >16.9 pts
    Mastery
    A. Clearly addressed all elements of the assignment. B. Demonstrated real-world application.
    16.9 to >13.9 pts
    Marginal
    A. Addressed most of the elements of the assignment. B. Demonstrated marginal real-world application.
    13.9 to >0.0 pts
    Needs Improvement
    A. Somewhat addressed the elements of the assignment. B. Demonstrated little to no real-world application.
    0 pts
    No submission
    20 pts
    This criterion is linked to a Learning OutcomeAnalysis of Issues/Problems
    30 to >25.4 pts
    Mastery
    A. Clearly addressed the issue/problem. B. Exhibited scholarly analysis. C. Established a solid connection to theory and/or research. D. Demonstrated critical thinking surrounding the issue/problem with depth and breadth. E. Formulated deep conclusion and/or implications.
    25.4 to >20.9 pts
    Marginal
    A. Addressed most of the issue/problem. B. Somewhat exhibited scholarly analysis. C. Established some connection to theory and/or research. D. Demonstrated a superficial understanding of the issue/problem. E. Formulated surface level conclusion and/or implications.
    20.9 to >0.0 pts
    Needs Improvement
    A. Many issues/problems not addressed. B. Exhibited little to no scholarly analysis. C. Established little to no connection to theory and/or research. D. Demonstrated limited evidence of understanding the problem/issue. E. Formulated limited evidence of conclusion and/or implications.
    0 pts
    No submission
    30 pts
    This criterion is linked to a Learning OutcomeUse of Evidence
    30 to >25.4 pts
    Mastery
    A. Displayed a variety of scholarly references as evidence. B. Demonstrated use of scholarly literature and research beyond sources provided in the course.
    25.4 to >20.9 pts
    Marginal
    A. Displayed a marginal use of references. B. Demonstrated a marginal use of literature and research provided in the course.
    20.9 to >0.0 pts
    Needs Improvement
    A. Displayed little to no use of references. B. Demonstrated little to no use of literature and research provided in the course.
    0 pts
    No submission
    30 pts
    This criterion is linked to a Learning OutcomeScholarly Writing
    10 to >8.4 pts
    Mastery
    A. Exceeded or met formal writing standards. B. Demonstrated correct grammar, usage, mechanics, and spelling.
    8.4 to >6.9 pts
    Marginal
    A. Marginally met a basic level of formal writing standards. B. Demonstrated inconsistent use of grammar, usage, mechanics, and spelling.
    6.9 to >0.0 pts
    Needs Improvement
    A. Demonstrated limited basic formal writing skills. B. Demonstrated difficulty with grammar, usage, mechanics, and spelling.
    0 pts
    No submission
    10 pts
    This criterion is linked to a Learning OutcomeAPA Format
    10 to >7.9 pts
    Mastery
    A. Demonstrated near-perfect APA formatting.
    7.9 to >5.9 pts
    Marginal
    A. Demonstrated marginally correct APA formatting.
    5.9 to >0.0 pts
    Needs Improvement
    A. Demonstrated limited correct APA formatting.
    0 pts
    No submission
    10 pts
    Total Points: 100

  • Closing the Health Care Disparities Gap in the LGBTQ Community Title: Addressing Health Care Disparities in the LGBTQ Community: Strategies for Closing the Gap The LGBTQ community faces significant health care disparities, including barriers to accessing quality care, discrimination

    Discuss how to close the health care disparities gap in the LGBTQ community?
    Submission Instructions:
    Your initial post should be , formatted and cited in current APA style with support from at least 2 academic sources. Your initial post is worth 8 points.
    You should respond to at least two of your peers by extending, refuting/correcting, or adding additional nuance to their posts. Your reply posts are worth 2 points (1 point per response.) 
    All replies must be constructive and use literature where possible.
    Attention: Please post your initial response by 11:59 PM ET Thursday, and comment on the posts of two classmates by 11:59 PM ET Friday.
    Late work policies, expectations regarding proper citations, acceptable means of responding to peer feedback, and other expectations are at the discretion of the instructor.
    You can expect feedback from the instructor within 48 to 72 hours from the Friday due date. 

  • Title: Implementing Hazard Mitigation Programs in the Aftermath of Natural Disasters: Lessons from the 2011 Tohoku Earthquake and Tsunami in Japan Abstract: Natural disasters have the potential to cause devastating impacts on communities, resulting

    Research has shown us that the most opportune time for local government to implement a robust hazard mitigation program is immediately following a major natural disaster. 
    This is largely due to the fact it is still very fresh on everyone’s minds. 
    Select a natural disaster that has occurred anywhere in the world over the past decade and share which mitigation efforts immediately followed that particular disaster. 
    Use peer-reviewed journals and books to select and support your event.
    MUST BE WRITTEN IN APA FORMAT AND INCLUDE ABSTRACT- NO AI OR PLAGERISIM 

  • “The Ethical and Legal Implications of Technological Advancements in Law Enforcement: A Case Study Analysis of DNA Extraction from Arrestees and the Use of ShotSpotter Technology” The Fourth Amendment and the Use of ShotSpotter Technology in Investigatory Stops: A Legal and Ethical Analysis

    You will create this assignment following the Assignment Detail instructions below.
    Review the tutorial How to Submit an Individual Project.
    Assignment Details
    As recent events have shown, the rapid pace of technology development has created complicated legal questions that are being litigated before the courts today. Select one of the following topics to analyze, and prepare a three to five page paper addressing the following issues.
    DNA from Arrestees
    One of the most controversial of technological advances is the relationship between DNA, probable cause, and issues of privacy and the Fourth Amendment. You are provided with two research documents below that analyze the case of Maryland v. King, 569 U.S. 435 (2013), in which the U.S. Supreme Court held that it is constitutional to extract DNA from arrestees. The author of the first article provides an overview of the legal issues associated with compulsory DNA collection from arrestees and argues that the U.S. Supreme Court correctly decided the Maryland v. King case.
    The author of the second article raises several concerns about the Maryland v. King opinion and the future of privacy and the Fourth Amendment. Read both documents, and then write an argumentative essay explaining your position on the issue of DNA extraction from arrestees.
    Complete the following for this assignment:
    Read the following 2 research documents:
    Deitrich, L. (2015). Say Aah! Maryland v. King Defines Reasonable Standard for DNA Searches. 49 Val. U.L. Rev. 1095.
    Click here to access the article.
    Noronha, S. (2014). Maryland v. King: Sacrificing the Fourth Amendment to Build up the DNA Database. 73 Md. L. Rev. 667 (2014)
    Click here to access the article.
    Summarize the key legal and privacy concerns discussed by Deitrich.
    Summarize the key legal and privacy concerns discussed by Noronha.
    Write an argumentative essay supporting your position relating to those issues raised by Deitrich and Noronha. Indicate the following: 
    Whether you agree with both authors or one author over the other, and why;
    Whether you disagree with one or both authors, and why;
    Discuss your own ideas on DNA extraction from arrestees;
    Explain your position in detail.
    For background and additional insight into the Maryland v. King case,
    Click here to listen to the oral arguments. 
    Click here to read the Maryland v. King case. 
    ShotSpotter Technology
    Another controversial technological advancement has been police departments’ adoption of ShotSpotter technology across the county. ShotSpotter is a sophisticated surveillance system that detects gunshots and pinpoints the location of the gunshots. Once the system’s microphones detect sounds of gunfire, it sends the audio file to the ShotSpotter Review Center where it will be determined whether the sound was indeed gunfire. If it is determined that the sound is gunfire, ShotSpotter notifies the local police department.
    In favor of the use of ShotSpotter, you are provided with a case, United States v. Rickmon, and the oral arguments, in which the majority of the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals held that a ShotSpotter alert could be used to create reasonable suspicion. There also is a dissenting judge in the Rickmon case. You also are provided with an interview with the president of the company that devised ShotSpotter.
    Concerns also have been raised about the use of ShotSpotter technology. To support this position, you are provided with an article that questions the use of ShotSpotter and its effectiveness, and Chief Judge Wood’s dissenting opinion in the United States v. Rickmon case. In the article, Mr. Goodman also questions the United States v. Rickmon opinion and raises several concerns about the ShotSpotter technology.
    Read these documents and listen to the oral arguments, and then write an argumentative essay explaining your position on the issue of whether ShotSpotter technology is an effective tool that law enforcement should use and whether it should be used to create reasonable suspicion for an investigatory stop, also known as a Terry stop.
    Complete the following for this assignment:
    Read the following documents and listen to the oral arguments.
    Pro ShotSpotter
    United States v. Rickmon, 952 F. 3d 876 (7th Cir. 2020).
    Click here to access the case. 
    United States v. Rickmon Oral Arguments.
    Click here to listen to the oral arguments
    Williams, C. (2017, May 10). ) How ShotSpotter locates gunfire, helps police catch shooters and works to ‘deformalize’ gun violence. Weblog post. Washington Post – Blogs , Washington: WP Company LLC d/b/a The Washington Post. 
    Click here to access the article.
    Questions ShotSpotter
    Goodman, B. (2021). ShotSpotter – The New Tool to Degrade What is Left of the Fourth Amendment, 54 UIC L. Rev. 797.
    Click here to access the article. 
    United States v. Rickmon, 952 F. 3d 876 (7th Cir. 2020) (dissenting opinion)
    Click here to access the dissenting opinion in the Rickmon case. (Only list the dissenting opinion here, if possible). 
    Summarize the key legal points of the Rickmon case and the benefits of ShotSpotter technology.
    Summarize the key legal and privacy concerns discussed by the Goodman article and Chief Judge Wood’s dissenting opinion in the Rickmon case.
    Write an argumentative essay supporting your position relating to those issues raised by the United States v. Rickmon case and the Goodman article. Indicate
    Whether you agree with the majority opinion or the dissenting opinion in the Rickmon case,
    Whether you agree or disagree with the Goodman article.
    Discuss your own ideas about ShotSpotter technology, how it should be used by police departments, and any constitutional concerns that you may have.
    Explain your position in detail.
    For additional background and insight into the ShotSpotter technology and constitutional issues, see
    Gecas, A.S. (2016). GUNFIRE GAME CHANGER OR BIG BROTHER’S HIDDEN EARS?: FOURTH AMENDMENT AND ADMISSIBILITY QUANDARIES RELATING TO SHOTSPOTTER TECHNOLOGY. 2016 U. Ill. L. Rev. 1073.
    Click here to access the article.
    Be sure to cite all references in APA format.
    Please submit your assignment.
    For assistance with your assignment, please use your text, Web resources, and all course materials.
    The following grading rubric will be used for this assignment: Grading Rubric.
    Assignment Reminders:
    Please submit your assignment.
    Make sure you submit this assignment by the listed due date. Late deductions will apply for this assignment. Please refer to the Late Submission of Assignment policy.
    If you need assistance, please view the Troubleshooting tips.
    Resave in the proper format per the Assignment Detail instructions and resubmit.
    Submit with a different Web browser.
    Submit from a different computer.
    Call Technical Support at 877-221-5800, Menu Option 2. They are open 24/7.
    If you are still having difficulties after trying steps 1-4, please contact your course instructor.
    Instructor’s Comments
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  • Title: “The Evolution of Dubai: A Study of Physical Change and the Influential Forces Shaping the City”

    Write on Dubai, United Arab Emirates which has undergone significant physical change through its history, particularly over the past 10-20 years. Document the evolution of Dubai, United Arab Emirates overtime and discuss the key forces that played a role in shaping and reshaping Dubai, United Arab Emirates. These forces may include, for example, changes in the economic function of the place, social structure, introduction of new public infrastructure, changes in the rules of development, or application of a particular vision of the city in your area of study. Try to describe the motivation behind these forces and the particular effects in your area.Variables to look at: population growth, geography, economic activities, technological capabilities to overcome geographical and topographical challenges, the role of political decisions and growth pattern, the role of social preferences and global and regional influence on the design of the place. In a brief paper, no more than 8-12 pages in length, with 10 scholarly sources  including any data and illustrations you may wish to include. Be sure to include a one-page summary of your conclusions up front. The assignment should be doneIn app format with in text citations.

  • “Understanding the Differences Between Integrated and Targeted ELD Instruction” The Difference between Integrated and Targeted ELD Instruction Integrated ELD instruction refers to the incorporation of English language development (ELD) into content area instruction, while targeted ELD instruction

    Image has 3 spheres and each sphere has a rectangle as background. It is titled as, ‘Integrated ELD vs Targeted ELD’. The sphere in the center has text, ‘Both’and the rectangle in the background of this sphere has text,’Lessons include age- and grade- level appropriate materials that are culturally relevant and aligned to standards. Lessons provide opportunities for students to engage in academic tasks that help them learn and understand the content. Lessons include linguistic accommodations that are differentiated based on language proficiency levels’. Circle on the left has the text, ‘Integrated ELD’ and the rectangle in the background has the text,’Content Standards guide planning, while ELP Standards serve as support. Lessons include content objectives or targets aligned to grade-level expectations.’ Circle on right has the text,’Targeted ELD’ and the rectangle in the background has the text, ‘ELP Standards guide planning, but lesson are still linked to the Content Standards. Lessons and instruction focus on the form and function of the English language.’ Watch “The Relationship Between Integrated and Targeted ELD Instruction” from the AZ DOE. Respond to the following in a minimum of 175 words: What is the difference between integrated ELD instruction and targeted ELD instruction? What kind of teacher would use targeted ELD instruction, and under what circumstances? Provide an example. What kind of teacher would use integrated ELD instruction, and under what circumstances? Provide an example.

  • “Saving the Middle Class: A Summary and Response to “How to Save the Middle Class When Jobs Don’t Pay” “Alaska’s Dividend Model: A Solution for Economic Inequality, Climate Change, and Political Stagnation” “Unlocking the Potential of Common Wealth Dividends: A Game-Changer for America’s Economy and Society”

    The Assignment:
    This assignment will have two parts:
    1.) Summary
    Summarize in 150-200 words the article your instructor has chosen from the assignment: “How to Save the Middle Class When Jobs Don’t Pay” (provided below).  In this summary, you should relay the article’s main points, completely and accurately, in your own words.  If you find yourself in a situation in which the author’s words needed to be quoted directly (perhaps for emphasis), you must make it clear that these words are the author’s by using quotation marks appropriately.  You will not want to quote anything over one sentence in length, and you will want to limit yourself to no more than 2-3 direct quotes, if you use any at all.  Remember that the whole point of this portion of the assignment is for you to restate the author’s points objectively in your own words.
    In general, I recommend you structure your first sentence something like this:
    In “How to Save the Middle Class When Jobs Don’t Pay,” Peter Barnes argues that…
    This will function as the thesis statement of your summary, so this first sentence will need to convey the main point(s) of the article to give your reader an overall view.
    2.) Response
    Write a 1 ½ to 2 page response to “How to Save the Middle Class When Jobs Don’t Pay.”  Before you even begin drafting, you will want to decide on the terms of your response.  Once you decide on the terms (or grounds) of your response, you’ll want to figure out how you can support your points—using logic, outside evidence, examples from your personal life—whatever is appropriate.
    The essay 
    How to Save the Middle Class When Jobs Don’t Pay
    Peter Barnes
    There’s long been a notion that, because money is a prerequisite for survival and
    security, everyone should be assured some income just for being alive. The notion has
    been advanced by liberals such as James Tobin, John Kenneth Galbraith, and George
    McGovern, and by conservatives like Friedrich Hayek, Milton Friedman, and Richard
    Nixon. It’s embedded in the board game Monopoly, in which all players get equal
    payments when they pass Go.
    And yet, with one exception, Americans have been unable to agree on any plan that
    guarantees some income to everyone. The reasons lie mostly in the stories that
    surround such income. Is it welfare? Is it redistribution? Does it require higher taxes and
    bigger government? Americans think dimly of all these things.
    But then, there’s the exception. Jay Hammond, the Republican governor of Alaska from
    1974 to 1982, was an independent thinker who conceived of, and then persuaded
    Alaska’s legislators to adopt, the world’s first system for paying equal dividends to
    everyone. In Hammond’s model, the money comes not from taxes but from a common
    resource: North Slope oil. Using proceeds from that gift of nature, the Alaska Permanent
    Fund has paid equal yearly dividends to every resident, including children, ranging from
    about $1,000 to over $3,000. (Bear in mind that a family of four collects four same-sized
    dividends.) While this isn’t enough to live on, it nicely supplements Alaskans’ other
    earnings. And paying such dividends regularly for more than thirty years has bolstered
    the state’s economy, reduced poverty, and made Alaska one of the least unequal states
    in America.
    The question Americans in the lower 48 should now ask is: Did Alaska find the right
    formula? If it can convert part of its common wealth into equal dividends for everyone,
    can the rest of America do the same?
    There are many good reasons to ask this question. One is that America’s middle class
    is in steady decline. In the heyday of our middle class, jobs at IBM and General Motors
    were often jobs for life. Employers offered decent wages, health insurance, paid
    vacations and defined pensions. Nowadays, such jobs are rare.
    It’s also unlikely that the jobs of the future will pay more (adjusted for inflation) than
    today’s. In unionized industries like autos and airlines, two-tier contracts are now the
    norm, with younger workers paid substantially less than older ones for doing the same
    work. Nor is the picture brighter in other industries. In the Labor Department’s latest list
    of occupations with the greatest projected job growth, only one out of six pays more
    than $60,000 a year. The implication is clear: without some form of supplementary non-
    labor income, we can kiss our middle class goodbye.
    The second reason to ponder Alaska’s dividends is climate change. It might seem odd
    that dividends based on oil could presage a remedy for climate change, but such is the
    case. Imagine if we charged companies for using another common resource—our air—
    and distributed the revenue equally to all. If we did this, two things would follow. First,
    higher air pollution costs would lead to less fossil fuel burning and more investment in
    renewables. And second, households that used less dirty energy would gain (their
    dividends would exceed their higher costs) while households that used a lot of dirty
    energy would pay. This would spur both companies and households to do the right
    thing.
    A third reason for considering Alaska’s model is our long-lasting economic stagnation.
    Not counting asset bubbles, our economy hasn’t sparkled for decades, and neither
    fiscal nor monetary policies have helped much. Tax cuts for the rich have benefited no
    one but the rich, and as Mark Blyth and Eric Lonergan recently wrote in Foreign Affairs,
    pumping trillions of dollars into banks hasn’t stimulated our economy either. What’s
    needed is a system that continually refreshes consumer demand from the middle out—
    something like periodic dividends to everyone that can be spent immediately.
    One further reason for looking north to Alaska is the current stalemate in American
    politics. Solutions to all major problems are trapped in a tug-of-war between advocates
    of smaller and larger government. But dividends from common wealth bypass that bitter
    war. They require no new taxes or government programs; once set up, they’re purely
    market based. And because they send legitimate property income to everyone, they
    can’t be derided as welfare.
    In this regard, it’s worth noting that Alaska’s dividends are immensely popular.
    Politicians in both parties sing their praises, as do the state’s voters. One attempt in
    1999 to transfer money from the Permanent Fund to the state treasury was trounced in
    a referendum by 83 percent. Nationally, Alaska’s model has been lauded by Fox News
    commentators Bill O’Reilly and Lou Dobbs as well as liberals like Robert Reich.
    The reasons for this popularity are pretty clear. Alaskans don’t see their dividends as
    welfare or redistribution. According to several surveys, most Alaskans consider their
    dividends to be their rightful share of their state’s natural wealth. There’s no stigma
    attached to them, and any attempt by politicians to reduce them is seen as an
    encroachment on legitimate property income.
    Moreover, because the dividends are universal rather than means-tested, they unite,
    rather than divide, Alaskans. If only “losers” got them, “winners” would be resentful.
    Universality puts everyone in the same boat. No one is demonized and a broad
    constituency protects the dividends from political attack.
    How Would It Work Nationally?
    How might a common wealth dividend system work at the national level? The easy part
    is distributing the dividends. As in Alaska, enrollment could be done online and
    payments could wired electronically at a cost of pennies per transaction. The Social
    Security Administration could set that up in a jiffy.
    The harder part is collecting the revenue. In my latest book, With Liberty and Dividends
    For All, I show how, over time, we could generate enough revenue to pay dividends of
    up to $5,000 per person per year. Initially, a sizable chunk would come from selling a
    declining number of permits to dump carbon into our air. Later, more revenue could flow
    from our monetary infrastructure, our patent and copyright systems, and our
    electromagnetic airwaves.
    Consider what $5,000 per person per year would mean. If a child’s dividends were
    saved and invested starting from birth, they’d yield enough to pay for a debt-free college
    education at a public university. In midlife, $5,000 per person would add 25 percent to
    the income of a family of four earning $80,000 a year. In late life, it would boost the
    average retiree’s Social Security benefit by about 30 percent. Thus, dividends from
    common wealth would provide a badly-needed boost for poor and middle class families
    during what promises to be a lasting shortage of good-paying jobs.
    Surprisingly, the core idea behind Alaska’s dividends is over two centuries old. In his
    1796 essay “Agrarian Justice,” American patriot Thomas Paine distinguished between
    two kinds of property: “natural property, or that which comes to us from the Creator of
    the universe—such as the earth, air, water … [and] artificial or acquired property, the
    invention of men.” The second kind of property, Paine argued, must necessarily be
    distributed unequally, but the first kind belongs to everyone equally. It is the “legitimate
    birthright” of every man and woman, “not charity but a right.”
    And Paine went further. He proposed a practical way to implement that right: create a
    “National Fund” to pay every man and woman a lump sum (roughly $17,000 in today’s
    money) at age twenty-one, and a stipend of about $1,000 a month after age fifty-five.
    Revenue would come from what Paine called “ground rent” paid by landowners. He
    even showed mathematically how this could work. Presciently, Paine recognized that
    land, air, and water could be monetized not just for the benefit of a few but for the good
    of all. Further, he saw that this could be done at a national level. This was a remarkable
    feat of analysis and imagination, and it’s time to apply it broadly.
    Today, Paine’s core idea—that everyone has a right to equal income from common
    wealth—can be applied not just to natural resources but also to the creations of society.
    Consider, for example, the immense value created by our legal, intellectual, and
    financial infrastructures, the Internet, and our economy as a whole. This value isn’t
    created by single individuals or corporations; it’s created collectively and hence belongs
    equally to all. In a fairer economy some of it would actually be distributed to all. The
    ideal mechanism for doing this would be common wealth dividends—simple,
    transparent, direct (not trickle down), built on co-ownership rather than redistribution,
    and politically appealing.
    And here’s the best part. If Paine’s idea and Alaska’s model were applied at sufficient
    scale, the implications would be vast. The current tendencies of capitalism to widen
    inequality and devour nature would be self-corrected. Instead of plutocracy and climate
    change, our market economy would generate widely-shared, earth-friendly prosperity.
    And it would achieve these goals automatically, without much need for government
    intervention.
    Is this wild-eyed dreaming? Possibly, but no more so than universal suffrage or Social
    Security once were. Common wealth dividends could be the next step in America’s long
    march toward equal rights—and the game-changer that leads to a new version of
    capitalism. But first, we have to see the opportunity and demand it.