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The Gist

Teenage Brains Are Just Different

The Gist

Peach Fish Productions

News, Daily News

4.53.7K Ratings

🗓️ 13 January 2018

⏱️ 24 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

On The Gist, Mike examines Trump's bottom-of-the-barrel statements on immigration. In the interview, Dina Temple-Raston explains how she became fascinated by the teenage brain. After years of covering terrorism for NPR, she was stunned to see so many young people leaving their homes to join ISIS. Teenagers aren't just prone to falling in with terrorist recruiters: Their underdeveloped minds make them more susceptible to video gaming compulsions and violent behavior. Why? Temple-Raston finds answers in her Audible Original series, "What Were You Thinking?" In the Spiel, a skit about the science (and lopsided sex ratio) of turtle love. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

Childhood should be fun. Don't let bed wetting spoil that. Dry nights give maximum

0:09.1

protection so kids can go to bed worry-free. Have a dry night sleep and wake up awesome.

0:24.5

Days start with dry nights. Search dry nights for a free sample. The following program and current

0:32.0

presidency does include explicit language. It's Friday January 12th 2018 from slated to the

0:42.8

Justi Mike Paska. How is the president doing? Let's do the numbers. Yes, the weather, stormy,

0:50.0

stormy, and deed. And some of the numbers that the president is talking about is let's up the

0:55.6

number of people from Norway. And what wouldn't a Norwegian come wanting to leave the number one

1:03.0

per capita income in the world, the happiest country in the world for the United States? The

1:07.5

president sells this country pretty well. Massive levels of poverty. Crime that's out of control.

1:15.6

No education. No jobs. Tremendous joblessness. People walk to the office. They walk to get a

1:25.9

loaf of bread. They get shot. Here are the numbers. In 2016, over a million people became legal

1:32.4

permanent residents of the United States. Of those, the ones from Norway, the count, 362. So why

1:39.7

do we get more of them? Because they don't want to come here. The 362 Norwegians are probably not

1:45.7

the answer to our immigration woes. If there is a question of Norway and the United States and

1:53.1

immigration, I'd worry about it going the other way. Americans emigrating to Norway. In fact,

1:59.6

after the presidential election, there is something called the hope, I hope I'm pronouncing this

2:04.7

the ringerike. It's a section near Oslo in Norway. The ringerike recovery program began to

2:15.2

lure Americans who are perhaps upset with getting shot while a biolo of a bread thing.

2:20.7

It was a pitch to Americans to come settle in Norway. I could see the flow going in that direction.

2:28.4

Those numbers are not really going to work out for the president. Of course, immigration is his

2:33.2

big issue. It seems like he's definitely not going to be able to paper over whatever is going on

2:38.8

with the rest of immigration, with just teams and swarms of Norwegians. But maybe he can keep out the

...

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