Ask Batya Ungar-Sargon a Question!
In partnership with Quo - The smarter way to run your business communications.
Batya Ungar-Sargon is an American journalist, author, and commentator. She holds a PhD from UC Berkeley and previously served as opinion editor at The Forward and deputy opinion editor at Newsweek. She has authored books like Bad News: How Woke Media Is Undermining Democracy and Second Class, focusing on class issues, media critique, and politics. She hosts Batya! on NewsNation and writes for outlets like The Free Press.
Tomorrow, she is returning to the show for a second time and will be discussing whether the MAGA civil is real or just just an online perception.
Comment your questions below.
A missed call is money out the door.
If you run a business, you already know the problem. Calls come in when you are busy. Texts get missed. A customer reaches out, gets no response, and goes elsewhere. The messier your communications setup, the more it costs you.
Quo fixes that.
Here is what it does:
Your entire team shares one business number, with every call and text visible to everyone so nothing falls through the cracks
Works from an app on your phone or computer, so you can handle customer conversations wherever you are
Keep your existing number, and add teammates or new numbers easily as your business grows
AI automatically logs calls, generates summaries, and flags next steps so nothing gets lost after a conversation
Responds to customers after hours, keeping your business responsive even
when you are offline
Streamlining your communications is one of the quickest upgrades you can make to a business. No new hires, no complicated setup, no missed opportunities.
Try Quo for free, plus get 20% off your first six months when you sign up at Quo.com/TRIG. That’s Q-U-O dot com slash TRIG.
Quo. No missed calls, no missed customers.




What happens in America affects the rest of the world, which ripple effect is going out globally that we don't discuss but that we really should be?
Technology advances against human interests, and often without our desire, and policies to defend Nature or Man have proven very ineffective constraints upon it (see: microplastics, PFAS, deforestation, restricted freedoms, social media, etc.).
While repugnant, if it becomes possible for our biology to accept brain-chip implants delivering advantages, these will be another forced technological adoption, like cars and smartphones; how can human integrity be maintained in the face of Technology's advances requiring biological integration?