That’s one of the questions we explore in today’s episode. NPR’s Mary Louise Kelly looks ahead to what happens next in the race for the republican nomination with senior editor and correspondent Domenico Montanaro.
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Tulsa Family Lawyer and Mediator
That’s one of the questions we explore in today’s episode. NPR’s Mary Louise Kelly looks ahead to what happens next in the race for the republican nomination with senior editor and correspondent Domenico Montanaro.
Email us at considerthis@npr.org
Or on the flip side — whether it’s going to put us out of a job. But how would you be thinking about AI… if you were in charge of a major US intelligence agency?
NPR’s Mary Louise Kelly spoke to FBI Director Chris Wray and National Security Agency Director Paul Nakasone about Artificial Intelligence as a national security threat.
Email us at considerthis@npr.org
There are displays of shiny orange and silver fish, bright rows of glistening pork ribs and overflowing crates of dragon fruit and guava.
It’s the place for everyday grocery shopping for cooks around here.
But it’s much more it’s a portrait of all the forces – both indigenous and colonial – that have shaped modern Taiwan. In essence, Taiwan’s cuisine is a reflection of its long history of influences.
NPR’s Ailsa Chang tours the market with “Made in Taiwan” cookbook authors Clarissa Wei and Ivy Chen.
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By Palestinian officials’ tally – more than 23,000 Palestinians have been killed in Gaza and about one in every 40 people there have been wounded in just three months.
Israel’s military is now pushing deeper into central Gaza. The World Health Organization says the most important hospital there is al-Aqsa Hospital.
American pediatrician Seema Jilani, spent two weeks working at the al-Aqsa hospital there. She recorded voice memos about what she saw and talks to NPR’s Ari Shapiro about the experience.
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It’s one of the most important and closely-watched elections around the world this year.
While most of the world – including the United States – does not officially recognize Taiwan as an independent country, they are watching the results.
On New Year’s Eve, Chinese leader Xi Jinping said China would “surely be reunified” with Taiwan – reiterating Beijing’s aspiration to one day control Taiwan. Caught in the middle of this are the island’s people.
NPR’s Ailsa Chang and Emily Feng spent some time with one family who don’t agree on what it means to be Taiwanese.
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Fast forward almost eight years. At a town hall in New Hampshire, a voter asked Haley what she believed caused the Civil War. Haley failed to identify slavery in her answer, and she’s been trying to clean up that misstep ever since.
When Haley rose to political prominence a decade ago, she was touted as the future of an inclusive and diverse Republican party. Now, in 2024, she’s trying to win the Republican nomination against Donald Trump, who has used divisive rhetoric and politics to build a political base with unwavering support.
Can Haley win over those voters and the nomination without losing herself?
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At the beginning of this year, the program expanded coverage to licensed professional counselors and licensed marriage and family counselors. But is this expansion enough to address a growing mental health gap in the United States.
NPR’s Juana Summers talks to a licensed professional counselor and professor about what these changes could mean.
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Host Scott Detrow speaks with NPR’s Brian Mann, who’s been following the case.