NPR’s Odette Yousef reports some new converts are using the religion to spread white nationalist views. More from her story here.
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Tulsa Family Lawyer and Mediator
NPR’s Odette Yousef reports some new converts are using the religion to spread white nationalist views. More from her story here.
Email us at considerthis@npr.org.
Reproductive justice advocates are concerned about the disproportionate impact those laws will have on Black and Brown communities if Roe is overturned.
NPR’s Sandhya Dirks spoke to some advocates about how women of color are situated in this abortion access debate. And NPR’s Selena Simmons-Duffin explains how restricting abortion access means restricting health care for people across all demographic backgrounds.
You can also hear more from Dr. Diana Green Foster, who spoke to NPR’s science podcast Shortwave, which examined what happened when people had access to abortion and what happened when they were denied.
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Almost as soon as abortions became legal, opponents began organizing efforts to repeal the law. Eighteen states now have so-called “trigger laws” that will ban abortions the moment that Roe v. Wade is overturned or pre-“Roe” era bans that remain on the books, ready once again, to fall into place.
We’ll look back at the longstanding efforts by legal, political and religious groups – on both sides of the debate – that have led to this moment. And we’ll discuss what comes next.
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Audio in the podcast from Supreme Court arguments of Roe v. Wade was obtained from Oyez.org multimedia archive.
NPR Science correspondent Michaeleen Doucleff reports on what the new Omicron variant could have in store for the U.S. in coming weeks and months, and what scientists know about Americans’ COVID immunity.
Andy Slavitt, former senior advisor to President Joe Biden on COVID, explains what the “endemic phase” could look like.
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Rescuers exfiltrated the babies, dodging Russian artillery fire and driving through a snowstorm before finally arriving at a Polish hospital, where new father Alex “Sasha” Spektor met the boys for the first time. But a more difficult journey for the family was just beginning.
NPR’s Ari Shapiro followed up with Spektor and his partner, Irma Nuñez, as they navigated the complicated bureaucratic process of getting their twins from Poland to the United States.
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In 2020, Former President Trump and his allies urged them not to certify as part of his campaign to undermine and overturn the presidential election, even though Joe Biden won Michigan by more than 154,000 votes.
Since then, local GOP leaders have replaced many of the Republican canvassers who upheld their oaths and voted to certify the results for Biden.
Michelle Voorheis, a Republican canvasser in Genessee County until last year, is one of them. She says she wasn’t re-nominated because she pushed back against false allegations of election fraud.
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NPR congressional correspondent Kelsey Snell, national political correspondent Mara Liasson, and national correspondent Sarah McCammon explain the far-reaching effects this draft could have on abortion-rights advocates, as well as its potential impact on the midterm elections later this year.
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The country has implemented a stringent “zero-COVID” strategy that includes mass testing, limited travel and large-scale lockdowns.
In Shanghai, many residents haven’t been able to leave their homes. It’s an eerie reminder of the lockdowns in Wuhan during the first year of the pandemic.
NPR’s international correspondent Rob Schmitz spoke with two residents of a housing complex in Shanghai about their experiences with the city’s lockdown.
There are some people who are leaving their homes – mainly to enforce China’s “zero-COVID” plan. China has hired tens of thousands of temporary workers to test, isolate and lock down entire cities.
Beijing correspondent Emily Feng spoke to a few of those workers, many of whom are poorly treated and underpaid.
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Ayana Elizabeth Johnson, a marine biologist, policy expert and writer, wants the broader environmental movement to understand the crucial link between the fight to save the planet and the fight for racial justice.
And we’ll hear how the Donors of Color Network is working to increase philanthropic funding for environmental initiatives led by people of color.
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NPR Media Correspondent David Folkenflik and NPR producer Marc Rivers look at the growing tension between police and the press through the lens of one March 2021 night at Echo Park Lake, when police detained at least 16 journalists.
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