An investigation from NPR’s Laura Sullivan and Northwest News Network’s Courtney Flatt shows how the U.S. federal government gave away American-made technology to China.
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Tulsa Family Lawyer and Mediator
An investigation from NPR’s Laura Sullivan and Northwest News Network’s Courtney Flatt shows how the U.S. federal government gave away American-made technology to China.
Email us at considerthis@npr.org.
NPR’s Kat Lonsdorf brings us the story of Vitaly, a 22-year-old college student in Kherson. Since the city first fell, he has sent NPR voice memos detailing life under the Russian occupation. Now, he’s decided he has to get out.
And NPR’s Brian Mann travels near the front lines with Ukrainian forces pushing towards Kherson. It’s a vast stretch of half-abandoned villages and farms fields, old industrial sites and dense forests, where the exact point of contact between Russian and Ukrainian troops is often unclear day by day.
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Earlier this summer, Murad’s concert in the West Bank city of Ramallah was cancelled under threats by anti-LGBTQ activists. As an outspoken proponent of LGBTQ rights, Murad is challenging both the external conflict Palestinians face with Israel and the internal conflicts imposed by a conservative society.
This week, NPR’s Daniel Estrin speaks with Bashar Murad about his music, his activism, and how anti-LGBTQ events that unfolded during the summer have added to the complexities that can come with being a voice for both the Palestinian and the LGBTQ communities.
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And as the number of cases in the U.S. continues to climb, there’s a lot of confusion about the disease, how it spreads and who’s most at-risk.
NPR health correspondents Pien Huang and Michaeleen Doucleff join us to discuss the current outbreak.
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He weighs in on all three in a sit-down interview with NPR.
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NPR’s Carrie Feibel brings us the story of a woman in Texas whose pregnancy took a sudden turn. Because of the state’s abortion law, her case became a medical crisis.
This episode also includes reporting from NPR’s Sarah McCammon and Melissa Block
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NPR’s Greg Myre and Diaa Hadid discuss the implications of al-Zawahiri’s death for the U.S., Afghanistan, and America’s decades-long war on terror.
This episode also features reporting from NPR’s Steve Inskeep.
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The water was more than six feet higher than the 1957 mark when floodwater destroyed the gauge.
The flooding took out bridges and knocked houses off their foundations. It had claimed at least 35 lives as of Monday afternoon.
And it was just the latest record-breaking flooding event to hit the U.S. this summer.
NPR’s Rebecca Hersher explains that climate change is making extreme floods more frequent. A warming atmosphere can hold more moisture, which means, when it rains, it rains harder.
This episode also features reporting from NPR’s Kirk Siegler, KJZZ’s Michel Marizco and St. Louis Public Radio’s Sarah Fentem.
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With Roe overturned, depending on where you live, figuring out how to obtain an abortion has gotten much harder. This could make the role of abortion doulas more critical than ever — and more risky.
NPR’s Michel Martin speaks with Vicki Bloom. She refers to herself as a full service doula and provides a range of reproductive health support services, from helping clients create a birth plan, to being present at abortions, to providing information and emotional support.
We discuss what a abortion doula does and how that role might change in a post-Roe world.
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These schools – funded by the Canadian government and administered by the Catholic Church – were aimed at erasing the culture and language of indigenous people.
The apology from Pope Francis this week comes after years of allegations detailing abuse and neglect at these residential boarding schools. Canada’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission was established in 2008 to document what happened at these schools – and the lasting trauma that has followed.
Stephanie Scott is a member of the Anishinaabe from Roseau River First Nation. She’s executive director of the National Center for Truth and Reconciliation – and has been part of a years-long effort to gather the testimony of survivors. She shares with us the mixed feelings about the Pope’s apology, and the work that still has to be done towards reconciliation.
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