We also talk to Vox climate reporter Rebecca Leber about Biden’s signature climate legislation, which was passed a year ago this month.
Email us at considerthis@npr.org.

Tulsa Family Lawyer and Mediator
We also talk to Vox climate reporter Rebecca Leber about Biden’s signature climate legislation, which was passed a year ago this month.
Email us at considerthis@npr.org.
And nearly every country with a space program is vying for a spot there – for a chance to explore the shadowy, polar craters in hopes of finding usable quantities of water ice.
On Wednesday, the Indian Space Research Organisation successfully landed its Chandrayaan-3 probe near the moon’s south pole. It was the first time India had landed a spacecraft on the moon, and the first time any country had successfully landed at the coveted moon’s south pole.
Many have tried including, Japan, Israel, and most recently Russia, whose Luna-25 spacecraft crashed onto the surface just days before India’s successful landing.
NASA is preparing its ARTEMIS mission to return to the moon. Luxembourg and Saudi Arabia have also set their sites on moon missions.
A new space race is underway. But why exactly are we racing to the moon again?
NPR’s Scott Detrow speaks to space lawyer Michelle Hanlon to find out.
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The focus has also turned to how the island can prepare for similar disasters in the future
Officials and experts hope to address Hawaii’s emergency alert system, as well as the construction of more fire-resistant homes.
But what of the fires themselves? We often hear about forest fires, but the deadliest fire in the US in more than a century was a grass fire. Co-host Ailsa Chang talks to Jeva Lange, who wrote a story called “Most Wildfires Aren’t Forest Fires,” about how wildfires largely occur in grasslands.
Also Rebecca Thiele with Indiana Public Broadcasting reports on how certain native plants can help combat the deadly effects of climate change.
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As head of the Wagner Group, Prigozhin led an unsuccessful mutiny against the Russian military in June. He quickly stood down and struck a deal with Russian President Vladimir Putin that would see him exiled to neighboring Belarus. That exile never came and questions swirled about what punishment, if any, Prigozhin would face for crossing Putin.
NPR’s Mary Louise Kelly speaks with Nina Khrushcheva. She is a professor of international affairs at The New School in New York City, and she’s also the great-granddaughter of former Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev.
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So how do you prep for a big, televised debate when your biggest opponent decides not to show up?
That’s been the question facing the eight Republicans who will be on stage in Milwaukee on Wednesday night.
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These disasters have taken a heavy toll on student mental health. They’ve disrupted everyday life – including school. That disruption has seriously impacted educational outcomes for kids and teens on the island.
The Nation’s Report Card shows that more than one-third of fourth graders overall in the U.S are considered proficient or better in math.
In Puerto Rico, that number rounds out to zero. Children on the island have worse outcomes when it comes to graduation rates, and reading scores continue to decline.
Reporter Kavitha Cardoza traveled to Puerto Rico to learn how students and teachers cope.
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We talk to Monique Worrell, who was elected state attorney for Florida’s ninth judicial circuit, which includes the city of Orlando, in 2020. This month, Republican Governor and presidential candidate Ron DeSantis suspended her and installed a replacement. He said her office had refused “to faithfully enforce the laws of Florida,” in its charging decisions. Worrell called her suspension an attack on democracy.
And we talk to Carissa Byrne Hessick, director of the Prosecutors and Politics Project at the University of North Carolina, explains how these sorts of battles are playing out across the country.
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Still, our communities seem to get louder and louder. Some people are fighting back – pushing for more regulation and quieter cities.
NPR’s Pien Huang takes a sonic tour of Providence, Rhode Island with researcher Erica Walker and talks about noise pollution solutions with Jamie Banks the founder and president of Quiet Communities, and New York City Council member Gale Brewer.
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Now, the administration is locking up more unauthorized immigrants and asylum-seekers in detention facilities, and NPR has exclusively obtained more than 1,600 pages of confidential inspection reports examining conditions inside those facilities.
They describe barbaric practices, negligent medical care, racist abuse and filthy conditions.
NPR’s Tom Dreisbach reports on the abysmal conditions detainees are forced to endure.
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Yet, COVID is nowhere near the threat that it was more than three years ago at the beginning of the pandemic.
And that might be one of the reasons that people are cruising again on big ships following a COVID-19 decline.
WLRN reporter Tom Hudson tells us how one of the hardest hit industries during the peak of the pandemic is trying to make a comeback.
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