After Dire U.N. Warning On Climate, Will Anything Change?
“The irreversibility” of some of the most catastrophic effects of global warming, he tells Audie Cornish. Kerry, the U.S. Special Envoy for Climate, tells NPR the U.N. report underscored the need for the world to respond more forcefully to climate change — and he’s called an upcoming U.N. climate summit in Scotland the “last best hope” for global action.
At the same time, the Biden administration faces an uphill battle to take major action on climate at home. Hear more on that from the NPR Politics Podcast via Apple, Spotify, or Google.
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Taliban Gains, U.S. Evacuates: What’s The Endgame In Afghanistan?
State Department spokesperson Ned Price told Audie Cornish the 300,000-member Afghan military needs “the willpower” to stand up to the Taliban.
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Uncharted Territory: Back To School Meets The Delta Surge
Dr. Marcos Mestre with Niklaus Children’s Foundation Hospital in Miami told NPR’s Weekend Edition Sunday many of the children his hospital is treating come from families with unvaccinated parents or caretakers.
Unlike last year, many schools will have no remote learning option this fall. While some may have mask mandates, a handful of Republican governors — including Florida’s Ron DeSantis — have issued executive orders banning those mandates. NPR’s Pien Huang surveyed experts about how to keep children safe during the delta surge. Read more coverage from the NPR science desk here.
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Ethiopia’s Civil War Is Becoming A Humanitarian Crisis
NPR’s Eyder Peralta visited the war-torn region in May and spoke with the people at the center of the conflict.
The United Nations says more than 400,000 people are now living in famine conditions in Ethiopia, putting them at risk of starvation if the country’s civil war doesn’t let up.
The United States is the country’s largest foreign aid donor. And the person who controls that funding currently is Samantha Power, administrator for the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID). She spoke with Ari Shapiro about she learned from her recent trip the area.
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On Our Watch: Perceived Threat
‘A Code Red For Humanity:’ Climate Change Is Getting Worse — Faster Than We Thought
Those effects are already becoming clear as extreme weather, drought, and fire become more common. One of the latest examples: wildfires are raging amid a record heat wave in Turkey, Lebanon, Italy and Greece. Durrie Bouscaren reports for NPR from Istanbul.
And, as NPR’s Jeff Brady reports, climate change is also changing lives in subtler ways.
Other reporting heard in this episode came from NPR’s Rebecca Hersher, who’s been covering the new U.N. report on climate change.
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Biden Admin Sees Bipartisan Infrastructure Bill As A Win
A Resistant Gov. Cuomo Could Face Impeachment
Cuomo has categorically denied harassment and groping allegations. And he said that people have “sought to unfairly characterize and weaponize everyday interactions.”
Multiple high profile politicians have called for Cuomo to step down, including President Biden. Meanwhile, NPR’s Brian Mann discusses how Democratic leaders in New York state legislature plan to move forward with impeachment proceedings.
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