50 Years Later, Is America’s War On Drugs At A Turning Point?
Fifty years later, during months of interviews, NPR found a growing consensus across the political spectrum — including among some in law enforcement — that the drug war simply didn’t work.
The stories in this episode are from NPR’s Brian Mann and Eric Westervelt as part of a special series: The War On Drugs: 50 Years Later.
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BONUS: Tom Hanks, Fox News, And A Debate About Whiteness In Hollywood
NPR TV and film critic Eric Deggans appreciated those words, but wrote in a column of his own that Hanks could do more from his powerful perch in Hollywood.
Eric speaks to host Audie Cornish about the reaction to his column, and how Hollywood reckons with its own power. (And no, he is not trying to cancel Tom Hanks.)
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Parents Want Schools To Make Up The Special Education Their Kids Lost In The Pandemic
Now they’re demanding help, arguing to judges, state departments of education and even to the U.S. Department of Education that schools are legally required to do better by their students with disabilities.
NPR education correspondent Cory Turner and reporter Rebecca Klein have spent months reporting on complaints filed across the country from families who say schools need to act now to make up for the vital services kids missed.
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Will The U.S. Meet Its July 4 Vaccination Goal? Your State May Already Have
Still — nearly two dozen states have already exceeded the 70% threshold. Many are clustered in the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic, while states with the lowest rates are largely in the South and Southwest. But there is one exception: New Mexico — where some counties report vaccination rates as high as 90%. NPR’s Kirk Siegler explains why.
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Reparation Discussions Are Gaining Traction But Not Widespread Support
The Virginia Theological Seminary, for example, has started cutting checks to descendants of the forced labor the campus long relied on. The city of Evanston, Ill., has started to offer housing grants to its Black residents, and other progressive local governments are considering similar approaches.
Despite increasing interest in reparations, there is not yet widespread acceptance among Americans. A recent poll from the University of Massachusetts Amherst shows that two-thirds of the U.S. does not agree with cash reparations on a federal scale.
Professor Tatishe Nteta ran the poll. He explains what the findings say about the political future of reparations in the U.S.
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Why Everything Is More Expensive Right Now
Additional reporting this episode from NPR’s Camila Domonoske — who reported on computer chips in car manufacturing — and NPR’s Weekend Edition Sunday, which reported on slowdowns in food processing and manufacturing.
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What’s At Stake As President Biden Enters Negotiations With Vladimir Putin
NPR’s Mary Louise Kelly is covering the summit in Geneva, where she spoke to former U.S. Ambassador to Russia Michael McFaul about what the U.S. could expect to gain from negotiations.
For more coverage of the negotiations, follow Mary Louise Kelly on Twitter and tune into NPR’s Up First on Wednesday morning. Listen via Apple, Spotify or Pocket Casts.
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BONUS: A World Where The NRA Is Soft On Guns
Back To The Office: Not Everyone Is Welcoming The Return
We asked you to tell us how your work has been for the last year and how you feel about returning to the office. The responses were mixed.
Susan Lund, a partner at McKinsey & Company, says that after the pandemic it’s unlikely that people will go back to the same pattern of working.
Email us at considerthis@npr.org.