Host Ailsa Chang talks with Michael Wara, who directs a climate and energy policy program at Stanford, about the financial calculus insurers are making as the threat of climate-fueled disasters grows.
What It’s Like Inside The Submersible That’s Lost In The Atlantic
CBS Sunday Morning correspondent David Pogue was aboard the same vessel to take the same voyage last year. He says its interior is the size of a minivan, it’s built with a combination of off-the-rack and highly technical components and it has a hatch that’s bolted shut from the outside.
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Remembering The Children’s Crusade On Juneteenth
June 19th marks the date in 1865 when the last enslaved people in the U.S. learned they were free. on that day, Major General Gordon Granger of the Union Army delivered the news to enslaved Black people in Galveston, Texas.
But for African Americans, the fight for freedom began long before the Civil War. And it didn’t end with the Emancipation Proclamation. So to mark the day we’re looking at a turning point in the fight for civil rights — The Children’s Crusade.
NPR’s Debbie Elliot traveled to Birmingham, Alabama, which is marking the 60th anniversary of the movement, when leaders like Reverend Martin Luther King Jr. looked to children to join the struggle for equal rights. The vicious response from white segregationists shocked the world and galvanized support for the Civil Rights Act.
Made in America: It’s trickier than it sounds
To understand why, NPR’s White House correspondent Asma Khalid spoke with policy makers, economists and even went out to a factory floor in Minnesota.
Celebrating Fathers From All Walks Of Life
There is no single, universal way to be a father. There are as many ways to be a dad as there are dads.
This year, for Father’s Day, we asked a variety of different dads to tell us their stories about what fatherhood means to them.
And we have a story that puts a new twist on the old saying “like father, like son”.
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The drug fueling another wave of overdose deaths
Xylazine has been around for a while, but over the last year authorities have been seeing it turn up in higher quantities all over the country.
In recent weeks, U.S. Drug Czar Rahul Gupta has been sounding the alarm, even acknowledging public health experts and police are mostly in the dark about how Xylazine took hold so quickly.
NPR’s Juana Summers speaks with addiction correspondent Brian Mann, who has been reporting on the mysterious and deadly emergence of the drug.
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A North Korean Defector SharesThoughts On Diplomacy With U.S.
That’s because Mr. Kim spent 17 years working for North Korean intelligence at the Ministry of State Security.
He defected in 2014 and lives today in South Korea.
In a rare glimpse behind the curtain of one of the most isolated countries in the world, he shared his thoughts on pathways to diplomacy between Washington and Pyongyang, possible successors to Kim Jong Un and his fears for loved ones who remain in North Korea.
Kim Hyun-woo spoke with NPR’s Mary Louise Kelly in an exclusive interview.
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Trump in Court…Again
He is the first former U.S. president to face federal criminal charges. Trump and many of his supporters have called the indictment politically motivated.
NPR’s White House correspondent Franco Ordonez has been following Trump’s case and he spoke to Ailsa Chang about how Trump, as well as his opponents in the Republican primary are reacting to the indictment on the campaign trail.
Ailsa Chang spoke with NPR’s Andrea Bernstein about why Trump sees so many lawyers come and go.
Making it Easier for Kids to Get Help for Addiction, and Prevent overdoses
And overdose deaths among young people, between the ages of 10 and 19, have been on the rise with sharp increases in recent years.
Across the country, cities and states are looking for strategies to help kids survive the opioid crisis.
At a school in Virginia, students are learning how to obtain and use the lifesaving overdose reversal nasal spray Narcan that was recently made available for sale over the counter.
And in California, where fentanyl is the cause of 1 in 5 deaths among youths, a pending bill could allow younger teens to seek drug treatment without parental consent.
The PGA LIV Golf Deal Is All About The Green
Though the deal has yet to be finalized, it’s already faced backlash from players who remain loyal to the tour, and from human rights activists who see this as an attempt by the Saudi government to use sports to draw attention away from their record of human rights abuses.
NPR’s Susan Davis speaks with Sally Jenkins, a sports columnist for the Washington Post, who wrote a column critical of the merger, and Terry Strada, who chairs the group 9/11 Families United, which represents thousands of surviving family members of those killed in the September 11, 2001 attacks. Strada has been one of the most vocal critics of the plan.
We also hear from Doug Greenberg, a writer for the sports news site Front Office Sports, who says the Saudi-backed league has actually been good for golf.