Some members of the Afghan military feel “abandoned and alone,” Commanding General of the Afghan Army Sami Sadat tells NPR’s Mary Louise Kelly.
Additional reporting this episode from NPR’s Diaa Hadid.
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Tulsa Family Lawyer and Mediator
Some members of the Afghan military feel “abandoned and alone,” Commanding General of the Afghan Army Sami Sadat tells NPR’s Mary Louise Kelly.
Additional reporting this episode from NPR’s Diaa Hadid.
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NPR’s Maria Godoy reports on that kind of outreach in Maryland, one of just a handful of states where at least half of the Latino population is vaccinated.
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Something similar happened in the 1990s with the term ‘politically correct.’ John K. Wilson wrote about that time in a book called The Myth Of Political Correctness.
And — just like ‘politically correct’ — ‘cancelling’ and ‘cancel culture’ have been co-opted and weaponized to attack the left today. Social media has made that easier, says Jon Ronson, author of So You’ve Been Publicly Shamed.
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The fastest such growth is in the Southeast, where few consider wildfire much of a threat. Molly Samuel with member station WABE reports from Tate City, Georgia.
Additional reporting in this episode from Annie Ropeik of New Hampshire Public Radio and from NPR’s Nathan Rott, who reported on fire risk in Wisconsin, home to the deadliest fire in American history.
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Hostetter is one of more than 500 people facing charges related to January 6th. Hear more about how prosecutors are proceeding from NPR’s Ryan Lucas and the NPR Politics Podcast. Listen via Apple, Google, Spotify, or Pocket Casts.
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Adam Harris, staff writer at The Atlantic, explains why. Harris has traced the debate over critical race theory back decades.
Gloria Ladson-Billings spoke to NPR about watching that debate morph in recent years. She’s president of the National Academy of Education and one of the first academics to bring critical race theory to education research.
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Footage of the festival had been locked in a basement for 50 years, because TV and film companies were not interested in it at the time.
Questlove and his fellow filmmakers speak to Audie Cornish about bringing the concert festival to the big screen in their movie, Summer Of Soul, which is also out on Hulu.
NPR’s Eric Deggans also reviewed the film. Some descriptions of the film from his review are heard in this episode.
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On this episode of NPR’s Throughline, we share three stories from NPR Music’s American Anthem series, which explored the origins of songs that have become ingrained in American culture.
Throughline is NPR’s history podcast. Listen via Apple, Spotify, Google, or Pocket Casts.
NPR’s Will Stone reports on the waiting game. And Harvard’s Junaid Habi argues vaccine hesitancy in America is a peculiar privilege.
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NPR’s Steve Inskeep reports on one group of people still living with the consequences: thousands of Afghans who worked with the U.S. military over the past 20 years. More from that story, which aired on Morning Edition, is here.
Additional reporting in this episode from NPR’s Greg Myre.
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