NPR’s Mary Louise Kelly speaks with Chantel Jennings, senior writer covering women’s basketball for The Athletic, about the factors that contribute to that gap and how the women’s game could overcome them.
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Tulsa Family Lawyer and Mediator
NPR’s Mary Louise Kelly speaks with Chantel Jennings, senior writer covering women’s basketball for The Athletic, about the factors that contribute to that gap and how the women’s game could overcome them.
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The White House says that’s the closest the U.S. can get to universal background checks without additional legislation from Congress, where Democrats and Republicans remain divided on any new actions aimed at reducing gun violence.
NPR’s Deepa Shivaram reports on the order, which Biden announced during a visit to Monterey Park, California, where a gunman killed 11 people and injured nine more in January, one of over 110 mass shootings in the U.S. so far this year.
And NPR’s Mary Louise Kelly speaks with White House domestic policy adviser Susan Rice about the order’s potential impact and where gun legislation goes from here.
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NPR’s Frank Langfitt profiles one of them, a 29-year-old who used to work as a journalist in Poland.
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The film warns parents about the dangers of sexually coercive crimes online and suggests that strangers are targeting potentially millions of minors – pressuring them into sharing revealing content and, often, extorting them for money.
But NPR has found the documentary could leave viewers with an incomplete and exaggerated sense of the risk by relying upon statistics that lack context. Experts fear it could hinder harm reduction efforts by skewing public perception.
NPR’s Lisa Hagen, who covers how false and misleading information spreads, shares her reporting into the documentary and its filmmakers.
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Federal regulators said Sunday that they were taking the emergency measures to prevent contagion at other small and regional banks in the wake of Silicon Valley Bank’s implosion.
NPR’s David Gura reports that, despite those measures, many bank stocks plunged on Monday.
And former Congressman Barney Frank, a Democrat who sponsored new banking regulations in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis, explains what he thinks went wrong at the banks. Frank more recently also served on the board of Signature Bank.
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While it’s easy to feel that cannabis has come a long way from the scare tactics of Reefer Madness, since 1970’s Controlled Substance Act, marijuana has been classified as a drug on par with cocaine and heroin – dramatically increasing penalties for possession, sale, and distribution. Those penalties were enforced in ways that continue to disproportionately target people of color, especially black people.
While the same states that once prosecuted the sale of weed are now regulating and taxing it, will those most affected by the punitive frameworks of the past be able to profit too?
Host Michel Martin speaks with Devin Alexander, owner of the cannabis delivery business, Rolling Releaf, based in Newton Massachusetts. And we hear from Tauhid Chappell, President of the Philadelphia CannaBusiness Association.
Buttigieg spoke to NPR’s Ari Shapiro a day after Norfolk Southern CEO Alan Shaw apologized for the East Palestine derailment during a Senate hearing, but stopped short of endorsing specific new regulations for his industry.
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During the pandemic, the federal government temporarily increased SNAP benefits. But those extra benefits have now expired. That means recipients will get about $90 less each month on average, according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a nonpartisan research institute. Some families may see their benefits cut by more than $250 per month.
Dr. Megan Sandel, co-director of the Boston Medical Center’s Grow Clinic, which focuses on treating malnutrition issues in kids, explains how children’s health can suffer when families are not able to put enough food on the table.
And NPR’s Stacey Vanek Smith reports on another worrying trend in Americans’ personal finances. Credit card debt is increasing at a record rate, as people struggle to keep up with inflation.
This episode also features reporting from NPR’s Alison Aubrey.
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Kaepernick’s new graphic novel “Change The Game,” written with Eve L. Ewing and illustrated by Orlando Caicedo, is about that time in his life. He talked to NPR about his coming-of-age story, his career, and whether the NFL has changed since his departure.
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DeSantis has just released a new book that highlights his pugnacious style and hardline stance on issues ranging from education to public health. And he has attracted even more attention as Florida’s Republican-led legislature began its session Tuesday.
NPR’s Greg Allen has this look at how DeSantis became what some believe is the future of the Republican Party.
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