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Once Out Of Office, Trump Faces Significant Legal Jeopardy
The president already is the subject of investigations by New York officials, and he may be implicated by federal authorities as well. As a private citizen, he would no longer enjoy de facto immunity.
Listen
•
3:56
Why Issues With Medical Records Interfere With Vaccine Rollouts
The electronic health record system is complicating the U.S.'s COVID-19 vaccine rollout. NPR's Noel King talks to Dr. Bob Kocher, who has advised California on its virus response, about the issue.
Listen
•
7:00
When Republicans Attack 'Cancel Culture,' What Does It Mean?
"Cancel culture" attacks are everywhere among Republicans: Marjorie Taylor Greene's defenders say the left is canceling her. Others claim they're being canceled for not standing by Donald Trump.
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•
7:00
What Would A 'Feminist Internet' Look Like?
Charlotte Jee of the MIT Technology Review speaks with NPR's Michel Martin about some of the ideas to make the internet more welcoming to women.
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•
8:03
Conservatives reckon with how to handle antisemitism after Tucker Carlson controversy
Prominent conservatives are engaged in a battle over how to respond to antisemitism in their ranks.
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•
6:41
'Cover-Up': How one investigative journalist uncovered lies, corruption and abuse of power
Seymour Hersh exposed the My Lai massacre during the Vietnam War, the CIA spying on American college students and torture by the CIA and U.S. military at Abu Ghraib in Iraq.
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•
10:56
As the shutdown drags on, Senator Klobuchar urges action
Sen. Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota says Democrats are united on affordability and calls on the president to help end the shutdown.
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•
7:47
A bowhead whale's DNA offers clues to fight cancer
Scientists searching for new ways to combat cancer think they may have uncovered a promising new lead in the DNA of the bowhead whale.
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•
4:01
How to actually keep your New Year's resolutions
The start of a new year often means one thing: New Year's resolutions. But what's the best way to make sure you actually follow them? Life Kit has some tips.
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•
6:15
Is It A Meth Case Or Mental Illness? Police Who Need To Know Often Can't Tell
Calming techniques officers learn during training for intervening in a mental health crisis don't seem to work as well when a suspect is high on meth. Police say meth calls can be much more dangerous.
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•
4:59
What Is Money? Jacob Goldstein's Book Explains 'Shared Fiction'
NPR's Noel King talks to Planet Money's Jacob Goldstein about his book, Money: The True Story of a Made-Up Thing. He addresses technology, historic advances, and hustlers who made money what it is.
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•
7:00
'TCM Reframed' Looks At Beloved Old Movies Through Modern Eyes
Turner Classic Movies' Reframed series aims to provide context and conversation around canonical films that have been revealed as problematic by contemporary standards.
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•
7:53
Israel Must Prepare For More Violence, Netanyahu Adviser Says
NPR's Steve Inskeep talks with Mark Regev, senior adviser to Israel's president about why tensions with Palestinians have again boiled over into deadly confrontations, and how to break the cycle.
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•
8:12
The Band Lula Wiles Formed A Quarantine Pod. A Folk Protest Album Came Out Of It
Americana trio Lula Wiles join NPR's Mary Louise Kelly to discuss their newest album Shame and Sedition, out May 21st, and how to make a protest anthem in the modern era.
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•
6:27
How We Can Acknowledge And Recognize Pandemic Grief
NPR's Michel Martin speaks with Ari Eisen, co-founder of the COVID Grief Network and Kristin Urquiza, co-founder of Marked by COVID, about their policies for recognizing grief after the pandemic.
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•
7:40
The Story Of A Denver Neighborhood In 'The Holly'
NPR's Michel Martin talks with author Julian Rubinstein about his book The Holly: Five Bullets, One Gun, and the Struggle to Save an American Neighborhood.
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•
8:35
New FTC Chair Lina Khan Wants To Redefine Monopoly Power For The Age Of Big Tech
The new Federal Trade Commission chair's first big challenge will be rewriting a lawsuit against Facebook that a federal court tossed out earlier this week.
Black TikTok Creators Are On Strike To Protest A Lack Of Credit For Their Work
Black creators on TikTok say that for years, non-black creators have risen to fame performing dances that Black influencers on the app created.
How We'll Know When The COVID-19 Crisis Is Over
Life might feel like it's getting back to normal. But we're not out of the woods yet. Here's what the end of the pandemic might look like.
Biden Administration Wants To Make Child Tax Credit Payments Permanent
Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen tells NPR's Noel King that Congress should make permanent the expanded child tax credit payments that began arriving this week.
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•
11:21
A Mission To Give Afghans Democracy Became A Bid To Repair America's Own
The United States inadvertently took on a mission to democratize Afghanistan and instead undermined democracy at home, as unpopular wars tend to do.
Flight Attendant Union Leader: Alcohol Is Big Factor In Rise Of Airline Incidents
NPR's Michel Martin speaks with Sara Nelson, international president of the Association of Flight Attendants-CWA, about what appears to be a rise in incidents involving unruly airline passengers.
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•
6:53
Alan Dershowitz Clarifies A Point Made In The Trump Impeachment Trial
Harvard professor Alan Dershowitz, who's on the president's legal team, talks to NPR's Steve Inskeep about an argument made on the Senate floor that caused debate about limits of presidential power.
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•
7:04
A Fix For Gender-Bias In Animal Research Could Help Humans
Women report more bad side effects from medicines than men do. Researchers say the discrepancy may stem in part from how biomedical research is conducted at its earliest stages in animals.
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•
4:17
Ta-Nehisi Coates On His Work And The Painful Process Of Getting Conscious
The writer, whose Between The World And Me was the winner of this year's National Book Award in nonfiction, talks about his process and the classmate and friend to whom he dedicated the award.
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7:21
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