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U.S. Acknowledges Mosul Airstrikes That Residents Say Killed More Than 100 Civilians
Loveday Morris, Washington Post Baghdad bureau chief, says if confirmed, the deadly airstrike marks the most civilian causalities since the U.S. began fighting ISIS in 2014.
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•
3:54
He walked away from his evangelical roots to escape feeling suffocated
The evangelical movement was Jon Ward's church, his family, his community, his music, and his identity. And then he broke away.
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•
16:09
Despite Dim Prospects, Syrian Exodus To Germany Continues
Germany is one of the few EU countries that has welcomed Syrians fleeing civil war. But it offers refuge only to a few thousand out of the millions who need it. And it actually deported Syrian asylum-seekers last year because of treaty requirements. Still, Syrians are risking their lives to get there.
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•
4:09
How Once-Reliable Voting Blocs Have Changed
U.S. electoral demographics have drastically changed in the past few decades. Brookings Institution demographer William Frey provides analysis, along with NPR's Asma Khalid and Domenico Montanaro.
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6:53
This psychedelics researcher approached his death with calm and curiosity
Roland Griffiths spent the later stage of his career exploring the ways that psychedelic drugs, specifically psilocybin, could help patients with depression, addiction issues and even terminal cancer.
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14:22
CEO Howard Lutnick Remembers Sept. 11: How His Company Survived After Great Personal Loss
To mark the 15th anniversary of September 11, NPR's Rachel Martin talks to Cantor Fitzgerald CEO Howard Lutnick. He lost his brother and more than 600 of his employees on that day.
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7:00
Colin Kaepernick and Nessa Diab wrote 'We Are Free, You and Me' with daughter in mind
Colin Kaepernick and Nessa Diab wrote a new children's book inspired by affirmations they share with their daughter and scores of young people they meet through their activism.
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7:01
Dyson, Merida React to 'Come On, People'
Michael Eric Dyson, a professor at Georgetown University, and Kevin Merida of the Washington Post, discuss the book Come On People, co-authored by Bill Cosby and Dr. Alvin Poussaint. Dyson has been a vocal critic of Cosby, calling him an out-of-touch elitist. Dyson and Merida talk about the plight of black men and where to find common ground with Cosby.
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0:00
Why Medicare is suddenly under debate again
As the White House and Republicans in Congress gear up for negotiations over the U.S. debt ceiling, how to pay for senior health care could be a sticking point, even if cuts are "off the table."
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6:45
Marco Rubio, Hillary Clinton Pick Up Endorsements From Iowa Newspaper
As Iowans prepare to pick their presidential nominees in just over a week, the Des Moines Register announced its presidential endorsements Saturday afternoon. The paper endorsed Rubio and Clinton.
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4:12
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