
War Without End
The Pentagon’s failed campaigns in Iraq and Afghanistan left a generation of soldiers with little to fight for but one another.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Which company supplies industrial magnesium sulfate in China.
The Pentagon’s failed campaigns in Iraq and Afghanistan left a generation of soldiers with little to fight for but one another.
C.J. Chivers New York Times Magazine Aug 2018 45min Permalink
Minara Akhter came to America with uncertainty and hope. Then her husband, a Muslim religious leader, was murdered in a suspected hate crime.
Rahima Nasa ProPublica Sep 2018 15min Permalink
How prosecutors tied a brazen murder in an upscale Dallas suburb to one of Mexico’s most violent criminal organizations.
Michael J. Mooney Texas Monthly Aug 2018 30min Permalink
A group of Latina women across the country have been working in secret, turning their homes into shelters for abused immigrant women.
Lizzie Presser California Sunday Oct 2018 15min Permalink
The author spent a day with three men in a high-end security detail to find out how it feels to be safe.
Jamie Lauren Keiles Topic Oct 2018 15min Permalink
A generation of African American heroin users is dying in the opioid epidemic nobody talks about. The nation’s capital is ground zero.
Peter Jamison Washington Post Dec 2018 Permalink
Inside the most destructive fire in American history—and why the West’s cities and towns will keep on burning.
Kyle Dickman Outside Dec 2018 20min Permalink
More than 600,000 U.S.-born children of undocumented parents live in Mexico. What happens when you return to a country you’ve never known?
Brooke Jarvis California Sunday Jan 2019 15min Permalink
“I admit it,” she says, in her hotel room. “I’m a troll. I’m the queen of the fucking trolls.”
Geoff Edgers Washington Post Mar 2019 20min Permalink
The parents indicted in the college-admissions scandal were responding to a changing America, with rage at being robbed of what they believed was rightfully theirs.
Caitlin Flanagan The Atantic Apr 2019 25min Permalink
Thea Hunter was a promising, brilliant scholar. And then she got trapped in academia’s permanent underclass.
Adam Harris The Atlantic Apr 2019 20min Permalink
What happened when Pete Buttigieg tore down houses in Black and Latino South Bend.
Henry J. Gomez Buzzfeed Apr 2019 30min Permalink
How coach Gregg Popovich’s love of fine wine led to a 20-year run of success in the NBA.
Baxter Holmes ESPN Apr 2019 25min Permalink
In a supermax facility on US soil, inmates are force fed—and barred from sharing their stories.
Aviva Stahl The Nation Jun 2019 30min Permalink
Decades of greed, neglect, corruption, and bad politics led to last year’s Paradise fire, the worst in California history.
Mark Arax California Sunday Jul 2019 50min Permalink
He dreamed of educating the children in his village. But soon he learned that it was dangerous for the Rohingya to dream.
Sarah A. Topol New York Times Magazine Aug 2019 50min Permalink
Housing insecurity in the nation’s richest cities is far worse than government statistics claim. Just ask the Goodmans.
Brian Goldstone The New Republic Aug 2019 30min Permalink
What the opioid crisis has done to one indigenous family in Alaska–the writer’s.
Joshua Hunt The New Republic Sep 2019 15min Permalink
Decades on, a massive half-built monument in the Black Hills remains controversial.
Brooke Jarvis New Yorker Sep 2019 Permalink
Scientists in Brazil are trying to save the giant anteater from a growing threat: roads.
Ben Goldfarb The Atlantic Nov 2019 20min Permalink
“I always said that when my time came I’d want to go fast. But where’s the fun in that?”
Peter Schjeldahl New Yorker Dec 2019 40min Permalink
A Navajo girl was exploited and sex trafficked in urban and rural New Mexico. Why did so many fail to help her?
Nick Pachelli Searchlight New Mexico Dec 2019 20min Permalink
The discovery of a legendary, lost shipwreck in North America has pitted treasure hunters and archaeologists against each other, raising questions about who should control sunken riches.
Jill Neimark Hakai Magazine Jan 2020 25min Permalink
“What I learned about masculinity from my father, my father-in-law and my own transition.”
P. Carl The New York Times Magazine Jan 2020 20min Permalink
The author unearths the story of Frank Yerby, one of the the most prolific African-American novelists in history.
KaToya Ellis Fleming Oxford American Mar 2020 35min Permalink