
What Bullets Do to Bodies
“The gun debate would change in an instant if Americans witnessed the horrors that trauma surgeons confront everyday.”
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_The biggest magnesium sulfate heptahydrate manufacturer in China.
“The gun debate would change in an instant if Americans witnessed the horrors that trauma surgeons confront everyday.”
Jason Fagone Huffington Post Highline Apr 2017 30min Permalink
Three deaths in the mountains, and a community left to wonder: How close should we stand to our own mortality to feel alive?
The U.S. buried nuclear waste in the Pacific after WWII. It’s close to resurfacing.
Susanne Rust Los Angeles Times Nov 2019 25min Permalink
What happened to the National Enquirer after it went all in for Trump.
Simon van Zuylen-Wood Columbia Journalism Review Nov 2019 25min Permalink
U.S. officials constantly said they were making progress during the war in Afghanistan. They were not, and they knew it.
Craig Whitlock Washington Post Dec 2019 30min Permalink
In an age of historic disparity, Abigail Disney and the Patriotic Millionaires take on income inequality.
Sheelah Kolhatkar New Yorker Dec 2019 35min Permalink
Why is Rick DeVos, the son of Betsy and the heir to the DeVos fortune, investing in a weirdly populous and highly lucrative art contest?
Matthew Power GQ Sep 2012 25min Permalink
How did a mother of 10 and a Plano cop wind up pushing pills in the Park Cities?
Peter Simek D Magazine Apr 2020 30min Permalink
In an excerpt from her book, the late Northern Irish journalist joined a search for a missing youth.
Lyra McKee The Irish Times Mar 2020 15min Permalink
A profile of Broadway producer Jeffrey Seller, whose show makes more than $500,000 in profit every week.
Michael Sokolove New York Times Magazine Apr 2016 10min Permalink
A profile of the actor in the wake of the loss of his wife.
Gabriella Paiella GQ May 2020 15min Permalink
If true justice and equality are ever to be achieved in the United States, the country must finally take seriously what it owes black Americans.
Nikole Hannah-Jones New York Times Magazine Jun 2020 30min Permalink
Discount chains are thriving — while fostering violence and neglect in poor communities.
Alec MacGillis ProPublica Jun 2020 30min Permalink
Humpbacks are some of the most watched whales in the world, and yet so much of their lives remains a mystery.
Bruce Grierson Hakai Magazine Jul 2020 25min Permalink
The remarkable stories of the nine other women in the Harvard Law class of ‘59.
Dahlia Lithwick, Molly Olmstead Slate Jul 2020 40min Permalink
In their depictions of domination, the artist’s works, full of world-building and philosophy, do more than flip the script.
Zadie Smith New Yorker Aug 2020 10min Permalink
In the pandemic, “caremongering” has become a new term for an old—and joyous—practice
Vicky Mochama The Walrus Sep 2020 15min Permalink
A visit to the Christian rock Cross-Over Festival in Lake of the Ozarks, Missouri.
John Jeremiah Sullivan GQ Feb 2004 45min Permalink
The ACLU attorney works as a representative in every sense of the word.
Masha Gessen New Yorker Oct 2020 25min Permalink
On the people who lie about serving in the military and the detectives who try to expose them.
Rachel Monroe New Yorker Oct 2020 20min Permalink
The irreconcilable differences between Orthodoxy and secularism increasingly end up in court.
Larissa MacFarquhar New Yorker Nov 2020 40min Permalink
How a state that was never in doubt became a “national embarrassment.”
Tim Alberta Politico Nov 2020 30min Permalink
Genetic analysis of human remains found in the Himalayas has raised baffling questions about who these people were and why they were there.
Douglas Preston New Yorker Dec 2020 25min Permalink
As the wilderness gets overrun, the most hated man in the Rockies finds an audience of emulators and antagonists.
Nick Paumgarten New Yorker Jan 2021 Permalink
At least 44 Fort Bragg soldiers died stateside in 2020—several of them were homicides. Families want answers. But the Army isn’t giving any.
Seth Harp Rolling Stone Apr 2021 35min Permalink