How the Elderly Lose Their Rights
Guardians can sell the assets and control the lives of senior citizens without their consent—and reap a profit from it.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Suppliers of Magnesium sulfate.
Guardians can sell the assets and control the lives of senior citizens without their consent—and reap a profit from it.
Rachel Aviv New Yorker Oct 2017 35min Permalink
A small group of programmers wants to change how we code—before catastrophe strikes.
James Somers The Atlantic Sep 2017 40min Permalink
How one of the world’s top conductors became ensnared in a WWI-era scandal.
Neil Swidey Boston Globe Nov 2017 40min Permalink
Can the star of ‘The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel’ help reclaim women’s place in stand-up history?
A former journalist, equipped with an algorithm and the largest collection of murder records in the country, finds patterns in crime.
Alec Wilkinson New Yorker Nov 2017 15min Permalink
“I have drunkenly sexually assaulted or raped women—the exact number of which I am currently determining.”
Sarah Jeong The Verge Nov 2017 10min Permalink
In postwar Japan, a single-minded focus on rapid economic growth helped erode family ties. Now, a generation of elderly Japanese are dying alone.
Norimitsu Onishi New York Times Nov 2017 30min Permalink
A discussion of how—or if—change is possible.
Anita Hill, Laura Kipnis, Lynn Povich, Soledad O’Brien, Amanda Hess, Danyel Smith, Emily Bazelon New York Times Magazine Dec 2017 25min Permalink
A profile of the irrepressible Trump campaign foreign-policy adviser.
Jason Zengerle The New York Times Magazine Dec 2017 15min Permalink
An investigation into widespread denial, inaction, and information suppression of sexual assault and violence allegations at Michigan State.
Paula Lavigne, Nicole Noren ESPN Jan 2018 25min Permalink
A 4-year-old girl was the sole survivor of a U.S. drone strike in Afghanistan. Then she disappeared.
May Jeong The Intercept Jan 2018 40min Permalink
The creator of the California-based food chain kills his mother, sister and, finally, himself.
From Hollywood to Anaheim, he had opened a chain of fast-food rotisserie chicken restaurants that dazzled the food critics and turned customers into a cult. Poets wrote about his Zankou chicken. Musicians sang about his Zankou chicken. Now that he was dying, his dream of building an empire, 100 Zankous across the land, a Zankou in every major city, would be his four sons’ to pursue. In the days before, he had pulled them aside one by one -- Dikran, Steve, Ara, Vartkes -- and told them he had no regrets. He was 56 years old, that was true, but life had not cheated him. He did not tell them he had just one more piece of business left to do.
Mark Arax Los Angeles Apr 2008 40min Permalink
The story of one journalist’s giant salary and why his company could no longer pay it.
Silvia Killingsworth The Awl Jan 2018 15min Permalink
A New Orleans football legend reached the pinnacle of the sport, playing in three Super Bowls. Then he disappeared.
Ted Jackson The Times-Picayune Feb 2018 25min Permalink
Elder abuse, secret recordings, shady memorabilia dealings and the sinister battle for the estate of 95-year-old Marvel legend Stan Lee.
Gary Baum The Hollywood Reporter Apr 2018 10min Permalink
A gang of teen hackers snatched the keys to Microsoft’s videogame empire. Then they went too far.
Brendan I. Koerner Wired Apr 2018 35min Permalink
A new historical inquiry into the murder of Elwood Higginbotham offers a chance to confront the past.
Vanessa Gregory New York Times Magazine Apr 2018 25min Permalink
A profile of New York City Ballet’s resident choreographer.
Sasha Weiss New York Times Magazine May 2018 20min Permalink
Inside the trailer park known as Little Mexico in Norwalk, Ohio in the wake of an ICE raid that separated children from their parents.
America’s first viral story was of a Kentucky cave explorer, Floyd Collins, and the epic effort to rescue him.
Lucas Reilly Mental Floss Jul 2018 40min Permalink
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
“It takes this huge amount of will and energy for anything to happen to you.”
Kathryn Borel, Nora Ephron The Believer Mar 2012 20min Permalink
The AIDS crisis as it unfolded in America is an object lesson in the danger, the potential violence, inherent in organized prejudice.
Tom Crewe London Review of Books Sep 2018 55min Permalink
An analysis of online activity during the 2016 campaign makes the case that targeted cyberattacks by hackers and trolls were decisive.
Jane Mayer New Yorker Sep 2018 30min 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