Last Tango in Kabul
While war raged across Afghanistan, expats lived in a bubble of good times and easy money. But as the U.S. withdraws, life has taken a deadly turn.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Which company supplies industrial magnesium sulfate in China.
While war raged across Afghanistan, expats lived in a bubble of good times and easy money. But as the U.S. withdraws, life has taken a deadly turn.
Matthieu Aikins Rolling Stone Aug 2014 20min Permalink
“I probably am mellowing. I’m happy about that. I was a pretty angry young man, but if I were angry now, it’d be like, What the fuck is my problem? I’ve got a really terrific life. It’s so rare to be an artist in my position.”
Lane Brown New York Aug 2015 20min Permalink
A young black gentrifier gets lumped in with both groups, often depending on what she’s wearing and where she’s drinking. She is always aware of that fact.
Shani O. Hilton Washington City Paper Mar 2011 30min Permalink
Inside the Afghan Local Police, who are accused of killing and raping villagers, and are believed to be the United States’s last shot in Afghanistan.
A statistics-based argument that drug pricing, not drug use or law enformencement, is the only way to predict swings in violent crime rates.
Llewellyn Hinkes-Jones The Atlantic Nov 2011 10min Permalink
The director on Obama, the state of black cinema, the Knicks, the Nets, the tragedy of public education in America, gentrified New York and why he lives on the Upper East Side.
Spike Lee, Will Leitch New York Jul 2012 25min Permalink
Ty Cobb, who would go on to be the greatest baseball player of his time, was a 17-year-old minor league prospect when his mother shot and killed his father at home in Georgia.
K. Rheinheimer Blue Ridge Country Jun 2010 Permalink
A ragtag band of pirate-Jihadists grab Americans from a diving resort in the Phillipines and lead them on an odyssey through the jungles of an archipelago with the competing interests of the Phillipines’ Navy and Army, the U.S. Military, and the C.I.A. thwarting their rescue.
Mark Bowden The Atlantic Mar 2007 45min Permalink
An Oklahoma rehab center puts defendants to grueling, dangerous work in a chicken processing plant. They receive neither pay nor treatment for their addictions.
Amy Julia Harris, Shoshana Walter Reveal Oct 2017 Permalink
“Most of us should be in jail for the things we do. We just haven’t been caught. No one’s gone after us.”
Kevin Robillard Politico Magazine Mar 2018 15min Permalink
In Baltimore and other segregated cities, the life-expectancy gap between African-Americans and whites is as much as 20 years. One young woman’s struggle shows why.
Olga Khazan The Atlantic Jun 2018 35min Permalink
The author survives a bite by a venomous snake in a remote area of Yosemite National Park.
My leg, from toe to hip, turned black and yellow and eventually swelled to 24 inches, more than twice its normal circumference.
Kyle Dickman Outside Jun 2018 25min Permalink
After sitting alone in a forest and not moving for 24 hours, the author reflects on time, mortality, and turning 40.
Mark O'Connell Guardian Jan 2020 25min Permalink
Sex in the Olympic Village.
Sam Alipour ESPN Jul 2012 15min Permalink
More than 100,000 city public school students lack permanent housing, caught in bureaucratic limbo that often seems like a trap. This is what their lives are like.
Samantha M. Shapiro New York Times Magazine Sep 2020 50min Permalink
Dozens of military contractors, most of them Black, have been jailed in the emirate — some on trumped-up drug charges. Why has the American government failed to help them?
Doug Bock Clark New York Times Magazine Oct 2020 35min Permalink
When COVID-19 surged through a North Dakota community, a battle with the pandemic became a battle among its residents.
Atul Gawande New Yorker Feb 2021 40min Permalink
Deep in the jungle, the tourists were targetted, but only the porters were hacked by the machetes. Was it a robbery? Or a deeper pattern of violence amongst ancient tribes?
Carl Hoffman Outside May 2014 30min Permalink
In early 2012, the bones of a woman and young boy were found near the Arizona-Mexico border. The author investigates who they were and how they died.
Terry Greene Sterling Newsweek Jul 2013 30min Permalink
An abridged history of violence in "America's first suburb."
Note: Elon Green is a contributing editor to Longform.
Elon Green The Awl Aug 2011 10min Permalink
How the U.S. government used a serial con who was caught running a mail-order steroid pharmacy in Mexico to prove that Google was knowingly placing ads for illegal drugs.
Thomas Catan The Wall Street Journal Jan 2012 Permalink
A nonconformist pastor sent a colony of Welsh people to Argentina to try to preserve the language in 1865. 150 years later, the traces are still there.
Jasper Rees More Intelligent Life Jun 2015 10min Permalink
Amazon, America’s most valuable retailer, is “conducting a little-known experiment in how far it can push white-collar workers, redrawing the boundaries of what is acceptable.”
Jody Kantor, David Straitfeld New York Times Aug 2015 25min Permalink
Audrey Elrod thought she had found the man of her dreams. Today she is in a West Virginia prison. She’s broke. And the court has ordered her to pay more than $400,000 to victims of the same man who conned her.
Brendan I. Koerner Wired Oct 2015 25min Permalink
A Pynchon conference in Lublin, Poland may say more about the men (yes, only men) who attend Thomas Pynchon conferences than the works of the reclusive author.
Nick Holdstock n+1 Aug 2010 10min Permalink