The Democracy Factory
For decades, the vote-by-mail business was a sleepy industry that stayed out of the spotlight. Then came 2020.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Suppliers of Magnesium sulfate.
For decades, the vote-by-mail business was a sleepy industry that stayed out of the spotlight. Then came 2020.
Jesse Barron California Sunday Sep 2020 20min Permalink
A trip to one of America’s quietest places and the guy who has dedicated his life to keeping it that way.
Kathleen Dean Moore Orion Nov 2008 15min Permalink
Observers have long warned of rising forced labor in Xinjiang. Satellite images show factories built just steps away from cell blocks.
Alison Killing, Megha Rajagopalan Buzzfeed Dec 2020 20min Permalink
When it comes to data from India’s 500 million daily internet users, everything is for sale.
Snigdha Poonam, Samarth Bansal Rest of World Dec 2020 Permalink
Trump transformed immigration through hundreds of quiet measures. Before they can be reversed, they have to be uncovered.
Sarah Stillman New Yorker Feb 2021 30min Permalink
For the past 70 years, the Circle L 5 Riding Club in Fort Worth has been honoring the legacy of its forefathers.
Aislyn Greene Afar Feb 2021 20min Permalink
An investigation into the killing of Maltese journalist Daphne Caruana Galizia.
Engen Tham, Jacob Borg, Christoph Giesen, Stephen Grey Reuters Mar 2021 30min Permalink
How did a lorry carrying 273 dead bodies end up stranded on the outskirts of Guadalajara?
Matthew Bremner Guardian Apr 2021 20min Permalink
Kurtis Minder finds the cat-and-mouse energy of outsmarting criminal syndicates deeply satisfying.
Rachel Monroe New Yorker May 2021 20min Permalink
The Jackass takes stock of a surprisingly long, hilariously painful, and unusually influential career.
Sam Schube GQ May 2021 20min Permalink
The city is beating the pandemic. Can it also recover from decades of division and neglect?
Jonathan Mahler New York Times Magazine Jun 2021 45min Permalink
A celebrated Uyghur writer gives a first-person account of the genocide in Xinjiang.
Tahir Hamut Izgil The Atlantic Jul 2021 50min Permalink
The enduring career of the megastar no one really knows.
David Marchese New York Times Magazine Jul 2021 30min Permalink
For years, a mysterious figure has been stealing books before their release. Is it espionage? Revenge? Or a complete waste of time?
Reeves Wiedeman, Lila Shapiro New York Aug 2021 25min Permalink
In the countryside, the endless killing of civilians turned women against the occupiers who claimed to be helping them.
Anand Gopal New Yorker Sep 2021 40min Permalink
On this ward at Morton Plant Hospital, nurses are overwhelmed by the number of new, desperate cases.
Lane DeGregory Tampa Bay Times Sep 2021 20min Permalink
In the West, organized extremists are driving community health officials out of their jobs.
Jane C. Hu High Country News Sep 2021 25min Permalink
Scientists predict Tangier Island could be uninhabitable within 25 years. This is the story of the people willing to go down with it.
Elaina Plott Pacific Standard Sep 2018 20min Permalink
Biden has a plan to make day care more affordable for parents—if the providers don’t go out of business first.
Claire Suddath Bloomberg Businessweek Nov 2021 20min Permalink
Jesse Coburn is an investigative reporter at Streetsblog. He won the Polk Award for Local Reporting for "Ghost Tags," his series on the black market for temporary license plates.
“You can imagine this having never become a problem, because it’s so weird. What a weird scam. I’m going to print and sell tens of thousands of paper license plates. But someone figured it out. And then a lot more people followed. It just exploded.”
This is the second in a week-long series of conversations with winners of this year's George Polk Awards in Journalism.
Apr 2024 Permalink
Joshua Topolsky is editor-in-chief of The Verge.
"Sometimes you tell stories that people don't know they need to read yet. You have to keep telling those kinds of stories, and eventually people will wake up to them. Of course we look at traffic. But the main thing is, are we doing good work? At the end of the week or the end of the day, do I think, that was awesome, I'm really glad we wrote that?"
Thanks to TinyLetter for sponsoring this week's episode!
</blockquote>
Feb 2013 Permalink
Hua Hsu is a staff writer for The New Yorker. His book Stay True won the 2023 Pulitzer Prize for memoir.
“I've worked as a journalist … for quite a while. … But this [book] was the thing that was always in the back of my mind. Like, this was the thing that a lot of that was in service of. Just becoming better at describing a song or describing the look of someone's face—these were all things that I implicitly understood as skills I needed to acquire. ... It is sort of an origin story for why I got so obsessive about writing.”
May 2023 Permalink
Sam Biddle writes for Valleywag.
"It's a lot of overgrown, entitled manchildren pulling price tags out of the ether and passing them around. Considering Silicon Valley worthy of contempt is the first premise that we work from."
Thanks to TinyLetter for sponsoring this week's episode.
Apr 2014 Permalink
Andy Kroll is an investigative reporter for ProPublica. His new book is A Death on W Street: The Murder of Seth Rich and the Age of Conspiracy.
“I think a book has ruined me for writing hot takes and spicy Twitter dunks and all of these other one- and two-dimensional bits of ephemera. I wasn't really a big fan of it in the first place, but I can't do it anymore. A book forces you to look at the world in a much more fine grained, humane, empathetic way, and there's no going back from that.”
Oct 2022 Permalink
Nona Willis Aronowitz, an editor and author, writes a sex and love advice column for Teen Vogue. Her new book is Bad Sex: Truth, Pleasure, and an Unfinished Revolution.
“I'm getting a lot of emails from people saying basically ‘You've inspired me to break up with my man tomorrow.’ Or ‘I may not ever break up with my man, but I'm starting to tell the truth, at least to myself, about my relationship.’ And I think a lot of people — even though I think being open about your feelings and acceptance of all kinds of lifestyles are two tenants of modern society — I still think there's a lot of silence around dissatisfaction around sex and love.”
Aug 2022 Permalink