Bernie Sanders for President? Why Not Try a Real Socialist for a Change.
The stubborn Senator from Vermont considers a run for the White House.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Who is the manufacturer of magnesium sulfate.
The stubborn Senator from Vermont considers a run for the White House.
Mark Jacobson New York Dec 2014 15min Permalink
How an elite anti-narcotics task force became the most brazen drug thieves on the Texas border.
Josh Eells Rolling Stone Jan 2015 30min Permalink
Tracing the 3,339 miles the Canadian ran in 1980, on one good leg and one prosthetic limb.
John Brant Runner's World Jan 2007 25min Permalink
How modern slot machines develop a nearly unbreakable hold on the brain, leading around one in five pathological gamblers to attempt suicide.
John Rosengren The Atlantic Nov 2016 40min Permalink
Isaiah Wall wants to get his life on track. But first, he’s gotta buy drugs for the police.
Mitch Ryals The Inlander Nov 2016 20min Permalink
The Syrian refugee said his name was Paul, and that he was 16 years old. The truth was much more complicated.
Scott Sayare GQ Oct 2017 30min Permalink
On surfer girls in Maui; the story that led to the film Blue Crush.
Susan Orlean Outside Sep 1998 20min Permalink
The Manhattan murder mystery spurred a tabloid drama that engulfed the city’s rich and powerful. But what really happened?
Christopher Bollen Vanity Fair Apr 2020 40min Permalink
The quest to transform this country cannot be limited to challenging its brutal police.
Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor The New Yorker Jun 2020 30min Permalink
The refugee and author survived, stateless, for seven years. What’s next?
Megan K. Stack New York Times Magazine Aug 2020 30min Permalink
Stephen Glass, the most notorious fraud in journalism, decided he would live by one simple rule: Always tell the truth. Then he broke that rule.
Bill Adair Air Mail Dec 2021 Permalink
How the heir to a horse racing empire became an informant on the Zetas cartel as they pushed their money laundering operations into the lucrative quarter horse trade.
Melissa Del Bosque, Jazmine Ulloa Texas Observer Aug 2013 20min Permalink
Odessa High School students know her as “Betty,” a ghost that haunts the auditorium at night. But few know much about the real Betty, whose 1961 murder was “the most sensational crime in West Texas in its day.”
Pamela Colloff Texas Monthly Feb 2006 30min Permalink
For many immigrants coming through Arizona, it’s not enough to pay a coyote to shepherd you across the border. You also need to pay the ransom demanded by your kidnapper after you arrive.
Monica Alonzo The Phoenix New Times Aug 2010 30min Permalink
While driving through a dangerous curve in East Texas, James Fulton crossed into oncoming traffic and killed a young woman. The cops said the crash was an accident. But the Smith County DA saw it differently.
Michael Hall Texas Monthly Mar 2019 30min Permalink
Local communities are taking the world’s largest polluters to court. And they’re using the legal strategy that got tobacco companies to pay up.
Brooke Jarvis The New York Times Magazine Apr 2019 20min Permalink
The largest crowdfunding site in the world puts up a mirror to who we are and what matters most to us. Try not to look away.
Rachel Monroe The Atlantic Oct 2019 30min Permalink
Antonio Carrion was headed for the NFL when the voices started and he drifted away. Then his estranged mother finished her time for robbery and saved him from a system that’s unkind to the mentally ill.
Vince Beiser Los Angeles Magazine Dec 2019 20min Permalink
Banned in Russia and cut by Condé Nast from the GQ website, this story (presented in full) details the intrigue behind the Moscow apartment bombings, blamed on Chechens, that allowed Putin to rapidly ascend to power.
Scott Anderson GQ Sep 2009 35min Permalink
In staying, I was not only denying myself the chance at true happiness, but I was keeping him from having it, too. It was that realization—that I was preventing my husband from having the life he deserved—that ultimately outweighed the fears I had about leaving.
Britni de la Cretaz Catapult Nov 2020 15min Permalink
Twenty-five years ago this month, “superpredator” was coined in The Weekly Standard. Media spread the term like wildfire, creating repercussions on policy and culture we are still reckoning with today.
Carroll Bogert, Lynell Hancock The Marshall Project Nov 2020 15min Permalink
The company’s AI algorithms gave it an insatiable habit for lies and hate speech. Now the man who built them can’t fix the problem.
Karen Hao MIT Technology Review Mar 2021 30min Permalink
How the Ebola virus works.
Leigh Cowart Hazlitt Jul 2014 15min Permalink
A three-part investigation into links between the cocaine trade, Nicaragua’s CIA-backed Contra rebels, and California’s crack epidemic in the 1980s.
Backers of CIA-led Nicaraguan rebels brought cocaine to poor L.A. neighborhoods in the early 1980s to help finance war – and a plague was born.
How a smuggler, a bureaucrat and an ambitious teenager created the cocaine pipeline.
The impact of the crack epidemic.
Gary Webb San Jose Mercury News Aug 1996 Permalink
Mark Binelli Rolling Stone Aug 2007 30min Permalink