Global Cactus Traffickers Are Cleaning Out the Deserts
A recent raid in Italy involving rare Chilean species highlights the growing scale of a black market in the thorny plants.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Magnesium Sulfate trihydrate Factory in China.
A recent raid in Italy involving rare Chilean species highlights the growing scale of a black market in the thorny plants.
Rachel Nuwer New York Times May 2021 10min Permalink
Federal agencies have long struggled to stop illegal fishing and drug smuggling in the Gulf of Mexico. In recent years, it’s only gotten worse.
John Burnett Texas Monthly Nov 2021 Permalink
On a remote island in Maine, a group of friends thought they witnessed one man killing another with an ax. But no one was ever arrested. In a small town far out at sea, justice sometimes works a little differently.
Jesse Ellison Esquire Dec 2021 25min Permalink
“In the recent history of American music, there’s no figure parallel to Lehrer in his effortless ascent to fame, his trajectory into the heart of the culture — and then his quiet, amiable, inexplicable departure.”
Ben Smith, Anita Badejo Buzzfeed Apr 2014 20min Permalink
Rape in the U.S. military, the history of marital advice columns and the highest-paid female executive in America — the week's top stories on Longform.
Sex, lies and fraud alleged at West Virginia University.
Tony Dokoupil, Nona Willis Aronowitz NBC News Sep 2014 10min
Marital advice columns from the past.
Rebecca Onion Aeon Sep 2014 15min
An oral history of the Tinderverse.
Kiera Feldman Playboy Sep 2014 30min
In the U.S. military, more than half of rape victims are men.
Nathaniel Penn GQ Sep 2014
A profile of the highest-paid female executive in America, who was born male
Lisa Miller New York Sep 2014 25min
Sep 2014 Permalink
“We, the writers—a word I am using in its most primitive sense—arrived in Chicago about 10 days before the baffling, bruising, an unbelievable two minutes and six seconds at Comiskey Park. We will get to all that later.”
James Baldwin Nugget Feb 1963 20min Permalink
“Redistricting today has become the most insidious practice in American politics—a way, as the opportunistic machinations following the 2010 census make evident, for our elected leaders to entrench themselves in 435 impregnable garrisons from which they can maintain political power while avoiding demographic realities.”
Robert Draper The Atlantic Sep 2012 20min Permalink
The former chancellor of New York City schools was not, in fact, “a child of the streets. He was not an academically unmotivated student. He did not come from a deprived family background. He did not grow up in public housing as we understand it today.”
Richard Rothstein The American Prospect Nov 2012 15min Permalink
An interview with a woman who works in one of the exclusive hostess bars in Tokyo’s Ginza district, where an elite clientele pay heavily for champagne, whiskey, and conversation, and client-hostess relationships can span decades.
Shimon Tanaka The Rumpus Dec 2012 Permalink
When the East Coast mob showed up in L.A. in 1946, the LAPD formed a ruthess special unit to run them out of town: the Gangster Squad.
Paul Lieberman The Los Angeles Times Oct 2008 30min Permalink
Each soldier in Iraq and Afghanistan generated around 10 pounds of garbage per day. Most of that trash—along with used equipment and medical supplies and other wastes of war—was burned in open-air pits, emitting a toxic smoke that many soliders blame for their poor health today.
Katie Drummond The Verge Oct 2013 Permalink
In 1985, a lost 22-year-old wrote a letter to a Manson girl-turned-model prisoner, asking for advice on conquering his demons. Then they fell in love.
Shawn Hubler Orange Coast Feb 2010 15min Permalink
How Washington Redskins owner Dan Snyder, with a little help from the Bush Administration, got 140 trees chopped down in a national park to improve his view and ruined the life of a park ranger in the process.
Tim Murphy Washington Monthly Jan 2014 25min Permalink
Since 2007, when they first heard that “the Florida of Russia” was being awarded the Winter Olympics, two Dutch journalists have been documenting everyday life in Sochi and how it has changed in the run-up to the Games.
Rob Hornstra, Arnold van Bruggen Jan 2014 Permalink
The closest thing that the international network of hackers Anonymous has to an organizer lives in a 378 sq. ft apartment in Dallas and, at the time of this interview, was on his fourth day of opiate withdrawal.
Tim Rogers D Magazine Jan 2012 30min Permalink
The story of Dean Corll and his accomplices, who killed over 20 teenage boys in the Heights neighborhood of Houston in the early 1970s, and the families searching for their missing sons.
Skip Hollandsworth Texas Monthly Apr 2011 45min Permalink
On “the Incidents”, three shootings in a single month in a 1,300 person hamlet tucked inside the 12-year-old Nunavut territory. (The complete 4-part series.)
Patrick White The Globe and Mail Apr 2011 Permalink
Manny Pacquiao, possibly the greatest boxer of his era and still in his fighting prime, on the campaign trail for a congressional seat in the remote, untamed Southern province of the Phillipines that spawned him.
Andrew Marshall The Post Aug 2010 15min Permalink
In 1992, a Chinese freighter tipped violently in a storm dumping a load of plastic floatee toys—7,200 red beavers, 7,200 green frogs, 7,200 blue turtles, and 7,200 yellow ducks—to the open sea. This is their story.
Donovan Hohn Harper's Jan 2007 1h15min Permalink
Before the guru, Prakashanand Saraswati, vanished in March—before a jury convicted him of sexual abuse; before he slipped across the border into Mexico overnight—he led the premier Hindu temple in Texas and, perhaps, the whole United States.
Ben Crair The Daily Beast Jun 2011 20min Permalink
Rogue cops in the LAPD Rampart division’s anti-gang CRASH unit (Community Resources Against Street Hoodlums) were involved in everything from drug smuggling and bank robberies to, allegedly, the murder of Christopher “Notorious BIG” Wallace.
Nearly four years later, I sometimes type his email address in the search box in my Gmail. Hundreds of results pop up, and I’ll pick a few at random to read. The ease of our everyday interactions is what kills me.
Remembering a relationship through IM.
Rebecca Armendariz Good Sep 2011 10min Permalink
A profile of a breakout male porn star:
The porn machine churns out performers to satisfy every fantasy, be it MILF, dwarf, fat, granny, or gang bang. But if you’re interested in watching a young, heterosexual, nonrepulsive man engage in sex, James Deen is basically it.
Amanda Hess Good Nov 2011 20min Permalink
The West Memphis Three, teenagers who were convicted in 1993 of brutal killings that they certainly did not commit on the basis of local gossip that they were satanists (as evidenced by Metallica fandom), suddenly found themselves released this summer after over 17 years in prison. But what life awaited them?
Sean Flynn GQ Dec 2011 30min Permalink
In 1979, a Pulitzer was given to “an unnamed photographer of United Press International” who documented a mass execution in Iran.
His name is Jahangir Razmi – and, nearly three decades later, he wants the credit.