All Things Considered
Hear KUOW and NPR award-winning hosts and reporters from around the globe present some of the nation's best reporting of the day's events, interviews, analysis and reviews.
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Episodes
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Two Kurdish mothers reflect on the end of a decades-long conflict
A militant Kurdish group end its struggle against Turkey: grieving mothers ask if it was worth the high cost
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President Trump announces he'll meet with Putin in Alaska next week
President Trump says he'll meet Russian President Vladimir Putin in person to try to broker an end to Russia's war in Ukraine, now in its fourth year.
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Former astronaut and Apollo 13 commander Jim Lovell has died
The giant, multi-billion dollar space telescope that NASA is about to launch is sometimes billed as Hubble's successor. Will this new telescope, which sees infrared light, be able to deliver?
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'We're just over the moon!' Good news for factories that make food for malnourished kids
One of the two US companies that makes emergency food for malnutrition is coming back online after it received a contract from the State Department. Earlier this year
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A growing number of Israelis are divided over government's denial of Gaza starvation
Israel's government and media deny there is a starvation crisis in Gaza -- but some Israelis are starting to doubt that narrative.
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Researchers find a culprit in sea stars' decline
A mysterious disease has been ravaging sea stars off the West Coast, leading to loss of entire kelp forests. Now, researchers have finally identified the culprit, opening new strategies for combatting it.
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Immigration enforcement brings new level of uncertainty to Montana cherry season
Cherry harvesting is an already volatile industry dependent upon weather and market conditions. This summer a new level of uncertainty was added when Montana growers weren't sure if migrant workers would cross state lines after heightened immigration enforcement.
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The Trump administration is removing the commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service
Internal Revenue Service Commissioner Billy Long is stepping down. Jacob Bogage, White House economic correspondent at the Washington Post, talks with NPR's Ari Shapiro.
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Lawyers, judges see a chilling effect from immigrants' arrests at criminal courthouses
As the Trump administration seeks to scale up deportations, ICE agents have been increasingly seen at immigration courts and criminal courthouses. Defense attorneys, prosecutors and judges say they're seeing a chilling effect on criminal proceedings, not only on the defendants but on witnesses and victims.
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Is there anything left to learn about the Russia investigation?
Reports say Attorney General Pam Bondi has authorized an investigation into the investigation of Trump's 2016 campaign's relationship with Russia. What is there left to learn?
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Justice Department escalates its campaign against Trump's perceived political enemies
The Justice Department is ramping up investigations into New York's attorney general and other frequent targets of President Trump, as it fires longtime FBI officials.
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We've all gotten those hiring scam texts. Instead of deleting, this writer played along
Alexander Sammon received a suspicious job recruitment text from someone who claimed to be a hiring manager. He decided to play along to see how far the scam would go, and wrote about it for Slate.