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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A look at the DOJ's lawsuit against Apple for violating antitrust laws
The Department of Justice thinks Apple has violated an antitrust law, accusing the tech giant of making it harder for consumers to switch software and hardware and even stifling innovation.
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Despite evidence, fewer Americans are believing that EVs are greener than gas cars
Why are some Americans growing less convinced that electric vehicles are better for the planet than gasoline? There's lots of evidence that they're indeed better for the planet.
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What we know about the North Carolina GOP governor nominee's online comments
Allegations of racist and homophobic online comments by the North Carolina governor candidate backed by Donald Trump ripple across that state and the race for president.
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Former Harrods employees' accusations against their late boss resurface
The late owner of London's luxury department store Harrod's, Mohamed Al Fayed, is accused of raping five women and sexually abusing others.
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Georgia's young voters could be decisive this election, so they're mobilizing
As the presidential race ramps up in Georgia, one vital voting demographic is mobilizing and hoping to impact the race: young people.
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Israel says its airstrike in Beirut today killed a senior Hezbollah leader
Israel has struck a building in a residential neighborhood in Beirut in the deadliest attack on the capitol in almost two decades. The Israeli military said it killed a senior Hezbollah commander.
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Steward Health Care CEO found in contempt for refusing to testify to Senate committee
The national hospital company Steward Health Care is in bankruptcy after piling up billions of dollars in debt.
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Muslim voters say they don't feel understood or welcomed by Republicans or Democrats
This year, some American Muslims say they feel politically homeless — not understood or welcomed by either Republicans or Democrats.
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Five states planning to execute prisoners this week despite federal moratorium
Despite a federal moratorium, there have already been thirteen state executions this year. And in the next week, five people are scheduled to die.
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Sudanese refugees are struggling after fleeing to Chad. Locals are being strained too
Hundreds of thousands of Sudanese refugees have fled to Chad, where they're facing increasingly difficult conditions as their presence strains local resources and humanitarian aid organizations.
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New data sheds light — and raises objections — on COVID-19 origins
New data samples from the Wuhan market points to an intermingling of SARS-CoV-2, raccoon dogs and humans. The authors of a new paper say it bolsters the animal origin theory. Other researchers object.
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The state of the presidential race in rural Georgia
Former President Donald Trump has lots of support in rural Morgan County, Ga., where immigration is a major concern.