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About
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Minneapolis has daily deportation flights. One man is documenting them
A professional airplane enthusiast has been tracking the federally chartered deportation flights out of the Minneapolis airport as DHS sends detainees to other states and, eventually, other countries.
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•
4:45
Small island nations threatened by climate change seek voice in U.N. negotiations
NPR's David Folkenflik speaks with ambassador Janine Felson, top climate negotiator from Belize, about the unique challenges facing small island nations ahead of the U.N. climate talks in Glasgow.
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•
6:55
What President Xi Jinping's absence from COP26 indicates for China's climate pledges
Chinese President Xi Jinping is not attending COP26 in person. Climate analysts and activists weigh in on what his absence means for the climate pledges made by one of the top carbon-emitting nations.
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•
5:32
Federal Aid Arrived For A Burned Town. It May Not Be Enough For Next Fire Season
Ninety percent of the West is under drought. Concerns of another bad fire year come as one farming community in Washington state has barely started cleaning up from a destructive fire last year.
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•
4:58
3 things the strike on al-Zawahiri tell us about the U.S. counterterrorism strategy
The U.S. targeted the top al-Qaida leader, showing it could track down and strike against a hard-to-find extremist figure even in a country where the U.S. has no military or diplomatic presence.
Michael Jackson: Life Of A Pop Icon
He was a child star, an international icon, a running late-night talk show joke. But in his prime, his overbearing talent and ambition made him a musical genius. He was 50 years old when he died.
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6:24
Prodigious fiddler Mark O'Connor celebrates 50 years of music with memoir
NPR's Leila Fadel speaks with Mark O'Connor about his memoir, Crossing Bridges, on his journey from multi-instrumentalist child prodigy to solo artist composing and performing on world stages.
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7:18
A Peruvian judge has ordered 18 months detention for ousted President Pedro Castillo
The judge's decision came a day after the government declared a police state as it struggles to calm the violence in impoverished Andean regions that were the base of support for Castillo.
Gov. Youngkin slows voting rights restorations in Virginia, bucking a trend
Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin has slowed restorations of voting rights for the formerly incarcerated while failing to specify what criteria he's using, sparking a federal lawsuit.
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4:03
As the Women's World Cup gets underway, a look at the history of the sports bra
The return of the Women's World Cup could mean more iconic shots of shirtless celebrations revealing sports bras. The garment has come a long way from its humble beginnings.
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2:40
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