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REI, the shopping mecca for outdoor enthusiasts, has fostered a progressive reputation, promoting sustainability and running as a co-op co-owned by its shoppers. But to the surprise of many employees, the company has balked at recognizing its newly unionized workers. They accuse the retailer of breaking labor laws, which the company denies. In Texas, if you are pregnant and your fetus is diagnosed with a fatal condition, you have two options: travel out of state for an abortion or continue to carry the pregnancy until it ends on its own. Two women who walked those different paths shared their stories with NPR in real time, making wrenching decisions under painful circumstances along the way. Florida is another step closer to paving its roads with phosphogypsum — a radioactive waste material from the fertilizer industry — after Gov. Ron DeSantis signed a controversial bill into law. Conservation groups say phosphogypsum would hurt water quality and put road construction crews at a higher risk of cancer, calling the plan a "reckless handout to the fertilizer industry." |
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Starting a Riot, from OPB: Thirty years ago, a movement called riot grrrl started in the Pacific Northwest. It wasn't just music — it was politics, feminism, culture and zines. Starting a Riot tells the history of riot grrrl and its lasting impact. 🎧 Riot grrrl kicked open a door that women had been prying open for decades. But the histories of riot grrrl that have been told before haven't felt fully representative to BIPOC and queer people. Episode 1 leans into that gap. The Stoop, from Radiotopia: Hosts Leila Day and Hana Baba start conversations and tell stories about what it means to be Black and how we talk about blackness. 🎧 Interest in psychedelics is ramping up, and some claim that psychedelics can help heal racial trauma. Should we believe the hype? In this episode, take a sonic trip to talk to a few new and seasoned psychonauts. How to LA, from LAist: Serving the curious Angeleno who wants to better connect with the city, discover the new, navigate the confusing and even drive some change along the way. 🎧 Nearly 200 new apartments opened up for unhoused veterans at the West LA Veterans Affairs campus. But the development is still years behind schedule and hundreds of units short, leaving roughly 4,000 veterans in LA County without a permanent place to live. |
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Even a shopping list in Abraham Lincoln’s handwriting (“Four score almonds, 2 tomatoes, 1 pt milk … ”) would be of great historical interest. A previously unpublished letter Lincoln wrote in the summer of 1861 was revealed this week. While it may not ring with his signature eloquence, it offers another view into what made Abe Lincoln a singular leader. In that first summer of America’s Civil War, incited by a Confederacy seeking to keep slavery, Charles Ellet Jr., an accomplished engineer, asked Lincoln to establish a civil engineering corps to help protect Washington, D.C., from Confederate attack. Lincoln’s reply was characteristically economical and direct. “I am not capable to judge of the value of such a corps; but I would be glad to accept one if approved by Gen Scott, Gen McClellan & Gen Totten. Please see them and get their views upon it,” he wrote. What stands out so many decades later (aside from a semi-colon, so properly used) is a political leader willing to say, “I am not capable to judge.” He didn’t feel the need to bluster or boast, but with the humility of true insight just said, “I am not capable to judge.” McClellan, as it happened, refused even to meet Ellet. His proposal was overlooked until Union ships were destroyed at Hampton Roads in 1862. Lincoln then appointed Ellet to implement his engineering project to protect Washington. But Ellet himself would die in the Battle of Memphis. And that two-sentence letter is up for auction with a starting price of $85,000. |
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