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A bookstore that was forced to close its Shanghai branch due to China's speech restrictions has reopened in Washington, D.C. Its owner, Yu Miao, revived the bookshop, now named JF Books, as a place where people can sit and read together and also have open discussions about politics, human rights and more in the diaspora community. Yu is part of a growing wave of people who have left China amid Xi Jinping's crackdown on free speech and the economic challenges following the COVID-19 pandemic. Here's a look inside JF Books, with its shelves of Chinese-language volumes and English titles with a focus on Chinese and Asian topics. Polls show a tight race for the White House between Vice President Harris and former President Donald Trump. Most people already know whom they plan to vote for, but a handful of swing voters could decide the election. Close to four dozen undecided voters in the NPR/PBS News/Marist poll in the last four months gave permission to NPR to call them back to follow up. NPR was able to reach 10 in the days following the Harris-Trump debate to understand their thinking. Here's what they had to say. As of Sept. 12, more than 12 million Americans have lost Medicaid coverage since federal pandemic protections expired. That includes patients in treatment for opioid addiction, the loss of which can be deadly. When medications for opioid use disorder are taken as prescribed, it can reduce dangerous drug use and cut overdose deaths by more than half, research shows. But if that treatment is interrupted, the risk of overdose and death increases. WBUR’s Here & Now takes a closer look into whether bail reform is working in Harris County, Texas, in a special series done in conjunction with Houston Public Media. The series explores criminal justice reform and why bail reform specifically has become a flashpoint in the larger debate over crime. It also dives into the causes and impacts of overcrowding at the county jail. |
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State of the World from NPR: Immerse yourself in the most compelling and consequential stories from around the globe. This podcast takes you where the news is happening — and explains why it matters. 🎧 Life is uncertain for children in war zones. There, school can be a source of stability or just another thing that war obliterates. We hear reports on what school is like in three of the world's most active war zones: Sudan, Gaza and Ukraine. Tacos of Texas, via KUT 90.5: Exploring the iconic tacos of Texas and taco culture across the Lone Star state. 🎧 Let's take a melty, gooey trip into what we know as queso, chile con queso, con queso or for you phonetically abled chip eaters, keso. Wild Card with Rachel Martin: Rachel takes actors, artists and thinkers on a choose-your-own-adventure conversation that lets them open up about their fears, their joys and how they've built meaning from experience — all with the help of a very special deck of cards. 🎧 Hanif Abdurraqib's writing has earned him a MacArthur "genius" grant. His most recent book, There's Always This Year: On Basketball and Ascension, landed a spot on Barack Obama's summer reading list. But those accolades don't matter to him as much as being a good friend and neighbor. Abdurraqib talks to Rachel about a youth spent unhoused and incarcerated, and the zen of making mixtapes. |
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This newsletter was edited by Carol Ritchie. |
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