When ISIS was at its height, its ranks included several hundred Americans. They were often young men radicalized online by savvy marketing that promised free housing and the chance to meet a wife.
When the Islamic State collapsed, some of them ended up in huge detention camps in Syria, and the U.S. has been trying to bring them home.
NPR's Sacha Pfeiffer reports on one American family coping with the aftermath of the child they lost, and the children they found.
What happened to the families of the Americans who joined ISIS? Not just the families they left behind in the U.S., but the ones they formed overseas?
For sponsor-free episodes of Consider This, sign up for Consider This+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org.
Okta's good quarter versus the market's glass half-empty reaction.
Dick's Sporting Goods brings the goods, though the acquisition of Foot Locker leaves some questions.
Vail Resorts has new "old" leadership, but will it be enough?
Companies Discussed: OKTA, MSFT, DKS, MTN
Host: Jason Moser
Guest: Matt Argersinger
Producer: Mary Long
Engineer: Rick Engdahl
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The civil war in Sudan has been ongoing for more than two years causing some fifteen million people to be displaced and the collapse of the country's healthcare system in many places. In the capital Khartoum, there were once nearly 100 public and private medical facilities, now none are operational. We go to Khartoum to see how residents are coping with the lack of medical care.
80 years ago, Smokey the Bear was mostly talking about campfire safety. Now? Things are a little different.
Forest fires have always been a normal part of our landscape – and a tool used by human civilizations for millennia.
But as climate change makes our landscapes hotter and drier, wildfires are getting bigger and more destructive. Fire consumed 8.9 million acres across the U.S. last year. The LA County fires this January are the costliest so far, with some estimates putting the total close to $250 billion in damages.
We discuss how we can better adapt to living with massive fires and how we should think about fighting – and preventing – them.
Recorded live from the Global Dollar Network event, Network Effect in New York City please enjoy this conversation with Paxos' Head of Product Ronak Daya and CoinDesk Indices' Andy Baehr
Join Washington Examiner Senior Writer David Harsanyi and Federalist Editor-In-Chief Mollie Hemingway as they discuss the murder of two Israeli embassy aides by a leftist radical, explain why Harvard deserves to lose its federal funding, analyze NPR's delusion that it is constitutionally entitled to tax dollars, and review former FBI Director James Comey's appearance on Jen Psaki's MSNBC show. Mollie also reflects on her travels in Poland and what it taught her about the Holocaust, and the duo share their culture picks for the week, including I'm Still Here, A Real Pain, Pig, and Murderbot.
If you care about combating the corrupt media that continue to inflict devastating damage, please give a gift to help The Federalist do the real journalism America needs.
Our VP used to think his path to power was through the ruling class at Yale Law School. But after 2016, he saw that his route was through Trump, so he swapped one set of elites for another. And now as a lord among the MAGA ruling class, he's embracing his true cruel, lying self—and railing against the globalists who nitpick about this silly due process thing. Meanwhile, even Elon doesn't like the bankruptcy-threatening reconciliation bill, even if it's larded with kickbacks just for him. Plus, America: stay and fight. And the biggest theft in the history of the presidency is happening every day right before our eyes.
New Mexico congresswoman Melanie Stansbury and The Atlantic'sGeorge Packer join Tim Miller.
In June 2024, I got to go to the Solid Sound Festival in North Adams, Massachusetts, which is organized by the band Wilco. I performed some of my new songs, and I got to interview Jeff Tweedy, the lead singer of Wilco, on stage as part of the festival. Jeff, in addition to being in Wilco and the band Tweedy, and putting out his solo albums, has also written three books. And this conversation was focused on his second book, which is called How to Write One Song. And even though it’s called How to Write One Song, I think it actually contains a lot of insight about creativity in general, and life in general. I’ve recommended it to friends of mine who aren’t songwriters. And, as you’ll hear, the conversation gets pretty personal for me, because I got so much out of the book personally. It helped me with some of the blocks that I’d been facing in my own songwriting, at a pretty profound level. And when I was listening back to this recording, I’d kind of forgotten about how much I put out there in front of Jeff and the thousands of people who were there watching. But I’m glad the conversation was recorded, partly just so I could revisit it, but also so that I could share it here on Song Exploder. I hope you’ll enjoy it, too.
You can listen to the Wilco episode of Song Exploder here. I also interviewed Jeff along with his son Spencer, who is also his bandmate in Tweedy, about their relationship and musical partnership, for an episode of my podcast Partners. You can listen to that here.
Thanks to Sonos for their support of the podcast. Check out sonos.com.
The latest price moves and insights with Input Output founder and CEO Charles Hoskinson.
To get the show every day, follow the podcast here.
Input Output founder and CEO Charles Hoskinson joins CoinDesk Live at Consensus to weigh in on the future of crypto, highlighting the archaic financial middlemen, the expected market cycles, and the increasing adoption of cryptocurrencies by global governments.
This content should not be construed or relied upon as investment advice. It is for entertainment and general information purposes.
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This episode was hosted by Jennifer Sanasie and Sam Ewen. “Markets Daily” is produced by Jennifer Sanasie and edited by Victor Chen.