Tilling the scarcely available arable land in Kamdesh District, Nuristan, Afghanistan, is hard work and often not sufficient to feed extended families (Franz J. Marty, 16th of May 2022)
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- is_single_v1This season on Things That Go Boom, we’re starting in Canada, because four years after January 6th, we want — we need — to understand our own divide. In 1970, Canada’s streets were full of troops and the country was on edge. Quebec cabinet minister Pierre Laporte had been captured by a militant French separatist[...]
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- is_single_v1Anthony CriderWhen Members of Congress are sworn into office, they say an oath. To protect the country from all enemies… foreign and domestic. But what does a domestic enemy look like? And how can they be stopped? Four years after January 6th, we're turning our eyes on the US to ask, “in our divided times, how[...]
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- is_single_v1When former US Navy Intelligence Officer Andrew McCormick spent the holiday season in Kandahar in 2013, attempts at holiday cheer were everywhere. But few were more out-of-touch than the generic care packages sent from civilians who knew nothing about him — or the war he was fighting. Part of our series of monologues in partnership[...]
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Tilling the scarcely available arable land in Kamdesh District, Nuristan, Afghanistan, is hard work and often not sufficient to feed extended families (Franz J. Marty, 16th of May 2022)
Words: Laicie Heeley
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