We - finally - have a little traction on the August fundraiser. If we can pick up the pace just a little now, we have a chance of finishing.
Donate folks. We really need it, and it really helps.
Sincere thanks to all.
Marc Ash
Founder, Reader Supported News
Founder, Reader Supported News
If you would prefer to send a check:
Reader Supported News
PO Box 2043
Citrus Hts, CA 95611
Reader Supported News
PO Box 2043
Citrus Hts, CA 95611
Biden Plummets Below Sanders and Warren for First Time in Major National Poll
Ryan Bort, Rolling Stone
Bort writes: "The former vice president finds himself trailing for the first time in the latest Monmouth University poll."
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Ryan Bort, Rolling Stone
Bort writes: "The former vice president finds himself trailing for the first time in the latest Monmouth University poll."
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Johnson & Johnson was ordered to pay far less than the $17.2 billion the state asked for. (photo: John Tlumacki/Getty Images)
Johnson & Johnson Ordered to Pay $572 Million for Its Role in Oklahoma's Opioid Crisis
Lenny Bernstein, The Washington Post
Bernstein writes: "Cleveland County District Judge Thad Balkman's landmark decision is the first to hold a drugmaker culpable for the fallout of years of liberal opioid dispensing that began in the late 1990s."
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Lenny Bernstein, The Washington Post
Bernstein writes: "Cleveland County District Judge Thad Balkman's landmark decision is the first to hold a drugmaker culpable for the fallout of years of liberal opioid dispensing that began in the late 1990s."
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Water protectors of all persuasions gathered in talking circles at Borderland Ranch in Pe'Sla, the heart of the sacred Black Hills, during the first Sovereign Sisters Gathering. At the center are Cheryl Angel in red and white and on her left, Lyla June. (photo: Tracy Barnett/YES! Magazine)
How the Women of Standing Rock Are Building Sovereign Economies
Tracy L. Barnett, YES! Magazine
Barnett writes: "Nearly 100 Indigenous water protectors and non-Indigenous allies met in the Black Hills of South Dakota for one week to take steps to establish a sovereign economy."
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Tracy L. Barnett, YES! Magazine
Barnett writes: "Nearly 100 Indigenous water protectors and non-Indigenous allies met in the Black Hills of South Dakota for one week to take steps to establish a sovereign economy."
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Joe Arpaio was the sheriff in Maricopa County, Arizona. (photo: Darren Hauck/AP)
Ex-Sheriff Joe Arpaio Wants to Bring Back His Brutal Tent City
Jeremy Stahl, Slate
Stahl writes: "One of the most notoriously racist sheriffs in recent American history wants his job back."
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Jeremy Stahl, Slate
Stahl writes: "One of the most notoriously racist sheriffs in recent American history wants his job back."
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La Jarvis D. Love is photographed in his home in Senatobia, Mississippi, Sunday, June 9, 2019. Love says he was sexually abused by a Franciscan friar at a Catholic grade school in Greenwood. (photo: Wong Maye-E/AP)
In Mississippi Delta, Catholic Abuse Cases Settled on Cheap
Michael Rezendes, Associated Press
Rezendes writes: "The IHOP in Southhaven, Mississippi, was an unlikely place to settle a sex abuse claim against the Catholic Church."
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Michael Rezendes, Associated Press
Rezendes writes: "The IHOP in Southhaven, Mississippi, was an unlikely place to settle a sex abuse claim against the Catholic Church."
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Pharmacy shops at Bhagirath Palace's pharmaceuticals market in Old Delhi, India. (photo: Saumya Khandelwal/Guardian UK)
Facing Fire Over Opioid Crisis, US Drugmakers Eye a Booming New Pain Market in India
Sarah Varney, Kaiser Health News
Excerpt: "As India loosens its stringent narcotics laws, US companies including Johnson & Johnson, Abbott Laboratories and a network affiliated with Purdue Pharma are rushing in."
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Sarah Varney, Kaiser Health News
Excerpt: "As India loosens its stringent narcotics laws, US companies including Johnson & Johnson, Abbott Laboratories and a network affiliated with Purdue Pharma are rushing in."
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Rising temperatures along the traditional holy route are worrying. (photo: Abid Katib/Getty Images)
Rising Temperatures Pose 'Extreme Danger' to Muslims on Hajj Pilgrimage
Paola Rosa-Aquino, Grist
Rosa-Aquino writes: "According to a new study, climate change could lead to an increase in temperatures and humidity along the heart of the Hajj route, putting many devotees in 'extreme danger' of developing heat-related illnesses."
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Paola Rosa-Aquino, Grist
Rosa-Aquino writes: "According to a new study, climate change could lead to an increase in temperatures and humidity along the heart of the Hajj route, putting many devotees in 'extreme danger' of developing heat-related illnesses."
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