Articles

  • 1 month ago | msn.com | Osita Nwanevu |Fabiana Moraes |Adam Elliott-Cooper |Zanele Mji |Abeo Jackson |Daniel Gyamerah

    Microsoft Cares About Your PrivacyMicrosoft and our third-party vendors use cookies to store and access information such as unique IDs to deliver, maintain and improve our services and ads. If you agree, MSN and Microsoft Bing will personalise the content and ads that you see. You can select ‘I Accept’ to consent to these uses or click on ‘Manage preferences’ to review your options and exercise your right to object to Legitimate Interest where used.

  • 1 month ago | theguardian.com | Osita Nwanevu |Zanele Mji |Adam Elliott-Cooper |Fabiana Moraes |Abeo Jackson |Daniel Gyamerah

    Columnist at the Guardian US and a contributing editor at the New Republic. He is based in BaltimoreFive years after 2020’s historic wave of racial justice protests, the US is very obviously a country much changed, though not in the ways that activists and reformers had hoped.

  • 1 month ago | msn.com | Osita Nwanevu

    Microsoft Cares About Your PrivacyMicrosoft and our third-party vendors use cookies to store and access information such as unique IDs to deliver, maintain and improve our services and ads. If you agree, MSN and Microsoft Bing will personalise the content and ads that you see. You can select ‘I Accept’ to consent to these uses or click on ‘Manage preferences’ to review your options and exercise your right to object to Legitimate Interest where used.

  • 1 month ago | businessandamerica.com | Osita Nwanevu

    If you can bear to hear it, there are still more than 1,300 days remaining in the Trump administration. That’s an interminably long time given all the havoc the president has been able to wreak since January alone; the chaos and cruelty of the term so far also happen to have used up his political capital remarkably quickly. The New York Times average of polls, which found him at 52% approval on inauguration day, had him at 51% disapproval on Wednesday.

  • 1 month ago | newrepublic.com | Osita Nwanevu

    If it’s caught early, before it’s had thechance to spread to other parts of the body, 99 percent of patients with cancer ofthe prostate go on to live at least another five years. Once it’s metastasized,the five-year survival rate drops substantially;⁠ down to 32 percent. Evenwith an intensive treatment regimen⁠—lowering testosterone, radiation,chemotherapy⁠—it’s likelier than not that they will pass before long.

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