
Stephanie McCrummen
Staff Writer at The Atlantic
Staff Writer for The Atlantic. Formerly: The Washington Post. Originally: Birmingham, Alabama. [email protected]
Articles
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3 days ago |
theatlantic.com | Stephanie McCrummen
The clinic was at the end of a craggy parking lot, in the husk of an old Dollar General, and on a morning in March when its future was more tenuous than ever, people were lining up to see a doctor while they still could. A woman worried she was having a relapse of tuberculosis. A man had a mysterious cyst on his neck. An 87-year-old woman hobbled to the check-in desk. “How’re you doing this morning, Ms. Birdie?” the receptionist said to Birdie Nelson.
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1 month ago |
theatlantic.com | Stephanie McCrummen
One recent morning on Chicago’s southwest side, the manager of a Mexican grocery store began the day posted at the front door, rehearsing the phrase “I wish to exercise my right to remain silent” in English in case immigration agents showed up asking about employees. At a Mexican restaurant, the owner stashed newly laminated private signs under the host stand, ready to slap on the walls of the kitchen and a back dining room where workers could hide if agents arrived without a proper warrant.
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1 month ago |
flipboard.com | Stephanie McCrummen
Uruguay’s Orsi to Become President Saturday in Shift to The LeftUruguay’s Yamandu Orsi will be sworn as president Saturday for a five-year term as a left-wing government returns to office even as its neighbors in …
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Jan 9, 2025 |
philstockworld.com | Stephanie McCrummen
Tens of millions of American Christians are embracing a charismatic movement known as the New Apostolic Reformation, which seeks to destroy the secular state. On the Thursday night after Donald Trump won the presidential election, an obscure but telling celebration unfolded inside a converted barn off a highway stretching through the cornfields of Lancaster County, Pennsylvania.
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Jan 9, 2025 |
theatlantic.com | Stephanie McCrummen
Listen1.0x0:0029:17Listen to more stories on harkOn the Thursday night after Donald Trump won the presidential election, an obscure but telling celebration unfolded inside a converted barn off a highway stretching through the cornfields of Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. The place was called Gateway House of Prayer, and it was not exactly a church, and did not exactly fit into the paradigms of what American Christianity has typically been.
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A Pentagon Nomination Fight Reveals the New Rules of Trump’s Washington - @GregJaffe https://t.co/pWkx9HP1e3

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Thrilled to be able to share, "Tragedy in Rock Springs," in this week's issue of @newyorker. It's an account of one of the most horrific episodes of racial terror in our nation's history and the effort today to unearth the fully story of what happened. https://t.co/y50u9umHR8

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