
Susan Levine
Deputy America Editor at The Washington Post
Covering all things across the country as deputy editor of the Washington Post's America team.
Articles
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1 month ago |
washingtonpost.com | Matt McClain |Susan Levine
The West has long captivated Americans’ imaginationswith its iconic vistas and mythical lore. Mountains jutting toward the heavens. Windswept valleys and ochre-colored deserts. A land of rugged freedom. Yet endless transformation may be the region’s most significant feature, one that explains both its past and its future. “Change is a constant,” Donna L. Lybecker, a professor at Idaho State University, has written.
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Dec 29, 2024 |
washingtonpost.com | Susan Levine |Nick Kirkpatrick
Jimmy Carter's post-presidency lasted more than 43 years - the longest of any former commander in chief by more than a decade. But it's what he packed into those years that probably set him apart for all time. Whether he was building houses for the poor in the United States and abroad, monitoring elections in some of the world's most turbulent, troubled countries or tackling the eradication of a tropical disease that once afflicted millions of people, Carter lived his convictions.
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Nov 12, 2024 |
washingtonpost.com | Peter Bresnan |Monica Campbell |Maggie Penman |Reshma Kirpalani |Susan Levine
When it comes to abortion, the results of last week’s election were decidedly mixed. Abortion protections passed in New York, Maryland, Montana, Nevada, Arizona, Colorado and Missouri but failed in Florida, Nebraska and South Dakota. This means that 2 million more women now have access to abortion services across the country.
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Aug 30, 2024 |
warontherocks.com | Susan Levine
It’s time for the national security enterprise to take non-lethal weapons seriously. Yes, non-lethal weapons. The Defense Department has been trying to come to terms with the use of non-lethal weapons in military operations for at least three decades. In 1996, Congress directed the secretary of defense to centralize responsibility for non-lethal weapons development due to their potential widespread operational utility.
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Jul 4, 2024 |
link.springer.com | Ithaca College |Francis Xavier |Susan Levine
AbstractPost-exertional malaise (PEM), the hallmark symptom of myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS), represents a constellation of abnormal responses to physical, cognitive, and/or emotional exertion including profound fatigue, cognitive dysfunction, and exertion intolerance, among numerous other maladies.
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The border city of Laredo has hosted an extravaganza to history — and to this country's ties to its southern neighbor — for over a century. George and Martha Washington attend. So do debutantes in bejeweled gowns. So did, this year, @mollyhf @mmcclain75 https://t.co/7ZoizxjOUp

Denali means 'the great one,' and those living in its snow-shrouded midst scorn making it a political pawn, as Trump did in renaming the peak for a president who never set foot in Alaska. A great read, look and listen from @karinbrulliard @wleaming https://t.co/RS9QcKL4x4

Tiny O'Neill, Nebraska, took a big hit from a 2018 ICE raid. The town is still recovering, its Latino residents again fearful. "The potential removal just lingers on for years like a war wound that won’t heal." @anniegowen https://t.co/5Ei52fvEze