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Losing our religion: Finding meaning beyond the pew
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Army divers go deep In Puget Sound to target lost fishing nets
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Climate change: How did we get here?
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Why the Hawaii telescope protests aren’t going anywhere
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Detoxing in jail: Treating opioid use behind bars
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A different kind of force—Policing mental illness: Part 1
37:13
A different kind of force—Policing mental illness: Part 2
30:10
Escaping burnout: Using meditation to set a different course
07:26
Tackling America's loneliness epidemic
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"Don't ask, don't tell" veteran becomes first Stonewall park ranger
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The real reason doctors burn out
13:49
Hurricane-hit Florida Panhandle awaits aid as wildfire risk looms
06:51
New York bodegas unite to bankrupt the New York Post
09:24
Abortion back-up plan: Some women are ordering abortion pills online
13:08
Battling the tech addiction that hijacked our brains
11:15
Exploring new slang: What is 'zaddy'?
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Exploring new slang: What is 'gekyume'?
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Should life be this stressful?
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Exploring new slang: What is 'blockchain'?
03:03
leftfield
Democratic Republic of Congo in crisis as president clutches to power
08:46
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The Democratic Republic of Congo is experiencing one of its most violent periods in nearly two decades, a humanitarian crisis rarely covered by the media. NBC Left Field went to the Kasai region and saw alleged evidence of crimes against thousands of Congolese people. We spoke to an ex-militia leader about what led to an uprising against the government in 2017, as well as child soldiers about why they took up arms. The United Nation warns that the humanitarian situation in the DRC is at par with Iraq, Syria, and Yemen—all while the country's president, Joseph Kabila, refused to step down after his term ended in 2016.April 25, 2018