Dumped: Nursing home evictions a reality for some poor patients
14:03
Losing our religion: Finding meaning beyond the pew
09:58
Army divers go deep In Puget Sound to target lost fishing nets
05:00
Climate change: How did we get here?
01:52
Why the Hawaii telescope protests aren’t going anywhere
10:20
Detoxing in jail: Treating opioid use behind bars
09:31
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
10:22
"Don't ask, don't tell" veteran becomes first Stonewall park ranger
10:01
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'?
02:52
Exploring new slang: What is 'gekyume'?
03:15
Should life be this stressful?
08:39
Exploring new slang: What is 'blockchain'?
03:03
leftfield
Deported U.S. veterans ask for second chance to come home
09:54
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Approximately 75,000 American military veterans are foreign-born legal U.S. residents. Even when these service men and women served honorably, they can still be vulnerable to deportation if they are convicted of an aggravated felony. Hector Barajas was one of these deported veterans, until a recent pardon by Governor Jerry Brown of California. Through his Deported Veterans Support House, Barajas now works to help other veterans who've been expelled from the United States.Sept. 13, 2018