The year's best reads from msnbc
The new msnbc.com has become a destination for the big stories, the stories that matter - deeply reported and richly presented.
Here are some of our favorite longreads – click through to read the whole collection.
How America’s harshest immigration law failed
by Benjy Sarlin
Alabama tried to kick out its undocumented immigrants with the harshest law in the country. Two year’s later, the law’s in ruins and the immigrants remain.
‘I’m showing my son mercy’
by Irin Carmon
Ending a wanted pregnancy was always going to be painful. But living in the most “pro-life” state made it far worse.
by Ned Resnikoff
Millions of Americans fell victim to food insecurity when the Great Recession hit in 2009, but didn’t benefit from the economic recovery. And the worst may be yet to come.
Bulldozing homes and civil rights
by Adam Serwer
A New Jersey town decided that crime made one neighborhood–home to many black and Latino families–irredeemable, and set out to destroy it. The residents fought back, and the case appeared headed to the Supreme Court.
by Suzy Khimm
More than 35 states have increased funding for mental health, but research and services took a hit from sequestration’s budget cuts.
by Geoffrey Cowley
Dr. Jonas Salk didn’t miss a beat when Edward R. Murrow asked him, in a 1955 television interview, who owned the patent on the polio vaccine. “Well, the people ,” Salk replied. “There is no patent. Could you patent the sun?”
In black Sanford, a place to gather
by Trymaine Lee
Sanford’s black community wait together to learn George Zimmerman’s fate.
by Zachary Roth
In Beaumont, Texas, a racially charged feud over the school board offers a window into how minorities will fare with a badly weakened Voting Rights Act.