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“Cover-up”: Workers “know the truth” about the derailment disaster — why are they being ignored?

Bob Hennelly
The "employers are the voice of the cover-up," says Transport Workers Union International President John Samuelsen

Elijah Wood slams AMC Theatres’ ticket price change, says it will “penalize people for lower income”

Joy Saha
"The movie theater is and always has been a sacred democratic space for all," the actor said

The Doomsday Clock is an imperfect metaphor — but the existential danger is all too real

Émile P. Torres
Critics call the clock a scare-mongering device — but the problem is, we have good reasons to fear extinction

Criminologists, looking to biology for insight, stir a racist past

Michael Schulson
Using biology to understand criminal behavior has long been controversial. Top criminology programs are pursuing it

As hip-hop turns 50, Chuck D praises its power as “a worldwide cultural experience and religion”

D. Watkins
The legendary rapper on politics, his Top 5 songs and PBS series "Fight The Power: How Hip-Hop Changed The World"

What the world would lose with the demise of Twitter

Anjana Susarla
Twitter itself produces a lot of data that’s available nowhere else

Beyond a diet fad: Fasting alters your genetic expression, experts say

Troy Farah
The surprising health benefits of fasting go far beyond mere weight loss, and can even make your organs healthier

Astronomers just created a massively detailed Milky Way map with 3.3. billion stars

Nicole Karlis
Researchers now have an intricate three-dimensional structural map of billions of objects in our galaxy

Are you living in a food desert? These maps suggest it can make a big difference to your health

Nicky Morrison, Gregory Paine
Lack of access to fresh affordable foods can be a problem even in large cities

How vulnerable is Wall Street to climate change? The Fed wants to find out

Jake Bittle
The Federal Reserve is putting the country's biggest banks to a test

“Unusual mortality event”: Climate concerns rise after dead whales keep washing up on beaches

Bob Hennelly
Environmental groups worry the whale deaths will be used to halt construction of off-shore wind turbine farms

What does a “compromise meatball” taste like?

Maggie Hennessy
At Chicago’s Peanut Park Trattoria, pork and beef come together in luscious meatball harmony

“Staggering number”: Right-wingers filed nearly 100 “anti-voter” lawsuits, analysis shows

Kenny Stancil
"The GOP establishment is becoming more litigious than ever," report says

When fishing boats go dark at sea, they’re often committing crimes – we mapped where it happens

Heather Welch
Periods of missing transponder data actually contain useful information on where ships go and what they do

22 books we’re looking forward to in 2023

Alison Stine, Hanh Nguyen
From fairy tales to historical fiction to the memoir of a prince, Salon looks ahead to the year in books

Best of 2022 | I got hooked on Uber Eats. Not as a customer — as a delivery driver

Margaret Dodge
As a recovered substance abuser, I recognized the signs of addiction: I couldn't stop even when I wanted to

Wildfires in Colorado are growing more unpredictable. Officials have ignored the warnings

Jennifer Oldham
A year after the deadly Marshall Fire, the state’s densest communities aren't ready for the next one

At long last, “The Long Kiss Goodnight” is getting the holiday affection it deserves

Melanie McFarland
For years Geena Davis' action marvel had fallen off holiday movie lists. Then her co-star helped folks discover it

“An absolute disaster”: Hochul nominates anti-choice, anti-union judge to lead New York’s top court

Julia Conley
New York's Democratic governor picked "potentially the worst" of seven choices

“There’s just not enough”: A water war is brewing over the dwindling Colorado River

Abrahm Lustgarten
Diminished by climate change and overuse, the river can no longer provide the water states try to take from it

The far-right is crazy — like a fox: The code behind the far-right’s success

John Feffer
Forget the deplorables and focus instead on the persuadables

The first climate change candidate: Inside Al Gore’s oddly prescient 1988 presidential run

Matthew Rozsa
Al Gore focused his 1988 presidential campaign on climate change — and the world shrugged him off

Picky eater? Research shows it could be in your DNA

Nicola Pirastu
Ever wondered why people can’t agree on what foods taste good?

How John Roberts may slow-walk American democracy right off the cliff

David Daley
Roberts may seek a compromise in the Independent State Legislature case — one that locks down minority rule
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