The human brain is wired to forget upsetting stories and memories. We’ll hear why it is important to think hard about hard things. Plus, one local veteran says reduction in force at the VA is the first steps toward privatization.
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President Donald Trump’s policies have virtually stopped the flow of migrants to Nogales, Sonora. But some remain, unable to return home and unable to enter the United States.
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The latest state budget included no new funding to grow the small staff charged with overseeing Arizona’s school voucher program, leaving the Department of Education with just a dozen employees to review spending that is expected to reach $1 billion next school year.
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The audio documentary is hosted and produced by Arizona journalist Ruxandra Guidi. The project grew out of her experience as a teenager immigrating to the U.S. from Venezuela.
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For the better part of a decade, we’ve been reckoning with the place that social media and online spaces should have in our lives. Are they tools to engage with only when necessary, or digital communities to exist and form relationships and have discussions?
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Concerns about creative censorship have rippled out all over the country under Trump, including right here in the Valley. Robrt Pela covered the trend recently for Phoenix Magazine, and he joins The Show.
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While the VA says reducing its nationwide staff of 484,000 by nearly 30,000 employees won’t disrupt care and benefits for veterans, many outside the agency aren’t convinced.