1,294 episodes

The hosts of NPR's All Things Considered help you make sense of a major news story and what it means for you, in 15 minutes. New episodes six days a week, Sunday through Friday.Support NPR and get your news sponsor-free with Consider This+. Learn more at plus.npr.org/considerthis

Consider This from NPR Consider This

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The hosts of NPR's All Things Considered help you make sense of a major news story and what it means for you, in 15 minutes. New episodes six days a week, Sunday through Friday.Support NPR and get your news sponsor-free with Consider This+. Learn more at plus.npr.org/considerthis

Listen on Apple Podcasts
Requires subscription and macOS 11.4 or higher

    The state of Hamas on 3 fronts: troops, governance and narrative

    The state of Hamas on 3 fronts: troops, governance and narrative

    Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says the war in Gaza can't end until Israel has destroyed Hamas.

    NPR's reporting from Israel and Gaza suggests that goal is still a long way off.

    For sponsor-free episodes of Consider This, sign up for Consider This+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org.

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    • 9 min
    Hollywood flips the script in the new movie 'Ezra'

    Hollywood flips the script in the new movie 'Ezra'

    'Ezra' is a road trip movie, a movie about fathers and sons.

    Bobby Cannavale plays the father Max, and he hasn't quite figured out what his son Ezra's autism diagnosis means for their life together.

    The movie draws on the real experiences of screenwriter Tony Spiridakis. William A. Fitzgerald, who plays Ezra. And associate producer Alex Plank also has autism, and is the founder of wrongplanet.net. Many members of the cast and crew are neurodivergent, or have neurodivergent family members.

    Hollywood hasn't always gotten it right when it comes to portraying neurodivergent people on screen. The new movie 'Ezra' is flipping the script.

    NPR's Juana Summers speaks with screenwriter Tony Spiridakis and producer Alex Plank.

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    • 14 min
    What will life look like for jurors after the Trump trial?

    What will life look like for jurors after the Trump trial?

    The 12 New Yorkers who served on the jury for former president Donald Trump's trial, and voted to convict him om 34 counts of falsified business records, have not had their identities disclosed publicly to protect their privacy.

    But now the trial is over, and they are likely returning back to normal life. So, will they reveal themselves to the public? And what risks do they encounter in doing so?

    In this episode we take a look at what other public figures who have gone up against Trump have faced from his supporters, and what those jurors could stand to gain from sharing their stories.

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    • 8 min
    Battlefield medicine has come a long way. But that progress could be lost

    Battlefield medicine has come a long way. But that progress could be lost

    When the U.S. launched its invasion of Afghanistan and Iraq in the early 2000s, it had been a decade since a full-scale deployment of American troops.

    That's why when the wars started a lot of the medical corps' experience came from big city emergency rooms.

    But a few years into the wars, the military was facing hundreds of casualties each month between Afghanistan and Iraq.

    Military surgeons were seeing wounds requiring double amputations, the kind of thing you might never encounter before serving in a war zone.

    The military was able to turn that real world experience into breakthroughs in battlefield care. Some of them were simple tweaks like pop up surgical teams that set up close to the battlefield.

    Over the course of the war, small innovations like this tripled the survival rate for the most critically injured troops, according to one study

    Now that the post 9/11 wars have ended, some veteran military doctors say those gains are at risk.

    The Pentagon has tried to cut its healthcare costs by outsourcing medical care to the private sector. And that could hurt battlefield medicine in a future war.

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    • 9 min
    How one Nashville museum has embraced the repatriation of stolen artifacts

    How one Nashville museum has embraced the repatriation of stolen artifacts

    The Rosetta Stone, the Kohinoor diamond, sculptures from Greece's Parthenon known as the Elgin Marbles are all dazzling objects that bear the history of early civilizations.

    But these objects were also taken by colonizers, and still remain on display in museum galleries far from their homes.

    Over the past several years museums around the world have been reckoning with the looted treasures they have kept and benefited from.

    Now one small museum in Nashville, Tennessee is returning ancient objects excavated in Mexico.

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    • 10 min
    Trump was found guilty on all counts. What comes next?

    Trump was found guilty on all counts. What comes next?

    After a trial that lasted 21 days and a deliberation that took less than ten hours, a Manhattan jury found former President Donald Trump guilty on all 34 criminal felony counts of falsifying business records.

    Trump says he will appeal the charges, but there are still implications for him, and his ongoing presidential campaign for the 2024 election.

    So what grounds does Trump have to appeal these charges? And how long could it take to play out? Attorney and NYU law professor Andrew Weissmann joins Ari Shapiro to map out what the next phase of the Trump trial will look like.

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    • 8 min

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