Democracy Dies in Darkness
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Days after nearly 60 Texas Democrats made their dramatic exodus to Washington to stop the passage of voting restrictions, many of them acknowledged they have a rapidly closing window to capitalize on the national spotlight.
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In communities like Liberty City and Little Haiti — traditionally Black and Latino neighborhoods that are located inland and on higher ground — some residents said they've been pressured by real estate agents and developers who want their property.
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(Drea Cornejo/The Washington Post)
Like many other survivors of the Surfside condo collapse, Steve Rosenthal is grateful that he made it out alive. But he’s worried about what comes next.
A police officer stands by a wall painted with a mural of late Haitian President Jovenel Moïse. (AFP via Getty Images)
Restoration work on a centuries-old painting revealed that the smile had been added.
Players walked off the field in Wakayama, Japan, with the score tied and a minute left to play in their match with Honduras.
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The indictments of a father and son — former and current police officers — bring the number of off-duty law enforcement officers charged in the Capitol mob to at least 20
Jewish law dictates that bodies be returned to the earth as whole as possible. "We return what we have," said Yona Lunger, founder of a volunteer group that prepares the dead for burial.
Workers are raised in a crane bucket on Oct. 19, 2019, at the collapse site of the Hard Rock Hotel in New Orleans. (Gerald Herbert/AP)
Irene Wimberly has painful personal experience with what lies ahead for families who lost loved ones in the Surfside, Fla., condo collapse.
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Some folks want to hang out in the Harry Potter world. (Warner Brothers/Everett Collection)
Most of us enter a meditative state naturally as we drift off to sleep each night. But some experts claim that the willful switching of one’s consciousness is a fairly new concept — that might be flourishing because of world events.
A father was diagnosed with early Alzheimer’s. Then he died from covid-19.
Reader’s unvaccinated relatives concoct unnecessary plan to fool airline.
Reader finds the greeting irritating and would rather be addressed by name.
An exhausted Rohingya refugee touches the shore after crossing the Bangladesh-Myanmar border by boat, in Shah Porir Dwip, Bangladesh, in 2017. (Danish Siddiqui/Reuters)
In SightPerspective
A firestorm erupted around the promotion of "Irreversible Damage." Some argued that the organization was promoting censorship.
The architect of the Vietnam Memorial is back with “Ghost Forest,” an installation of 49 dead cedars, up through Nov. 14 in Madison Square Park.
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