VoxThe four criminal investigations into the former president, explained
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Donald Trump is now the first former US President to face criminal charges. He pleaded not guilty to 34 counts of falsifying business records in the first degree.
This case involves hush money that Trumpâs lawyer paid to an alleged former sexual partner. But itâs actually just one of four criminal investigations into the former president. The other three investigations focus on his behavior after the 2020 presidential election.
A Georgia team is examining Trumpâs efforts to persuade Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger to âfindâ more Trump votes after the votes had been counted and Raffensperger had declared Joe Biden the winner.
Federal special prosecutor Jack Smith is heading up the other two investigations. One group is looking at the Trump teamâs attempts to persuade officials in a handful of states where Biden won not to certify his victory, and instead to claim Trump won the state despite the vote counts. The other federal investigation is focused on classified documents that Trump brought with him from the White House to his Florida estate after losing the 2020 election. According to reports from the Washington Post and the New York Times, when the FBI searched his estate in August 2022, they found documents related to nuclear weapons, as well as files containing information that could put US informants in the field in danger.
As president, Trump didnât just say outrageous things, he acted in unprecedented ways. Now that heâs out of office, investigators in a variety of jurisdictions are trying to figure out if he broke the law, too.
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The Trump investigations you should actually care aboutVox2023-04-07 | The four criminal investigations into the former president, explained
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Donald Trump is now the first former US President to face criminal charges. He pleaded not guilty to 34 counts of falsifying business records in the first degree.
This case involves hush money that Trumpâs lawyer paid to an alleged former sexual partner. But itâs actually just one of four criminal investigations into the former president. The other three investigations focus on his behavior after the 2020 presidential election.
A Georgia team is examining Trumpâs efforts to persuade Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger to âfindâ more Trump votes after the votes had been counted and Raffensperger had declared Joe Biden the winner.
Federal special prosecutor Jack Smith is heading up the other two investigations. One group is looking at the Trump teamâs attempts to persuade officials in a handful of states where Biden won not to certify his victory, and instead to claim Trump won the state despite the vote counts. The other federal investigation is focused on classified documents that Trump brought with him from the White House to his Florida estate after losing the 2020 election. According to reports from the Washington Post and the New York Times, when the FBI searched his estate in August 2022, they found documents related to nuclear weapons, as well as files containing information that could put US informants in the field in danger.
As president, Trump didnât just say outrageous things, he acted in unprecedented ways. Now that heâs out of office, investigators in a variety of jurisdictions are trying to figure out if he broke the law, too.
Make sure you never miss behind the scenes content in the Vox Video newsletter, sign up here: http://vox.com/video-newsletter
Vox is an explanatory newsroom on a mission to help everyone understand our weird, wonderful, complicated world, so that we can all help shape it. Part of that mission is keeping our work free. You can help us do that by making a gift: http://www.vox.com/contribute-now
Watch our full video catalog: http://goo.gl/IZONyE Follow Vox on TikTok: http://tiktok.com/@voxdotcom Check out our articles: vox.com Listen to our podcasts: vox.com/podcastsWhy useless decongestants are still for saleVox2023-10-05 | Phenylephrine doesnât work better than a placebo. So why is it still on shelves?
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If youâve taken an over-the-counter decongestant in the past 20 years, youâve probably taken something with phenylephrine as the main active ingredient. A Food and Drug Administration panel recently recommended that it be taken off shelves because it doesnât work any better than a placebo. What happened?
In the above video, Voxâs Phil Edwards chronicles the history of the FDAâs regulation of over-the-counter medicines. That process is the reason that, despite decades of evidence that phenylephrine doesnât work (especially in typical OTC doses), itâs remained an option for consumers.
This is the PowerPoint given before the FDA panel presentation and discussion on Phenylephrine, and itâs probably the most digestible way to get the full debate: fda.gov/media/171971/download
Hereâs Part II of the FDAâs Zoom meeting on Phenylephrine (including the vote and discussion): youtube.com/watch?v=aUyuzjjnGfA
Vox is on a mission is to help everyone, regardless of income or status, understand our complicated world so that we can all help shape it. Part of that mission is keeping our work free.
Watch our full video catalog: http://goo.gl/IZONyE Follow Vox on TikTok: http://tiktok.com/@voxdotcom Check out our articles: vox.com Listen to our podcasts: vox.com/podcastsUS politicians are really old and refusing to retire #shortsVox2023-10-02 | In the US, the share of lawmakers under the age of 40 is at an all-time low. Are we living in a gerontocracy?
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Vox is on a mission is to help everyone, regardless of income or status, understand our complicated world so that we can all help shape it. Part of that mission is keeping our work free.
Vox is on a mission is to help everyone, regardless of income or status, understand our complicated world so that we can all help shape it. Part of that mission is keeping our work free.
Watch our full video catalog: http://goo.gl/IZONyE Follow Vox on TikTok: http://tiktok.com/@voxdotcom Check out our articles: vox.com Listen to our podcasts: vox.com/podcastsThe anti-racist town in the American South, explainedVox2023-09-29 | Soul City was meant to be an antiracist town in the American South.
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In the 1960s, Floyd B. McKissick, a prolific civil rights activist, embarked on an ambitious idea: What if Black Americans could build and lead their own city? A place centered on the idea of racial equality and economic power, where everyone, especially people of color and the poor, could thrive? That idea turned into Soul City, North Carolina: the Black-led, capitalist utopia that almost came to be.
At the time, the federal government was encouraging the idea of new cities. The US Department of Housing and Urban Development opened up a process to finance new towns built by private developers. McKissick took the opportunity to pitch his idea and hoped to secure federal funding to finally make his dream a reality. But to do it, he also made an unlikely ally: Republican President Richard Nixon. By 1972, Soul City was approved for funding, and McKissick broke ground on hundreds of acres of former tobacco plantation land in Warren County, North Carolina.
Designs were drafted. Land was cleared. An electrical grid and water system were constructed. Infrastructure was built, like roads, a public pool, a health clinic, and a massive industrial building called âSoul Tech Oneâ â meant to be a manufacturing hub. But within just seven years of breaking ground, McKissickâs dream of Soul City was cut short. In the piece above, we explore what happened to this experimental town. With the help of McKissickâs son, former Sen. Floyd McKissick Jr., and one of Soul Cityâs first residents, Jane Ball-Groom, we look at what got built, what remains today, and the forces that came together to cause its end.
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The summer of 2023 was the summer of Barbie. Everywhere you looked there was marketing â posters, ads, trailers. There were Barbie cafeâs, Barbie progressive commercials, everyone was wearing pink! It was a delightful wave of cinematic energy.
But it was also completely overwhelming. At times it felt inescapable.
Barbieâs marketing felt different. And in some ways it was â but it owes a lot to the blockbusters that came before.
As promised, here are the links: I started listening to this podcast to learn more about Jaws, and then I listened to every episode in like a week. Life-changingly good podcast if youâre into movies: open.spotify.com/show/6nhQUF8rDmBaRjbZp9zgzv or getblockbuster.com
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This episode is presented by Delta. Delta doesnât have a say in our editorial, but they make videos like this possible. For more information, visit http://www.delta.com/sustainability.
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In 2021, President Biden set an ambitious climate goal for the US to reach net-zero carbon emissions economy-wide by 2050. And as part of the transition to renewable energy, the country has drastically ramped up production of solar over the past few years. But thatâs led to a new problem: finding enough land on which to put solar panels.
The easiest and cheapest places to install solar panels are often large, undeveloped plots of land. It's why, in many places across the country, we've seen rural areas â including fragile desert ecosystems and valuable farmland â turned into solar farms. Many local residents and conservationists have protested these rural solar projects for a variety of reasons: Some want to keep natural views, others want to retain space for agriculture or aim to preserve biodiversity. Solar will likely play an important role in the countryâs move away from fossil fuels â but is there a smarter way to do it that doesnât require taking up so much rural land?
In the video above, we explore one option that could help: parking lots. Solar photovoltaics researcher and professor Joshua Pearce goes into the data on how placing solar canopies over parking lots could be a worthwhile investment for many cities. And as more countries, like France, are moving toward retrofitting parking spaces with solar, we look at what it could mean in the US.
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Vox is on a mission is to help everyone, regardless of income or status, understand our complicated world so that we can all help shape it. Part of that mission is keeping our work free.
Watch our full video catalog: http://goo.gl/IZONyE Follow Vox on TikTok: http://tiktok.com/@voxdotcom Check out our articles: vox.com Listen to our podcasts: vox.com/podcastsReporting on ChatGPT in educationVox2023-09-21 | Students, how are you using chatbots in your work, if at all? Teachers and professors, what are your AI policies and how do you enforce them?
Drop Joss a line at joss@vox.com to let her know what youâre seeing in your classrooms.Its time to replace urban delivery vansVox2023-09-20 | E-bikes are cleaner, and safer. So why arenât we using them?
This episode is presented by Delta. Delta doesnât have a say in our editorial, but they make videos like this possible. For more information, visit http://www.delta.com/sustainability.
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Remember during lockdown, how we all got obsessed with ordering everything online and having it delivered right to our doorsteps? Yeah, turns out that isnât going away anytime soon, and weâre starting to understand the many downsides. The delivery vans that make our next-day shipping dreams come true are driving up C02 emissions while making our streets more crowded and less safe.
Fortunately, thereâs a hero waiting in the wings: the e-cargo bike. Not only can these bad boys deliver packages in urban environments just as quickly (and sometimes faster) than delivery vans, they take up far less space and are much less likely to cause pedestrian deaths. Companies like Amazon, DHL, and UPS are using them in several European cities, but American cities havenât followed suit.
In this video, we explore why that is, and lay out some of the big steps American cities would need to take to join the e-bike delivery revolution.
Vox is on a mission is to help everyone, regardless of income or status, understand our complicated world so that we can all help shape it.
In 2022, before he began a campaign for the presidency, Ron DeSantis was reelected governor of Florida in a landslide. This was impressive and surprising because the 2022 elections were disappointing for Republicans almost everywhere else in the US. But DeSantisâs overwhelming victory was doubly impressive and surprising because when he had first been elected, just four years earlier, it was by just a tiny margin.
For a long time, in fact, tiny election margins were the norm in Florida elections. Florida was a âswing stateâ â it sometimes voted for Democrats, sometimes for Republicans, and was a major prize up for grabs in presidential elections. But by 2022, something had changed: Florida Republicans up and down the ballot won their races by margins similar to DeSantisâs, and no one was calling Florida a swing state anymore.
Florida seems to have undergone a political transformation. So what happened? In this video, we look at three possible explanations.
Chapters: 0:00 What changed? 1:49 Defining the question 2:52 New Floridians 4:10 Latino voters 7:05 Florida Democrats 8:26 The other reasons 10:09 A request
We looked at âŚ. a lot of data for this video. Here are the main sources we used:
County-by-county results in Florida elections from 2016-2022 came from the Florida Department of Stateâs Election Reporting System: results.elections.myflorida.com
Our map showing the âspecific originâ of various statesâ Latino populations was inspired by the University of Washingtonâs Great Migrations Project: https://depts.washington.edu/moving1/map_latinx_migration.shtml
The chart at the end, which compiles spending from the national Democratic Party, was also based on information from OpenSecrets: opensecrets.org/political-parties
Finally, the data around voters who moved to a new state and new Florida registrations from 2020-2023 came from the data vendor L2: l2datamapping.com
Vox is an explanatory newsroom on a mission to help everyone understand our weird, wonderful, complicated world, so that we can all help shape it. Part of that mission is keeping our work free. You can help us do that by making a gift: http://www.vox.com/givenow
Vox is an explanatory newsroom on a mission to help everyone understand our weird, wonderful, complicated world, so that we can all help shape it. Part of that mission is keeping our work free. You can help us do that by making a gift: http://www.vox.com/contribute-now
Watch our full video catalog: http://goo.gl/IZONyE Follow Vox on TikTok: http://tiktok.com/@voxdotcom Check out our articles: vox.com Listen to our podcasts: vox.com/podcastsHow to take the global temperature #shortsVox2023-09-15 | 2023 is another record-breaking year for global warming. Joss Fong explains how they do the math.
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Vox is an explanatory newsroom on a mission to help everyone understand our weird, wonderful, complicated world, so that we can all help shape it. Part of that mission is keeping our work free. You can help us do that by making a gift: http://www.vox.com/contribute-now
Vox is an explanatory newsroom on a mission to help everyone understand our weird, wonderful, complicated world, so that we can all help shape it. Part of that mission is keeping our work free. You can help us do that by making a gift: http://www.vox.com/contribute-now
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We believe that information should be free for everyone. Thatâs why we publish our work here on YouTube, and why Vox doesnât have a paywall on the site. We rely on a lot of revenue streams to do this â ads alone aren't enough. By becoming a contributor, you can help us make more videos and keep them free! http://vox.com/give-now
By the end of 2023, weâre trying to reach 85,000 contributions across all of Vox. This means that in September, we need to add 2,500 new contributors to stay on pace. That will help ensure that all of our coverage stays free for all in 2024, including all the special reporting weâll be doing for the US election.
And as a special thank you to those who make recurring contributions, youâll get access to video tutorials, behind-the-scenes newsletters, and Q&As with Vox journalists from across our entire newsroom. Thanks so much for watching, and we canât wait to do more.
Vox is an explanatory newsroom on a mission to help everyone understand our weird, wonderful, complicated world, so that we can all help shape it. Part of that mission is keeping our work free.
Watch our full video catalog: http://goo.gl/IZONyE Follow Vox on TikTok: http://tiktok.com/@voxdotcom Check out our articles: vox.com Listen to our podcasts: vox.com/podcastsWhy most tennis players struggle to make a livingVox2023-09-11 | Tennis fails where other sports provide a living for their players.
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During the US Open in New York, Vox video sat down with professional tennis players and the head of the Professional Tennis Players Association to explain the pay problem in the top-five global sport. Tennis is unique among other professional sports in how players are paid, what costs they are responsible for, and how they are categorized as independent contractors. The result is that â unless you are consistently among the very top-ranked players like Rafael Nadal, Andy Murray, Roger Federer, Serena Williams, and Naomi Osaka â itâs nearly impossible to make a living with income from tennis alone.
Unlike other sports that provide support for people outside the very top performers, tennis leaves them high and dry.
In 2021, Novak Djokovic and Vasek Pospisil co-founded a players organization in part to try to address these issues they believe pose an existential threat to the sport. Itâs called the Professional Tennis Players Association, and Vox video worked with it to interview players and the organizationâs president to shed light on the structural issues that cause such a pay disparity when compared with other global sports.
The Professional Tennis Players Association site: ptpaplayers.com
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Today, one of the hottest parts of the global economy is in Silicon Valley. And itâs thanks to, in large part, a radio engineer who had a plan.
As the above video shows, Fred Terman was key in building a technological hub in an area best known for its prunes. Thanks to his work developing Stanford Research Park, a new cycle of business innovation began and has continued to this day.
Vox is an explanatory newsroom on a mission to help everyone understand our weird, wonderful, complicated world, so that we can all help shape it. Part of that mission is keeping our work free. You can help us do that by making a gift: http://www.vox.com/givenow
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Vox is an explanatory newsroom on a mission to help everyone understand our weird, wonderful, complicated world, so that we can all help shape it. Part of that mission is keeping our work free. You can help us do that by making a gift: http://www.vox.com/contribute-now
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Iceland has made significant progress with its gender pay gap in the past 50 years. In 1975, Icelandic women made around 40 percent less than what men made. Today, that number is around 10 percent, making Iceland one of the few countries in the world where women are paid almost as much as men.
To understand how Iceland made so much progress, you have to take a look at what happened almost 50 years ago. In 1970, a radical feminist group called the Redstockings formed in response to outdated ideas in Iceland surrounding issues like violence against women, reproductive rights, and womenâs labor. The Redstockings were known for their loud and public demonstrations, and in 1975 they proposed their biggest idea yet: a womenâs strike. A day when women would collectively refuse to work at home and in the office to prove their economic worth to society.
The idea was divisive at first, but slowly, women from different political backgrounds got on board. To make the idea more accessible, they changed the name to âWomenâs Day Off,â or âKvennafrĂ,â and planned the strike from the ground up. It was a massive success. An estimated 90 percent of Icelandic women refused to work that day, and it shut down the country. Flights were canceled without flight attendants, and schools were closed without teachers. Men had to bring children to work because there was no child care at home.
The effects of KvennafrĂ were felt across the country. Iceland quickly passed its first Gender Equality Act and soon after elected its first female president â and the world's first woman to be elected democratically. In this episode of Missing Chapter, we walk through how Icelandic women shut down their country, and talk to one of the women who helped do it.
Disclaimer: The views in the video above are not those of the United Nations.
Sources: Read about KvennafrĂ, and other Icelandic womenâs history, at the Womenâs History Archive: https://kvennasogusafn.is/index.php?page=english
Vox is an explanatory newsroom on a mission to help everyone understand our weird, wonderful, complicated world, so that we can all help shape it. Part of that mission is keeping our work free. You can help us do that by making a gift: http://www.vox.com/givenow
Vox is an explanatory newsroom on a mission to help everyone understand our weird, wonderful, complicated world, so that we can all help shape it. Part of that mission is keeping our work free. You can help us do that by making a gift: http://www.vox.com/contribute-now
Watch our full video catalog: http://goo.gl/IZONyE Follow Vox on TikTok: http://tiktok.com/@voxdotcom Check out our articles: vox.com Listen to our podcasts: vox.com/podcastsWhy this is the Trump indictment you should care about #shortsVox2023-08-19 | It seems like the former president is getting indicted every other day. But this latest one could be the most important. From producer Liz Scheltens.
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Vox is an explanatory newsroom on a mission to help everyone understand our weird, wonderful, complicated world, so that we can all help shape it. Part of that mission is keeping our work free. You can help us do that by making a gift: http://www.vox.com/contribute-now
Watch our full video catalog: http://goo.gl/IZONyE Follow Vox on TikTok: http://tiktok.com/@voxdotcom Check out our articles: vox.com Listen to our podcasts: vox.com/podcastsWhat we get wrong about saving the beesVox2023-08-14 | Honeybees get a ton of attention, but theyâre not the ones who need help.
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Every year there are alarming headlines about honeybees in the US. Each one highlights some grim facts about the fate of these insects and the subsequent fallout: Colonies are collapsing, beekeepers are struggling, and farming is at risk. The stakes are high. Honeybees are estimated to pollinate up to $15 billion worth of food in the US. Itâs safe to say that without them our plates and farms would look very different. Naturally, theyâve become the face of a larger movement to âsave the bees,â but the truth is ⌠theyâll be fine.
Honeybees are domesticated animals being cared for by a billion-dollar agriculture industry. Theyâre so ingrained into American life that it might surprise you that theyâre not even from the US â they were brought here by settlers in the 1600s. We give them a ton of attention, and the species as a whole isnât threatened or even at risk â but other species are.
There are 20,000 other species of bees in the world â over 4,000 in the United States. Theyâre incredibly diverse, unique, and also important for pollination. Unfortunately, hundreds of these bee species are at risk of being lost forever, but you rarely see those headlines. Watch the video above to learn more.
Vox is an explanatory newsroom on a mission to help everyone understand our weird, wonderful, complicated world, so that we can all help shape it. Part of that mission is keeping our work free. You can help us do that by making a gift: http://www.vox.com/givenow
Watch our full video catalog: http://goo.gl/IZONyE Follow Vox on TikTok: http://tiktok.com/@voxdotcom Check out our articles: vox.com Listen to our podcasts: vox.com/podcastsThe surprising factor making Mauis wildfires worse #maui #hawaii #wildfireVox2023-08-11 | Hurricane winds, drought conditions, and...cow fodder?
Be sure to check out this super informative piece from Hawaii Business Magazine. They get into way more detail about the role of invasive grasses in Hawaii's increasingly frequent wildfires
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When youâre flying, thereâs one thing you want to be above all else â comfortable. (Well, besides safe, of course!)
Whether or not youâre comfortable is determined by a slew of factors, but none draw more ire than seat pitch â the fancy term used to describe the distance between where your seat begins and the seat in front of you ends. You probably know it as legroom.
Legroom is a precious commodity, and airlines are aware of this. After all, there is a finite amount of space on planes. In order to get the maximum number of people onboard, you have to either innovate â like by designing slimmer seats â or you have to shrink the seat pitch. Airlines have done both. Plus, they now give you the option to spend some more money to upgrade for more legroom, allowing you (and your wallet) to choose how comfortable you want to be.
If you want the cheapest flight, then you have to be willing to endure the slimmest seat pitch. If youâre willing and able to pay more, then you can feel the comfort of yesteryear, when seat pitch was way more luxurious.
Though there have been legal efforts to come up with minimum seat dimensions, there are no current regulations on seat pitch. For now, itâs still up to airlines to decide their own minimums, while hopefully enticing you to upgrade. Check out Vox video team's latest to learn more!
Travel is back in a big way this summer. Voxâs first-ever travel guide is answering some of your most pressing questions about travel: vox.com/e/23499975
Vox is an explanatory newsroom on a mission to help everyone understand our weird, wonderful, complicated world, so that we can all help shape it. Part of that mission is keeping our work free. You can help us do that by making a gift: http://www.vox.com/givenow
Watch our full video catalog: http://goo.gl/IZONyE Follow Vox on TikTok: http://tiktok.com/@voxdotcom Check out our articles: vox.com Listen to our podcasts: vox.com/podcastsThe biggest reason SUVs dominate US roads #shortsVox2023-08-04 | Thereâs a reason why it seems like every car on the road is a truck or SUV, and itâs not (just) because people like driving them.
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Vox is an explanatory newsroom on a mission to help everyone understand our weird, wonderful, complicated world, so that we can all help shape it. Part of that mission is keeping our work free. You can help us do that by making a gift: http://www.vox.com/contribute-now
Watch our full video catalog: http://goo.gl/IZONyE Follow Vox on TikTok: http://tiktok.com/@voxdotcom Check out our articles: vox.com Listen to our podcasts: vox.com/podcastsRental Scams Are On The Rise: Check Your FOMO At The Door [Ad content from Zelle]Vox2023-08-03 | Donât pay for the dream apartment before you actually get to see it.
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Vox is an explanatory newsroom on a mission to help everyone understand our weird, wonderful, complicated world, so that we can all help shape it. Part of that mission is keeping our work free. You can help us do that by making a gift: http://www.vox.com/contribute-now
Watch our full video catalog: http://goo.gl/IZONyE Follow Vox on TikTok: http://tiktok.com/@voxdotcom Check out our articles: vox.com Listen to our podcasts: vox.com/podcastsHigh female employment rates in Europe mean more babies #shortsVox2023-08-02 | In the EU high fertility rates go hand in hand with higher female participation in the workforce. Itâs a striking new phenomenon that illustrates how empowering women to achieve the work-life balance that works for them, can make a huge difference in countries experiencing population declines.
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Cruise ships are freaking big. Theyâre the biggest passenger vessels humans have ever built. In size and appearance, they look nothing like almost any other boat. So how did they get that way?
The predecessor of todayâs cruise ships was the ocean liner: big, beautiful ships that sailed across the Atlantic. But ocean liners had a totally different purpose from cruise ships: They were for transportation. Everything about them was designed to facilitate an ocean voyage from one continent to another.
But air travel changed that. Planes eliminated the main reason to take a ship somewhere, and ocean liner business plummeted. So the industry pivoted and began selling a ship as the destination itself. The cruise ship was born. But the ocean liners, built for a voyage, werenât ideal for the purposes of a cruise, and over the next few decades, the cruise ship began its evolution. And it has culminated in the behemoths we see today.
Vox is an explanatory newsroom on a mission to help everyone understand our weird, wonderful, complicated world, so that we can all help shape it. Part of that mission is keeping our work free. You can help us do that by making a gift: http://www.vox.com/givenow
Watch our full video catalog: http://goo.gl/IZONyE Follow Vox on TikTok: http://tiktok.com/@voxdotcom Check out our articles: vox.com Listen to our podcasts: vox.com/podcastsBarbieâs past life as a German sex worker #shortsVox2023-07-31 | Before she was a surgeon, an astronaut, or a marine biologist, Barbie was a German sex worker named Lilli.
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Vox is an explanatory newsroom on a mission to help everyone understand our weird, wonderful, complicated world, so that we can all help shape it. Part of that mission is keeping our work free. You can help us do that by making a gift: http://www.vox.com/contribute-now
Watch our full video catalog: http://goo.gl/IZONyE Follow Vox on TikTok: http://tiktok.com/@voxdotcom Check out our articles: vox.com Listen to our podcasts: vox.com/podcastsDonât Let Your Survival Instincts Trick You Into A Bank Imposter Scam [Ad content from Zelle]Vox2023-07-28 | Why are there so many scam victims? It all comes down to survival instincts. Humans are predisposed to go with the flow for our own gain - that can mean we listen when someone who sounds like they are from our bank (but isnât) is trying to help us. Call the number on your bank-issued card - your real bank will let you know if anything is truly wrong.
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Vox is an explanatory newsroom on a mission to help everyone understand our weird, wonderful, complicated world, so that we can all help shape it. Part of that mission is keeping our work free. You can help us do that by making a gift: http://www.vox.com/contribute-now
Watch our full video catalog: http://goo.gl/IZONyE Follow Vox on TikTok: http://tiktok.com/@voxdotcom Check out our articles: vox.com Listen to our podcasts: vox.com/podcastsA fact-checked debate about euthanasia in CanadaVox2023-07-27 | 2 opposing perspectives and 6 true facts about Canadaâs policy on Medical assistance in dying (MAID).
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Chapters: 0:00 Intro 1:36 Fact #1 3:10 Dr. Green Introduction 3:29 Background info 4:07 Fact #2 5:21 Dr. Maher introduction 5:42 Fact #3 7:20 Fact #4 8:31 Fact #5 10:04 Fact #6 11:20 Questions 13:44 Personal experiences 15:47 Debunk 17:10 Uncertainties 19:00 Closing statements
In 2016, a Supreme Court case in Canada removed the criminal penalties for doctors providing a patient with a medically assisted death. Since then, the country has been embroiled in a legal and ethical debate about where to draw the line on who qualifies for one.
In the US states where it's legal, that line is drawn at a terminal diagnosis with 6 months to live. On the other end of the spectrum, countries like Belgium, Luxembourg, and the Netherlands allow anyone suffering from a serious condition to qualify, so long as theyâve exhausted treatments available to them.
After a series of court cases, Canada has landed somewhere closer to where the Benelux countries are: there is no terminal diagnosis requirement, and next year, people whose only serious condition is a mental illness will qualify for an assisted death.
While the Canadian public appears to show large support for the policy change, there are vocal minorities who believe that it is dangerous. Many in the disability rights community believe that making a disability an eligible condition for assisted death is discriminatory. Some psychiatrists and mental health practitioners are concerned about when you can decide a mental illness is eligible â and that it could hinder the work of suicide prevention.
This is the debate we present here. Dr. Stefanie Green is a practitioner of medically assisted dying (MAID) in British Columbia and is the co-founder and president of the Canadian Association of MAID Assessors and Providers (CAMAP). She also wrote a book about her work as a MAID practitioner, called This is Assisted Dying. She argues that Canadaâs policies have been successful and have been extremely meaningful for her patients.
Dr. John Maher is a psychiatrist based in Ontario who leads an Assertive Community Treatment group and is the editor-in-chief of the Journal of Ethics in Mental Health. He argues that there arenât enough safeguards in place in Canada and that offering the option of euthanasia to people with mental health will undermine the suicide prevention work he does.
In Vox Videoâs take on a debate, we asked both participants to identify facts that their opponent would have to concede are true. They were given an opportunity to review each otherâs facts in advance and, in a video call, agreed on a set of six. In the video, youâll see those facts presented, with each participant given the opportunity to add a âfootnoteâ to their opponentâs facts. We added four additional rounds to our format to give our participants more time to flesh out their viewpoints.
Vox is an explanatory newsroom on a mission to help everyone understand our weird, wonderful, complicated world, so that we can all help shape it. Part of that mission is keeping our work free. You can help us do that by making a gift: http://www.vox.com/givenow
Watch our full video catalog: http://goo.gl/IZONyE Follow Vox on TikTok: http://tiktok.com/@voxdotcom Check out our articles: vox.com Listen to our podcasts: vox.com/podcastsThat time 90s activists âliberatedâ Barbie #shortsVox2023-07-26 | In 1993, the âBarbie Liberation Organizationâ switched out the voiceboxes of hundreds of Teen Talk Barbies and G.I. Joe dolls. The US news media proceeded to lose its collective mind.
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Itâs no secret that big cars dominate American roads. But even so, some of the stats are staggering: Last year, 80 percent of all new cars sold in the US were SUVs and trucks. Thatâs compared to just 52 percent in 2011. Meanwhile, many automakers are phasing out passenger cars as consumer demand for them has disappeared.
Not all of this is a result of consumer choice, though. A huge factor in why SUVs and trucks are so popular in the US is hidden in a 50-year-old policy decision. In this video we cover the history of the SUV, and how its origin story and popularity is rooted in US fuel economy standards.
Here is the study on pedestrian fatalities and big cars: https://sci-hub.se/https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S2212012221000241?via%3Dihub
Correction: 2:50 a label on the x-axis of a chart misspells âAustralia.â
Vox is an explanatory newsroom on a mission to help everyone understand our weird, wonderful, complicated world, so that we can all help shape it. Part of that mission is keeping our work free. You can help us do that by making a gift: http://www.vox.com/givenow
Watch our full video catalog: http://goo.gl/IZONyE Follow Vox on TikTok: http://tiktok.com/@voxdotcom Check out our articles: vox.com Listen to our podcasts: vox.com/podcastsFlight attendant uniforms over time #shortsVox2023-07-24 | From small accessories in the 1940s to space helmets in the 1960s, flight attendant uniforms have changed a lot since they first started flying almost a century ago. Hereâs a quick fashion history.
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Watch our full video catalog: http://goo.gl/IZONyE Follow Vox on TikTok: http://tiktok.com/@voxdotcom Check out our articles: vox.com Listen to our podcasts: vox.com/podcastsWhy no aquarium has a great white shark #shortsVox2023-07-23 | Many have tried to keep a white shark in captivity. Here's why that's so difficult.
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Vox is an explanatory newsroom on a mission to help everyone understand our weird, wonderful, complicated world, so that we can all help shape it. Part of that mission is keeping our work free. You can help us do that by making a gift: http://www.vox.com/contribute-now
Vox is an explanatory newsroom on a mission to help everyone understand our weird, wonderful, complicated world, so that we can all help shape it. Part of that mission is keeping our work free. You can help us do that by making a gift: http://www.vox.com/contribute-now
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Los Alamos quickly became the centerpiece of the Manhattan Project â the United Statesâ successful attempt to develop a nuclear bomb. But why was Los Alamos selected, and how did that relate to the selection of the subsequent testing site? The above video tells the story of Oppenheimerâs selection of the site and the unique culture that was built there.
Los Alamos was more than a lab â it was a secret city, built for the express purpose of atomic development. Housing top scientists, their families, and support staff, this island of research led to a century-changing technological development.
Further Reading Manhattan: The Army and the Atomic Bomb (https://history.army.mil/html/books/011/11-10/) This logistical history of the Manhattan project provides great non-scientific background on the Manhattan Project, including the selection, distribution, and construction of key sites around the country, as well as a guide to the bureaucracy that surrounded it.
The Manhattan Project: Making the Bomb (osti.gov/biblio/1330716) This Department of Energy history covers similar ground with additional information on the Army Corps of Engineerâs role.
Manhattan District History: Nonscientific Aspects of Los Alamos Project Y (osti.gov/biblio/4555247) This document provides a fine-grained look at the nitty gritty of Los Alamos, from prices at the commissary to accommodations for the residents.
Vox is an explanatory newsroom on a mission to help everyone understand our weird, wonderful, complicated world, so that we can all help shape it. Part of that mission is keeping our work free. You can help us do that by making a gift: http://www.vox.com/givenow
Watch our full video catalog: http://goo.gl/IZONyE Follow Vox on TikTok: http://tiktok.com/@voxdotcom Check out our articles: vox.com Listen to our podcasts: vox.com/podcastsThree facts about US rail travel #shortsVox2023-07-19 | Here are 3 facts you might not know about passenger travel in the US.
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Vox is an explanatory newsroom on a mission to help everyone understand our weird, wonderful, complicated world, so that we can all help shape it. Part of that mission is keeping our work free. You can help us do that by making a gift: http://www.vox.com/contribute-now
Watch our full video catalog: http://goo.gl/IZONyE Follow Vox on TikTok: http://tiktok.com/@voxdotcom Check out our articles: vox.com Listen to our podcasts: vox.com/podcastsThe controversial bomb the US just sent Ukraine #shortsVox2023-07-18 | The US just shipped a bunch of cluster bombs to Ukraine. These bombs are controversial because they can indiscriminately target civilians, frequently making them the subject of war crimes investigations.
The US is one of a few holdouts in banning these weapons. Another country that has declined to ban them is Russia, which has reportedly already used them in the war with Ukraine.
We covered the use of cluster bombs at length in 2022. You can find the full video here: youtu.be/OTk4Q4Nm5CA
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Vox is an explanatory newsroom on a mission to help everyone understand our weird, wonderful, complicated world, so that we can all help shape it. Part of that mission is keeping our work free. You can help us do that by making a gift: http://www.vox.com/givenow
Watch our full video catalog: http://goo.gl/IZONyE Follow Vox on TikTok: http://tiktok.com/@voxdotcom Check out our articles: vox.com Listen to our podcasts: vox.com/podcastsWhat I learned from taking a train across the USVox2023-07-18 | Hereâs how US train travel went from excellent to mediocre.
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If youâve taken the Amtrak recently, you might have no idea that the United States used to have the largest and wealthiest rail system in the world. How did the US go from having luxurious, widely used passenger trains to the Amtrak system we have today?
Video producer Dean Peterson makes a 72-hour journey on Amtrak from LA to NYC to show its current state of operation. From getting kicked in the head by his sleeping seat mate to taking in sweeping views of the desert at sunset, Dean shows the highs and lows of being stuck on Amtrak for days on end.
Along the way, he explains the history of passenger rail in the US â starting in the problematic robber baron era to the US governmentâs takeover of passenger rail. Will the United States ever catch up to the rest of the world when it comes to train travel, or are Americans stuck with an underfunded, inefficient rail network forever? Join Dean on his journey as he sets out to find out the answer to these questions and more.
Travel is back in a big way this summer. Voxâs first-ever travel guide is answering some of your most pressing questions about travel. Keep up on the site where new articles and videos are being published each week in July: vox.com/e/23499975
Vox is an explanatory newsroom on a mission to help everyone understand our weird, wonderful, complicated world, so that we can all help shape it. Part of that mission is keeping our work free. You can help us do that by making a gift: http://www.vox.com/givenow
Vox is an explanatory newsroom on a mission to help everyone understand our weird, wonderful, complicated world, so that we can all help shape it. Part of that mission is keeping our work free. You can help us do that by making a gift: http://www.vox.com/contribute-now
Watch our full video catalog: http://goo.gl/IZONyE Follow Vox on TikTok: http://tiktok.com/@voxdotcom Check out our articles: vox.com Listen to our podcasts: vox.com/podcastsThe dark patterns Amazon uses to hook you in #shortsVox2023-07-11 | The FTC is suing Amazon over what it calls manipulative design elements. They argue the company uses "dark patterns" to unintentionally sign people up for Prime and make it nearly impossible to cancel easily.
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Vox is an explanatory newsroom on a mission to help everyone understand our weird, wonderful, complicated world, so that we can all help shape it. Part of that mission is keeping our work free. You can help us do that by making a gift: http://www.vox.com/contribute-now
Watch our full video catalog: http://goo.gl/IZONyE Follow Vox on TikTok: http://tiktok.com/@voxdotcom Check out our articles: vox.com Listen to our podcasts: vox.com/podcastsWhy so many baseball players are DominicanVox2023-07-11 | And why so many players are among the best in Major League Baseball.
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Baseball has a long history in the United States, but it also has strong roots in the Caribbean and Latin America, particularly in the Dominican Republic. Cubans were the first to bring the game from the US to their country in the 19th century, and later, wealthy Cubans introduced it to the Dominican Republic. Over the following decades, the sport became deeply ingrained in Dominican culture, while in the United States, baseball evolved into a multi-million dollar industry.
Eventually, the United States began to seek out Cuban baseball talent. But when diplomatic relations between the two countries deteriorated, the Dominican Republic emerged as the primary focus of Major League Baseball's talent pipeline.
As Dominicans demonstrated their skill and success as baseball players, the MLB started establishing academies in the Dominican Republic, which were affiliated with MLB teams in the United States. This system facilitated the influx of numerous talented Dominican players into MLB teams. Currently, Dominicans dominate Major League Baseball in the United States, making up more than 10 percent of all players in the league. They significantly outnumber players from other foreign-born countries.
To gain a deeper understanding of how baseball spread throughout the Dominican Republic and why the island produces so many MLB players, watch the latest episode of Vox Atlas.
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Youâve seen it on the highway: a giant RV, lumbering by with its exterior totally covered in swooshes and swoops. Those lines of paint seem to grace the sides of every recreational vehicle, and for decades theyâve defined the RV aesthetic. But where did they come from?
In this video, producer Estelle Caswell heads to Elkhart, Indiana â the global capital of RV production â to investigate why these swoops are everywhere, and whether theyâre here to stay. While there, she explores Elkhartâs RV history museum and library and speaks to RV designers who love and hate the swoops.
Will RV makers be forced to change their infamous look to appeal to younger generations obsessed with clean aesthetics? Or are we stuck with this look for the next 20 years? Check out the video to find out.
Note: The headline on this piece has been updated. Previous headline: Why do RVs have these ugly swoops?
Travel is back in a big way this summer. Voxâs first-ever travel guide is answering some of your most pressing questions about travel. Keep up on the site where new articles and videos are being published each week in July: vox.com/e/23499975
Vox is an explanatory newsroom on a mission to help everyone understand our weird, wonderful, complicated world, so that we can all help shape it. Part of that mission is keeping our work free. You can help us do that by making a gift: http://www.vox.com/givenow
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Weâre taking you on a trip this summer â five trips to be exact. Vox producers are hopping on planes, trains, RVs, cruise ships, and cars to explain the design choices that shape the way we travel. Weâre tackling the big questions about these modes of transportation, like: Why are RV paint jobs so ugly? Why does US train travel have such a bad reputation? And why is our plane legroom disappearing?
Join us every week starting Monday, July 10.
Vox is an explanatory newsroom on a mission to help everyone understand our weird, wonderful, complicated world, so that we can all help shape it. Part of that mission is keeping our work free. You can help us do that by making a gift: http://www.vox.com/givenow
Subscribe and turn on notifications đ so you don't miss any videos: http://goo.gl/0bsAjO
Weâre taking you on a trip this summer â five trips to be exact. Vox producers are hopping on planes, trains, RVs, cruise ships, and cars to explain the design choices that shape the way we travel. Weâre tackling the big questions about these modes of transportation, like: Why are RV paint jobs so ugly? Why does US train travel have such a bad reputation? And why is our plane legroom disappearing?
Join us every week starting Monday, July 10.
Vox is an explanatory newsroom on a mission to help everyone understand our weird, wonderful, complicated world, so that we can all help shape it. Part of that mission is keeping our work free. You can help us do that by making a gift: http://www.vox.com/givenow
Watch our full video catalog: http://goo.gl/IZONyE Follow Vox on TikTok: http://tiktok.com/@voxdotcom Check out our articles: vox.com Listen to our podcasts: vox.com/podcastsThe US Supreme Court just shot down student debt forgiveness #shortsVox2023-06-30 | Student debt forgiveness could change the lives of millions. The US Supreme Court just shot it down.
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Vox is an explanatory newsroom on a mission to help everyone understand our weird, wonderful, complicated world, so that we can all help shape it. Part of that mission is keeping our work free. You can help us do that by making a gift: http://www.vox.com/contribute-now
Watch our full video catalog: http://goo.gl/IZONyE Follow Vox on TikTok: http://tiktok.com/@voxdotcom Check out our articles: vox.com Listen to our podcasts: vox.com/podcastsWhen flight attendants fought the airline industry and wonVox2023-06-29 | The âstewardess rebellionâ fought the industry and won.
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When flight attendants, known as stewardesses at the time, first took flight in the 1930s, the profession became a token of glamor. Unlike other jobs open to women at the time, like teaching or secretarial work, stewardesses had a unique opportunity to travel the world and meet new people thousands of feet in the air. While the position provided exciting opportunities for working women, it also capitalized on the bodies of these women to benefit the airline industry.
For decades, airlines exclusively hired young, single, unmarried, white women and enforced strict policies â like weight and age requirements â to make sure their employees were up to the standard they were selling. Airlines relied on the glamorous reputation of the jet-setting stewardess to sell luxury air travel, and it worked. Along with imposing extreme qualifications for the job, airlines leaned into a âsexy stewardessâ stereotype with advertising campaigns and new uniforms, like Southwest Airlines' âhot pantsâ that painted stewardesses as sex objects.
But in the 1960s and '70s, stewardesses mounted an organized push against their employers' discriminatory labor practices. They became one of the first groups in the US to fight discrimination in the workplace. And they won. Their activism and legal battles, which used Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, became known as the âstewardess rebellion.â It changed the airline industry into what we know today and paved the way for working women nationwide.
Note: The headline on this piece has been updated. Previous headline: How flight attendants changed the airline industry
Sources: The book Femininity in Flight by Kathleen Barry played a huge role in researching this story: https://www.dukeupress.edu/femininity-in-flight
So did Nell McShane Wulfhartâs book about the stewardesses' legal fights and unionizing: nellmcshanewulfhart.com/books
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Watch our full video catalog: http://goo.gl/IZONyE Follow Vox on TikTok: http://tiktok.com/@voxdotcom Check out our articles: vox.com Listen to our podcasts: vox.com/podcastsBehind the Scenes on Asteroid Cityâs miniatures #shortsVox2023-06-26 | Check out these behind the scenes photos of the miniatures used in Asteroid City. Photos courtesy Simon Weisse / Focus Features.
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Out of the millions of fungal species in the world, only a few hundred can make people sick. Coccidioides is one of them â and it lives in desert dust. Microscopic spores are kicked up when the ground is disturbed; if inhaled, they can cause an infection known as Valley fever. Most people recover without ever knowing they had it, but others will experience far more intense symptoms, ranging from pneumonia to meningitis. Coccidioides is also really good at eating ⌠meat.
Fortunately, this fungus is typically only found in the southwestern US, parts of Mexico, and Central and South America â and cases are rare. But unfortunately, that range is expanding quickly. Scientists are racing to understand exactly why, because even though this fungus has existed for millennia, there are still tons of unanswered questions about how it lives both in the desert and in people.
Further reading: Bridget Barker is one of the authors of the endozoan hypothesis. You can read her study co-authored by John Taylor here: pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30690603/.
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