Sunday, July 3, 2016

Conservative Christians grapple with whether "religious freedom" includes Muslims

Amid a reshuffled electoral landscape, challenging questions abound for both evangelical voters and the candidates themselves. Try answering some of them yourselves with our new 270 Project tool.
Best of NPR
'God Is God Because He Remembers'

For decades he helped carry on the memory of the Holocaust. Now, we remember him

Elie Wiesel died Saturday at the age of 87. The survivor of the Nazi death camps advocated on behalf of victims of hate and persecution around the world. But he liked to call himself simply a witness. And as a witness, he said, it was his duty to never let those who suffered be forgotten.

Our remembrance

Choose Your Own Adventure

Can Donald Trump beat Hillary Clinton?

The electoral landscape looks rocky for Trump, as demographics alone seem to give Clinton a clear edge. But Trump argues the usual rules ought to be tossed out the window. So, who's got the better chance? Play around with our brand-new, handy-dandy demographics tool to see for yourself.

The 270 Project

The Facets Of Freedom

Conservative Christians grapple with whether 'religious freedom' includes Muslims

Religious liberty has a rallying cry for many evangelical voters this election season — but usually only as it pertains to Christians. Among these voters, the matter becomes significantly murkier when discussing other faiths, like Islam.

'I do not want to help people go to hell'

Break In Case Of Catastrophe

This government stockpile is secret. But one day, thousands of lives may depend on it

No, this is not the final scene from Raiders of the Lost Ark. This is, in fact, a very real warehouse, packed with very real drugs and supplies — secretly stashed away in case of a pandemic or catastrophic attack. And NPR got a glimpse inside.

Take a tour with us

Nonstop Flight

This bird has a 6-foot wingspan, and it stays aloft for weeks at a time. But how?

The huge seagoing birds, called frigatebirds, fly for tens of miles without so much as a wing-flap, and as high as parts of the Rocky Mountains — and they do it by hitching a ride on a cloud. Scientists are astonished by these birds.

More on the birds

NPR

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