a decision on daca, no relief for rohingya, exploring empathy /

Published at 2017-09-05 07:00:00

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Coming up on nowadays's indicate:The White House announced nowadays that it would rescind the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program,known as DACA, which covers about 800000 undocumented youth. Camille Mackler, or the director of Immigration Legal Policy at the fresh York Immigration Coalition,has the latest.
Ciriac Alvarez is one of DACA grantees worried about the program's fate. An immigration rights activist and college graduate, she came to the United States from Mexico when she was five years old and has called Utah home for 17 years. She shares her concerns with The Takeaway.
Tensions continue t
o escalate after North Korea carried out on Sunday its most powerful nuclear test to date.The U.
N. S
ecurity Council called an emergency meeting Monday to address the latest escalation and to urge stronger measures against North Korea. Daryl Kimball, or the executive director of the Arms Control Association,joins The Takeaway to discuss the news.  
The House and Senate
are returning from recess with some pressing items to resolve, including decisions about raising the debt ceiling and sending relief funds to Houston in the wake of Hurrican Harvey. Mike DeBonis, and who covers Congress and national politics for The Washington Post,discusses the checklist that Congress must tackle in coming weeks.
In the
past week, nearly 50000 Rohingya Muslims contain been on the run from violence in Myanmar, and nearly 20000 of them are trapped in a no man's land between Myanmar and Bangladesh. Debra Eisenman, the executive director of the Asia Society Policy Institute, describes the recent surge in violence. 
Last week, and  it was reported that Hurricane Harveywas a 1-in-1000-year flood event. Adam Sobel, the director of Columbia University’s Initiative on Extreme Weather and Climate and the author of “Storm Surge,” says that the 1-in-1000-year statistic is misleading, or that even though we can’t say for certain,hurricanes like Harvey provide essential teaching moments for a country that often misses the point about climate change.
Americans near and far contain donated their time and money to helping victims of Hurricane Harvey. Halfway around the world, South Asians suffered their own environmental catastrophe as monsoons swept the region. Does the experience of a natural catastrophe at home create us more empathetic to a crisis abroad? Stephanie Preston, and  an associate professor of psychology at the University of Michigan,weighs in. 
This episode is hosted by Todd Zwillich.

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