{“title”:”Military unease grows after Iran war sparks departures”,”content”:”For weeks Bill Galvin, counseling director at the Center on Conscience and War, has been fielding an unusually high number of calls. The center helps run the 24-hour GI Rights Hotline and in March logged more than 80 new clients — nearly twice its usual annual intake — with its busiest day adding 12 new callers. Many ask how to apply for conscientious-objector status, while others anonymously describe confusion, anger and plans to leave. Advocates say the volume is small next to the roughly 1.3 million people in uniform, but the pattern is striking: more service members are exploring ways out and airing ethical and morale-based objections.

U.S. Army and U.S. Army National Guard/Collage by Emily Bogle/NPR Bill Galvin has spent much of the past month answering the phone. "It's been very, very busy," he says. Galvin is the counseling director at the Center on Conscience and War, which helps run the 24-hour GI Rights Hotline, set up to inform service members

7 Smart Ways to Tame Kids’ Clutter

A million magnetic tiles scattered across the living room. Stuffed animals piled high in the playroom. Outgrown baby gear taking up space in the closet. When you live with kids, your home is bound to get messy. And the more stuff they have, the more time you have to spend organizing it and cleaning it

Artemis II Nears Splashdown: What to Expect

NASA astronaut and Artemis II Commander Reid Wiseman looks at Earth through Orion's main cabin windows as the crew travels towards the moon. Wiseman and his three crewmates are set to return to Earth on Friday. NASA hide caption toggle caption NASA Flying by the moon, witnessing an eclipse, and traveling farther from Earth than

How a Digital Fog of War Hindered Reporting in Iran

Loading... The first signs an American aircraft was shot down came over the Telegram messaging app. Images of aircraft debris and a pilot's empty ejection seat appeared on pro-Iranian channels. They were quickly followed by videos of search-and-rescue aircraft flying low over the mountains of southwestern Iran. Jake Godin got to work trying to figure

BTS Begins ‘Arirang’ World Reunion Tour

South Korea's BTS K-pop supergroup launched its global concert tour on Thursday with the first of three concerts at Goyang Stadium near Seoul. The tour will take the band to 34 cities across the world, setting a new record for the most tour dates by a K-pop artist. Tickets for the concerts in South Korea

Four Die After Dinghy Capsizes in English Channel

Four people died off France's northern coast trying to cross the English Channel in a small boat early on Thursday morning.  The dangerous boat crossings trying to reach the UK tend to reduce in frequency during the harshest winter months, when the seas are dangerously rough and cold. But as the temperatures slowly start to

Is the Dubai Dream Over? Separating Hype from Reality

A slew of recent headlines have proclaimed that the Iran war marks the end of the so-called "Dubai dream," where foreigners seek a tax-free, luxury lifestyle in the United Arab Emirates.  "The unravelling of Dubai as a safe haven," US magazine the New Yorker wrote. "Could this be the end of Dubai?" a New York Times

Mario Adorf, Storied German Actor, Dies at 95

German actor Mario Adorf was a phenomenon. On screen, he beat people up, shot and killed them. He was loud, he was rude and used foul language. And yet, in the end, he was beloved by all. Many other actors have been around for a long time, too, but who else can claim to have

Artemis II Crew Emotional Ahead of Reentry

The four astronauts aboard the Artemis II mission's Orion spacecraft spoke to the press from space for the first time since completing a lunar flyby that took them a record distance from earth. After becoming the first humans to directly observe the far-side of the moon, emotions are running high as the crew prepares to reenter the
back to top