Sunday, March 31, 2019

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Democracy Dies in Darkness
 
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[FLASH SALE] Save over 60% through midnight tomorrow.

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The Washington Post
Democracy Dies in Darkness
 
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Saturday, March 30, 2019

In Sight: The best photography from the week

In Sight
A curated view of your world in photographs

 

 

The Best Photos of the Week

(Daniel Acker/Bloomberg News)
Here are 12 of the week's best photos
Flooding in Iowa, the reaction after a Pittsburgh officer was acquitted in Antwon Rose's shooting, special counsel Robert S. Mueller III, baseball's Opening Day and more images from around the world.

 

 

In Sight

 
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Misha Friedman
Perspective
The unexpected spaces inside Ukrainian prisons
Photographer Misha Friedman says that his study of Ukrainian prisons is about the traces that a society leaves behind.
Perspective
What it's like living in an abandoned building in one of the most-populous cities in the world
Photographer Javier Alvarez documents the life of Brazilian squatters.
Perspective
A photographer explores the mystique behind her memories of Crimea
Stanislava Novgorodtseva has been observing Crimea transform since her childhood.
 
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Must-see photo stories

(Michael Bonfigli)
How one photojournalist found an unexpected way to process trauma
Photographer Michael Bonfigli was used to covering news stories from an objective distance. Then he turned the camera on himself.
(Pétala Lopes for the Washington Post)
A mining disaster covered a town in toxic sludge. Now, residents navigate a wasteland.
A torrent of waste buried hundreds of people in Brumadinho, Brazil, in the second mining disaster to strike the country in three years. Survivors recall loved ones lost and look to the company for answers.
(Michael S. Williamson/The Washington Post)
Homeless, living in a tent blocks from the U.S. Capitol — and working full-time
The rise of tent encampments is changing the face of American homelessness. Inside one, Monica Diaz struggles to keep her full-time job — and her dignity.
Loay Ayyoub / For The Washington Post
Gazans have paid in blood for a year of protests. Now many wonder what it was for.
Israeli gunfire has killed 266 Palestinians and wounded more than 6,850 over the past year, health officials say.
 
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