NPR has received two of the largest gifts in the public media network’s existence, totaling $113 million.
They will go toward fueling innovation in NPR’s use of digital technology, increasing its connection with audiences, and ensuring the viability of public radio stations after Congress eliminated all federal funding for public media.
NPR President and CEO Katherine Maher said the gifts would help to set up the network and its stations for the next 50 years, beyond the radio network infrastructure that sprang up in 1970 from a coalition of community and university-owned public radio stations across the country.


When all of this was first happening, it sure did look like Palestine elected a government that attempted to commit genocide against the Jews and drive them out of Israel. The tides have turned and the genocide backfired, but it’s hard to blame NPR for being at one point sympathetic.
If your news source was leading you to believe a narrative that “Palestine elected a government that attempted to commit genocide against the Jews and drive them out of Israel” then you should question the lack of context and facts that your news source is providing.
You should blame NPR for this, and the fact that you don’t shows that you haven’t learned your lesson and you will fall for it again.
Umm, are we glossing over the settler attacks?