There are tens of thousands of foreign-trained doctors who could help alleviate the US’ shortage. But many of them are not allowed to work here.
"I have no idea what to do."
"You don’t feel safe anymore. It always feels like we’re tiptoeing our way to 2020, we’re tiptoeing our way to, hopefully, a new president.”
An interview with the correspondent from "The Daily Show" on his recent presidential roast, releasing a Netflix special and family ties in his comedy.
Millions of people in the US live their lives in limbo, under the “supervision” of federal agents and the uncertainty of whether they will be deported. One couple is asking: When can we have children?
Identity, integration and Islam were critical issues in the Dutch spring elections in the Netherlands. At the heart of the debate was who belongs in the Netherlands.
"They make me bleed inside every time I talk to them," says Saber Askar, a US citizen from Yemen, with family still in the war-torn country. "I don’t know what to do. Every time I call, I’m afraid they're not going to answer anymore."
Sure, some students can manage to study abroad. But a cultural exchange program in Minnesota is putting a twist on the concept, making it local and far more accessible.
At the University of California, Davis, law students take on immigrant cases, with guidance, and double as cultural navigators too.
The legal action from two of Massachusetts' poorest cities could offer a blueprint for other small sanctuary communities looking to push back on President Trump’s immigration agenda.
It’s not always easy to bridge gaps in communities. But these two friends are giving it a try.