Talk of the Nation on KCCU http://kccu.org en When A Language Dies, What Happens To Culture? http://kccu.org/post/when-language-dies-what-happens-culture Nearly half of the 7,000 languages spoken in the world are expected to vanish in the next 100 years. One of them is Athabaskan, a language of the Siletz tribe in the Pacific Northwest. Bud Lane, vice chairman of Siletz tribal council, explains the importance of language diversity. Tue, 18 Jun 2013 17:49:00 +0000 editor 36264 at http://kccu.org A Look Ahead To The Future Of Afghanistan http://kccu.org/post/look-ahead-future-afghanistan Twelve years after the war began, Afghanistan's president announced Tuesday that Afghan forces officially assumed control of security for the country. U.S. and NATO troops will remain until the 2014 deadline, but the Afghan military is now expected to fight without NATO support. Tue, 18 Jun 2013 17:46:00 +0000 editor 36263 at http://kccu.org Obama's Former Legal Adviser Urges U.S. To 'Disciple Drones' http://kccu.org/post/obamas-former-legal-adviser-urges-us-disciple-drones Transcript <p>JOHN DONVAN, HOST: <p>Last month, Harold Koh, who is a lawyer who worked for President Obama, gave a speech where he criticized the way the president is running the drone war against terrorist targets overseas, which is an interesting thing because Koh himself provided much of the legal underpinning that the president relies on to keep the use of drones within the boundaries of national and international law. Tue, 18 Jun 2013 17:34:00 +0000 editor 36269 at http://kccu.org Breaking Bad News To Kids: How Media Has Tweaked The Process http://kccu.org/post/breaking-bad-news-kids-how-media-has-tweaked-process Parents have always had to break hard news to kids, from family hardships to national tragedies. Now there are more ways for children to learn about news faster — through 24 hour news and social media. So, what's changed in how parents broach these subjects? How can media help, or hurt? Tue, 18 Jun 2013 17:34:00 +0000 editor 36268 at http://kccu.org After SCOTUS DNA Ruling, What Changes For Police? http://kccu.org/post/after-scotus-dna-ruling-what-changes-police The Supreme Court ruled in June that police can routinely take DNA samples from people who are arrested for comparison against a national database. The decision raises major questions about how law enforcement and criminal justice processes will change. Mon, 17 Jun 2013 17:54:00 +0000 editor 36197 at http://kccu.org