Information trickles out about the Brussels bombing; the 40-year anniversary of Argentina's "dirty war"; Republicans in disarray.
Vox Sentences is written by Dylan Matthews and Dara Lind.
TOP NEWS
What we know about the Brussels bombers
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A gesture of justice for los desaparecidos
Nicholas Kamm/AFP/Getty Images
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Under the military junta that took power in 1976, up to 30,000 people were killed or "disappeared" — and the country's still struggling to discover exactly what happened and bring justice to the victims.
[Telegraph / Alfonso Daniels]
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Much of the credit for bringing the dirty war to international attention goes to the Grandmothers of the Plaza de Mayo, a group that organized to call attention to the government's practice of kidnapping children (some of them the children of imprisoned mothers who would later be disappeared) and giving them up for adoption.
[New Yorker / Francisco Goldman]
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The Grandmothers and other groups are still active, and have been concerned that the new conservative government of Argentina was going to sweep the dirty war under the rug — fears that appeared to be confirmed when Obama's visit was scheduled to coincide with the 40th anniversary of the junta's coup.
[Vice / Remi Lehmann]
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Instead, not only will the US be opening up its archives, but so will the Vatican — a decision that's particularly interesting because questions have swirled about the Catholic Church's possible collaboration with the junta, and because Pope Francis was a priest in Argentina at the time.
[AFP / Kelly Velasquez]
GOP does everything to stop Trump but ask
Win McNamee/Getty Images
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Bush's endorsement, Dylan says, is a reminder that for all the things Republican elites find distasteful about Trump, his racism is not high on the list.
[Vox / Dylan Matthews]
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In other futile attempts to regain control of the GOP, Paul Ryan gave a speech on "the state of American politics" today. It was an eloquent denunciation of obstructionism, but it also made absolutely no reference to what's actually going on in the party right now.
[Time / Ryan Teague Beckwith]
MISCELLANEOUS
VERBATIM
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"I got kicked out of school when I was seven years old. I refused to salute the flag because my great uncle had been lynched with the flag wrapped around his body. So I went back to Sacramento and said, 'I'm not saluting the flag.' And teacher went at me and hit me, and I hit back. And then we had a Joe Frazier/Muhammad Ali moment right there in the third grade."
[Cornel West to CBS News / James Brown]
WATCH THIS
Vice / Medyan Dairieh
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