As mass shootings became commonplace, attempts to hold gun makers accountable kept hitting the same roadblock — until now. We look at a lawsuit that could transform the firearms industry. Guests: Natalie Kitroeff, a business reporter for The New York Times, spoke with David Wheeler, whose 6-year-old son, Ben, died in the massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary School; and Sheryl Gay Stolberg, who covers Congress for The New York Times. For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily.
Background reading:
A Connecticut Supreme Court ruling has created a potential opening for Sandy Hook families to maneuver around the gun industry’s legal shield and hold companies liable for the attack.The families are hoping to replicate a tactic used in lawsuits against cigarette manufacturers.The Sunday Read: ‘Bariatric Surgery at 16’
The Year of Taylor Swift
The Woman Who Fought the Texas Abortion Ban
Antisemitism and Free Speech Collide on Campuses
Ukraine’s Counteroffensive Fizzled. U.S. Funding May Be Next.
Can an ‘Anarcho-Capitalist’ President Save Argentina’s Economy?
The Sunday Read: ‘The Bodily Indignities of the Space Life’
Biden Is Trying to Rein In Israel. Is It Working?
Nikki Haley’s Moment
Opioid Victims Have a Settlement. Will the Supreme Court Undo It?
The Blurry Line Between Rap Star and Crime Boss
The Oct. 7 Warning That Israel Ignored
Sunday Special: Elon Musk at 'DealBook'
Should You Rent or Buy? The New Math.
The Bad Vibes Around a Good Economy
Ending Roe Was Supposed to Reduce Abortions. It Didn’t.
Israel and Hamas’s Fragile Cease-Fire
Botox, Hermès and OnlyFans: Why This May Be George Santos’s Last Week in Congress
'Hard Fork': An Interview With Sam Altman
Thanksgiving With 'The Run-Up': Are Black Voters Leaving Democrats Behind?
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Up First
Post Reports
The Ezra Klein Show
Consider This from NPR
Marketplace