2024-09-11
21 分钟Hi, I'm Josh Haner, and I'm a staff photographer at the New York Times covering climate change.
For years, we've sort of imagined this picture of a polar bear floating on a piece of ice.
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My challenge is to find stories that show you how climate change is affecting our world right now.
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This is the Opinions, a show that brings you a mix of voices from New York Times Opinion.
You've heard the news.
Here's what to make of it.
I'm Patrick Healy, the deputy editor of New York Times Opinion, and I've covered American politics for decades as a reporter and editor and running our New York Times focus groups.
So the first and maybe only Harris Trump debate just ended, and I'm joined by my colleague, opinion columnist Michelle Goldberg, to talk through what we just saw and what it means for the presidential race.
Michelle, thank you so much for joining me so late in the evening.
Thrilled to be here.
So tonight was a crucial moment in this strange, chaotic, unpredictable presidential race.
All eyes have been on Kamala Harris.
And given her short time, time as a candidate, she hasn't had many of these spontaneous and unscripted moments to really show herself and prove herself to a lot of voters.
And Michelle, you said before the debate that beyond any specifics on policy, the only thing that mattered, that really mattered, is if Kamala Harris wins it.
So how are you feeling about how she did tonight?
I mean, she won it.
I don't think there's any question about that.
You know, I was extremely anxious coming into this because the stakes are so incredibly high.