| The last couple of years have been challenging for me and for so many of us, and good writing and reporting has never felt more valuable. The work of my colleagues inspires, entertains and informs me every day. Give yourself the gift of a Washington Post subscription: Unlock access to every story in this newsletter and so much more for just $0.99 every four weeks. This offer ends soon. —Kelly Poe, newsletter editor We'll be back to a regular newsletter (with only 10 stories) next week to kick off 2022. (Illustration by Frank Hulley-Jones/The Washington Post) The Pandora Papers show how global elite abandoned international financial centers for the secrecy afforded by Wyoming trusts, turning the state into one of the world's top tax havens. The Pandora Papers ● By Debbie Cenziper and Will Fitzgibbon ● Read more » | | | | | From at-home care to evaluating an emergency, here's what to do if you get a breakthrough coronavirus infection. By Derek Hawkins and Lindsey Bever ● Read more » | | | | | A common piece of code used by thousands of companies for years has turned out to contain one of the "most serious" cybersecurity risks of the Internet age. Here's what you need to know about log4j. By Tatum Hunter and Gerrit De Vynck ● Read more » | | | | (Beya Rebai for The Washington Post) Every year at this time, The Post offers stories about the season. Amid a new surge of the coronavirus, here are five tales of people's hopes for a restoration of pre-pandemic life. By Marisa Iati, Silvia Foster-Frau, Paul Schwartzman, Emily Davies and Rebecca Tan ● Read more » | | | | | Well-funded allies of the former president have gained audiences with top state officials to push for examinations of the vote, and local residents have bombarded election administrators with their own demands to investigate. By Amy Gardner, Emma Brown and Josh Dawsey ● Read more » | | | | | The best thing that might be said about 2021 may be that it wasn't 2020. Opinion ● By Editorial Board ● Read more » | | | | The new analysis challenges NSO claims that the murdered journalist's wife, Hanan Elatr, 'was not a target' The Pegasus Project ● By Dana Priest ● Read more » | | | | The Limetree Bay refinery, which showered oil and fumes on St. Croix residents earlier this year, appears to be on the verge of reopening. Three potential buyers are vying to win control of the plant in a bankruptcy hearing Tuesday. By Juliet Eilperin, Darryl Fears and Salwan Georges ● Read more » | | | | | About 800 kids have been admitted nearly every day this week, with those in Ohio, Texas, Pennsylvania and New York hit particularly hard by the juggernaut variant. By Ariana Eunjung Cha and Jacqueline Dupree ● Read more » | | | | (The Washington Post) Santa and his elves are here to combat the supply crisis. Can you find all 100 elves and Santa? By Eddie Alvarez and Jake Crump ● Read more » | | | | Farmers in the Yaqui Valley are driven to over-fertilize their crops, resulting in an explosion of nitrous oxide emissions with deadly and invisible consequences. By Joshua Partlow and Chris Mooney ● Read more » | | | | Student loan borrowers tell us what they would change about their debt experience and the policy that defines federal education lending. By Danielle Douglas-Gabriel and Sabby Robinson ● Read more » | | | | |
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