2017
November
02
Thursday

Monitor Daily Podcast

November 02, 2017
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Amelia Newcomb
Senior editor

President Trump starts a five-country, 12-day trip to Asia this weekend. He’s heading to a region rattled by North Korea’s nuclear weapons and uncertainties over US policies. That’s why his itinerary in South Korea may send a welcome signal about how we can measure the true value in relationships.

Forgoing a visit to the DMZ, or demilitarized zone, that divides South and North, Mr. Trump will instead travel to Camp Humphreys, the $11 billion US base that Gen. Thomas Vandal dubbed "the crown jewel of overseas installations” when it opened in July. That visit will likely send an important message to President Moon Jae-in, who was well aware that candidate Trump chastised the South for getting a “free ride.” But in 2014, the United States and South Korea renewed a long-standing cost-sharing accord. It stipulated that the South would boost its contribution further, paying $847 million through 2018 toward maintaining the 28,500 US troops in South Korea. That's about half the cost. The South also put $8 billion toward relocation costs for Humphreys.  

Troy Stangarone of the Korea Economic Institute said that "a visit [to Humphreys] sends a stronger signal about US commitment to defend South Korea." And Asia expert Jim Schoff added: “It's the big story of the alliance in recent times, and it's a great opportunity to highlight that." 

Here are our five stories for today, intended to show justice, leadership, and scientific inquiry at work.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

J. Scott Applewhite/AP
House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Kevin Brady of Texas, joined by House Speaker Paul Ryan of Wisconsin (r.), holds a proposed 'postcard tax filing form' as they unveil a Republican plan that would be the first major revamp of the tax system in three decades, on Capitol Hill Thursday.
House Republicans released their tax plan on Thursday, which they say will reduce income taxes by about $1,200 for a family of four earning $59,000. Here are the highlights of their plan:
SOURCE:

Associated Press, Bankrate,

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Jacob Turcotte/Staff
Emilio Morenatti/AP
Kybumba Fran of Cameroon is comforted by Riccardo Gatti of the Italian nongovernmental organization Proactive Open Arms as he leaves a rescue vessel at Pozzallo, Italy, with more than 220 migrants earlier this year. Italian society has traditionally welcomed migrants, but it has become increasingly polarized on the issue.
Scott Peterson/The Christian Science Monitor/Getty Images
Afghan girls attend a computer class at the Sufi Mohamed Islam Secondary School in Kabul last month. Despite the extensive progress made in girls' education since the end of the archconservative Taliban regime, analysts say those gains are increasingly at risk.

The Monitor's View

AP Photo
Players sit at slot machines in the Lady Luck Casino Nemacolin near Pittsburgh, Penn. Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf signed a bill Oct. 20 authorizing a major expansion of gambling in what's already the nation's second-largest commercial casino state. The bill will make Pennsylvania the fourth state to allow online gambling, allow the state's current 10 casinos to apply for the right to operate satellite casinos, put video gambling terminals inside truck stops, and allow gambling parlors in airports.

A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

A message of love

Marcos Brindicci/Reuters
A girl holds a candle outside the Instituto Politecnico, the technical high school in Rosario, Argentina, where the five Argentine citizens who were killed in the Oct. 31 truck attack in New York went to school.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte and Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us today. And a heads-up: Three months ago, writer Warren Richey, as he put it, "set out to examine key vulnerabilities in the US election system and whether they might allow someone to secretly manipulate the vote." The result is his three-part series on "Securing the Vote." It begins tomorrow with a look at the vulnerability of voter rolls in Florida's Broward County, the epicenter of the hanging chads episode of the 2000 election. 

More issues

2017
November
02
Thursday
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