2017
November
29
Wednesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

November 29, 2017
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Amelia Newcomb
Senior editor

Few would argue these are hard times for the media. The term “fake news” has become a breezily efficient way to dismiss rigorously reported stories. Its implication of intentional manipulation of facts tarnishes respected news outlets that prize accuracy. Some outlets that don’t hew to high reporting standards gain the same privileges – such as White House press credentials – as those who do.

The vast majority of journalists work honestly to serve readers well. And The Washington Post just set an example for how to help those readers understand what they do, something that could help counter an increasingly toxic attitude toward media.

The Post broke a story earlier this month in which women went on the record about alleged sexual misconduct by Roy Moore, the GOP candidate in Alabama for the US Senate. On Monday, it recounted its careful investigation of an individual's claim that she had a potentially related story for them. The Post ultimately determined the information was aimed at getting them to publish a false report that would undermine their earlier reporting.

The Post’s account resonates with a statement by Louis Brandeis, a Supreme Court justice from 1916 to 1939. “Sunlight,” he wrote, “is the best disinfectant.”

Now to our five stories that look at consistency, accountability, and the broadening of children’s horizons.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Yuri Gripas/Reuters
US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson spoke to members of the media during a briefing at the White House in Washington Nov. 20.
The Fourth Amendment originally only protected "unreasonable" searches of "houses, papers, and effects," but has been expanded to to account for postal communications and telephone conversations, among other things. Now the Supreme Court is considering if and how information transmitted from cellphones to third parties – including internet service providers and social media companies – should receive Fourth Amendment protection as well.
SOURCE:

CTIA, Pew Research Center, Statcounter; Photos: AP

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Jacob Turcotte and Henry Gass/Staff
Christa Case Bryant/The Christian Science Monitor
Laura Horwitz (l.) and Adelaide Lancaster founded the nonprofit We Stories in 2015. The group, which has enrolled more than 550 families and has hundreds more on a waiting list, works to expand, in particular, white parents’ understanding of race and racism through children's books.

The Monitor's View

Reuters
People queue to withdraw cash outside a bank in Harare, Zimbabwe, Nov. 28.

A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

A message of love

Sergio Perez/Reuters
Travelers in Madrid walk down a taxi lane Nov. 29 during a strike by taxi drivers in protest of what they call unfair competition from ride-hailing services such as Uber and Cabify.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us today. Tomorrow, among other stories, we'll be looking at the National Flood Insurance Program and how this fall's series of hurricanes laid bare its shortcomings. 

Also, a correction: In our report in yesterday’s Daily on coal, the scale for the chart showing global carbon dioxide emissions should be in billions of tons. (That chart has been updated.)  

More issues

2017
November
29
Wednesday
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