2018
February
20
Tuesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

February 20, 2018
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More than 100 Parkland, Fla., students went to lobby Florida lawmakers today (and we’ll be reporting on the student-led effort to stop school shootings in our next issue). US history suggests that after a spasm of grief and anger, political inertia returns. But there are hints that the response to this shooting may be different.

For American gun owners, including Scott Pappalardo of Scotchtown, N.Y., this has been a week of soul-searching.

Mr. Pappalardo, who is a proud bearer of a Second Amendment tattoo, posted a video this weekend that has more than 19 million views. Cradling his cherished AR-15, Pappalardo takes a few minutes to explain why he can no longer keep it. Then, he asks: “Is the right to own this weapon more important than someone’s life? I don’t think so.” He turns and cuts the rifle in half with a chop saw.

“This was a personal choice,” he adds, explaining that he “can’t live knowing” that if he sold his gun, someone might use it in a mass shooting. “I’m not saying this is for everyone and this is the answer to solve all the problems....”

Democracy is based on individual choices. Progress is born out of an openness to reexamine old positions, and ask oneself, What can I do to be a part of the solution?

Now to our five stories for today, selected to illustrate possible paths to progress when it comes to trusting the FBI, finding hope in Tunisia, and helping absentee students get back to the classroom.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Patterns

Tracing global connections
Lennart Preiss/MSC Munich Security Conference/Reuters
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, speaking Feb. 18 at the Munich Security Conference in Germany, holds up what he says is a piece of an Iranian drone shot down in Israeli airspace.
Taylor Luck
Oussama Marassi and his wife, Aya Manzalee, live in Douar Hicher on the outskirts of Tunis, Tunisia. In marginalized neighborhoods like this one, the conditions that led to Tunisia’s 2011 revolution – unemployment, marginalization, urban migration, and police harassment – persist.

The Monitor's View

Jake May /The Flint Journal-MLive.com via AP
Children in Flint, Mich., watch a screening of the film "Black Panther" Feb. 19.

A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

A message of love

Ahmad Putra/Antara Foto/Reuters
Students sweep up ash in their schoolyard in Payung village in North Sumatra, Indonesia, Feb 20 after the eruption of Mt. Sinabung.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Bonus story: Our Winter Olympics coverage continues today with a Cinderella story about five Korean women, known as the “Garlic Girls,” who’ve already knocked off some of the world’s top curling teams.  

And come back tomorrow. We're working on a story about ethnic diversity at the Winter Olympics. Exhibit A: Alex and Maia Shibutani, the “Shib Sibs,” who on Monday became the first skating pair of Asian descent to win an Olympic medal in ice dancing.

More issues

2018
February
20
Tuesday
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