2018
March
14
Wednesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

March 14, 2018
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Amelia Newcomb
Senior editor

It might be time to flip an old saying – “stop acting like a child” – on its head.

In this case, they’re not really children but young people. Across the United States today, many walked out of school for 17 minutes to protest gun violence – one minute for each victim of the Stoneman Douglas High School shooting on Feb. 14 – through everything from speeches to “lie-ins.”

At a time when civics education sometimes falls short, students are augmenting the curriculum, studying rights, how bills are shaped, how different constituencies get heard. They’re talking up voting. While many have responded to #NationalWalkoutDay, others have focused on #walkupnotout, which encourages students to reach out to loners and people who don't share their views.

At Ronald Reagan High School in San Antonio, the Monitor’s Henry Gass spoke with members of the girls’ track team who were practicing during spring break. One wanted better safeguards against students going “off the rails.” Another’s class wrote to their representative. One noted a rise in exchanges with friends and neighbors. One wanted more security drills. 

Few students are suggesting pat solutions. Instead, they’re saying their engagement is here to stay. And adults are listening. At a town hall meeting near me, questions from two students about how to engage constructively – they didn’t share their politics – generated a cheer. The crowd seemed to be thinking it was time to start acting like a child.

Now to our five stories, including ones that remind us to address very human needs on the ground and encourage us to think beyond conventional confines.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Scott Peterson/The Christian Science Monitor/Getty Images
Maghul cries as she describes how Taliban militants killed her farmer husband and burned their house on the western fringe of Kabul, Afghanistan, last year, displacing her and their two grown sons.
SOURCE:

Tax Policy Center

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Karen Norris/Staff
Anita Snow/AP
A section of border fence in Nogales, Mexico, is adorned with crosses showing the names of migrants who died trying to make their way to the United States.

The Monitor's View

Reuters
World Wide Web founder Tim Berners-Lee speaks in London in 2014.

A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

A message of love

Jim Bourg/Reuters
High school student Sara Durbin, outside the US Capitol in Washington Mar. 14, joined with other students who had walked out of classes to demand stricter gun laws. Click the blue button below for a gallery of similar walk-outs around the US.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris and Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us today. Tomorrow, we'll look at how Congress is rolling back regulations in the banking industry, while in the private sector, many companies are trying to increase regulation in the name of what they call employees' "best interests."

More issues

2018
March
14
Wednesday
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