2018
March
26
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

March 26, 2018
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Mark Sappenfield
Senior global correspondent

When Rebecca Asoulin returned from Washington and began to write her story about the March for Our Lives rally, she included three words at the top of her document:

“love love love”

Rebecca was among five college students and recent graduates whom the Monitor sent to cover the March for Our Lives rallies against gun violence in Washington and Boston this Saturday. It was a historic moment for America’s youth, and it felt like it should be covered that way.

Each of our reporters came back with a different view of the experience, yet Rebecca’s inspirational heading at the top of her draft captured the spirit that they all felt. The day was driven by tragedy, but it embodied hope.

For one of our writers, it was the indescribable feeling of being borne on a tide of humanity, all flowing through the streets for a common purpose. For another, it was the joy of seeing teens shattering the stereotype that they are disconnected and apathetic. Over the course of a day, a generation found it had power that few had ever imagined.

“People felt a sense of movement, a sense of progress,” said Noble Ingram, who also covered the Washington rally. “It would have been really easy to frame this moment through fear. But it was a call to action, framed as, ‘Let’s protect the people we love.’ ”

To read their story about the event, please click here.

Here are our stories for today. In their own way, all five ask readers to look at the world through a different lens, from the evolution of political scandal to how science itself is sometimes blind to its own biases. 


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Joshua Roberts/Reuters/File
John Bolton, former US ambassador to the United Nations and President Trump’s pick for national security adviser, spoke last year at the Conservative Political Action Conference in Oxon Hill, Md.
Bailey Bischoff/The Christian Science Monitor
Beekeeper Spencer Marshall of the Fairmont San Francisco hotel pulls out a frame covered in honeybees, checking the productivity and health of each section of the hive. As guests become more interested in sustainability, a growing trend has emerged among San Francisco hotels: rooftop and terrace apiaries.

The Monitor's View

AP Photo
A demonstrator in Lima, Peru, holds a sign that reads in Spanish "Let them all go," during a protest against the country's political class, a day after the March 21 resignation of Peru's President Pedro Pablo Kuczynsk.

A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

A message of love

Issei Kato/Reuters
Visitors row boats in the Chidorigafuchi moat as they enjoy fully bloomed cherry blossoms during the spring season in Tokyo March 26. The season's arrival was reportedly the third earliest on record.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris and Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us today. Please come back tomorrow when we review our 10 best books of March. 

More issues

2018
March
26
Monday
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