2018
July
18
Wednesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

July 18, 2018
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Amelia Newcomb
Senior editor

Today’s issue includes a familiar byline: Sara Miller Llana. Her dateline over the past five years has typically been Paris. Or Berlin. Or Amsterdam, Athens, Bilbao, Budapest, Copenhagen, Kiev, Moscow, Reykjavik, Rome, Stockholm, Warsaw, or … you get the idea.

Today, it’s Halton Hills, Ontario, and she is filing as the Monitor’s new Canada bureau chief.

To all of us at the Monitor, it’s an exciting time. “On both sides of the Atlantic, people frequently tell me ‘we are in strange times,’ ” Sara says. “Toronto is the perfect place from which to plumb that sentiment, because Canada is adhering to the international order, while the United States, under the Trump administration, seems to be suggesting a new direction.”

While Sara is moving to a new geographical base, her focus will be less on physical location than on new ways of thinking about long-standing issues: a nation defining itself as a "post-nationalist state" based on “shared values”; what it means to be “us,” with implications across North America and Europe; land and energy issues; consensus-building amid immigration challenges and concerns about democratic institutions; and trade initiatives.

Sara served as Latin American bureau chief before reporting from Europe. Fluent in French and Spanish, she covers the news with rigor and heart. She and her husband and young daughter are liking the Toronto vibe so far. “I was on a crowded, hot streetcar that people were trying to exit. Instead of yelling at the driver who had shut the doors, it was a polite, 'Could you open the door? I'm trying to get out.’ It just set a tone that changed the mood for all.”

Now to our five stories, showing how the consequences of certain actions are hard to anticipate, and the power of generosity.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Julie Jacobson/AP
Women demonstrate during an abortion-rights rally, Tuesday, July 10, 2018, in New York. Many Democrats and abortion-rights supporters believe a new conservative justice could tilt the court in favor of overturning Roe v. Wade.
Michael Holtz/Christian Science Monitor
The Rohingya refugees are fed three meals a day at the temporary shelter in Bireuen, Indonesia.
Karen Norris/Staff
Karen Norris/Staff

The Monitor's View

AP Photo
Former US President Barack Obama, back right, stands with South African President Cyril Ramaphosa, back left, behind members of the Soweto Gospel Choir singing the South African national anthe at the Wanderers Stadium in Johannesburg, South Africa, July 17. Mr. Obama delivered the 16th Annual Nelson Mandela Lecture.

A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

A message of love

Vincent Thian/AP
The Wild Boar soccer team was released from the hospital Wednesday. The players and coach gave their first account of the two weeks they spent trapped in a cave in northern Thailand with no food before an international team of divers and experts engineered their successful rescue. Coach Ekkapol Janthawong (l.) and the 12 boys show their respect and gratitude as they hold a portrait of Saman Kunan, the retired Thai Navy SEAL diver who died during the rescue, at a press conference in Chiang Rai, Thailand, July 18, 2018. The coach said the boys wish to be ordained Buddhist monks to honor his memory. Four of the boys, who are stateless, will be granted Thai citizenship.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us today. Tomorrow, we'll talk to veterans, a group that has served and sacrificed for their country, about their views on the Trump-Putin summit in Helsinki. I hope you'll join us. 

More issues

2018
July
18
Wednesday
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