2019
June
21
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

June 21, 2019
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Mark Sappenfield
Senior global correspondent

Welcome to your Daily. Today we look at what the U.S. wants from Iran, a college admissions case that tests the boundaries of forgiveness, how forest preservation can ease water woes, shows that highlight (and may help heal) social injustice, and the poignant subtext of “Toy Story 4.” 

First, a little bit about simple acts that can lift us all. 

This week I read a story that made me immediately think every Monitor subscriber should read this. So that is what I am going to ask you to do today. Please read this story.

To be honest, it’s too lovely to give away spoilers here. But I will say that this is the kind of story that most media put behind the wall of “good news” or “feel-good stories.” To me, the Monitor recognizes that it is so much more than that.

This story shows us that even when human life seems darkest and most hopeless, there is a light, even if it is just a scruffy stray dog named Chica. And it shows us that there is a Kenny in every one of us, and that we can profoundly change lives through the simple act of being good.

These are not just “feel good” lessons; they are intimate to each one of us, and they speak to our remarkable ability to, step by step, turn darkness into light.

Did you notice? This intro column looks different. Many of you say you want a quick take on the Daily’s contents to shorten your scroll. The links in the top paragraph will jump you to whichever story you choose. Helpful? Let me know at editor@csmonitor.com.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Meghdad Madadi/Tasnim News Agency/AP
In Tehran, Gen. Amir Ali Hajizadeh, head of the Revolutionary Guard's aerospace division, looks at debris Friday from what the division describes as the U.S. drone that was shot down on Thursday.

A deeper look

Doug Struck
Whitefish, Montana, is nestled beside Whitefish Lake in the Rocky Mountains. Access to streams, which gave the town the cleanest and cheapest water, was threatened by development, so the town used an increasingly popular strategy of buying rights to the forest.
NETFLIX
In the Netflix series ‘When They See Us,’ Marquis Rodriguez (l.) plays Raymond Santana, one of five young men wrongly convicted of rape in 1989. The program has caused public backlash against investigators and prosecutors involved in the case.

On Film


The Monitor's View

Reuters
Demonstrators cheer outside Britain's Court of Appeal after a June 20 judgment challenging the government’s decision to grant the export of arms to Saudi Arabia.

A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

A message of love

Aijaz Rahi/AP
Revelers meditate at sunrise as thousands gather at the ancient stone circle Stonehenge to celebrate the summer solstice, the longest day of the year, near Salisbury, England, June 21, 2019.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thank you for joining us today. Please come back Monday when we look at how, as Eastern European democracies gradually corrode amid the collapse of an independent media, one country is seeing the start of a rebellion.

More issues

2019
June
21
Friday
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