2017
September
01
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

September 01, 2017
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Clayton Collins
Director of Editorial Innovation

How do you like to see police outfitted in the streets?

The answer tends to quickly send Americans into one of two dug-in camps: one that thinks too much gear turns cops into bulked-up bullies, another that maintains it makes officers far less vulnerable and allows them to better protect and serve. (Consider the job of facing down armed right-wing militias, as police did in Charlottesville, Va., this month.) 

The issue may be too complicated to be just two-sided.

The 1033 Program, designed to let military surplus trickle down to state and local law enforcement, was launched during the Clinton administration. It drew heat after the lethal clashes in Ferguson, Mo., and was scaled down in 2015 by President Barack Obama. The limits that he placed on the program were rescinded this week by President Trump.

So what are its practical effects? If people in underserved communities see police as an occupying force, then perception can harden into reality and problems can worsen. Still, a new study by the Shorenstein Center at Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government indicates that in cities where ex-military gear is deployed by police, there have, in fact, been reductions in some kinds of crime – robbery, assault, burglary, and car theft.

Notably, it’s not about weapons. “Nonlethal equipment, including office supplies and IT hardware, have the largest effect on all types of crime,” the report found. Vehicles help, too. But there it’s not all about armored-up war wagons. As police work to help Houston in Harvey’s wake, it’s high-axle trucks and flat-bottomed boats of military origin that are reportedly coming in handy.

Now, to the five stories we’ve selected for you today. 


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Admiration and gratitude have rightly been showered on the civilian rescuers of Houston. Supporting their good work also calls for a deeper understanding of what they’re up against. 

American close-ups

Reports from the road

Reaching the final stop in our summer of community drop-ins meant crossing a North American border to record a different perspective on border-crossers who arrive without documents. 

Steve Helber/AP
Mayor Levar Stoney held a news conference at City Hall in Richmond, Va., in June. Mr. Stoney announced the formation of a commission tasked to redefine the narrative of the Confederate statues on Monument Avenue.

Perhaps no city in America is struggling with the need for a shift in thought more than Richmond, Va., is now. (Worth noting: Both the writer and the primary editor of this next piece are onetime Richmonders.)

Here’s another story about a city trying to balance preservation and adaptation. Driving the conversation in this case: an artist collective. 

Juan Ignacio Llana Ugalde
A blunt message to tourists adorned a restaurant’s shutter in San Sebastián, Spain. Many here say that they do not share the sentiment.

Spain’s relationship with tourists has recently turned love-hate – and become a cause for introspection. Can understanding the real source of the tension get this important relationship back on track?


The Monitor's View

A British regulatory sent a strong message to the gaming industry on Aug. 31 about its duty to care for its customers. The UK Gambling Commission imposed a record penalty of $10 million against the online firm 888 for failing to screen for problem gamblers. More than 7,000 customers who had chosen to exclude themselves from the site were still able to access the operator’s platform. One customer took $71,000 from his employer to play.

The commission’s tough action came just days after it announced that the number of British people over age 16 deemed to be problem gamblers had grown by a third in three years. It also found that the number of people who had violated their own voluntary self-exclusion from gambling sites had more than quadrupled between 2009 and 2016.

The commission’s stiff fine should help remind the global gambling industry that it must accept greater social responsibility to spot and deter adults with a risk of gambling addiction – or face potential lawsuits. The industry has done much in the past two decades to deal with the issue. But the financial incentives remain high to entice the most vulnerable to gamble because they provide a large portion of the industry’s revenues.

Regulators, too, may be under pressure from lawmakers to ensure high tax revenue from gaming. They cannot become lax in ensuring the industry keeps high safeguards of screening customers. Gamblers must also be offered counseling if they have problems.

The rapid pace of technological change in the industry has made gambling more accessible, thus demanding greater vigilance to screen and track gamblers. Gaming institutions have tried to set limits on the credit, deposits, and losses of customers prone to gambling addiction. But regulators should make sure that such efforts are not eroded over time.

Many governments hold liquor bars accountable for the driving accidents of drunken customers. Yet up to now, regulators and courts have generally not imposed a similar liability on casinos or online gambling sites for the social or financial damages caused by problem gamblers. But it is a simple matter of common compassion for the industry to do more. Its negligence can result in a pretty stiff fine, as Britain has now done.


A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

Each weekday, the Monitor includes one clearly labeled religious article offering spiritual insight on contemporary issues, including the news. The publication – in its various forms – is produced for anyone who cares about the progress of the human endeavor around the world and seeks news reported with compassion, intelligence, and an essentially constructive lens. For many, that caring has religious roots. For many, it does not. The Monitor has always embraced both audiences. The Monitor is owned by a church – The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston – whose founder was concerned with both the state of the world and the quality of available news.

At the start of a new school year parents sometimes experience angst, as children venture out into new experiences. But as Christian Scientist Michelle Nanouche has found, God’s mothering care is always with everyone to guide, protect, uplift, and support parents, as well as children. God is the infinite, illimitable Mother of us all – not as a person, but as divine Love. And we can acknowledge the true, spiritual nature of each other, including our children, even when we’re not in the same place. Recognizing that each one of us is embraced by and reflects divine Love’s unlimited blessing and care can ease our worry and contribute to a secure and healthy environment for children – our own, our neighbor’s, and the world’s.


A message of love

Jim Bourg/Reuters
Burning Man participants on bicycles react as a participant aboard an 'art car' signals to them as they ride through Black Rock City at the annual Burning Man arts and music festival in the Black Rock Desert of Nevada. Tens of thousands attend the event, though it is by some accounts not the bacchanal it is often made out to be. 'As the event has grown, Black Rock City has become more like a real-world municipality,' reported CityLab, 'albeit one that’s whiter, wealthier, and more circular than most American cities of its size.'
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for reading (or listening) today. We won’t be publishing on Monday, Labor Day in the US. But come back Tuesday. Congress resumes work with a heavy load – Harvey recovery, government funding, the debt limit, and more. We’ll look at where brinkmanship might make way for a little bipartisanship.

More issues

2017
September
01
Friday

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