2017
September
15
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

September 15, 2017
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Clayton Collins
Director of Editorial Innovation

It was a big week for news about “brand positioning” by several nations. There was another North Korean missile launch and some large-scale Russian war-gaming. 

It wasn’t all belligerence and force projection, although a lot of it did involve flexing. India, with Japan’s help, got going on a bullet-train project that’s partly a hedge by both powers against China’s rising clout. Norway, an oil-and-gas giant, reelected a Conservative prime minister even though many saw Greens making a credible challenge, reflecting an electorate conflicted about climate change.

Most often, defining moves come in layers amid cultural reflection. Germany, which has a woman as chancellor but has, by most accounts, lagged on equality for women, is pressing big companies to add women to their boards. Australia is finding its lawmaking process a little klugy as it decides whether to legalize same-sex marriage, as Mark Sappenfield wrote on Monday

In the United States, at the citizen level, it’s been a period of helpfulness and hanging tough. But in the political sphere, volatility seems to cloud intent. How much is by design? What’s wholly uncalculated? Which deals are real?

And what does the US project to the world?

Now, to our five stories for your Friday night.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Susan Walsh/AP
Vice President Mike Pence (c.) answers a reporter's question on Sept. 10 during his visit to Federal Emergency Management Agency headquarters in Washington to see the response to hurricane Irma. Standing with Pence are (from l.) Kysa George, the Private Sector Liaison, FEMA Office of Pubic Affairs, Veterans Affairs Secretary David Shulkin, Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross, and Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Scott Pruitt.
Sara Miller Llana/The Christian Science Monitor
Jennifer Larsen teaches 'social learning,' which stresses the importance of tolerance and respect for others, at a school in Faxe, in rural Denmark.

On Film

Mark Blinch/Reuters
Former tennis player Billie Jean King arrives for the film 'Battle of the Sexes' – the story of her 1973 match against Bobby Riggs (Ms. King won) – at the Toronto International Film Festival Sept. 10.

The Monitor's View

Reuters
94 of 900NORTHKOREA-MISSILES/ A woman peeps through a barbed-wire fence decorated with ribbons bearing messages wishing for the unification between the two Koreas near the demilitarised zone separating the two Koreas in Paju, South Korea, Sept. 15.

A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

A message of love

Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff
Bonnie Britz, portraying Mrs. Jennings from 'Sense and Sensibility,' learns how to shoot a bow and arrow during an archery lesson at a Jane Austen character weekend in August in Hyde Park, Vt. The event takes place at The Governor's House, a B&B and fully restored Victorian mansion. Each person chooses an Austen character to portray. Activities include archery, sidesaddle horseback riding, carriage riding, sewing, card games, and English country dancing. (Click the button below for more scenes from this year’s event.)
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us today. Among the stories we’re pursuing for next week: a look at conservative environmentalism around Chesapeake Bay.

Also, this past Wednesday Katherine Gehl and Michael Porter, a CEO and a Harvard professor, respectively, released a report called “Why Competition in the Politics Industry Is Failing America.” It analyzes the US political system as an industry.

Business editor Laurent Belsie sat down with them both. Here’s an excerpt of Mr. Porter's comments on the roots of political division:

“If you have two dominant competitors, the last thing they want to do is compete for the same customers. They’d rather divide up the customers, because then they can differentiate themselves. Their respective loyalists will then be very dedicated to support them and give money and vote.”

Come back for the rest!

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2017
September
15
Friday
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