2017
October
20
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

October 20, 2017
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Clayton Collins
Director of Editorial Innovation

The war on misinformation keeps spreading.

Three US senators, reacting to evidence that Russian-linked players were behind deceptive ads ahead of last year’s US presidential election, floated a bill Thursday aimed at forcing internet firms to tell the Federal Election Commission who’s bankrolling online ads. (Paid TV, radio, and print political advertisers have long been regulated.)

The same day, Pew Research Center released a survey that asked: “Will trusted methods emerge over the next 10 years to block false narratives and allow the most accurate information to prevail?”

Respondents were almost evenly split. Pessimists held a slight edge. They worried about those with a stake in maintaining the status quo, and saw divisions rising among those who care about the quality of information and those who don’t.

Optimists saw tech coming to the rescue, with innovations that could reduce “the potency and availability of misinformation.” They envisioned successful regulation, the rise of “trust ratings,” and a rise in information literacy.

That’s likely to require a grass-roots global push. Here’s one promising precursor: In some 8,000 Italian schools beginning Oct. 31, a public/private experiment aims to teach those weaned on social media how to sort fact from fiction online, The New York Times reports.

Said Laura Boldrini, a parliamentarian champion of the effort: “It’s only right to give these kids the possibility to defend themselves from lies.”

Now to our five stories for your Friday, highlighting prudence, adaptibility, and connectedness in action. 


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Today's stories

And why we wrote them

One individual wields presidential power at any given time. But political players from both parties have strong feelings about what the presidency means. That has some heavyweights coming out to defend what they presume are shared values. 

Rahmat Gul/AP
US forces and Afghan commandos patrol Pandola village in the Achin district of Jalalabad, east of Kabul, Afghanistan, in April 2017.

Is forestalling defeat the same as victory? A more aggressive posture by the US delivers a new degree of optimism to allies on the ground. But the Taliban are undeterred and Afghans might not yet be positioned to capitalize.

Pulling economic levers may seem less important in boom times than it does when red lights are flashing. But not taking advantage of stability to enact policies that support new growth may represent a dangerous complacency. 

SOURCE:

International Monetary Fund

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Karen Norris/Staff

Every institution works within the set of constraints and advantages it is granted under the law. Today, a changing religious landscape has more people questioning the parameters that churches have long taken for granted. 

On Film

Hugo van Lawick/National Geographic Creative
Jane Goodall and infant chimpanzee Flint reached out to touch each other's hands at Gombe in Tanzania. Flint was the first infant born at Gombe after Jane arrived. With him she had a great opportunity to study chimp development – and to have physical contact, which is no longer considered appropriate with chimps in the wild.

Primatologist Jane Goodall’s sense of community transcended species. A new biopic explores her sometimes complicated life of connectedness. 


The Monitor's View

It’s being compared to bidding for the Olympic Games.

The online retailing giant Amazon set Oct. 19 as the deadline for applications from cities wishing to host the company’s second headquarters, its “HQ2,” as the company is calling it.

The prize for the winning city indeed will be golden: 50,000 new jobs with an average wage of $100,000, Amazon says.

In response, metropolitan areas all over North America have scrambled to put their best offers on the table.

Amazon, based in Seattle, has set out a few prerequisites for bidders: The metro population should be more than 1 million, the airport should have direct flights to key US and international cities, and the mass transit system should be top-notch. Great public amenities, top universities, a reasonable cost of living, and a highly educated workforce will be valued, too.

Amazon has also noted that economic incentives, such as tax breaks, could become a tiebreaker in choosing among the top contenders.

That’s brought some soul-searching among city officials: How sweet do we make our offer without the giveaways exceeding the benefits?

As Amazon’s building boom and expansion to 40,000 employees have taken hold in Seattle, home prices and traffic congestion have soared. Low- and moderate-income residents have been squeezed out. Not everyone is thrilled to be living in the country’s largest company town.

San Antonio Mayor Ron Nirenberg decided earlier this month that his city wouldn’t join in the Amazon bidding war. “We’re just not going to mortgage our future to do it,” he said.

The highest bidder is not guaranteed to win the prize. A city that plays a little harder to get may show a kind of self-confident attractiveness that says “you want to be with me.” In Minnesota, for example, a bid to base HQ2 in the Twin Cities relies on the attractive lifestyle workers will find there – which already has resulted in 17 Fortune 500 companies being headquartered in the state – and is offering very little in the way of financial incentives.

Getting caught up in an irrational bidding war probably isn’t a smart strategy. (See "Amazon’s 50,000 new jobs? Why some cities don’t play tax-break game.") But the effort that dozens of cities have made to put together a bid can be a positive thing. Creating an effective proposal meant bringing together local government, businesses, and civic groups that must set aside differences for the common good.

The effort may have also encouraged a little introspection. What is great about our city or region? Why would someone want to live and work here? What plans are we making to ensure that our city will be even more vital and livable in the future?

In Detroit, nearly 100 consultants volunteered time to help shape the Motor City’s bid. “I’ve never seen a community come together like that,” one local top executive told Axios. The city partnered with Windsor, Ontario, across the Detroit River, to make a joint proposal that touts the advantages both the United States and Canada have to offer.

The competition’s lone winner won’t be known for some time. But the thought that all these cities have put into their efforts needn’t be wasted. These ideas can be put to use making improvements that will attract other businesses and boost the quality of life for residents.

If that becomes the case, the Amazon competition will have many winners, not just one.


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.

Lessening violence in our communities can be a matter of a God-inspired thought. For an inmate at a Pennsylvania penitentiary, it was a powerful thought that inspired him not to kill another inmate in the jail. The thought was that he was truly created by God and that meant he was naturally inclined to love his neighbor. Understanding that he was a child of God inspired him to think of the other inmate that way, too. Such thinking can be an inspiration for all of us seeking healing in our communities.


A message of love

“Street dogs” from Puerto Rico have been making their way north from shelters and rescue programs in Puerto Rico for years. Hurricane Maria pushed up the volume of canine need there, as it did on so many other fronts. The Monitor’s Hannah Schlomann and Melanie Stetson Freeman visited a shelter in Methuen, Mass., where dozens of hopeful adopters turned out to meet a batch of rambunctious new arrivals. Read Hannah's story here. Click the image below for Melanie’s video.

Finding homes for Puerto Rican dogs evacuated from Hurricane Maria

( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us today. Have a wonderful weekend and come back around next week. We’ll be watching the Sunday parliamentary elections called for by Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, and we'll have a report on what the results mean. 

More issues

2017
October
20
Friday

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