2018
March
20
Tuesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

March 20, 2018
Loading the player...

On a day when there was another school shooting, this time by a boy in Maryland, I couldn’t get a song out of my head.

It’s climbing the charts, and it’s the perfect antidote to “toxic masculinity.”

Yes, the title, "Drunk Girl," and the first verses sound rather ominous.  It’s about a girl on a drinking binge, bouncing from bar to bar, headed for trouble.

Then comes the chorus:

Take a drunk girl home

Let her sleep all alone

Leave her keys on the counter, your number by the phone

Pick up her life she threw on the floor

Leave the hall lights on walk out and lock the door

That's how she knows the difference between a boy and man

Take a drunk girl home

The song was co-written by Chris Janson and two other fathers. “We wrote it from a father’s perspective,” Mr. Janson told Billboard. “If our daughters ever got into that situation.... We would hope that a young man ... would take great care of them with great respect, do the right thing....”

That's not to suggest that women require sheltering by men from men. But for this father of daughters, the message of respect in a fraught moment is worth amplifying.

Now on to our five stories, including looks at how Colombia is rethinking its immigration crisis, at democratic integrity in Kansas, and at seeking paths to respect for Native Americans.


You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.

Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

A case in Kansas appears to be about the constitutional right to vote and the integrity of that vote. But behind the legal battle are issues of fairness, inclusiveness, and the defining of fundamental American values.

Why is Colombia shifting its view of illegal immigration? Perhaps it’s because finding solutions sometimes means rethinking how you see the problem.

Karen Norris/Staff

Across the US, Democrats are awash in candidates for elected office. But the party’s discovering that such an abundance poses its own unique challenges.

Looking only at the wild-eyed passion of its fans, you probably can’t tell the difference between, say, an Oakland Raiders devotee and an Overwatch zealot. The emergence of video gaming as a professional sport is the product of evolving technology and shifting demographics. The result is a whole new form of entertainment.

Game on

Briefing

Mark Duncan/AP/File
Philip Yenyo (l.), executive director of the American Indians Movement for Ohio, speaks with a Cleveland Indians fan before a baseball game against the Detroit Tigers in Cleveland in April 2015. The Indians are dropping the 'Chief Wahoo' logo from their uniforms after decades of protests and complaints that the grinning red-faced caricature used in one version or another since 1947 is racist.

Staying with our sports theme, in this briefing we look at the use of Native American symbols, logos, and team mascots and the shifting perceptions about honor, racism, identity, and respect.

SOURCE:

MascotDB, National Center for Education Statistics, FiveThirtyEight; Map includes 2,291 public and private school team names referencing Braves, Chiefs, Indians, Orangemen, Raiders, Redmen, Reds, Redskins, Savages, Squaws, Tribe, and Warriors, and tribe names: Apaches, Arapahoe, Aztecs, Cherokees, Chickasaws, Chinooks, Chippewas, Choctaws, Comanches, Eskimos, Mohawks, Mohicans, Seminoles, Sioux, and Utes

|
RESEARCH: Rebecca Asoulin/Staff, GRAPHIC: Jacob Turcotte, Rebecca Asoulin/Staff

The Monitor's View

Facebook, the social media giant that collects data on about a quarter of humanity, is in the hot seat over the disclosure of personal information about 50 million of its users to a voter-profiling company. With both Congress and the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) now probing this latest Facebook security lapse, we can expect the next chapter is about to be written on privacy protections for the ongoing revolution known as “big data.”

Every country, not just the United States, is trying to find a nuanced balance between secrecy and the transparency of personal data, such as facial recognition of shoppers. Facebook is not alone. Government lapses in privacy are common, too. Facebook just happens to be the biggest provider of data, much to its profit.

Society gains by allowing open data if the purpose is to stop or catch terrorists, swindlers, and pedophiles. Just as important is the “right to be left alone.” With each breach of data, new rules must be written.

The current rules are still not clear enough when it comes to data culled in targeting voters for a political campaign. Anyone who has answered personal questions on a local census for his or her city or town knows such information can be used, or misused, by politicians.

We also willingly hand over data to companies and rely on their commitments to privacy. It appears Facebook was not careful enough in how its data was used for the 2016 presidential campaign.

The mass surveillance of “social data” is only going to increase. What must rise with it is a recognition that privacy is essential for individuals to achieve their unique expression, or their identity.

“Without privacy, concepts such as identity, dignity, autonomy, independence, imagination, and creativity are more difficult to realize and maintain,” writes David Anderson, Britain’s former reviewer of counter-terrorism legislation.

Privacy allows the very trust that companies and government rely on to fulfill their purposes. If a privacy breach erodes trust, the data can begin to dry up.

The task in such cases is to find a trustworthy arbiter that can balance privacy and other interests, such as security and business. Will Facebook be able to now rebuild that trust? Or will its future depend on new rules from the FTC and Congress? Finding the best privacy protections is an ongoing struggle, one that must ensure trust remains a key quality for digital users.


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.

Today’s column takes a closer look at what constitutes true happiness.


A message of love

Baz Ratner/Reuters
A warden watches over Najin and her offspring, Patu, the last two northern white rhino females, at the Ol Pejeta Conservancy in Kenya's Laikipia National Park March 20. The world’s last known male white rhino, named Sudan, died at the reserve Monday night. Scientists still hope to use harvested cells to impregnate white rhino surrogates. 'By conservative estimates, the technology to pull this off is still roughly ten years from being perfected,' reported National Geographic.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris and Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us. Come back tomorrow: We’re working on a story about how the Russian community in London, Europe’s largest, sees the tensions between Moscow and the West.

More issues

2018
March
20
Tuesday

Give us your feedback

We want to hear, did we miss an angle we should have covered? Should we come back to this topic? Or just give us a rating for this story. We want to hear from you.