2018
November
09
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

November 09, 2018
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Clayton Collins
Director of Editorial Innovation

Some very testy people on both sides.

Had you beamed into this week’s post-midterms presidential press conference from an era of gentler discourse, that might have been your quick takeaway.

But it’s obviously part of a much deeper story.

The bristly 87-minute showdown between America’s chief executive and the nation’s Fourth Estate, as well as some international reporters, came between two more mass shootings – one motivated by hate, the other still too fresh to meaningfully distill.

Yesterday the president’s invocation of national security powers to deny asylum to unlawful migrants got new energy and launched angry new exchanges on immigration. Mueller probe revelations will likely ignite others.

All of that has Monitor editors talking about American anger, vitriol gone viral – about anger as an addiction, as an “industry.” We’ll be reporting on that in the coming weeks.

But we’re also inclined to discuss solutions. More than one colleague mentioned a recent story (worth reading) that plumbed the beautiful simplicity of kindness. Many studies have shown the power of acts that are generous or empathic. Such acts tend to cause others to conform to that behavior. Civility is a good start, for all sides. 

Now to our five stories for your Friday, including a look at resilience in Florida’s hard-hit Panhandle and at progress in building a more diverse future workforce for the tech sector. 


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Today's stories

And why we wrote them

Americans weren’t the only ones closely watching US midterm results. We asked our Moscow correspondent to dig into what a split US political leadership may mean, from the Kremlin’s perspective, for political and economic deal-making between the two countries. 

This next piece is really a special issue within an issue. Eight writers whose bylines you’ll know explore their respective segments of an arc that runs from the Ottoman Empire to modern Turkey, from women’s suffrage to #MeToo, and from “false news” to “fake news.”

Jacob Turcotte/Staff
Carmen K. Sisson
Grand Ridge, Fla., resident Mary Walden receives cleaning supplies from volunteer Wilma Johnson at the town's emergency distribution point last month. Residents have relied heavily upon donations since hurricane Michael swept through the area Oct. 10. And some distribution centers have had to close.

Poor communities inland were caught off guard by hurricane Michael, and lapses in long-term recovery efforts can worsen inequality, experts say. We look at how that may be partly offset by a strong collective will to recover.

Amanda Paulson/The Christian Science Monitor
Sarah Metzer, education specialist at the US Fish and Wildlife Service’s National Wildlife Property Repository near Denver, shows a tiger pelt at a warehouse that stores more than 1.3 million illegally trafficked items seized at US borders.

This is as much about cause and effect as it is about values. Some people believe that allowing a limited market for certain species can curb illegal trafficking. But in key cases, the reverse seems to be true.

Points of Progress

What's going right

Silicon Valley has long been disproportionately male. Our writer looks into some encouraging new activity around one important on-ramp for helping get more women and minorities into well-paying tech jobs.


The Monitor's View

One surprise in the midterm elections was how many young Americans made it a hands-on exercise in civics. An estimated 31 percent of those age 18 to 29 cast ballots. That was higher than what pollsters predicted. And it was well above the 21 percent turnout in 2014.

In fact, youth turnout in the 2018 election was the highest for any midterm in the past quarter century, according to a Tufts University study.

This is welcome at a time when more than half of adults in the United States do not know who Robert Mueller is. Or when more than two-thirds of Americans cannot name all three branches of the federal government.

Perhaps this year’s increase in youth voting was just another type of  “Trump bump.” Or perhaps a reaction to the shooting at a Parkland, Fla., high school. Or it was the draw of youth-oriented referendums, such as questions on marijuana legalization.

Another explanation is that many states have put a stronger focus on civic education, and not just the study of Pilgrims, Paul Revere, and Rosa Parks.

About 17 states require high school students to pass the citizenship exam before graduation. Many schools nationwide now weave civics into other courses. Since 2010, Florida has had especially rigorous requirements for civic education, perhaps one reason students at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School were so prepared to campaign on gun limits.

A Massachusetts bill signed into law this week requires at least one student-led civics project in public schools and encourages students as young as 16 to register to vote (when they turn 18). And in a 21st-century update on civic education, the law also requires the teaching of digital media literacy and modern etiquette toward the American flag.

Learning civics and doing civics must go hand in hand. Those states with the highest rates of youth civic engagement (and volunteerism) are also the ones with the strongest courses in civic education, according to a study by the Center for American Progress.

Such an action-based approach to civic education may account in part for the rise in youth voting in the latest election. Political activism at an early age is a surefire way to counter youthful indifference about the future. A ballot cast is a bulwark against cynicism.


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 contributor considers the spiritual power of qualities such as strength, honor, integrity, and brotherly love expressed by veterans from all walks of life.


A message of love

Toby Melville/Reuters
Employees at the Lloyd's building in London stand for a “poppy drop” during a Remembrance Service Nov. 9. The flower’s symbolism is based on a 1915 poem by Canadian physician and author John McCrae. “In Flanders fields the poppies blow,” he wrote, “Between the crosses, row on row.”
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Have a great weekend. We don’t publish on Monday, a federal holiday in the US. But watch for a special Veterans Day email from one of our bureaus. 

On Tuesday our On the Move series resumes with a look at why fewer Afghan refugees are making their way to Europe. We’ll also be checking in on lingering midterm vote issues in both Georgia and Florida. 

More issues

2018
November
09
Friday

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