2021
December
22
Wednesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

December 22, 2021
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’Tis the season for Yuletide music. Once again, Mariah Carey’s 1994 hit “All I Want for Christmas Is You” is topping the charts worldwide. But in Australia, there’s a chirpy little newcomer. 

Songs of Disappearance,” featuring the tweets and warbles of 53 threatened Australian bird species, is now the No. 3 album, shooting past Taylor Swift, ABBA, and yes, even Mariah Carey. 

This songbird collection is an unlikely Christmas chart contender, a bit like one of the storylines in the 2003 holiday film “Love, Actually.” 

But perhaps it isn’t so unlikely.  

As a reporter living in Sydney in the late 1980s, I found Australians identify closely with their flora and fauna, a host of native species found nowhere else on this planet. Their love of nature shapes their national character. And this songbird album is apparently resonating Down Under, especially after the devastating wildfires of 2019-2020. All album sale proceeds are being donated to Birdlife Australia, a conservation group.

The title song is kind of the fine-feathered version of a Pentatonix riff. It starts gently, slowly building to a chorus crescendo, including the calls of princess parrots, bowerbirds, and regent honeyeaters.  

“Conserving threatened species is an emotional act,” Stephen Garnett, author of the Action Plan for Australian Birds, told The Guardian. “It’s much more than about biology. It’s about a much deeper attachment to our environment, and this is a way of reaching that in a way that words on paper don’t.”

It’s not a Christmas tune you can hum, but this avian aria is touching Australian hearts.


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Today's stories

And why we wrote them

A deeper look

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As U.S. inflation spikes, we spoke to two families about their resourceful responses to the shifting economic environment.

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When government critics are jailed as terrorists, free speech – a cornerstone of democracy – is eroded. Our reporter looks at an anti-terrorism law in India that’s being abused to silence peaceful protesters.

A letter from

Cheyenne, Wyoming
Stephen Humphries/The Christian Science Monitor
Sophie Belcher, from Britain, shows off her engagement ring shortly after her boyfriend, Simon Floyd, proposed to her. His 2022 wish is for a happy marriage. She also wished for their puppy to have a long and happy life. Visitors to Times Square in New York can write down their wishes for 2022 on pieces of paper that will be used as confetti on New Year's Eve.

In New York City’s Times Square, our reporter finds a global intersection of gratitude for 2021 and hopes for prosperity, peace, and true love in the coming year. 

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The Monitor's View

It’s nearly Christmas morning, when kids will tear into mysterious boxes under the tree hoping to find a toy that will fascinate and amaze them. 

Toy sales in the United States have been strong this year, up 10% over 2020. Some of these toys are packed with the latest technology, including links to the internet that allow the toy to respond to the child in ever more sophisticated ways.

Americans are becoming more and more wary of the way their personal information is being collected on the web. A new Washington Post-Schar School poll, for example, found that 72% of respondents trusted Facebook “not much” or “not at all” to handle the data it collected on them responsibly. And 70% said they believed their smartphone or other tech devices are listening to them in ways they haven’t agreed to.

That wariness is justified. But adult gift-givers may not realize that some children’s toys are collecting personal data, too. Toys with cameras, mobile apps, and requirements to set up online accounts that store data about the toy and its user all present privacy concerns, according to Trouble in Toyland, a report issued in November by the U.S. Public Interest Research Group (PIRG), a consumer advocacy organization.

Toys that employ Bluetooth connections, for example, could be susceptible to being hacked from outside the home, perhaps exposing the child to inappropriate content or gathering sensitive information. The Mario Kart Live Home Circuit, the report notes, employs a camera that uploads images of the room in order to create a virtual racecourse. But these images of the room’s layout and the objects in it could be exposed if the game’s website were ever hacked.

Most toy manufacturers are trying to build in protections. And the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act, or COPPA, provides another layer of defense by requiring parents to be involved in setting up the toy and giving adults the right to have their children’s online data removed.

Parents should also be aware that some toys no longer sold by manufacturers because of privacy concerns are still available for purchase online. 

PIRG suggests that parents research any smart toy before buying it, in order to understand what technology is being used and the ways their child will interact with it. Adults can check out the toy and its manufacturer online to see if privacy concerns have been raised.

The worldwide market for smart toys is expected to reach almost $70 billion in the next five years, according to Transparency Market Research. These toys can be wonderfully engaging and entertaining – and even educational, such as an interactive globe that speaks to children about a country as they touch it on the map. Action figures, robots, or dolls that talk back and hold conversations can become loved companions.

But  adults need to be sure that these high-tech friends aren’t also snitching on their children to online databases in inappropriate ways.


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.

During this season of lights, we can turn to divine Love – the source of all goodness and light – to guide us in loving our neighbor as ourselves, as Christ Jesus taught.


A message of love

Hannah McKay/Reuters
Choristers from St. Paul’s Cathedral choir take part in a rehearsal photo call at the cathedral in London, Dec. 21, 2021.

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us. Come back tomorrow: Our photographers plan to share their best images from 2021 in a video gallery that portrays resilience and joy.

More issues

2021
December
22
Wednesday

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