2017
June
30
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

June 30, 2017
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Clayton Collins
Director of Editorial Innovation

This has been a week for thinking about tech and consequences.

Let’s not spend time on that 53-word tweet by the US president.

The iPhone just turned 10! You might remember getting an early one. Whatever you had before became a paperweight. While Apple didn’t invent smartphones, it did revolutionize them. The items it replaced “could fill a warehouse of nostalgia,” notes a watch-worthy video at Recode. Some 1.2 billion iPhones have been sold to date, adding up to $738 billion in sales, reports Forbes.

Beyond ushering in the era of the ubiquitous smartphones, Apple also triggered an avalanche of apps. That undoubtedly helped speed our arrival at another tech milestone: This week Facebook reached 2 billion users worldwide. (Founder Mark Zuckerberg is bent on bringing the internet to parts of the world that remain disconnected.)

And operator behavior? Individuals haven’t always self-regulated very well. Bundled in with all of the good and productive, there is isolation, addiction, and bullying. States scramble to implement laws requiring hands-free phones for drivers. Families try to disinvite devices to dinner. Tweets own a weirdly big slice of the news cycle. (We said we wouldn’t go there.)

We’re seeing new signs of a quest for balance. One study indicates that nearly 6 in 10 teens now take voluntary breaks from social media (and are glad they did). That kind of milestone is worth noting, too. 

Now to our five stories for today.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

The news from Caracas runs from violent street protests to this week’s still-mysterious grenade attack, by helicopter, on parliament. Now, Mexico’s internal politics are motivating that country to help where others have failed. Does it matter if the motivation isn’t entirely altruistic?

Some may debate whether the term “activist” applies to Justice Neil Gorsuch, who handled a question about political bias during his confirmation by saying: “We just have judges.” But there’s no denying that he has been active. Will his energy translate to sway?

James West/The Canadian Press/AP
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau mixed and mingled at Brundage Point River Center during a Canada Day kick-off and ice-cream social in Grand Bay-Westfield, New Brunswick, Thursday. Canada Day, which marks the anniversary of the enactment of the Constitution Act in 1867, is July 1.

On the occasion of Canada’s 150th, Dylan Robertson digs below the widely covered Trudeau effect to look at how a nation long known as a quiet consensus-builder is becoming a much bolder world player – by doubling down on its long-held values. 

Ann Hermes/The Christian Science Monitor/File
Jaime Hooper spoke to a group of women last year during a counseling session at the Dartmouth-Hitchcock Addiction Treatment Program in Lebanon, N.H. New Hampshire has seen a rise in opioid-related deaths last year, and has the second-highest rate per capita, behind West Virginia. But the state has also been working to expand treatment.

The scourge of opioid abuse – made worse by fentanyl – becomes more than just a talking point about federal funding when you look unflinchingly into an epicenter. Simon Montlake reports from Manchester, N.H.

This piece by Jessica Mendoza explores intentions and effects: California banned its employees from doing business in states it sees as infringing on LGBT rights. Will that bring progress on rights – or is it well-meaning symbolism that poses practical problems?


The Monitor's View

Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press/AP
Prince Charles shakes hands with locals as he participates in an event in Iqaluit, Nunavut, Canada, June 29. Prince Charles and the Duchess of Cornwall visited the Canadian Arctic to kick off a royal visit that's scheduled to culminate in Ottawa July 1 as Canada marks its 150th birthday.

One can’t imagine Canadians getting too worked up about the 150th anniversary of their nation’s founding. That occurred July 1, 1867, when three provinces merged to form a “confederation,” the basis of modern Canada.

On the Fourth of July Americans might be moved to dance to “The Stars and Stripes Forever” as fireworks erupt overhead. On Canada Day on July 1 Canadians might just lean back on the chesterfield (that’s the sofa to Americans) and nod in agreement “pretty good, eh?”

Actually America’s northern neighbor is spending roughly a half-billion dollars (Canadian) this year on special events from coast to coast to mark the 150th. Its famed national parks are free to visitors. Prince Charles and his wife, Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, are making a royal visit, a reminder of the close ties that remain with Britain.

While the American Colonies tore themselves from British control in the late 18th century, a violent and sudden separation, Canada quietly eased away in stages over many decades. Complete independence only came in 1982 with the passage of its Constitution Act.

Today Canada’s story is a multiethnic one; it’s a country that prides itself as a home to immigrants from around the world. Europe and the United States wrangle over setting limits on immigration. In Canada, taking in immigrants is widely seen as a good thing.

The country’s young, charismatic prime minister, Justin Trudeau, has called Canada “the first post-national state” – tied together not by a common ethnicity or race but by “shared values – openness, respect, compassion, willingness to work to be there for each other, to search for equality and justice.”

Not that the 150th celebrations have been without controversy. Canada’s indigenous peoples, the First Nation and Inuit, don’t see much to celebrate. They view the country’s history as much older – long before 1867 or the arrival of European settlers. They hope the anniversary will include a revised history lesson, one that reveals the abuses suffered by indigenous peoples at the hands of the Europeans.

“Asking me to celebrate Canada as being 150 years old is asking me to deny 14,000 years of indigenous history on this continent,” Alethea Arnaquq-Baril, an Inuit filmmaker, is quoted as saying in Britain’s The Guardian.

As much as Canadians are teased about being polite or saying “eh?” they don’t seem to agree on what defines them. Asked in a recent poll for a word to describe their country, the most popular answer was “freedom” or “liberty.” In part it could reflect the views of immigrants on what their new home offers them compared with what they left behind. (A third of Canadians even said they can’t stand ice hockey, the country’s national sport.)

Some Americans may see their neighbors as pretty much like them – except without as many guns and with government-provided health care. But Canadians are much more: They’re known for sending peacekeeping forces abroad, for being good stewards of a land of vast natural beauty, and for being a good friend and ally to the US.

Whatever flaws they’re still ironing out, Canadians still have plenty to celebrate this year.


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.

With Canada Day, formerly known as Dominion Day, around the corner, contributor Kathy Chicoine shares how she gained dominion over various addictions. As she learned more about God’s abundant presence of love, she was able to overcome these unhealthy behaviors and find healing. “This lifestyle change restored genuine balance to my life,” she writes, “and continues to establish a beautiful foundation for true freedom.” We all have an inherent ability to think and act rightly, and to have dominion over whatever would hide our inherent goodness and purity.


A message of love

Maxim Shemetov/Reuters
A boy leaps into the Black Sea from a pier in central Sochi, Russia. Recent weeks here have been all about soccer. Sochi was one of the host cities of FIFA’s Confederations Cup. The finals will be held at the Krestovsky Stadium in St. Petersburg July 2 between the winners of the semi-finals, Chile and Germany.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks, as always, for joining us. Come back around on Monday (and bring friends). We have Michael Holtz reporting in Hong Kong for the 20th anniversary of the handover. Everyone talks about the political implications of Beijing’s control, but a sometimes overlooked local concern is the mainland’s renewed heavy influence on the island’s culture.

Netflixing this weekend? Think I might check out "Okja," about a young South Korean girl’s bid to save her companion – a genetically modified “superpig” – from the slaughterhouse. The Monitor’s Peter Rainer didn’t love it. Others did. My early intel: It’s no “Charlotte’s Web.” Happy weekend. 

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2017
June
30
Friday

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