2017
November
03
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

November 03, 2017
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Clayton Collins
Director of Editorial Innovation

This week had more “rigging” than a clipper ship. 

That was true even before Democratic operative Donna Brazile unloaded on her party in a book excerpt in Politico for, she says, tilting the table against Bernie Sanders.

The big story was the multiday face-off between lawmakers and internet giants including Facebook for, as one senator put it, profiting from propaganda. Mike Allen of Axios describes how two senators built a Facebook page for a made-up political group and then, as a test, paid to target journalists and Capitol Hill staffers with ads for it. One of them, at least, was surprised at how anonymous they could remain, Mr. Allen reports. “Lawmakers are still learning the basics,” he writes.

The early web was sold as the province of little guys, rebels with cool names filling arcane niches. Down with gatekeepers; power to the people. But as blogger and web developer André Staltz writes, power has become remarkably concentrated over the past few years.

No one’s sure how to classify these big guys, and that matters when it comes to policing them. It’s not just about whether Facebook is a publisher. It may also matter, for example, that TripAdvisor is not regulated as a “transactional firm.” A Milwaukee Journal Sentinel investigation cites charges by travelers that they had posted warnings of assaults and involuntary druggings at resorts – but had seen those posts deleted. (TripAdvisor prohibits “inappropriate” or “off-topic” posts. It has restored some of the warnings it took down.)

People want the power back.

Now to our five stories for your Friday, chosen to highlight security, inclusion, and fairness in action.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Andrew Harnik/AP
President Trump and first lady Melania Trump board Air Force One at Andrews Air Force Base in Maryland Nov. 3 to travel to Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam in Hawaii. Mr. Trump begins a five-country trip through Asia, traveling to Japan, South Korea, China, Vietnam, and the Philippines.

At a time when President Trump is touting the central role of his personal hand in policymaking, and with many Americans concerned about his willingness to use force against North Korea, the stakes for this diplomatic tour keep rising. 

Jacob Turcotte and Molly Jackson/Staff

Special report: Securing the Vote

Americans might be expected to filter out would-be influencers as they cast their votes. They might also expect fundamental protections for the machinery of democracy. This deep-dive story on the evidently vulnerable voter rolls of Florida’s Broward County really deserves the full-length read. (It’s the first of three parts.) 

Ann Hermes/Staff
After arriving from Puerto Rico in late October, Alicia Santiago (l.) and Paulette Alvarez (r.) sign up for housing and school enrollment at Sociedad Latina on Nov. 2, in Boston's Roxbury neighborhood. Sociedad Latina, a nonprofit serving the Latino community, hosts a pop-up center for families displaced by recent hurricanes to register children for Boston Public Schools.

The school environment, at its best, embraces the “whole child.” Children who’ve fled home after a fierce storm are finding that steadying embrace in some US city school systems. 

Number of Puerto Ricans under the age of 19 living in ZIP Codes serviced by Boston Public Schools
SOURCE:

US Census, 2010

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Jacob Turcotte and Story Hinckley/Staff
Susie Armitage
Mitsue Murakami (left) stands with Tomoko Shinkai, a city employee who helps single parents settle in Hamada, Japan as part of an initiative to counter depopulation. Ms. Murakami moved to Hamada last year with her twin boys.

Facing demographic realities, Japan’s government has learned that boosting women’s employment opportunities isn’t just an issue of equality, it’s also about economic survival.

Fair access to natural, unprocessed food is a social justice issue as well as one path toward personal and social well-being. This story looks at a front-line organization that’s shifting an old business model to serve the communities that most need help. 


The Monitor's View

AP Photo
From left, Facebook's General Counsel Colin Stretch, Twitter's Acting General Counsel Sean Edgett, and Google's Senior Vice President and General Counsel Kent Walker, are sworn in Nov. 1 for a Senate Intelligence Committee hearing on Russian election activity.

After a grilling by Congress for allowing Russia to meddle in the 2016 elections, the nation’s biggest social media providers are starting to make changes to their platforms. Twitter, for example, will ban official Russian news outlets while Facebook plans to do better fact-checking on its news feed and will reveal the sources of political ads.

In essence, the social media giants are taking more responsibility to help others discern the truth and to uphold civility. Their past passivity toward the dissemination of “fake news” and attack ads had only undermined the very democracy that preserves the freedoms of an open society, including the internet.

During the presidential campaign, Google says it allowed 1,108 Russian-linked videos to run on its YouTube site. Facebook admitted that 126 million users may have seen Russian disinformation on its site. The magnitude of these numbers shows how much social media, like books, TV, and radio, can accelerate the flow of information, whether it be true or false.

These private companies should not be alone in taking corrective steps against those whose sole aim is to pit Americans against each other and to raise fears, as Russian internet trolls tried to do. A recent poll by the Pew Research Center finds Americans are more divided than at any time since 1994 in their political values and their views toward those of the opposing party. On a range of issues, the partisan gap between Republicans and Democrats has doubled, as has each side’s negative views of the other.

Bridging this divide will require citizens to do what Twitter, Google, and Facebook are now attempting to do: realize their ability to perceive the truth and practice the virtues of civil discourse. While debate is necessary in a democratic society, and different sides will cite different facts in an argument, there remains a shared desire for wisdom to rise to the surface. That should not be lost.

Just as the big information providers are being held accountable for what passes across their platforms, individuals can also take responsibility for what enters their thoughts or guides their actions. Simply blaming others for their being duped is to deny the role of individual conscience. Without discerning thinkers, a democracy cannot hold.


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.

Unless we are mathematicians, it’s probably not very often that we consider the notion of infinity. But entertaining the concept has practical implications for the world and in our lives. When contributor Eric Nelson found his legs giving out during a 50-mile bike ride, it was his spiritual thinking about infinity as the unlimited nature of God as infinite Spirit, that spurred him on with a renewed sense of energy. Seeing ourselves as the reflection of the infinite allows us to excel and break limitations. 


A message of love

Kamil Zihnioglu/AP
A devotee in the full, authentic regalia of a George Lucas Stormtrooper – a soldier in the ground force of the Galactic Empire – rests his (or her) weapon while playing a Star Wars Battlefront II video game Nov. 3 during Paris Games Week, a celebration of games and gaming culture.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte and Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us. We’re still sorting out Monday’s lineup. A couple of stories well under way: a look at President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf’s complex legacy in Liberia, and an exploration of how well protected “sensitive locations” – identified by US immigration agencies as places where arrests should be avoided – really are.

More issues

2017
November
03
Friday

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