2022
September
30
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

September 30, 2022
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Clayton Collins
Director of Editorial Innovation

You might already get some of your Monitor journalism (including this Daily) through earbuds, a smart speaker, or your car’s sound system.

Now you can listen to more.

We’re relaunching our “Rethinking the News” podcast as “Why We Wrote This.” The new weekly show, available on all podcast apps and on our site, has two big aims: to help you connect with our storytellers as people and to make clearer what sets the “Monitor lens” apart.

You’ve probably already come to know Why We Wrote This as a signature element in our stories. Think of this as an audio extension. 

We got a running start over the summer with 10 short pilot episodes. Today, we’ve added a two-minute series teaser by Samantha Laine Perfas, our main host. Next week, you’ll hear more about the thinking behind the show from the team that built it. After that, we’ll talk to the Monitor’s editor, Mark Sappenfield, about some bigger changes that are afoot. 

Then will come new interviews featuring our writers, editors, and photographers on their experiences, their processes, and their work.

All of this is meant to enrich and expand the Monitor experience for those who know us – and to offer a clear path to entry for those who’d like to get acquainted.

The Monitor’s long history in audio includes recent highlights. Just weeks ago our limited-series podcast “Say That Again?” was a finalist, among giants, for an Online News Association award.

We hope you’ll listen to the preseason episodes of “Why We Wrote This” and then make listening part of your Friday routine. Tell me what you think at collinsc@csmonitor.com. At the Monitor, we’re listeners too.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Phelan M. Ebenhack/AP
First responders with Orange County Fire Rescue use a boat to rescue a resident in a flooded neighborhood in the aftermath of Hurricane Ian, on Sept. 29, 2022, in Orlando, Florida.

Overseeing relief efforts after a natural disaster can become a tenure-defining moment for public officials – partly because at these moments people need help, not mere words.

Bilal Hussein/AP
A Palestinian rescue team stands on the Lebanese shore, waiting for the Syrian Red Crescent to deliver several victims from among those who were on a boat carrying migrants from Lebanon to Italy that sank in Syrian waters, at Arida border crossing point between Lebanon and Syria, north Lebanon, Sept. 23, 2022.

What happens when the needs for dignity and safety collide? As Lebanon’s society crumbles, our reporter notes, individuals are taking much greater risks.

Ueslei Marcelino/Reuters
Former Brazilian President and current presidential candidate Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva greets supporters during a rally in Curitiba, Brazil, Sept. 17, 2022. Nearly a dozen candidates are running in Brazil’s Oct. 2 election, but only two stand a chance of reaching a runoff: Lula and incumbent President Jair Bolsonaro.

A president’s divisive reelection bid in Brazil is about more than rejecting the status quo. It’s about a citizenry’s expectations of leadership, and its demand for leadership that can deliver hope.

Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff
Greg Tull, a Coast Guard member and contestant on the Fox series “LEGO Masters,” builds his own creations in his basement workshop in Weymouth, Massachusetts.

Light hobbies picked up as diversions during the pandemic are now helping grown-ups rediscover the life-enhancing joy of creative play.


The Monitor's View

Reuters
A man walks past presidential campaign materials depicting Brazil's former President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and and President Jair Bolsonaro in Brasilia,

In recent years, political disinformation campaigns – like those that have shaken confidence in America’s democratic institutions – have become an increasingly common playbook around the world. Brazilian voters now have an opportunity to push back against that trend.

On Sunday, the South American giant holds presidential and congressional elections that carry high stakes for Latin America. The most immediate consequence could be the reversal of democracy’s erosion in Brazil – and the model it sets elsewhere.

The election campaign has been marred by violence and, most of all, withering campaign rhetoric aimed at undermining the integrity of the electoral system. Yet despite those threats, or perhaps because of them, voters appear undeterred. A Gallup Poll this week showed that lack of public confidence in the honesty of the ballot, while still high at 67%, is nearly 20% lower than it was ahead of the last presidential election in 2018.

The mood to defend democracy was reflected in a public letter drafted by the University of Brasília law school faculty and signed by nearly 1 million people. “Our civic conscience is much greater than the opponents of democracy imagine,” the letter declares. “We know how to put aside minor differences in favor of something much bigger, the defense of the democratic order. ... We cry out in unison: Democratic rule of law always!” On the day it was released in August, it was read aloud in crowded public gatherings in cities across the country.

A similar campaign has been waged by Brazil’s election bodies, the military, the courts, and civil society to safeguard voters and boost accountability in the vote. That includes the creation of a “transparency commission” of tech experts, public officials, and pro-democracy groups to counter disinformation. The Election Court (which oversees elections), for example, partnered with WhatsApp to allow users to denounce bulk messages from candidates.

Candidates “are more timid because they know that the verification instruments are very strong,” said Chico Otavio, a reporter at O Globo newspaper, to Agência Brasil before the last election. “The lie has lost its force.”

The Election Court also, for the first time, ran an advance simulation of its voting-day testing procedure for ballot counting machines to demonstrate their accuracy. Military leaders have reportedly offered quiet assurances to members of Congress and the judiciary that they will not back any efforts by candidates to disrupt the election or oppose the results unlawfully.

“We are living through particularly difficult times in the institutional life of the country,” said Justice Rosa Weber, who was made president of Brazil’s Supreme Federal Court on Sept. 12. “I pay homage to the Brazilian people who do not give up the fight for their real independence and seek to build it every day.”

At a time of global concern for democracy, Latin America is providing laboratories of civic resilience. In some countries, like Nicaragua and El Salvador, authoritarian governments hold the upper hand. Elsewhere, in countries like Chile and Honduras, democracy is finding renewal, fueled by public demands for honesty and equality. On Sunday, and in the days that follow the vote, Brazilians may add a new accent to those demands.


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.

We’re all innately capable of discerning divine inspiration that keeps us safe.


A message of love

Reuters
Denis Pushilin, the Russian-installed leader in Ukraine's Donetsk region, is seen on screens during a concert near the Kremlin and Red Square in central Moscow on Sept. 30, 2022. The event marked the declared annexation of Russian-controlled territories in Ukraine's Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson, and Zaporizhzhia regions after what Russian authorities called referendums were held that were condemned by Kyiv and governments worldwide.

A look ahead

Thanks for ending your week with us. Come back Monday. We’ll hear from our justice reporter about the start of the Supreme Court’s new session, and get a sense of how recovery efforts are progressing in the wake of Hurricane Ian.

More issues

2022
September
30
Friday

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