2025
January
08
Wednesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

January 08, 2025
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Mark Sappenfield
Senior global correspondent

This morning, we woke to two of our Southern California correspondents having evacuated their homes in suburban Los Angeles. Francine Kiefer and Ali Martin are safe. Ever the professional, Francine even filed a story on the fires.

Yesterday, Stephanie Hanes wrote about the consequences of fiercer disasters on communities worldwide. Today’s example hits closer to home for us. But it’s why we do what we do every day, trying to bring the whole world into the Monitor family.


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News briefs

• Greenland status: Greenland may become independent if its people want, but it won’t become a U.S. state, Denmark’s foreign minister said after U.S. President-elect Donald Trump refused to rule out using force to acquire the Arctic island.
• Justice Department findings: The Justice Department says it will release special counsel Jack Smith’s findings on Donald Trump’s efforts to undo the results of the 2020 presidential election.
• Sudan genocide claim: The Biden administration says it has determined Sudan’s Rapid Support Forces rebel group and proxies are committing genocide in the country’s civil war.
• U.S. unemployment falls: The Labor Department says applications for unemployment benefits fell to their lowest level in nearly a year last week, pointing to a still-healthy labor market with historically low layoffs.

Read these news briefs.


Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

The Explainer

Mario Anzuoni/Reuters
Firefighters work to extinguish flames as the Eaton Fire, one of four blazes spreading in Southern California, burns in Pasadena, California, Jan. 7, 2025.

Thousands have evacuated as wildfires threaten populated areas near Los Angeles. Gusty Santa Ana winds are familiar in the region, but this week’s weather comes amid a dry start to what is typically the rainy season.

SOURCE:

Fire Information for Resource Management System

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Jacob Turcotte/Staff
Brandon Bell/Reuters
President-elect Donald Trump and Elon Musk watch the launch of the sixth test flight of the SpaceX Starship rocket in Brownsville, Texas, Nov. 19, 2024.

Elon Musk’s efforts to influence European politics raise a host of questions about his business interests, and the degree to which he speaks for himself or President-elect Donald Trump.

Is Russia’s war in Ukraine intended as a war of depopulation? Some experts say the hollowing-out of communities contributes to a national mental health crisis. Still, others look forward to a postwar process of renewal and growth.

Jimmy Carter and Demetrius Young both died Dec. 29. The two men shared a life of service, a love of Georgia, and a care for the needs of everyday people.

Ludovic Marin/Reuters
A special edition of French satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo lies amid wreaths and pencils left in front of Charlie Hebdo's former offices Jan. 7, 2025, during commemorations marking 10 years since the attack on the magazine.

What’s more important, the freedom to mock, or protection of what many hold sacrosanct? After the Charlie Hebdo massacre, France firmly opted for the former. But now, 10 years later, attitudes may be shifting.

Points of Progress

What's going right

In our progress roundup, patient preparation yields success for coral raised from embryos, and terrace-grown crops in Rwanda. And in science that advances past research, a lab creates a powder that absorbs carbon dioxide.


The Monitor's View

Charles Sykes/Invision/AP
Music fans at the Sea. Hear. Now music festival in Asbury Park, New Jersey, on Sept. 14, 2024. In several states, new transparency laws require ticket companies to show hidden fees and surcharges upfront in the prices they advertise.

Residents in Minnesota may have noticed a change on the menus in their favorite restaurants lately. That’s because on Jan. 1, the state enacted a law requiring businesses to include all mandatory fees and surcharges in the prices they display. So if a diner adds 5% to every bill for “wages and benefits,” for example, it must build that increase into the cost shown for every item it offers.

Minnesota’s Uniform Deceptive Trade Practices Act is the latest confirmation of a broadening trend to protect consumers by bringing sunlight to pricing. The new law addresses what is variously called drip pricing or partition pricing, a common practice across industries ranging from ticketing to travel that stacks hidden fees at the end of transactions. In December, the Federal Trade Commission finalized a similar rule. A few months earlier, so did California.

The concerns don’t stop there. In recent years, several states have sought – through legislation as well as executive orders – to crack down on a range of opaque practices, from price gouging to inconsistencies in what retailers charge for the same good online versus in person.

The new laws hold a mirror to what may matter even more to consumers than rising costs. “Pricing is one area where consumers of all types expect complete transparency,” wrote Austin Mac Nab, CEO and co-founder of the Iowa-based technology company VizyPay, in an essay for Business.com last year. He cited a study by Harvard Business School showing that loyal customers spend 67% more on products and services than new customers.

“Businesses that strive to be open and honest,” he noted, “set themselves apart and generate ... long-term stability.”

The Federal Trade Commission’s Junk Fees Rule, formally called the Trade Regulation on Unfair or Deceptive Fees, encourages more states to build on the laws enacted recently by Minnesota and California. Inherent in transparency, commission chair Lina Khan notes, is respect. The rule, scheduled to go into effect in April, followed two years of public hearings and reflected written input from 72,000 citizens. The commission estimates it will save people up to 53 million hours per year in time searching for the actual cost of goods or services online.

“People deserve to know up-front what they’re being asked to pay – without worrying that they’ll later be saddled with mysterious fees that they haven’t budgeted for and can’t avoid,” Ms. Khan said during the rule’s announcement.

Economists have long noted that price transparency drives innovation by pushing companies to create better products to remain competitive. For diners in Minnesota, the equation is simpler. The state’s new law means that honesty is on the menu.


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.

As we see that God’s goodness is what’s truly going on, we experience healing.


Viewfinder

Khalil Ashawi/Reuters
People visit Mount Qasioun, the highest point that overlooks the Syrian capital of Damascus, Jan. 7, 2025. It had been closed to visitors for almost 14 years under the rule of President Bashar al-Assad, who was ousted Dec. 8, 2024. It has become crowded with visitors.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thank you for spending time with The Christian Science Monitor Daily. Please come back tomorrow for Ann Scott Tyson’s latest report on South Korea. She catches up with demonstrators she met there in the early moments of the current political crisis to see how they’re viewing the situation now.

More issues

2025
January
08
Wednesday

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