MPR News Update
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Good morning and welcome to the holiday week. Here’s what you need to know to start your Monday. 

A mild start to the week. Twin Cities highs in the mid 40s with afternoon wind gusts up to 30 mph and nighttime lows around 30. Statewide, snow is likely in the North and highs range from mid 30s to mid 40s. More on Updraft. | Forecast

And heads up: looks like a storm is on its way. Winter storms are predicted for the Twin Cities and much of central and southern Minnesota on Tuesday and Wednesday, just in time for Thanksgiving traveling.

Cheaper isn’t always better. In fact, it can be catastrophic when it comes with hundreds of thousands of dollars in medical expenses. Trump administration changes to the Affordable Care Act allow people to buy non-compliant health plans without paying a fee. Despite the lower premiums, these plans can be junk. This story by MPR News’ Mark Zdechlik explores why. 

Wills don’t always need money or stuff. As Peter Cox reports, interest is growing in ethical wills — or those which pass down life lessons and guidance. “Particularly for aging people ... we have a responsibility and that is to pass on what our learning and what our experience has been in our lifetimes, so that that wisdom can be used by the next generations.” 

Minnesota’s mussels are among the most endangered species here. But there is hope, Kirsti Marohn reports. Conservation and reintroduction efforts have helped mussels make a resurgence. Minneapolis is using them for their ability to be the “canary in the coal mine,” indicating problems with a river’s health.

Don’t subpoena the whistleblower. “Sen. Amy Klobuchar said Sunday that subpoenaing the whistleblower who helped spark the House impeachment inquiry into President Trump ‘would be a serious, serious mistake,’” reports The Hill’s Justine Coleman.

Take a hike and help your health. Euan Kerr reports on Minnesotans who are promoting the Japanese practice of “forest bathing” — attention-filled walks they say may improve physical and mental health.

What’re you curious about in Minnesota? All our Ask a ‘sotan questions come from readers. Pose your idea for a future article  here.

Cody Nelson, MPR News

As more men run, Klobuchar makes case for ‘woman candidate’
The Associated Press
Amy Klobuchar does not want to run for president as a “woman candidate.”

That’s never been the Minnesota Democrat’s style. But the media, public opinion polls and the addition of more men to an already crowded 2020 primary race led the three-term senator to a conclusion: Many Americans still aren’t comfortable with the idea of a woman in the Oval Office, and she needed to amplify the conversation about it.

So in interviews, on the debate stage and before overflow crowds at weekend town halls in New Hampshire, Klobuchar has been talking more pointedly about gender and politics.
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What's on the radio today

9 a.m. — MPR News with Kerri Miller

Listen to Kerri Miller in discussion with author and columnist Lindy West about her latest book, The Witches Are Coming. New York Times columnist and author of the critically acclaimed memoir and Hulu TV series Shrill, Lindy West, provides a laugh-out-loud, incisive cultural critique that answers the fundamental question of this hellish political moment — how did we get here? — by dissecting the films, television series, internet phenomena, and lifestyle gurus that have taught us who we are. And, more importantly, what happens when people start saying “no.” The conditions that fostered the catastrophic resentment and abetted Trump’s victory did not spring up in a vacuum; they are woven into America’s DNA.

10 a.m. — 1A with Joshua Johnson

According to a recent Gallup poll, 30 percent of U.S. adults say they own a firearm. And according to the Pew Research Center, three-fourths of those gun owners bought their firearms for self-defense. But researchers at Harvard recently found that people defended themselves with their guns in less than one percent of violent crimes. If the chances that you'll save yourself with a gun are so rare, why does the "Good Guy with a Gun" myth persist?

11 a.m. — MPR News with Angela Davis 

Country music is wildly popular. Several experts join the program to discuss the history and why Minnesotans love it so much. 

Noon — MPR News Presents

APM Special: "Spotlight on Indigenous Relocation" a "Call to Mind" program hosted by Anton Treuer. This program features a discussion of the ongoing trauma and mental health impacts from the U.S. government's American Indian Relocation Program. The Relocation program was designed in the 1950s to assimilate Indigenous people into white-centric society and eliminate tribal governments and culture. Indigenous experts delve into the impacts of historical trauma in their community and the resiliency factors that empower so many to overcome persistent systems of discrimination.

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