<a href='http://www.cnn.com/changethelist'>Vote on which of these stories you like best</a> and CNN will send columnist John D. Sutter to the field to report on the top five as part of his new <a href='http://www.cnn.com/changethelist'>Change the List project</a>, which pushes for progress in places that need it most. Winning so far? <strong>Widest rich-poor gap:</strong> What's happening to America's middle class? One state may yield answers. <a href='http://www.cnn.com/changethelist'>Vote here.</a>Vote on which of these stories you like best and CNN will send columnist John D. Sutter to the field to report on the top five as part of his new Change the List project, which pushes for progress in places that need it most. Winning so far? Widest rich-poor gap: What's happening to America's middle class? One state may yield answers. Vote here.

<strong>Free speech crackdown:</strong> One country ranks lower than North Korea when it comes to free speech. <a href='http://www.cnn.com/changethelist'>Vote here.</a>Free speech crackdown: One country ranks lower than North Korea when it comes to free speech. Vote here.

<strong>No toilets:</strong> In one country, 90% of people don't have access to basic sanitation. <a href='http://www.cnn.com/changethelist'>Vote here.</a>No toilets: In one country, 90% of people don't have access to basic sanitation. Vote here.

<strong>America's most endangered river:</strong> Most U.S. rivers are unsuitable for aquatic life, the EPA says. <a href='http://www.cnn.com/changethelist'>Vote here.</a>America's most endangered river: Most U.S. rivers are unsuitable for aquatic life, the EPA says. Vote here.

<strong>Malaria at its deadliest:</strong> Malaria-infected mosquitoes killed an estimated 660,000 people in 2010. <a href='http://www.cnn.com/changethelist'>Vote here.</a>Malaria at its deadliest: Malaria-infected mosquitoes killed an estimated 660,000 people in 2010. Vote here.

<strong>Saddest of the rich countries:</strong> Australia is the happiest, according to one survey. Who could use cheering up? <a href='http://www.cnn.com/changethelist'>Vote here.</a>Saddest of the rich countries: Australia is the happiest, according to one survey. Who could use cheering up? Vote here.

<strong>No Internet -- in the U.S.:</strong> Pockets of the United States have little high-speed Internet access. <a href='http://www.cnn.com/changethelist'>Vote here.</a>No Internet -- in the U.S.: Pockets of the United States have little high-speed Internet access. Vote here.

<strong>Where rape is common:</strong> Women in some communities face disproportionate rates of rape and violence. <a href='http://www.cnn.com/changethelist'>Vote here.</a>Where rape is common: Women in some communities face disproportionate rates of rape and violence. Vote here.

<strong>High-school dropouts:</strong> Many U.S. schools are failing their students. Where is the problem worst? <a href='http://www.cnn.com/changethelist'>Vote here.</a>High-school dropouts: Many U.S. schools are failing their students. Where is the problem worst? Vote here.

<strong>Poor kids in the rich world:</strong> Kids in extreme poverty suffer stunting and malnutrition. <a href='http://www.cnn.com/changethelist'>Vote here.</a>Poor kids in the rich world: Kids in extreme poverty suffer stunting and malnutrition. Vote here.

<strong>Mothers die in childbirth:</strong> In one country, one in 100 live births kills the mother. <a href='http://www.cnn.com/changethelist'>Vote here.</a>Mothers die in childbirth: In one country, one in 100 live births kills the mother. Vote here.

<strong>Roads that kill:</strong> Smarter laws could prevent many of the 1.3 million annual road traffic fatalities. <a href='http://www.cnn.com/changethelist'>Vote here.</a>Roads that kill: Smarter laws could prevent many of the 1.3 million annual road traffic fatalities. Vote here.

<strong>Polio still cripples:</strong> Polio has been 99% eradicated, but three countries stand in the way. <a href='http://www.cnn.com/changethelist'>Vote here.</a>Polio still cripples: Polio has been 99% eradicated, but three countries stand in the way. Vote here.

<strong>Where women aren't in government:</strong> The barriers aren't formal, but five countries have almost no female representation. <a href='http://www.cnn.com/changethelist'>Vote here.</a>Where women aren't in government: The barriers aren't formal, but five countries have almost no female representation. Vote here.

<strong>Illegal animal trade:</strong> Illicit trade in animal parts lines pockets and empties ecosystems. <a href='http://www.cnn.com/changethelist'>Vote here.</a>Illegal animal trade: Illicit trade in animal parts lines pockets and empties ecosystems. Vote here.

<strong>Leprosy remains a scourge:</strong> The WHO says more than 200,000 cases of leprosy are diagnosed each year. <a href='http://www.cnn.com/changethelist'>Vote here.</a>Leprosy remains a scourge: The WHO says more than 200,000 cases of leprosy are diagnosed each year. Vote here.

<strong>Conflict is never-ending:</strong> The longest-running and deadliest conflicts aren't always in the news. <a href='http://www.cnn.com/changethelist'>Vote here.</a>Conflict is never-ending: The longest-running and deadliest conflicts aren't always in the news. Vote here.

<strong>Likely to be locked up:</strong> Which U.S. state has the highest incarceration rate? And why? <a href='http://www.cnn.com/changethelist'>Vote here.</a>Likely to be locked up: Which U.S. state has the highest incarceration rate? And why? Vote here.

<strong>Land mines end lives:</strong> Land mines still kill thousands per year. What can be done to remove them? <a href='http://www.cnn.com/changethelist'>Vote here.</a>Land mines end lives: Land mines still kill thousands per year. What can be done to remove them? Vote here.

<strong>Drug-dependent state:</strong> U.S. demand ultimately drives the illicit drug trade and cartel violence. <a href='http://www.cnn.com/changethelist'>Vote here.</a>Drug-dependent state: U.S. demand ultimately drives the illicit drug trade and cartel violence. Vote here.








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Editor's note: John D. Sutter is a columnist for CNN Opinion. VOTE on what he will cover as part of the Change the List project. The ballot works best on desktop computers and tablets. Follow him on Twitter, Facebook or Google+. E-mail him: ctl@cnn.com.


(CNN) -- CNN is doing something terrifying and awesome this week: The network is asking you to be my boss. You have the power to vote on the stories I'll do over the next year as part of a new social-justice project called Change the List.


Polls close at 2 p.m. ET Monday. You can find the ballot, with 20 topics to choose from, at CNN.com/Change. I'll do the top five.


I say it's terrifying because you have me in a state of near-constant panic as I wait to hear which stories I'll be doing (at one point on Friday morning, the fifth and sixth place stories were tied) and awesome because this is a great experiment in journalism as democracy, in letting the voices of the people be heard.


The response has been mostly wonderful. As of Friday morning, 28,000 ballots had been submitted. Melinda Gates, Rotary International and Change.org all tweeted about it. The New York Observer praised the aspirations of the project and said it represents a "very different kind of journalism than the 'infotainment' that the CNN's brand, fairly or not, is known for." (I'll take that as a compliment, although you'd be hard pressed to find anyone who would label Arwa Damon's work in Syria, Erin Burnett's reports from Iran or Christiane Amanpour's anything "infotainment.")


And many of you wrote to me personally to say that you appreciated the fact that CNN was listening to your points of view. "I just wanted to drop a line and say thank you for actually listening and trying." "Thank you for your invitation to participate." "Thanks for even asking." "To say you have made my day hugely understates the case."



John D. Sutter


The feedback isn't all sunshine and unicorns, of course. Some of you have tweeted me that this is "not journalism" because the story-selection is crowdsourced. Others called it a gimmick or a marketing ploy. And, on the other end of the who-controls-the-news spectrum, some of you said that it was draconian and old-school of me to present 20 ideas to choose from -- rather than asking you for the story ideas in the first place.


Many of you have e-mailed me with smart, specific story concepts that you hope will be considered for a sixth Change the List story, which will be chosen by a small group of CNN editors. Perhaps the whole thing could have been crowdsourced. It's too late for that. But I did want to air the smart suggestions you shared with me. I collected them on a public Google Doc and have listed them below.


Among the most popular write-in ideas: overpopulation, climate change and child abuse in the United States. The first two surprised me. If you look at polls, Americans don't seem to care much for environment and resource issues. In a February survey from the Pew Research Center, only 34% of Americans said climate change was "something that is essential for the White House and Congress to tackle this year."


This informal feedback suggests that many of you are passionate about these issues. "You missed some huge ones that mainstream media is neglecting," one person wrote in an e-mail. "Climate change is continuing without much attention. Resource depletion: peak oil (end of cheap oil), aquifer depletion, fishery depletion, etc."


And another: "At the core of resource, environmental, gender and health issues is human population, a subject most cannot manage to accept."


I could go on, but instead I'll hand over the floor to you. Here are 97 topics you suggested I cover as part of Change the List. They're in no particular order, other than which e-mails and tweets I read first. Have more ideas? Tweet me: @jdsutter. Or e-mail ctl@cnn.com. The wild-card sixth story could come from this list but ultimately will be chosen by CNN's editors.


Although I could never cover all these topics alone, I thought it would be helpful to make them public. Maybe someone else will take up the torch. The United Nations has a similar project, for instance, that aims to crowdsource the "world we want." Meanwhile, there's still plenty of time to vote for the five stories I will cover as part of Change the List. Winners will be announced Tuesday.


Thanks so much for participating. And here are your ideas about the biggest problems in the world:


1. Constitutional rights


2. Bullying


3. Immigrant rights in the United States


4. Domestic-worker slavery


5. Discrimination against people with disabilities


6. Enviro-based solutions for poverty


7. Lacking investigative journalism


8. Mental health


9. Overpopulation


10. Kurdistan


11. Media coverage of mass shootings


12. Poverty and American Indians


13. Environmental justice


14. Africa's longest civil war


15. Genetically modified organisms (GMO)


16. Indefinite detention in jails


17. Child abuse in the United States


18. Drug-related incarcerations, particularly of minorities


19. Corporal punishment


20. Anti-climate change


21. Gay rights internationally (I second this as a very worthy subject; the crackdown on gays in Georgia and Russia, just to name two, is staggering, and being gay is still punishable by death in some nations.)


22. Better-skilled work force and trade-based education


23. Family planning


24. Slowing illegal immigration to the United States


25. International diplomacy and compromise


26. Zimbabwe's failing economy


27. Traffic congestion


28. Child prostitution


29. Patent trolls ("This American Life" did a helluva job explaining this concept. The show defined patent trolls as "companies that amass huge troves of patents and make money by threatening lawsuits." Critics say they stifle innovation.)


30. Polarized political discourse


31. Deforestation rates


32. Community gardens (pro)


33. "Death of journalism"


34. High-fructose corn syrup


35. U.S. budget issues


36. Lacking patriotism


37. Nodding Syndrome in Uganda (From NPR: "The strange and deadly illness known as nodding syndrome affects only children, and only in a small pocket of East Africa. It has affected more than 3,000 children since the late 1990s, when it first appeared in what was then southern Sudan. And for more than three years, the cause of nodding syndrome has eluded epidemiologists around the globe.")


38. Abortion


39. Niger Delta oil spills (The U.N. said in 2011 that cleanup could take 30 years.)


40. Family court issues


41. Arctic issues


42. "Transgenerational effects of endocrine disruptors, with DES (diethylstilbestrol) as prime example"


43. "Culture of the deaf"


44. "Going to send you to the South Pole to cuddle with emperor penguins" (from a Facebook friend who knows I would love that assignment)


45. Vets getting preference on jobs


46. Anti-Monsanto


47. Syria's war


48. IRS scandals


49. Sex trafficking (See CNN's "The Fighters.")


50. Unfairly high cost of student loans


51. Government spying in the United States


52. Benghazi, Libya


53. "Cancer Cluster in Clyde, Ohio!!"


54. Mining in Africa and its environmental cost


55. Price-fixing scandals globally


56. "The rise of conservative and hate ideology"


57. "I want to know more about Greece's economic crisis." (That's a phrase I never expected to hear from a reader. But check out this fascinating story from Vice on the drug of choice among Greece's homeless population.)


58. Kids in jail


59. Violence in U.S. cities


60. China's rise


61. "Child sexual abuse by the clergy in developing African countries"


62. U.S. nuclear waste storage


63. Conflicts of interest in government


64. Clean energy


65. Hospice and its "occult character"


66. Thorium/energy


67. Veterans services, generally


68. Child malnutrition, which reportedly is responsible for 45% of deaths of kids under five


69. HIV/AIDS. "The crisis isn't over, despite what many people think."


70. "Ever see a poor politician?"


71. "Government waste: Where does our tax money go anyway?"


72. Corporate greed (Check out this "Frontline" documentary that investigates why no top-level Wall Street bankers have gone to jail in connection with the U.S. financial crisis.)


73. Why can Congress vote their own wage increases?


74. PTSD among veterans


75. Teacher pay


76. Homeless and mentally ill children, particularly in developed countries


77. "APATHY"


78. Lacking mental health services in California


79. Lyme disease


80. Condom availability


81. Sex-offender prevention programs


82. Potable water access


82. Government corruption


83. Violence against Aboriginal women in Australia


84. Global warming


85. Alleged prostitution and illegal activity on Craigslist


86. Resource depletion


87. Health care availability


88. Tort reform


89. Laws on the right to self-defense


90. Racism in America


91. Prisoners are free labor in the U.S.


92. American Indians being removed from tribal rolls without cause


93. "The violent persecution of Christian and other minority communities in majority Muslim countries"


94. Jobs for adults with Asperger syndrome


95. Discrimination against men in divorce cases


96. Lou Gehrig's Disease (ALS)


97. Privatization of American schools


Vote here: http://cnn.com/changethelist


Follow us on Twitter @CNNOpinion


Join us on Facebook/CNNOpinion


The opinions expressed in this column are solely those of John D. Sutter.



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