海角大神

2018
November
02
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

November 02, 2018
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Clayton Collins
Director of Editorial Innovation

The week鈥檚 news was thick with stories about control over direction-setting, from US preelection elbow-throwing to over the handling of sexual harassment to the prospect of sanctions that could relieve Yemen of its . 聽

Are any societies getting it right?

Ethiopia has just sworn in a woman , a first. (Already half of the country鈥檚 cabinet ministers .)

Look also, as usual, to Scandinavia. The 鈥渟ocial utopia鈥 label isn鈥檛 undisputed. at a White House report that living standards in Nordic nations were lower than those in the United States (the pushback: life 鈥渜uality鈥 is about more than money). Finns marked a quirky and controversial rite of tax transparency .

Norway seems to be displaying care in direction-setting. A looks at how the oil-rich country is openly approaching moves to leave fossil fuels behind: It will decide within months whether to purge its sovereign wealth fund of oil and gas stocks, and within years whether to fund a major initiative to capture and store CO2.

That鈥檚 a path that鈥檚 probably unavoidable, Harder maintains, even though it sounds contradictory. It鈥檚 a look at 鈥渉ow [even] an economy fueled by oil and natural gas,鈥 she writes, 鈥渃an attempt aggressive action on climate change.鈥

Now to our five stories for your Friday, including a look at humanity at the border, confidence in the future of US vote-casting, and a special empathy between faiths at one university.聽


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Rodrigo Abd/AP
Students cross the border from Columbus, N.M., into Palomas, Mexico, after attending classes at Columbus Elementary School last year. American children living in Mexico make up about 60 percent of the school鈥檚 student body. Many are the children of parents who were deported and who moved here to be able to send their children to school in the United States.

Schools in some US border towns have long enrolled Mexican-American students living on the other side. This humanitarian policy reveals nuances that some say are missed in the national debate.聽

Russia鈥檚 real success in its 2016 election interference may have been in casting doubt on the sanctity of US democratic processes. A new tool not yet widely in use may help restore confidence.

Populism鈥檚 global resurgence has alarmed many. We look at how one of its chief American proponents may have missed a key point about the transferability of 鈥渘ationalism.鈥澛

Being a tiny minority in a community can amplify differences. But at BYU, a common history of being 鈥渢he other鈥 leads to a learning atmosphere of empathy.聽

Film

Courtesy of WEOWNTV/Freetown Media Center
Kadiatu holds Ibrahim in the documentary 鈥淪urvivors.鈥 Director Arthur Pratt was determined to ensure that the perspectives of Sierra Leoneans were accurately represented in the film about overcoming Ebola.

Four years after the Ebola outbreak, the world is still asking questions about the country鈥檚 response. But an essential voice has often been ignored: Sierra Leoneans who survived and fought the epidemic.


The Monitor's View

AP
U.S. Rep. Mia Love and Salt Lake County Mayor Ben McAdams take part in a debate in Sandy, Utah, as the two battle for Utah's 4th Congressional District.

It鈥檚 taken a civil war and other struggles but America鈥檚 democracy is now clearly more welcoming of diversity in its political candidates, at least in terms of gender, race, and ethnicity. In the 2018 midterm elections on Tuesday, candidates are more diverse than ever at the federal level and in most state races, according to the Reflective Democracy Campaign. One candidate is on track to be the first Native American woman in Congress.

The Democratic Party, which focuses on such identity politics, is leading the trend. This year, white men are a minority of the party鈥檚 candidates. The Republican Party, meanwhile, still has far to go. Three in 4 GOP candidates for Congress are white men.

Yet in one House contest, these narrow definitions of diversity are being turned on their head, challenging a notion that one鈥檚 political perspective is determined by biology or other material backgrounds.

Mia Love, a Republican incumbent in a Utah congressional district, is a black woman with Haitian ancestry who is running against a white man, Ben McAdams, a local Democratic mayor. Polls indicate a tight race in the normally GOP district, which Ms. Love won in 2014. In contrast to many of today鈥檚 electoral contests, the two are competing simply over their diversity of ideas about issues, such as the role of government, as well as their merits as political leaders.

At a time of mass violence in the United States based on views about race, as witnessed in the recent killing of members of a Jewish congregation in Pittsburgh by a white supremacist, the Utah contest is a refreshing reminder of democracy鈥檚 call for voters and candidates to see themselves in a higher identity as citizens, perhaps even servants to others.

Elections are often seen as a zero-sum contest for power, as if power were a limited entity and only one group can hold it. Yet if 鈥済roup鈥 is defined as those who hold certain ideas rather than views based on physical or cultural identity, democratic politics becomes easier. It allows for empathy, consensus, and compromise. Different viewpoints are easier to entertain and more easily adopted. Debate over the merits of ideas can lead to new ideas. It helps create patience, as often ideas fail and alternative ones gain ground.

Ideas may not be malleable but people certainly are. US history reflects how people can adapt, even if slowly, to the ideals embedded in its founding documents, such as the equality of individuals and truth as self-evident.

In the American past, writes historian Jill Lepore in a new book, 鈥淭hese Truths,鈥 there is 鈥渁n extraordinary amount of decency and hope, of prosperity and ambition, and much, especially, of invention and beauty.鈥 Such a diversity of ideas should be as welcome in the halls of power as much as the rising diversity of political candidates.


A 海角大神 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 鈥 in its various forms 鈥 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 鈥 The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston 鈥 whose founder was concerned with both the state of the world and the quality of available news.

When the weather suddenly changed for the worse during a road trip, today鈥檚 contributor prayed to understand that God鈥檚 protecting love and care were right at hand.


A message of love

Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff
The pergola of Frank Lloyd Wright鈥檚 Martin House in Buffalo, N.Y., leads to a conservatory with a reproduction of the 鈥淲inged Victory鈥 statue of Nike. Nestled among Victorians, the 111-year old house still makes a visitor feel as if a spaceship has landed. It鈥檚 one of the best of Wright鈥檚 famous 鈥淧rairie Houses,鈥 the architectural manifestation of wide horizons and fearless reach. When it was completed in 1907, Martin House was a cultural turning point: the first American house that was truly American. It earned National Historic Landmark status in 1986 and has been undergoing restoration since 1997. More than a century old, it鈥檚 as modern as ever. (For more images, click the button below.) 鈥 Michael S. Hopkins
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris and Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

See you Monday. We鈥檒l have the next installment of On the Move, our series about migration. Migrants who hold Temporary Protected Status in the United States pay taxes and Social Security and maintain a clean record in order to renew their permits every 18 months. Some now hope聽to persuade Congress to provide a path for permanent residency.

Also, a correction. An Oct. 29 story on Montana campaign finance law incorrectly characterized two details: Citizens United struck down a ban on corporate spending in politics but not all limits on corporate spending; and the nine Montana Republicans pursued by the Commissioner of Political Practices included candidates and lawmakers.

More issues

2018
November
02
Friday

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