海角大神

2019
May
16
Thursday

Monitor Daily Podcast

May 16, 2019
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Noelle Swan
Weekly Editor

Some of Oregon鈥檚 most fragile residents are beginning their lives in prison. And they鈥檙e off to a good start.

At Oregon鈥檚 only women鈥檚 prison, inmates are helping to raise endangered butterflies. The Taylor's checkerspot butterfly was聽once a common sight throughout the Pacific Northwest, but development has since encroached on its native grassland habitat. In Oregon, only two wild populations remain. Inmates at the Coffee Creek Corrections Center are helping to change that. This spring, the lab鈥檚 inmate technicians successfully reared 476 checkerspots for biologists to release into the wild.

Entrusting convicts with the care of living things may seem counterintuitive. But for the women working in the Coffee Creek butterfly conservation lab, the chance to nurture life is an act of restorative justice.

It鈥檚 an idea that has taken hold at a smattering of correctional facilities in the United States. Washington is a hotbed for these programs, thanks to the state鈥檚 . But similar programs are cropping up elsewhere. In Omaha, Nebraska, designed to offer respite to migrating Monarch butterflies. And in Marion, Ohio, prisoners have found a sense of purpose in .

As Sarah Martin, a Coffee Creek inmate serving a life sentence, told Atlas Obscura, raising butterflies has brought her a sense of peace in a world full of chaos. 鈥淚t鈥檚 such to help sustain the life of an endangered species,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t feels so good to give a little back.鈥

Now on to our five stories for today, including an in-depth examination of the hidden costs of free college and a window on a 500-person experiment in disagreement as a path to understanding.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

The China trade war reflects President Trump鈥檚 long-held belief in the power of tariffs, and his drive to fulfill a campaign promise. At least for now, he鈥檚 willing to put the strong U.S. economy at risk in pursuit of that goal.聽聽

A deeper look

Ann Hermes/Staff
Tufayel Ahmed (r.), a freshman computer science major at City College of New York, studies in the library with classmates Sakil Khan and Emma Athow in May. Mr. Ahmed received the state's Excelsior Scholarship, which helps cover his tuition. Currently 24 states pay for tuition 鈥 and sometimes more 鈥 for a subset of students.

To make college more accessible, states are jumping in with 鈥榝ree college鈥 plans, but the concept is still evolving 鈥 generating debates about who benefits, who should pay for it, and what strings should be attached.

SOURCE:

College Promise Campaign, data as of May 10, 2019

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Jacob Turcotte and Stacy Teicher Khadaroo/Staff
Gabriela Bhaskar/Reuters
People cheer as 2020 presidential candidate Andrew Yang holds a rally in New York May 14.

Lots of presidential candidates promise to help middle class workers losing jobs to automation. But Andrew Yang has a very specific plan, and he says getting his ideas out there matters more than getting to the White House.

Ann Hermes/Staff
Visitors to Liberty Island pose for pictures in front of the Statue of Liberty in New York. French sculptor Fr茅d茅ric-Auguste Bartholdi designed the statue, and it was dedicated in 1886.

Lady Liberty is getting a new museum at a time of heated debate on immigration. Revisiting the statue鈥檚 history offers fresh perspectives on what it stands for 鈥 and how that may have changed.

A letter from Jerusalem

In politics, debate can quickly devolve into argument. In Brussels, however, Europeans are exercising civil disagreement as a tool for understanding.


The Monitor's View

Reuters
A laborer loads coal in a truck next to containers near Tianjin Port, China.

This year marks the 30th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall, which led to the collapse of the Soviet Union. The end of the Cold War and of a bipolar world led to a great rush of globalization, with most nations drawing closer together.

This week, however, that rush may have turned to a hush. Three big powers hinted at a potential decoupling from other countries.

In Europe, German Chancellor Angela Merkel said the Continent must 鈥渞eposition itself鈥 against three rivals, the United States, China, and Russia. 鈥淭he old certainties of the postwar order no longer apply,鈥 she said.

In Beijing, Chinese leader Xi Jinping told other countries in Asia that they should stick together to write a 鈥渘ew glory of Asian civilizations.鈥

And in Washington, President Donald Trump imposed his toughest sanctions yet on China over its trade practices, all but excluding any U.S. business with the premier Chinese technology firm Huawei. The ban came only days after new tariffs on $250 billion worth of Chinese goods.

Of the three moves, the most serious is the attempt in the U.S. to disengage from China. The world鈥檚 two largest economies have become closely intertwined since the 1990s yet remain far apart on how to run their respective countries. The U.S. accuses China of technology theft, unfair subsidies of exports, and an authoritarian rule that turns workers and companies into government tools of national power.

The new tariffs and other restrictions are designed to change Chinese behavior. Yet they might also become permanent if China fails to change. That is very likely given the Communist Party鈥檚 strategic goals for Chinese dominance in certain industries and a historical resentment toward outside pressure.

Last month the U.S. State Department鈥檚 director of policy planning, Kiron Skinner, said the administration was coming up with a new defensive strategy toward China, one similar to the containment strategy for the Soviet Union devised by American diplomat George Kennan in 1947.

鈥淚n China we have an economic competitor; we have an ideological competitor, one that really does seek a kind of global reach that many of us didn鈥檛 expect a couple of decades ago,鈥 said Dr. Skinner.

Today鈥檚 China is in many ways different from the Soviet Union. It works within international bodies, for example, even as it tries to change them to its favor. Still, if the U.S. moves to decouple from the Chinese economy and even tries to isolate it, such a policy would be adopting the core idea of Mr. Kennan鈥檚 approach.

The Soviet Union, he wrote, was based on flawed ideas, such as a state-run economy. Its system would 鈥渆ventually weaken its own total potential.鈥 Russian leaders, he said, were 鈥渄riven by fear or concern for their prestige to do things that are not in their best interests.鈥

His approach took decades of patient vigilance by the U.S. to succeed. Rather than defeat the Soviet Union, the U.S. in effect followed an old Arab proverb: 鈥淟eave evil and it will leave you.鈥

Many of China鈥檚 practices are repugnant to its competitors, not just the U.S. But will boxing in China bring different results than engaging it?

Three decades of globalization may have turned a corner in recent days. Of all the big players, the U.S. and China will determine whether the world splits into regional blocs and defensive postures. Their trade war is about more than trade or even the future of each country. It is about ideas that either work for all or collapse on their own fallacies.


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.

Today鈥檚 contributor explores the idea that it鈥檚 a God-inspired generosity of spirit, not the single-minded pursuit of money or opportunity, that most substantially enriches.


A message of love

Frank Augstein/AP
Kids enjoy the new Children's Garden at Kew, designed around the elements (earth, air, water, sunlight) that plants need to grow, at Kew Gardens in London May 16. The new garden, which opens officially May 18, is the size of nearly 40 tennis courts and features tunnel slides, sand pits, a splash pool, swings, and trampolines.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us today. Come back tomorrow, when diplomatic correspondent Howard LaFranchi will untangle the motivations driving White House policy toward Iran.

More issues

2019
May
16
Thursday

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