海角大神

2023
April
13
Thursday

Monitor Daily Podcast

April 13, 2023
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As a business reporter in Beijing, I met plenty of entrepreneurs who had a good story to tell. But the only one who really lit up a room was Jack Ma.

Jack, as everyone calls him, is a former English teacher who created Alibaba, an e-commerce site that became one of the world鈥檚 largest marketplaces. In 2012, I went to Hangzhou to see Jack give a talk to hundreds of suppliers and traders.

To them, Jack was an idol who had graduated from an 鈥渁verage university,鈥 as he put it, and through hard work made his mark on China and the world. He poked fun at himself and at China鈥檚 politicians, but didn鈥檛 overstep. At least, not at that time. Two years later, Alibaba went public in New York in what was then the largest ever initial public offering.

The fall came in 2020. Just days before Alibaba was to list a new finance arm,聽聽the initial public offering. The company was later hit with a $2.8 billion antitrust fine. And Jack abruptly dropped out of sight. He became the latest high-profile entrepreneur to fall out of favor with Beijing鈥檚 rulers as part of a tightening of political control on the economy.

Now Jack is back. He鈥檚 been spotted in China and around the world, pursuing his personal interest in sustainable fishing and agriculture. He no longer runs Alibaba. But his return to China has been taken by some as a sign that Xi Jinping鈥檚 administration may be rethinking how it treats its entrepreneurs as it tries to build a more advanced economy.

As Eswar Prasad, a China specialist at Cornell University, told the Wall Street Journal, 鈥淏eijing seems eager to show that prominent entrepreneurs like Jack Ma, once hailed as visionaries and then vilified by the government, are now welcome back in China.鈥


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Photo Courtesy of Cassie Fambro/Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools
Kyra Porter, an eighth grade math teacher in Charlotte, North Carolina, asks questions that prompt discussion, March 15, 2023. One way her district is using federal pandemic funds is on math support and instruction.

U.S. schools have billions in federal pandemic funding to spend. But how much are they putting toward specific academic needs, such as boosting math skills?

Patterns

Tracing global connections

China could give Russia new weapons or persuade the Kremlin to negotiate an end to the Ukraine war. Beijing鈥檚 actions will reflect its key goal聽鈥 to ensure Russia does not lose and thus hand victory to the West.

With electric vehicles accounting for only about 6% of current new car sales in the United States, a Biden target of about two-thirds by 2032聽may sound unrealistic. But experts don鈥檛 see it as an impossible reach.

Commentary

Hannah Mattix/The Clarion-Ledger/ AP
Mayor Chokwe Lumumba speaks during a city council meeting at City Hall in Jackson, Mississippi, on April 10, 2023.

In the conversation about racial justice, the need for self-determination 鈥 the freedom of Black Americans to shape their own destinies 鈥 is sometimes overshadowed. But news in Tennessee and Mississippi has brought it to the fore.聽 聽

Podcast

鈥楾he world is watching鈥: French protests showcase collective will

Most people cherish stability. Many are willing to endure disruption to affect change. In this week鈥檚 podcast, our Paris-based writer takes the measure of current French protests and puts this robust season of clashes in context.聽

Voices From the Street

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Points of Progress

What's going right

Our progress roundup this week is an appreciation of extremes. Plots of growing food are surrounded by skyscrapers, Albania keeps a river wild, and populations of a lynx unique to Spain and Portugal are rebounding.


The Monitor's View

AP
A teacher talks to his students at Ballard High School in Seattle, March 14.

The persistence of mass shootings in the United States has forced many towns and cities to be prepared to react when one occurs. Yet a new study provides an alternative response, one that is proactive. Based on data from 3,253 secondary schools across California between 2001 to 2019, a report by the University of California, Los Angeles found 鈥渟ignificant and substantial鈥 reductions in every category of violence 鈥 from verbal abuse to confrontations involving weapons.

Overall, said Ron Avi-Astor, a social welfare professor and co-author of the study, 鈥渙n a day-to-day basis for most students, American schools are safer than they鈥檝e been for many decades.鈥

The California study notes a correlation between empathy and safety 鈥 a 鈥渘orm shift,鈥 as the authors call it, reflecting a 鈥渕assive social investment鈥 in measures ranging from emergency preparedness to mental health care. For instance, the study found that 89% of students surveyed felt 鈥渢here is a teacher or adult who truly cares about me,鈥 or 鈥渨ho tells me when I do a good job,鈥 or 鈥渨ho notices when I鈥檓 not there.鈥 Other questions measured high levels of 鈥渂elongingness鈥 (79%) and being able to 鈥渕ake a difference鈥 (76%).

At the same time, it found a 70% reduction in reports of guns carried onto school grounds and a 59% reduction in threats involving weapons. Those declines in victimization were largest among Black and Latino students.

The study, which found consistent reductions in data tracking school safety nationwide, comes at a time when society more broadly is rethinking violence prevention. Mayors aren鈥檛 waiting for national gun reforms. Instead they are trying and sharing a wide range of ideas that draw their communities together with empathy, compassion, and inclusivity.

A Politico survey of 50 mayors found that 70% want more social workers to handle more policing calls involving nonviolent or mental health incidents. More than half said that if given new funding to prevent violence, they would build more affordable housing and better public parks. That regard for quality of life runs in another direction, too. Nearly all said reducing violence also requires better caring for police officers and their families.

The important lesson in the California study may be that empathy begets empathy. That point has special resonance for Jose Sanchez, a high school civics teacher in Monterey Park, California. Two days after a shooter killed 11 people and wounded nine others in his community in January, he sat in his classroom helping his students grapple with the tragedy.

As he wrapped up a class, Mr. Sanchez told Politico last week, 鈥渁 student patted me on the shoulder and asked if I was OK. It鈥檚 not that often that my students ask me how I鈥檓 doing.鈥 They knew that two days later he was due to be sworn in as mayor. That caring and compassion can serve as a form of armor against violence.


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.

Knowing our inherent goodness and completeness as God鈥檚 children brings healing to our lives.


Viewfinder

Chalinee Thirasupa/Reuters
A boy and a tourist play with water as they celebrate during the Songkran holiday, which marks the Thai New Year, in Bangkok, Thailand, on Thursday.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte and Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us. Please come back tomorrow, when we鈥檒l look at reverberations from the leak of classified U.S. intelligence documents.

More issues

2023
April
13
Thursday

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