海角大神

2024
October
21
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

October 21, 2024
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Mark Sappenfield
Senior global correspondent

Last week, a United Nations task force made an alarming statement: 鈥淣ever in modern history have so many people faced starvation and famine as in Sudan today.鈥

It is happening largely in the dark. Foreign journalists face difficulties accessing the war-torn area. Local journalists are intimidated or killed.聽

This week, we鈥檙e publishing three stories about Sudan, starting today. We are also making a statement. The articles explore how people are surviving the war 鈥 where they draw hope and the sense of family and community they鈥檝e fought to retain. But they also ask the world to bring this crisis into the light.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Tyrone Siu/Reuters
Taiwanese President Lai Ching-te is seen in front of the Hsiung Feng III mobile missile launcher during a visit to the base in response to recent Chinese military drills, in Taoyuan, Taiwan, Oct. 18, 2024.

China鈥檚 military is practicing putting a choke hold on Taiwan 鈥 a strategy that defense experts increasingly believe could be an effective alternative to a full-scale invasion. What would such a blockade mean for Taiwan, and its allies?

Today鈥檚 news briefs

鈥 Elon Musk promise: Pennsylvania鈥檚 Democratic governor, Josh Shapiro, calls on law enforcement to investigate billionaire Elon Musk for his promise at a weekend pro-Trump rally to give away $1 million each day until Election Day.
鈥 Cuba protests: People in Havana go into the streets banging pots and pans to protest nights without power and water after the nation鈥檚 power grid failed starting Thursday evening.
鈥 Moldova EU vote: Electoral data shows that Moldovans have voted by a razor-thin majority in favor of securing the country鈥檚 path toward European Union membership.
WNBA鈥檚 record season: The New York Liberty won its first Women鈥檚 National Basketball Association championship after beating the Minnesota Lynx 67-62 in Game 5. The women鈥檚 professional basketball series has been a fitting conclusion to a season of record-breaking interest.

Read these news briefs.

Guy Peterson
Mothers cradle their children on the steps outside the malnutrition ward of the Cap Anamur German Emergency Hospital near Kauda, Sudan, June 15, 2024.

As a journalist, our correspondent has documented Sudan鈥檚 descent into a brutal civil war. But the conflict isn鈥檛 just a story for him. It鈥檚 also the terrifying backdrop of his own life, as he explains in this essay about the birth of his daughter.

Ghada Abdulfattah
Osama Harb, sitting in a rented shelter in the Nuseirat refugee camp in central Gaza, looks at a photo from the 1980s taken with his brothers and friends in Lebanon, before he was exiled to Gaza. His brother, two sisters, nieces, and nephews still live in Lebanon.

Gaza鈥檚 residents know what Lebanon is going through, as Israel pursues its campaigns against Hamas and Hezbollah, and as civilians are killed or are forced from their homes. But they worry that the world鈥檚 attention has been diverted.

Podcast

A politics writer on the scrutiny that Election 2024 needs

Even veteran politics watchers who鈥檝e 鈥渟een it all鈥 aren鈥檛 shying away from calling the rapidly approaching U.S. presidential election unprecedented. A senior Washington reporter for the Monitor joins our podcast to parse the extraordinary preconditions 鈥 and the work of reporting it all right down the middle. First of two parts.聽

Election Unprecedented, Part 1

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Books

Our picks for the 10 best books of October include a bracing novel by Louise Erdrich, a continent-spanning mystery by Louise Penny, and a richly observed biography of civil rights icon John Lewis.聽


The Monitor's View

AP
Cattle walk along an illegally deforested area in a reserve in Rondonia state, Brazil, last year.

In early October, a group of public organizations and private funders backed a novel strategy to slow deforestation in the Amazon basin. It plans to provide financial incentives for cattle ranchers in Colombia to restore degraded pasturelands in the world鈥檚 largest rainforest.

The ranchers, in other words, would be on the front line in mitigating climate change, joining many of the world鈥檚 rural areas in a shift in values on land use.

鈥淲e can choose our values, and how to live with them,鈥 Mar铆lia Moura, a spokesperson for one of many farming collectives across rural Portugal formed in response to climate change, told 海角大神.

By some estimates, the world requires $2.4 trillion a year to address global warming. That need is driving innovations in climate finance. Each year, dozens of new funding tools emerge to help businesses and communities adapt to climate change and reduce their greenhouse gas emissions.

鈥淚t used to be ecology versus economics,鈥 Portuguese farmer Pipo Vieira told the Monitor. 鈥淣ow people realize it doesn鈥檛 have to be that way. Instead of ... exploiting nature, we can live differently.鈥

In Colombia, cattle ranching occupies 80% of agricultural land, employing more than 800,000 people. Since the signing of a peace accord in 2016 that ended a half-century of conflict between the government and a guerrilla group, a few projects have shown how restoring farming communities and surrounding ecosystems can lead to economic renewal.

The new finance model is one of 10 pilot projects endorsed by the Global Innovation Lab for Climate Finance. It brings together investors and cattle ranchers in potentially lasting partnerships. Instead of saddling farming families with debt, the investments are based on deferred profit-sharing after five years.

Many countries are expanding their thinking on what is possible with the climate challenge. In the Caribbean, for example, people need a 鈥渃ultural confidence,鈥 said Mia Mottley, the prime minister of Barbados, in a 2020 speech, 鈥渢hat plays to our strengths and which captures the imagination of our own people鈥 in response to the region鈥檚 problems, such as vulnerability to natural disasters.


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.

Even when God鈥檚 messages to us aren鈥檛 what we think we want to hear, only good comes from listening and obeying.


Viewfinder

Gian Ehrenzeller/Keystone/AP
Babs Brandstetter and her sturdy steed Fiola celebrate winning the cow race at the annual cheese market in Flumserberg, Switzerland, Oct. 20, 2024.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte and Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thank you for joining us today. Please come back tomorrow as Jackie Valley explores how an unusual election year in the United States is providing teachers with something they need: engaged students. Some high school civics classes keep teens coming back for more.聽

More issues

2024
October
21
Monday

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