海角大神

2025
May
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Monitor Daily Podcast

May 30, 2025
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Linda Feldmann
Washington Bureau Chief

And with that, Elon Musk has left Washington. Just weeks ago, the world鈥檚 richest man was wielding a chain saw 鈥 literally and figuratively 鈥 in the name of reducing federal bureaucracy. Now, he鈥檚 gone back to his companies. His so-called Department of Government Efficiency axed some 280,000 jobs. But the in the president鈥檚 鈥淏ig Beautiful Bill,鈥 saying it increases the budget deficit. Mr. Musk also doesn鈥檛 love tariffs. And he now has an ally in two federal courts, where many of the Trump tariffs have been ruled illegal. Our Laurent Belsie explores the matter as it relates to the U.S.-Europe trade war 鈥 in which trust could be a casualty.


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News briefs

China pushed back against U.S. plans to revoke student visas.聽In a formal diplomatic protest, the Chinese Embassy in Washington said the move threatens Chinese students鈥 鈥渓egitimate rights鈥 and urged the United States to 鈥渋mmediately correct its mistakes.鈥澛燙hina鈥檚 Foreign Ministry on Wednesday called the U.S. decision 鈥渄iscriminatory鈥 and said it would damage America鈥檚 reputation. The more than 277,000 students from China make up nearly a quarter of all foreign students in the U.S., although their numbers have declined in recent years amid growing U.S.-China tensions. 鈥 Staff

For the first time in three years, the U.S. economy contracted.聽It shrank at a 0.2% annual pace from January through March as trade wars disrupted business, the government said Thursday. First-quarter growth was brought down by a surge in imports as U.S. companies hurried to bring in foreign goods before the president imposed new import taxes. Consumer spending also slowed sharply, and federal government spending fell at a 4.6% annual pace, the biggest drop in three years. 鈥 The Associated Press

Israel approved the expansion of West Bank settlements. Half of the 22 settlements are new; the others are outposts and farms that will now be deemed legal under Israeli law. Peace Now, a left-wing organization monitoring settlement activity, cautioned the settlements could 鈥渄ramatically reshape the West Bank,鈥 further entrenching the occupation. Defense Minister Israel Katz praised the move as helping block the establishment of a Palestinian state. Palestinian leaders called it a 鈥渄angerous escalation.鈥 The settlements, illegal under international law, have expanded sharply under the current Israeli government, which for the first time has settlers in two senior Cabinet positions. 鈥 Staff

A new youth climate lawsuit set a precedent in the U.S. A group of 22 plaintiffs, many of whom were involved in successful state climate lawsuits, claims that a spate of executive orders promising to 鈥渦nleash鈥 fossil fuels and dismantle climate protections threaten their constitutional right to life, liberty, and personal security. They argue the Trump administration is 鈥渟crubbing, suppressing and dismantling climate science.鈥 This marks the first comprehensive legal action targeting wide-ranging administrative efforts to eliminate research, programs, incentives, and speech connected to the warming planet. 鈥 Staff

Threats against federal U.S. judges have spiked. Eighty judges received threats from October 2024 through February 2025, according to internal data compiled by the U.S. Marshals Service and reported by The New York Times. But in just six weeks 鈥 beginning March 1 鈥 162 judges received threats. Threats to federal judges had already doubled between 2021 and 2024, according to a Marshals Service survey. Judges are now considering adopting their own armed security force, The Wall Street Journal reported. 鈥 Staff

Harvard can continue enrolling international students. A federal judge on Thursday extended an order blocking the Trump administration鈥檚 attempt to bar Harvard University from enrolling foreign students, as a lawsuit proceeds. U.S. District Judge Allison Burroughs extended the block she imposed last week. The dispute over international enrollment at Harvard is the latest escalation in a battle between the White House and America鈥檚 oldest and wealthiest college. 鈥 AP


Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

People gather for a vigil May 5 at Shelby Park by the Rio Grande in Eagle Pass, Texas, in part to honor people who died as they attempted to cross the border from Mexico into the U.S. The park, which was closed last year as authorities dealt with border crossings, is now partially open.
Alfredo Sosa/Staff
People gather for a vigil May 5, 2025, at Shelby Park by the Rio Grande in Eagle Pass, Texas, in part to honor people who died as they attempted to cross the border from Mexico into the U.S. The park, which was closed last year as authorities dealt with border crossings, is now partially open.

Texas provided a border-enforcement blueprint for President Donald Trump. Now people in the Eagle Pass area, which was once an immigration epicenter, live with a new, quieter reality. 鈥淭he border has never been as secure as it is right now under President Trump,鈥 says Kate Hobbs, whose family manages a watermelon farm near Normandy, Texas. Others wish state funds spent on border security were apportioned elsewhere.

Jacob Turcotte/Staff
Guglielmo Mangiapane/Reuters
Members of the Iranian delegation leave the Omani Embassy in Rome, where the fifth round of U.S.-Iran talks took place, May 23, 2025.

President Donald Trump campaigned as a deal-maker and peacemaker, pledging to quickly resolve the wars and international security crises that threaten global stability. But the wars in Ukraine and Gaza have proved extraordinarily challenging. And as complex a problem as Iran鈥檚 advancing nuclear program may be, it may offer Mr. Trump his best option for progress 鈥 if not a full-fledged deal, at least an interim agreement laying out the parameters of a deal.

Patterns

Tracing global connections

Israel鈥檚 brutal assault on Gaza has for many people undermined the Jewish state鈥檚 moral authority and raised troubling questions about the country鈥檚 future. And for Israelis of all stripes, from West Bank settlers to Tel Aviv tech entrepreneurs, the trauma of Oct. 7, 2023, still runs deep. But many Israelis鈥 inability to comprehend the scale of destruction in Gaza 鈥 and the agony of Palestinian civilian victims 鈥 could be changing.

While courts challenge the legality of President Donald Trump鈥檚 recent tariffs, the longer-term damage of America鈥檚 chaotic tariff policy is more likely to be political than economic. In the U.S.-EU trade war, nearly $1 trillion worth of trade in mostly high-value goods is at stake. But the sense of trust between longtime allies could be a casualty.

Ish Mafundikwa
Former farmers chased off their land in the early 2000s meet for coffee at a restaurant in Harare, Zimbabwe, April 12, 2025.

Twenty-five years after the infamous seizures of its white-owned farms, Zimbabwe is still reckoning with that period鈥檚 complicated legacy. For years, farmers who lost their land have demanded the Zimbabwean government compensate them. Western countries and international lenders have also made those payments a key condition for helping Zimbabwe dig itself out of its .

In Pictures

Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff
POISE ARE US: Bedazzled dancers wait offstage for their turn to perform at Youth America Grand Prix (YAGP), the world鈥檚 largest ballet scholarship competition, in Purchase, New York.

Youth America Grand Prix offers dancers an invaluable opportunity to perform in front of an audience and to be seen by judges. It also highlights the warm support young dancers offer one another. What do judges look for? In addition to technique and skill, says one, 鈥淚鈥檓 looking for how much enjoyment they have in self-expression.鈥


The Monitor's View

Reuters
Flags flutter during the African Development Bank annual meeting, in Abidjan Ivory Coast, May 27.

Africa鈥檚 leaders are setting the clock on achieving higher economic growth for the continent. One big reason: By 2050, about 1 in 4 people on Earth will be African.

A good example of this resolve was the May 29 election of a new head of the African Development Bank, a premier finance entity for driving job creation. The winner was Sidi Ould Tah of Mauritania. He most recently led the Arab Bank for Economic Development in Africa, where he quadrupled the bank鈥檚 assets and secured a triple-A rating.

A common thread in the competitive election for a new bank president was the need to shift Africa from a dependence on foreign donors to economic self-reliance and a shared vision for investments. That goal is urgent after the slashing of American foreign aid by President Donald Trump as well as a decline in European assistance.

鈥淎s Africans we are not completely sad about [these] developments,鈥 Tanzania鈥檚 former foreign minister told The Economist. 鈥淭his is what we have always been saying we want, to rely less on others.鈥

Former Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta was more blunt: 鈥淲hy are you crying?鈥 he asked during initial shock over the aid cuts. 鈥淸Instead] say, 鈥極K, what are we going to do to help ourselves?鈥欌澛

One popular answer is to tap private capital in Africa. An estimated $4 trillion is held in African banks, pension funds, and foreign reserves. 鈥淭he issue is,鈥 a Lagos, Nigeria-based lender told the news site Semafor, 鈥渉ow we get [that money] to flow into projects.鈥 Key targets include power supply, natural resources, and agriculture.

The first challenge for Mr. Tah is to align the bank鈥檚 54 member nations toward common goals. One model of cooperation for him is the Economic Commission of West African States, which marked its 50th anniversary this year. Despite linguistic, cultural, and political differences among its more than a dozen members, it has been effective. The countries allow free movement and free trade for citizens and businesses and agree on common tariffs and policies toward nonmember states.聽聽

The African Development Bank now has a chance to become 鈥渁 true engine of continental unity,鈥 wrote Kenya-based economist Hannah Ryder in Semafor. It can also break from an overdependence on foreign aid that has prevented a firm footing for democracy 鈥 the kind in which citizens hold elected leaders accountable for economic growth, not for how much aid is amassed.


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.

Discovering the truth of our spiritual nature brings healing.


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Julia Demaree Nikhinson/AP
Holden Connor Good (left), 13, reacts after spelling a word correctly as Aishwarya Kallakuri, 14, of Charlotte, North Carolina, looks on during the semifinals of the Scripps National Spelling Bee May 28, 2025, in Oxon Hill, Maryland. The event鈥檚 winner on May 29 was Faizan Zaki, a 13-year-old from Allen, Texas, who was runner-up last year. His winning word: 鈥渆claircissement.鈥
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

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