2017
June
26
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

June 26, 2017
Loading the player...
Mark Sappenfield
Senior global correspondent

Religious liberty. Terrorism. Same-sex marriage. Gun rights. All in one day. On Monday, the United States Supreme Court finished its term with cases that cut to the country’s deepest divides. The next term, which ends a year from now, will have far more blockbusters.

The question is, How will Americans handle it? The solidarity that kept America together through the severe strains of Vietnam and the toppling of Jim Crow was at least partly born of shared sacrifice and purpose, first in World War II, then the cold war.

Today, that solidarity is at a low ebb. Rebuilding it during the year ahead might call for sacrifice of a different sort.

 “[E]ven the best-designed legal institutions and practices may yield decisions which many believe to be mistaken,” Columbia University professor Michele Moody-Adams tells The Atlantic. These are the inevitable “strains of commitment” to any democracy, she adds. The path forward is in finding a deeper foundation for our sense of unity. “Contemporary life erects many barriers to respect and concern for our common humanity, but the future of our democracy demands that we learn how to transcend them.”


You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.

Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Monday's final day of the Supreme Court term appears to be less a finish line than a green flag for the new court.

Special Report

There is another side to reining in health-care costs beyond what we see unfolding in Washington this week. There are the stories of those who stand up to fraud and secrecy in the industry to hold corporations to account. 

SOURCE:

US Department of Justice

|
Jacob Turcotte/Staff

Overlooked

Stories you may have missed
Ben Curtis/AP
Refugee children who arrived unaccompanied by their families played inside a World Vision tent as they waited for child-protection specialists at the Imvepi reception center in northern Uganda June 9. About 9,000 such children are reported to have crossed into the country since July.

In South Sudan, where almost half of all residents are under age 14, children are more than the future, they are the present. Those helping them say these lives can still be shaped by promise, not just blighted by the legacy of war and hunger.

A new educational study offers a lesson in desegregation: For it to really flourish, ethnic and racial divides have to be rousted out of every level of a school, from classrooms to the expectations of teachers and administrators. 

Rafael Marchante/Reuters
Firefighters worked to put out a forest fire near Gois, Portugal, June 20. Officials are still debating whether arson or lightning set off the blazes, which scorched tens of thousands of acres and killed more than 60 people. As of Monday, June 26, the fires were said to be largely under control.

For a Monitor correspondent in Portugal, forest fires were so common growing up that she sometimes ate dinner in her beachwear because of the heat. But this year's fires have been different, she writes, leading to conversations about how residents can embrace long-ignored solutions. 


The Monitor's View

Lucy Nicholson/Reuters/File
An array of solar panels sweep across a hillside in Oakland, Calif.

Should the world promote economic growth or fight climate change? That model of “either/or” thinking may be losing its validity faster than even some experts have imagined.

While fossil fuels – coal, oil, gas – still generate roughly 85 percent of the world’s energy supply, it’s clearer than ever that the future belongs to renewable sources such as wind and solar.

The move to renewables is picking up momentum around the world: They now account for more than half of new power sources going on line.

Some growth stems from a commitment by governments and farsighted businesses to fund cleaner energy sources. But increasingly the story is about the plummeting prices of renewables, especially wind and solar. The cost of solar panels has dropped by 80 percent and the cost of wind turbines by close to one-third in the past eight years, reports the International Renewable Energy Agency.

In many parts of the world renewable energy is already a principal energy source. In Scotland, for example, wind turbines provide enough electricity to power 95 percent of homes.

While the rest of the world takes the lead, notably China and Europe, the United States is also seeing a remarkable shift. In March, for the first time, wind and solar power accounted for more than 10 percent of the power generated in the US, reported the US Energy Information Administration.

President Trump has underlined fossil fuels – especially coal – as the path to economic growth. In a recent speech in Iowa, a state he won easily in 2016, he dismissed wind power as an unreliable energy source.

But that message did not play well with many in the Hawkeye State, where wind turbines dot the fields and provide 36 percent of the state’s electricity generation – and where tech giants such as Facebook, Microsoft, and Google are being attracted by the availability of clean energy to power their data centers.

Prominent Republican politicians in Iowa are backing the growing industry. The state’s senior senator, Republican Chuck Grassley, has pledged his strong commitment to wind power, as has the new GOP governor, Kim Reynolds. Other red states in the heartland, such as Kansas, the Dakotas, and Texas, are experiencing a wind-powered boom as well.

The question “what happens when the wind doesn’t blow or the sun doesn’t shine?” has provided a quick put-down for skeptics. But a boost in the storage capacity of batteries, and a dramatic drop in their cost, is making their ability to keep power flowing around the clock more likely.

The advance is driven in part by vehicle manufacturers, who are placing big bets on battery-powered electric vehicles. Although electric cars are still a rarity on roads in 2017, this massive investment could change the picture rapidly in coming years. China, whose cities are choked by air pollution, may lead the way.

“Renewables have reached a tipping point globally,” sums up Simon Virley, who studies the world’s energy markets for the international accounting firm KPMG. He sees renewables competing on price with fossil fuels in more and more places around the world.

“I think [the shift to renewable energy is] happening much faster than most well-educated business people in America understand,” adds British investor Jeremy Grantham, cofounder of the Boston-based asset manager firm GMO, in Britain’s Financial Times recently.

While there’s a long way to go, the trend lines for renewables are spiking. The the pace of change in energy sources appears to be speeding up – perhaps just in time to have a meaningful effect in slowing climate change.

What Washington does – or doesn’t do – to promote alternative energy may mean less and less at a time of a global shift in thought.


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

Throughout history and still today, reports of shady or even inhumane actions to further leaders’ political ambitions seem unending. But it’s also notable that the most lasting stability and progress come from a spirit of humility and grace. Christ Jesus expressed these qualities so powerfully that many around him were healed and reformed. And through a deeper understanding of our relationship to God, divine Love, we come to see that such qualities are inherent in each of us. “I will put my spirit within you,” we read in the Bible (Ezekiel 36:27). We all have the capability to express the wisdom and grace that inspire good leadership and promote progress in our lives and in the world around us.


A message of love

Yuri Gripas/Reuters
A news assistant ran from the building with press materials Monday after the US Supreme Court granted parts of the Trump administration’s emergency request to put its travel ban into effect, even as the legal battle continues. The court is expected to take it up in October.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Come back tomorrow for more on the high court’s big day. We’ll be looking closely at two major religious-liberty cases at the center of US culture wars – one decided Monday on public funding, and one to be decided in the next term on same-sex marriage. 

More issues

2017
June
26
Monday

Give us your feedback

We want to hear, did we miss an angle we should have covered? Should we come back to this topic? Or just give us a rating for this story. We want to hear from you.