2017
July
11
Tuesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

July 11, 2017
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Monitor editors were mulling over some of the major events of the day – the reported death of the Islamic State leader, Microsoft’s plan to close the Wi-Fi gap in rural America, Donald Trump Jr.’s meeting with a Russian lawyer (see below) – but the gravitational pull of altruism kept bringing us back to Florida.

Six members of a single family were swept out to sea by a riptide off Panama City Beach. Four more people, trying to help, were also caught in the current.

There were no lifeguards on duty. Police were on the scene, but waiting for a rescue boat.

That’s when something remarkable happened. One by one, strangers on the beach formed a human chain stretching out into the water. First 20, then 50, then 80 people held hands, forming a line about 100-yards long, reported the Panama City News Herald. Some couldn’t swim themselves but stood there up to their necks in water. All 10 swimmers were saved.

That Florida beach was a portrait of collaboration, compassion, and selflessness – times 80. No gender or racial divides: It was just people, linking arms, helping people.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Campaign collusion with Russia or a media witch hunt? The latest revelation by the president’s own son may answer that question.

On health-care reform, Republicans face two apparently competing principles: more freedom of choice and less government spending. Two senators offer their solution.

Mark Kreusch/Splash News/Newscom
Shoppers roam a gun show in Port St. Lucie, Fla. Gun ownership is rising among African-Americans in the Trump era.

At the Monitor, we look for thought shifts – and what drives them. There are few more dramatic shifts than the change in how African-Americans now look at gun ownership. Increasingly, it’s seen as a constitutional right.

Peter A. Ford
Meach Mean speaks about squatters living on an irrigation dyke constructed with forced labor under the Khmer Rouge, in Praek Tanoub Village, Cambodia.

By some indicators, Cambodia is making great economic strides. Can we call it progress if it's built on injustice and inequality?

Marcus R. Donner
Mary Matsuda Gruenewald reacted as Vashon Island High School’s principal, Danny Rock, told her story at a graduation ceremony June 17 on Vashon Island in Washington. She was in an internment camp for Japanese-Americans in 1943 when she should have graduated with her class.

Our next story is about hope, perseverance, and overcoming hate. It’s a remarkable tale that brought one Monitor editor to tears.


The Monitor's View

AP Photo
German Chancellor Angela Merkel, right, welcomes the President of Niger, Mahamadou Issoufou, for a meeting of the 'G20 Africa Partnership' in Berlin, Germany June 12.

Just this year alone, an estimated 400,000 African migrants will flee to Germany, escaping either war or poverty, or both. If nothing is done, officials warn, millions more could arrive in coming years. Yet rather than simply seek solutions in Africa to this flood of humanity, Germany decided last year to first tally up its own indifference toward the continent.

Among the 400,000 companies in Germany, fewer than 1,000 invest in Africa, officials found. And Germany’s trade with Africa amounts to only 2 percent of its total foreign trade.

“That has to change!” declared Gerd Müller, Germany’s development minister, in February.

This humble introspection may help explain why German Chancellor Angela Merkel was so successful at the Group of 20 summit on July 7-8 in winning support from most of the world’s wealthiest nations for a major boost in private investment for Africa. Dubbed the “Merkel Plan” (a play on America’s Marshall Plan that revived postwar Germany), the initiative aims to shift global thinking about the business opportunities in Africa. Only then can investment in both entrepreneurs and infrastructure rise, helping to create jobs and discourage migration.

“We must change the lenses with which we look at Africa, from the traditional development mind-set to an investment mind-set,” says Akinwumi Adesina, president of the African Development Bank.

Germany’s approach is to have G20 countries set a few models for Africa by partnering with the most reform-minded countries, such as Ghana, Ivory Coast, Rwanda, and Tunisia. Money will be given to fight corruption, curb capital flight, and improve tax systems – all necessary to reduce business risk in Africa. “We’re trying to put the spirit of partnership into the foreground,” said Ms. Merkel.

For all its troubles, from famine to dictatorships, Africa remains a gold mine as a potential workforce. By 2050, it will be home to more than one-quarter of the global population. Half of its 54 countries have reached middle-income status. And compared with Asia and Latin America, Africa has the largest share of adults running or starting a new business.

Such opportunities explain why Germany calls its plan “Compact with Africa.” Both sides must be responsible to act. Mass migration may have pushed Germany to focus on the continent’s crises. But it also looked at its past neglect of Africa – and the potential for investment.


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.

The Bible brings out the fundamental point that God cares for humanity’s needs – whether it’s love or food. But what role do we play in proving that God meets human needs? At a time when she was unemployed and experiencing lack, contributor Carol Rounds learned firsthand that giving to others enabled her to understand and prove God’s care for herself and those she helped. As she focused more on giving, she quickly found a job that led to full-time and rewarding employment. The Bible says, “now at this time your abundance may be a supply for their want, that their abundance also may be a supply for your want: that there may be equality” (II Corinthians 8:14).


A message of love

Jason Lee/Reuters
An IT worker prepares for a lunch-break snooze in a capsule bed at Xiangshui Space in Beijing today. The start-up 'capsule hotel' – among a growing number that offer private pods for napping at about $1.50 per half-hour – launched in May and quickly expanded to Shanghai and Chengdu.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us today. Come back tomorrow. We'll be talking to Trump voters about how they see the controversy over Donald Trump Jr.’s meeting with a Russian lawyer during the 2016 campaign.

More issues

2017
July
11
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