2017
November
08
Wednesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

November 08, 2017
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Among the many lessons of Virginia’s Election Day races is this: Your vote matters.

Is that stating the obvious? Not to a lot of people – just look at dismal participation rates generally. People tune out for many reasons. Maybe they live in a reliably red or blue state. Maybe gerrymandering discourages them. As Prof. Jesse Richman of Old Dominion University told the Daily Press of Newport News, Va.: “That gives us a safe seat for both parties, and you often end up without any real contest.”

Virginia’s House of Delegates had all 100 seats in play yesterday. Sixty were contested by candidates from the two major parties – the highest rate in some 20 years. Turnout was the highest in 20 years. On Wednesday, five seats were too close to call, with one result separated by just 12 votes. The recount will determine which party has control.

Imagine if you hadn't found time to weigh in.

Skepticism about the US voting process is deepening, as a Monitor series underscored this week. That’s all the more reason to stay involved. There are lofty motives: Many people don’t have the right to vote, and we honor that right when we mark a ballot. There are practical ones: “Small bore” local races can influence our daily lives. And then there’s the one we were reminded of yesterday: Your “small” voice can make a big difference.

Here are our five stories today, which underscore in different ways the power of rethinking common assumptions.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Elaine Thompson/AP
Gun shop owner Tiffany Teasdale-Causer displays a Ruger AR-15 semiautomatic rifle, the same model (though in gray rather than black) used by the shooter in a Texas church massacre just days earlier, in Lynnwood, Wash., Nov. 7. Gun-rights supporters have seized on the shooting as more proof of the well-worn saying that the best answer to a bad guy with a gun is a good guy with a gun. Gun-control advocates, meanwhile, say the tragedy shows once more that it is too easy to get a weapon in the US.

Gun rights and gun control are typically portrayed as adversarial issues. But in this case, the two camps share common interests – if they're willing to recognize and act on them. 

Most people know when they're entering ethically dubious territory, but may justify the move with 'everyone does it,' or 'I create more wealth for society than government can.' When it comes to the superrich, that mind-set is starting to be challenged.

A revolution can sometimes unfold with remarkable speed. But its true strength is revealed in its staying power.

Saying goodbye to coal: A recognition of how that will benefit the rising generation is helping to ease the uncertainties for some Chinese coal workers.  

Karen Norris/Staff

Probing space for the ingredients of life – or even an ‘Earth twin’

In the search for life elsewhere in the universe, we tend to look for our own image. That may be limiting us in terms of seeing what's really there.

The search for aliens: how do we know where to look?


The Monitor's View

Reuters
A Muslim student holds a book in a class at a school in Cikawao village of Majalaya, West Java province, Indonesia,

In Myanmar (Burma), the Muslim minority is on the run from extremists in the Buddhist majority. In nearby Malaysia, some in the Muslim majority refuse to do business with the Hindu minority. In the Philippines, Islamic terrorists target the Christian majority with bombs and bullets.

Amid such religious tensions in Southeast Asia, it is worth noting that the Constitutional Court of Indonesia issued a ruling Nov. 7 that upholds religious freedom. It ordered the government to no longer discriminate against people whose faith is not one of the six religions that have been officially recognized since 1965 (Islam, Roman Catholicism, Protestantism, Hinduism, Buddhism, and Confucianism). Instead, officials must ensure equality before the law regardless of a person’s faith and honor the Constitution’s guarantee of “freedom of religion and worship.”

The ruling serves not only as a legal beacon for one corner of Asia but also for much of the Islamic world. Indonesia is the world’s most populous Muslim nation with close to 90 percent of its 260 million people identifying as Muslim. While it has a mixed record of tolerance toward non-Muslims, it is widely admired among many in the Middle East as a model for harmony between different religions.

The country’s reputation, however, has lately been challenged by a rise in groups seeking a nondemocratic caliphate and by a number of terrorist attacks committed by Islamic militants since 2000. In May, a recent former governor of the capital region was jailed on charges of blasphemy against Islam. And in many local areas, the rights of religious minorities are restricted.

The high court’s ruling is one step toward containing such religious intolerance. In September, President Joko Widodo called on universities to promote the official ideology of secular rule. He appointed a special envoy for interfaith dialogue and cooperation. And, in a controversial move, the government passed a law that outlaws any civil organization that violates or threatens Indonesia’s pluralist tradition. One group, Hizb ut-Tahrir Indonesia, has already been banned.

“Moderate Muslims are too quiet. We have to become radical moderates,” said Abdul Mu’ti, secretary-general of the Muslim reformist group Muhammadiyah, at a recent conference.

A few other Muslim-majority countries, such as Tunisia, have notched some success in religious tolerance. Indonesia bears watching as it puts its faith in equality into equality between faiths.


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.

Recently we’ve heard many accounts from individuals who have experienced sexual harassment or assault. When today’s contributor found herself being assaulted and unable to fight back, the realization that everyone has God-given purity and strength helped her stop seeing herself as a vulnerable victim. She “felt God’s presence and strength there” with her, and suddenly the man let her go. The lasting effect of this experience has not been trauma, but a feeling of empowerment. We can find comfort, protection, and healing in our identity as the innocent children of God – not destined to be victims or victimizers.


A message of love

Jonathan Ernst/Reuters
Opera dancers perform during a visit by President Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping to the Forbidden City in Beijing Nov. 8.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris and Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us today. Tomorrow, we'll further plumb Tuesday's election by looking at whether Trump's first year is generating a wave of newly energized Democrats.

More issues

2017
November
08
Wednesday

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