2017
December
20
Wednesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

December 20, 2017
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Yvonne Zipp
Features Editor

It’s a truism that every vote counts.

But in Virginia, the balance of power in the House of Delegates – which we wrote about after the elections – now teeters in a 50-50 split, with a tie for one seat between Democrat Shelly Simonds and Republican David Yancey. The final tally: 11,608 votes for each. The fate of the seat now will be drawn by lot and the loser can request an additional recount. The state Board of Elections will decide the next move.

But lawmakers in both parties say they see the prospect of sharing power as an opportunity for Virginia to showcase the kind of cooperation that many voters say they want.

When it appeared that Ms. Simonds had won by one vote, several Republican delegates said in a joint statement: “We stand ready to establish a bipartisan framework under which the House can operate efficiently and effectively over the next two years.” 

For its part, the Democratic leadership says it sees an opportunity to “do something really special here.”

“I’m optimist[ic] that we can actually be a model for the nation,” Democratic Caucus chair Charniele Herring told station WTOP.

In happy holiday news, we have an update on the big-hearted 9-year-old we told you about yesterday. Employees at an Ohio Microsoft store heard about Mikah Frye’s generosity in giving up an Xbox to provide blankets for those who are homeless, just like his family once was. They surprised him with two bags of gifts, including the video game console.

Now, here are our five stories of the day showing community, generosity of spirit, and one generation helping another.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Today marked the passage of the largest tax overhaul since the 1980s – and the first legislative accomplishment of the Trump administration. One problem: Right now, 55 percent of Americans view the bill unfavorably. Republicans believe, if the economy improves, that will change rapidly.

Mike Eliason/Santa Barbara County Fire Department/AP
Firefighters work to root out and extinguish smoldering hot spots in Santa Barbara, Calif., on Dec. 19. The Thomas fire has grown to be the second largest in California's history.

Thousands of firefighters are deployed in California, fighting the second-largest blaze in state history, and they won't be getting Christmas off. Jessica Mendoza says that almost everyone she interviewed for our next story – whether or not they lost their homes – expressed their gratitude for the firefighters' untiring dedication and courage.

Briefing: ‘Section 702’ surveillance

The statute that allows the National Security Agency to collect electronic communications of foreign intelligence targets will expire unless reauthorized by Congress. Critics on both the right and left are calling for more privacy protections for US citizens inadvertently snared in the dragnet.

Stacey Knott
Christabel Afrane works among her Rhode Island Reds near Accra, Ghana. She bought the chickens and built their shed to prove she practices what she preaches to young women at the Kairos Ladies Network: that there is money and empowerment in agriculture in this West African nation, and when a woman succeeds, everyone benefits.

From a woman in Botswana who trains single moms in poultry management to a reality TV show in Tanzania, multiple efforts to boost Africa's female farmers aren't just about fairness, advocates say, but a belief that when a woman succeeds, everyone benefits.

Difference-maker

One of the most moving stories I've edited was a conversation between a middle school student and his mentor about why he wasn't coming to school. The boy had been shot as a first-grader, and was afraid to leave his mom. For his mentor, making the boy feel safe was Job No. 1. One caring person really can change the course of a child's life. (To read or hear the conversation, click here.)


The Monitor's View

Ramon Espinosa/AP/File
What was once the home of Arden Dragoni and his family lies in ruins after hurricane Maria hit Toa Baja, Puerto Rico. The family lost everything Sept. 20: clothes, household goods, and an old car, as well as the family's source of income – Mr. Dragoni's construction work.

It would be easy to paint a gloomy picture of Puerto Rico at year’s end.

Three months after hurricane Maria struck the island only 70 percent of electrical power generation has been restored. And that figure doesn’t take into account downed lines that keep even that electricity from reaching many homes.

New research by news media organizations into death records has shown that more than 1,000 fatalities can be attributed to the storm and its aftermath, a huge increase over the current official total of just 64. 

An international human rights organization, Refugees International, has criticized relief efforts by both the federal and Puerto Rican governments as showing “poor coordination and logistics on the ground” that have “seriously undermined the effectiveness of the aid delivery process.”

On Tuesday US Housing and Urban Development Secretary Ben Carson visited the island and struck a more positive note, assuring a group of local officials, “We are in this for the long haul.” Current emergency relief efforts will be followed up by HUD’s help in rebuilding homes, he said.

No doubt the logistics involved in aiding 3.4 million Americans living on an island far off the US mainland, where poverty and a suspect power grid already existed, are daunting.

But it’d be wrong to not point out some good news as well. Celebrities such as movie star Jennifer Lopez and Lin-Manuel Miranda, creator of the Broadway megahit “Hamilton,” have raised millions of dollars in relief aid and continue to make known the island’s need for help.

Church groups across the United States have responded with heartfelt relief efforts. In Lexington, Mass., for example, the Lexington Interfaith Clergy Association sponsored a drive called Lexington Unites for Puerto Rico that resulted in a 40-foot container with lanterns, clothes, water, food, and other supplies being delivered to residents of Cabo Rojo and Aguadilla, two towns hit hard by the hurricane. 

Local church members there helped unload and distribute the donations to those most in need. The US group expects to continue its efforts, becoming a long-term commitment.

All Americans ought to keep the people of Puerto Rico in mind as they go about their end-of-year charitable giving.

But they can do so not with a sense of pity but with a feeling of rejoicing in the resilience being expressed by Puerto Ricans. From all over the island have come reports of neighbors helping neighbors, sharing what they have and checking in on each other. Some have worked with whatever tools they could find to clear debris and open the roads; many are rebuilding their homes with whatever materials they can find, not waiting for outside aid. 

Writer Rebecca Solnit studies disasters and how people respond to them, from the 1906 San Francisco earthquake to the 2005 hurricane that flooded New Orleans. Too often, she says, the wrong stories are told. 

“[E]verything we’ve been told about disaster by trashy Hollywood disaster movies ..., everything [in] the news – is that human beings are fragile” and will quickly revert to me-first looting and even savagery.

Instead, “When all the ordinary divides and patterns are shattered, people step up to become their brothers’ keepers,” she says. “And that purposefulness and connectedness brings joy even amidst death, chaos, fear, and loss.”

As we acknowledge the ability of Puerto Ricans to help themselves we’ll find ourselves encouraged to join with them in our prayers and with charitable donations.


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.

Tax reform. It seems the very phrase is sometimes enough to spark controversy and fear. But as contributor Tony Lobl discovered when a proposed new tax in his country resulted in riots, there’s a God-given peace innate in everyone that leads to solutions and calm. As unlikely as it might seem when we’re observing images of upheaval, neither anger nor greed is any part of our nature as God’s children. Lack isn’t, either; Christ Jesus proved that our provision truly comes from God’s infinite love, and is therefore spiritual, consistent, and impeccably just. These ideas brought Mr. Lobl the peace he sought. And as it turned out, there was no repetition of that day’s violence. Even more unexpectedly, the proposed tax itself was ultimately superseded by one generally deemed much fairer. We can all turn to Spirit, God, as an endless fount of sufficiency, and find freedom from fear and uncertainty.


A message of love

Denis Balibouse/Reuters
A tourist crosses the Peak Walk bridge at Glacier 3000 in Les Diablerets, Switzerland, Dec. 20. The 350-foot suspension bridge opened in 2014 in the Bernese Alps. Engineers built the span to endure 120 m.p.h. winds.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for spending time with us today. Come back tomorrow. We'll have a story out of Honduras, where the Organization of American States is calling for a new vote, about what makes an election fair and how election observers can uphold integrity when they're being undermined.

More issues

2017
December
20
Wednesday

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