2018
January
03
Wednesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

January 03, 2018
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For the first time in two years, North and South Korea have agreed to talk to each other.

What prompted the sudden détente? The 2018 Winter Olympics next month.

To be sure, North Korea could be blackmailing the South: Let our team participate or we’ll disrupt your big event with a missile test – or worse. Or Kim Jong-un may simply be attempting to drive a wedge between Seoul and Washington.

The optimistic view is that North Korea, having achieved its goal of perceived greater security by building a nuclear weapon, is now looking for a path to de-escalate tensions. Time may reveal what lies behind this move.

But here’s what we find intriguing: The Olympics provided sports-loving Mr. Kim the opportunity for this small break in his pattern of pugnaciousness.

A core Olympic ideal is to bring out the best in mankind: Courage, teamwork, determination, and commitment are on display in the arenas. The Olympic movement’s stated aim is “to contribute to building a peaceful and better world ... which requires mutual understanding with a spirit of friendship, solidarity and fair play.”

If the fact of the event creates an opening for North-South dialogue, then at the very least the Olympics are living up to its ideals.

Now our selection of five stories that include paths to progress against crime, for better low-income graduation rates, and for less food waste.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Manuel Balce Ceneta/AP
Amanda Bayer (l.) and Marisol Maqueda display posters at a rally outside the White House in December. Ms. Maqueda’s daughter is a beneficiary of the Obama-era Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals policy, which President Trump is ending unless Congress acts.

You can make a case that the prospects for US bipartisan legislation passing could improve in 2018. But honestly, it’s not a strong one. We look at the possible paths to progress in Congress.

Our reporter steps back from the immediate event – the United States withholding aid from Pakistan – to look at the changing nature of South Asia relationships. Help from China is making Pakistan feel a bit more independent of the US, while Washington courts India as a regional ally.

Points of Progress

What's going right

It’s a common perception that crime in America is rising. But the facts tell a different story. New York City offers a remarkable example of the way a major US city has continued to improve safety and security.

SOURCE:

FBI Uniform Crime Reporting, New York Civil Liberties Union, New York City Police Department

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Jacob Turcotte/Staff

Difference-maker

Courtesy of Nick Chiles/The Hechinger Report
High school junior Ismelda Mejia chats with Giovanni Luke, another student in the Legal Outreach program in New York. Ismelda, who has her sights set on Brown University, credits the program with pushing her to excel.

Our editors look not just for good ideas, but for ideas with credible paths to progress. This next story qualifies: It’s about an inspiring program with a decades-long record of preparing low-income students to attend and graduate from the best colleges in the US.

If you agree that one of the paths to a better world is to feed the hungry, check out what France is doing. It’s now No. 1 in the world when it comes to reducing wasted food, and setting a new standard of efficiency.


The Monitor's View

Michael Ciaglo/Houston Chronicle via AP
A homeless man wraps himself in blankets donated by the charity Love in Action in Houston Jan. 2, as temperatures dipped into the 30s. Snow flurries fell as far south as Austin and Abilene, Texas.

Melinda Bowyer gives free rides to homeless people to get them to the warmth of a shelter.

For some time Ms. Bowyer, known locally as the “Uber Queen” of Doylestown, Pa., has been giving her tips to homeless people she encounters. 

But during this winter’s lingering, bitter cold spell in much of the United States she now has turned off her Uber app and lets the homeless ride free of charge. Helping them “is the best feeling in the whole, entire world,” she told reporters from the NBC TV affiliate in Philadelphia. “You wouldn’t believe the amount of homeless people there are.”

In cities across the country individuals, churches, and charities are stepping in to help sometimes overwhelmed local governments provide a warm place for homeless people to stay as night after night of unseasonably frigid temperatures wears on. 

Many shelters are asking for extra support as they work to meet an increased need, from donations of food, hats, scarves, and gloves to personal hygiene items. Some are looking for extra volunteers to handle the influx of shelter seekers. 

“It’s something I don’t understand. We’re the richest country in the world, and yet we have to face situations such as these,” the Rev. Alfred Harrison at the Fellowship in Christ Christian Center in Charlotte, N.C., told the local ABC TV affiliate. Nighttime temperatures in his area have been dropping to well below freezing.

As Americans step up to meet this emergency through their actions and prayers they are being made more aware of the world of the homeless, a world too often seen through a distorted lens of oversimplification or stereotypes. 

One’s image of a homeless person, for example, may be that of an older man who’s facing mental or substance abuse challenges.

But a new study from the University of Chicago, for example, paints a different picture. It shows that 1 in 10 young adults (18- to 25-year-olds) in the US has experienced homelessness, as has 1 in 30 adolescents. Nearly 660,000 adolescents and 3.5 million young adults have been homeless within the past year alone, the study found.

Many of the young adults are well educated, some with college degrees. And they come from both rural and urban areas. 

As might be expected some youths and young adults are fleeing unstable or difficult home situations. But others are having a hard time just finding work and a place to live in a time of rising housing costs. 

The findings “are staggering. They are alarming, but they’re not necessarily surprising,” notes one of the researchers. “Homelessness is young. It’s more common than people expect, and it’s largely hidden.”

Those trying to alleviate long-term homelessness acknowledge it is a multifaceted challenge. Which programs are most effective at getting people off the streets and into stable housing? What are the underlying causes and how can they be addressed? Workers at shelters need to assess each case individually. Could a program that is effective somewhere else work at their shelter? How can government and private efforts blend more closely to be even more helpful?

The same deep-seated instincts that are causing Americans to help one another during this cold spell can also be applied to defeat the pernicious and tenacious challenge of homelessness year round.


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.

Against the backdrop of the daily news that clamors for attention are hardworking, plainclothes folks like you and me. And in our day-to-day lives, challenges come up that threaten to delay or halt our work, making us feel stuck. Is there an alternative to discouragement? There was for the prophet Nehemiah in the Bible, who faced harassment, opposition, ridicule, and deception. But his faith in good, in the one God, or Mind, and his obedience to God’s will gave him the strength and wisdom to persist – and to succeed. Through the understanding of God’s all-power, any roadblocks or opposition to progress can be overcome. Our Father in heaven has given all of us the spiritual strength and dominion to succeed and prosper in our work. As we recognize and yield to God’s law of good, the way will clear, because nothing can resist God, good, and win.


A message of love

Stephen B. Morton/AP
A nearly frozen fountain in historical Forsyth Park, in Savannah, Georgia, keeps flowing Jan. 3 despite freezing temperatures.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us. Come back tomorrow: We are working on a story out of Senegal, where Muslim clerics are playing a pivotal role in introducing birth control to men and women.

More issues

2018
January
03
Wednesday

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