2018
March
08
Thursday

Monitor Daily Podcast

March 08, 2018
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Yvonne Zipp
Features Editor

If students at J.J. Hill Montessori Magnet School in Minnesota couldn’t afford lunch, they knew they could go to “Mr. Phil.” Philando Castile would quietly pay out of his own pocket. 

Now, at least 1,788 schoolchildren have had their lunch debt erased as a way to honor the legacy of Castile, who was killed by police during a traffic stop in 2016. Philando Feeds the Kids has paid the debt for every student enrolled in the National School Lunch Program in St. Paul’s 56 schools, including J.J. Hill.

Children can’t focus on learning if they’re hungry. And school nutrition workers like Castile are the ones who most often see which kids are going without.

Generous people in other states like Massachusetts and Pennsylvania also have raised money to make sure the school lunch tray doesn’t come with a side of shame. And our EqualEd reporters wrote about New Mexico’s Hunger-Free Bill of Rights, which ensured that no child would be publicly embarrassed or go without food. 

Originally, the Minnesota fundraiser was designed to help J.J. Hill’s students, Pamela Fergus, an instructor who started it last fall with her psychology class at St. Paul's Metropolitan State University, told The New York Times. Now organizers have a new goal: Pay the cafeteria debt of every child in Minnesota.

The reasoning is simple: “He loved those kids,” Ms. Fergus says.

Now, here are our five stories of the day looking at unexpected optimism around one of the world's tensest relationships, the ways that global challenges can reverberate locally, and a new effort to show people wonders that need protecting.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

The hollowing out of the American political middle has had many consequences. One of the most notable might be the decline of legislation and the rise of lawsuits. “It’s very difficult to bargain when the center is so underpopulated,” political scientist John Pitney says. “The one thing you can say for sure is there’s going to be lots of litigation, lots of lawsuits, and lots of billable hours.”

Why a (very) cautious optimism has emerged on North Korea

Two months ago, President Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong-un were dueling on Twitter as a queasy world watched. Today, denuclearization may be on the table. How did we get here?

Michael Holtz, Molly Jackson, Jacob Turcotte/Staff; Photos: AP

The Olympic ban made Russian athletes’ victories in Pyeongchang that much more dramatic for the Russian public. But the underlying issues over doping remain unresolved with fewer than 100 days until Russia hosts the 2018 World Cup.

Afolabi Sotunde/Reuters
A church choir in Makurdi, Nigeria, sings at a Jan. 11 funeral mass for some of those killed in a clash between semi-nomadic cattle herders and members of a farming community.

When we talk about climate change’s impact, the emphasis is often on what we can see and touch: rising seas, drier fields. But one of its urgent consequences often goes unseen. As competition for resources heats up, so can the sense of "us" and "them" – causing people to forget that this is a fight we’re all in together.

Courtesy of Alex Hofford
A diver appears in a scene from the film 'Blue,' which is scheduled to appear in the International Ocean Film Festival in San Francisco March 8-11. The festival’s mission is to inspire audiences 'to appreciate and care for the ocean.'

How do you make people care about a world they may never see? Like Jacques Cousteau before them, the organizers of the International Ocean Film Festival are counting on the power of documentaries to take you there.


The Monitor's View

Reuters
Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras addresses lawmakers in Athens before a Feb. 22 vote on setting up a special committee which will probe the role of ten politicians in a case which involves alleged bribery by Swiss drugmaker Novartis.

The family of 28 nations known as the European Union has had a rough decade of near divorces. The latest blow was Italy’s election last Sunday. The anti-EU parties won. In other parts of Europe, similar parties have advanced. Britain wants out of the Continent-fusing project altogether.

But then there is Greece, which may serve as a model of a prodigal nation.

In 2009, the country of 11 million nearly brought down the eurozone and came close to exiting the EU after admitting it had lied about the size of its deficit (which was five times above the EU guideline). The official dishonesty, coupled with deep-seated corruption, spooked foreign lenders and defied core EU values of integrity in governance.

With the Greek economy near collapse, however, the EU and other creditors decided it was worth throwing Athens a financial lifeline – hefty loans with conditions of austerity and other reforms.

The cash-for-rescue effort seems to be working for now. Greece made a critical decision in 2015 to implement the EU-mandated reforms. It has improved government openness and transparency on budgeting, procurement, and trade – all key areas in fighting corruption.

Here’s the clincher: In 2018, Greece’s economy is expected to grow faster than that of the EU as a whole. In addition, the government has been running a fiscal surplus instead of the big deficits of a decade ago. And unemployment has fallen from 30 percent to less than 20 percent in the past five years.

On corruption, however, the leftist government of Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras still has far to go in ensuring a virtuous circle of honesty and openness. Last month, two of its ministers had to resign after accepting a housing subsidy. And the Council of Europe told Greece this month that it has fulfilled only six of 19 recommendations aimed at rooting out corruption. Some of the government’s new rules require lawmakers to disclose gifts and reveal potential conflicts of interest.

One sign of hope is that Greece is currently in a vigorous public debate about the alleged bribery of 10 top politicians by Swiss drugmaker Novartis. And polls show Greeks are more demanding of integrity in their elected leaders.

This mood in Greece reflects a global trend. “More and more citizens from a growing number of countries ... have presently come to demand that their governments deliver good governance,” writes Alina Mungiu-Pippidi of the European Research Center for Anti-Corruption and State-Building in a new book.

The EU and other official lenders are still holding Greece to account. With further reform, it might have enough financial credibility by the end of the year to return to private markets for money. Instead of a divorce from the EU, it has been making up. The key was a new embrace of integrity.


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.

In the spirit of International Women’s Day, today’s contributor shares an experience that points to how each individual can #PressforProgress by taking a stand for the right of men and women everywhere to express strength, goodness, and purity.


A message of love

Sakchai Lalit/AP
Polo players behind mahouts sit astride elephants as they play during the King’s Cup Elephant Polo tournament in Bangkok, Thailand, March 8. The annual charity event raises funds for projects that better the lives of Thailand's wild and domesticated elephant populations.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks so much for spending time with us today. Come back tomorrow. We’ll have a story looking at why all those stories this week about the Texas primary presaging a blue wave for Democrats in November elections might be overlooking a few key things about the Lone Star State.

First, here’s a bonus story for tonight: President Trump has just signed off on new tariffs, introducing a temporary exemption for Canada and Mexico. Read our economy writer's briefing here.

More issues

2018
March
08
Thursday

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