2018
August
23
Thursday

Monitor Daily Podcast

August 23, 2018
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Noelle Swan
Weekly Editor

“Immigrants are not like puppies.”

That may seem like an odd statement, but to Marion Davis, it’s a sentiment worth repeating.

To be sure, there are complex policy questions around how governments handle both legal and illegal immigration that need to be hashed out. But too often the conversation revolves around stereotypical views of immigrants as either opportunistic drains on society or helpless individuals deserving of pity, says Ms. Davis, communications director for the Massachusetts Immigrant and Refugee Advocacy Coalition.

There’s a tendency, she says, to talk about the plight of immigrants and refugees in the same tone that singer Sarah McLachlan uses to advocate for shelter animals.

That likely comes from a place of compassion, adds community organizer Damaris Velasquez, but what newcomers to the United States really need is to be viewed as equals.

Davis and Ms. Velasquez recently sat down with Monitor staffers to share their perspectives on the portrayal of immigrants and refugees in American media.

What gets lost in conversations around illegal immigration, Velasquez and Davis say, is the number of legal immigrants who have become thriving members of our communities.

Amid policy discussions and debates, it is important to remember that “we were all created equally,” says Velasquez. “We are all the same.”

Now onto our five stories for today.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Cleaning up corruption can be a powerful campaign platform, and recent news has given Democrats an opening. Still, history shows it isn’t always a top concern for voters – and can even backfire.

Adel Hana/AP/File
Palestinian girls fly kites during an event at the UNRWA Rimal Girls Preparatory school in Gaza City. The UN agency serves some 5 million Palestinians across the Middle East – including refugees displaced by the war surrounding Israel's establishment in 1948 and their descendants. Palestinian officials have denounced reported US attempts to undercut UNRWA.

Efforts to resolve the Israeli-Palestinian dispute have been stymied so long that the Trump philosophy of “disruption” would seem to be a perfect fit. But the complexity and emotion of the Palestinian refugee issue may require a step further.

Turkey's economic malaise, a product of mismanagement, could worsen if investors continue to see political leaders subscribe to conspiracy theories rather than take responsibility.

Robots are often considered a threat to workers. But for dairy farmers, robots can relieve a labor shortage and help younger people consider staying on the farm by lifting the no-days-off pressure. 

Courtesy of Puro Surf
Marcelo Castellanos, who provided the inspiration for Puro Surf Hotel and Performance Academy, teaches a boy to surf.

El Salvador has been gaining a bigger and bigger reputation for violence. But in one part of the country, Marcelo Castellanos has been central to an innovative effort to counter the challenges.


The Monitor's View

AP Photo
A woman carrying a baby crosses into Colombia from Venezuela through Simon Bolivar international bridge in San Antonio del Tachira, Venezuela, Aug. 3.

On an international scale, here is what generosity looks like – and what it can potentially do.

Just before he stepped down as Colombia’s president on Aug. 7, Juan Manuel Santos granted temporary residency permits to 440,000 refugees from Venezuela, doubling the number given in recent years. It was an act of solidarity with innocent people fleeing starvation, violence, and hyperinflation in their country. Since 2015, Colombia has been the largest receiver of Venezuelan refugees – more than 1 million.

The move sparked Mark Green, the head of foreign aid for the United States, to tweet: “The world owes Colombia a debt of gratitude for welcoming Venezuelans fleeing [the] Maduro regime.” Similar statements have come from United Nations officials. A few days later, the US, which itself is the largest humanitarian donor to the refugee crisis, decided to send a Navy hospital ship to Colombia to provide medical aid to the Venezuelans.

Yet the biggest impact of Colombia’s open-arms policy may be in Venezuela, where an estimated 7 to 12 percent of the population has so far left the country, a migration approaching the flows in Syria.

Perhaps embarrassed that neighboring Colombia was widening its welcome mat, President Nicolás Maduro announced Aug. 17 that he would try to solve the country’s economic crisis. He introduced a new currency that knocked five zeros off the value of the old one, hoping to curb an annual inflation rate estimated at 1 million percent. And he also promised to raise the minimum wage – by 34 times.

Venezuela used to be Latin America’s richest country. It also holds the world’s largest known petroleum reserves. Yet years of mismanagement, corruption, and clampdowns on dissent have left it a failed state. The country’s decline, especially in its democracy, really began to impact its neighbors this year with the flow of refugees. “The capacity of the region is overwhelmed,” says one UN official. Ecuador and Peru have started to restrict the entry of Venezuelans. Last week, Brazil sent its military to the border to quell local violence against the refugees.

Colombia’s generous response could be a result of the lessons it learned during its own crisis. During a half-century of civil war that ended in 2016, millions of Colombians were displaced. Part of the peace process includes generous compensation to the war’s victims. Helping Venezuelans may now seem like a natural extension of the compassion shown to its own people.

Efforts to help the refugees can be one way to encourage stronger international action toward restoring democracy in Venezuela. In particular, Colombia’s generosity will create hope for Venezuelans that they are not alone. It lays a moral groundwork for an eventual solution to the biggest crisis in Latin America.


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.

Today’s contributor was completely and permanently healed of recurring allergies as she learned more about the beauty and grace of God and His creation.

( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris and Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for spending time with us today. Come back tomorrow when we'll look at how some coastal communities in Texas are faring, one year after hurricane Harvey.

More issues

2018
August
23
Thursday

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