2019
January
08
Tuesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

January 08, 2019
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Here are three true stories that might just challenge your assumptions about the homeless and integrity.

A year ago, Elmer Alvarez found a $10,000 check. He didn’t try to cash it, he searched for its owner and found her. In gratitude, New Haven, Conn., real estate broker Roberta Hoskie put a roof over his head for seven months and put him through real estate school.

When Kevin Booth found $17,000 in cash in a paper bag outside a food bank in Sumner, Wash., he didn’t pocket the cash. The homeless man turned it in. Police investigated, found no evidence of a crime and no one claimed it. The money was given to the food bank last month. After Mr. Booth was praised by police for his honesty, a GoFundMe campaign collected more than $14,000 for him.

In Milan, Italy, a vlogger who stages “Candid Camera”-style ethics tests, dressed as a homeless man in a park. After people walked by, he ran after them saying he’d just found a €20 bill on the ground. Was it theirs? The final honesty score: 11 took the bill, only five said the bill wasn’t theirs.

Would you pass that integrity test? Is your honesty worth €20 or $10,000?

Mr. Alvarez, the man who returned the $10,000 check, recently told CBS News that just because a person is without a home, it doesn't mean they're without character.

Now to our five selected stories, including a look at justice for those affected by sex trafficking, at collaboration with Canada, and at the power of play in Mexico.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/Reuters
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo (left) holds a news conference with Jordanian Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi at the start of a Middle East tour in Amman, Jordan, Jan. 8.

Are abrupt changes in US foreign policy a sign of progress? We look at how presidential decrees are interpreted and what they mean to American relationships in the Middle East.

A deeper look

Lacy Atkins/The Tennessean/AP
Trafficking survivor Cyntoia Brown appeared in court during a clemency hearing at the Tennessee Prison for Women in Nashville in May. State Democratic lawmakers were among those urging Republican Gov. Bill Haslam to grant her clemency for killing the man who bought her for sex when she was 16; he did so in January 2019.

“Transformation should be accompanied by hope,” said Tennessee Gov. Bill Haslam when granting clemency to Cyntoia Brown. As attitudes about justice in sex trafficking cases change, more states are giving those survivors paths to a fresh start.

Our reporter asks: Who pays the price for a government shutdown? Often it’s the most economically vulnerable American workers.

We know that the US lets in fewer immigrants today. But this story explores how Americans are collaborating with Canadians to find new ways to help war refugees from the Middle East.

Whitney Eulich
Suri Amaizani Gonzalez Peña meets with a physical therapist at the Federico Gómez Children’s Hospital in Mexico City in August. Suri, 5, is part of a pilot program in public health centers and preschools across Mexico that ‘prescribes’ play to improve early childhood development.

This story has echoes of the US debate about the value of recess in schools. A pilot program in Mexico seeks the best balance between work and play when it comes to learning.


The Monitor's View

Reuters
Venezuela's President Nicolas Maduro attends a military parade in Caracas Dec. 17.

In a globalized world, the methods of measuring the moral legitimacy of today’s rulers are changing fast. A good case can be found in Venezuela. On Jan. 10, President Nicolás Maduro is set to begin a second term. After years of violating so many democratic norms with ruthless power grabs, here is how his reputation measures up:

Last week a dozen countries in Latin America announced they would not recognize him as the country’s leader because Mr. Maduro’s election last May was not “fair and transparent.” This week, a Supreme Court judge who was to be involved in the swearing-in ceremony fled to Miami, saying the election “was not free and competitive.” A new poll shows only 12 percent of Venezuelans are happy with how their “democracy” functions. Meanwhile, at least 3 million people have left the country, a result of mass poverty and repression.

Rigged elections cannot cover up for lost legitimacy, as Maduro has discovered. A society sets its own norms, which are quickly made known these days via social media and the internet. Most of the time, those norms are rooted in the wisdom of a deliberative democracy based on public reason, equality, transparency, and accountability. Maduro still holds power by dint of a clever security apparatus. But that shallow sort of power is ebbing as the values held dear by Venezuelans and their neighboring countries are revealed.

Legitimacy is not just a matter of perception.

Another window on the notion of moral legitimacy are recent events in Congo. The results of a Dec. 30 election have yet to be announced. Yet the United Nations, the African Union, the Roman Catholic Church, and many other institutions have already put the outgoing leader, Joseph Kabila, on notice to ensure an accurate count and a peaceful transfer of power.

The Catholic Church, which monitored the polls, says the opposition candidate, Martin Fayulu, won. Mr. Kabila cannot fool his people now by claiming his handpicked successor, Emmanuel Ramazani Shadary, was the winner. His shutdown of the internet during the vote count only further damaged his credibility. The United States is so worried about mass protests in Congo that it has deployed some 80 soldiers to neighboring Gabon.

The world’s despots, or would-be despots, are up against new and faster flows of information that can easily put one spotlight on their flaws and another on a society’s norms. With enough light, the norms of dignity and mutual respect eventually win.


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.

With news swirling about the ongoing US government shutdown and political turmoil in Gabon, Congo, and elsewhere, here’s an article on the role each of us can play in supporting just, wise, and compassionate government.


A message of love

Eurokinissi/AP
Snow covered parts of the ancient Acropolis in Athens Jan. 8. Schools in the Greek capital and many surrounding areas were to remain closed due to rare weather conditions after snowfall blanketed the city, with temperatures in some parts of the country plunging well below freezing.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris and Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us. Come back tomorrow: We’re working on a story about a global trend inspired by the Swedish pastime of plogging – that’s picking up litter as you jog.

More issues

2019
January
08
Tuesday

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