2019
April
02
Tuesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

April 02, 2019
Loading the player...

Voters in Slovakia elected a president who ran on civility and integrity. Royal Dutch Shell took a stand on the Paris climate pact. And to save sea turtles, a 7-year-old persuaded L.L. Bean to ditch their plastic straws.

But the story I couldn’t let pass today was about a robotics team in Minnesota. Their gift: Freedom for a 2-year-old boy.

A group of high schoolers accepted the challenge of building a low-cost wheelchair for a toddler with mobility issues. The result is way cooler than what you might imagine.

The Farmington, Minnesota, teenagers hacked an electric toy car, rewired it and rewrote the controller code, added a custom seat, and built a joystick with a 3D printer.

Little Cillian Jackson doesn’t walk – now he flies around the house.

His parents describe it as the gift of choice and independence. “When he gets in his car, he will consciously stop and look at a doorknob or a light switch or all of these things he’s never had time to explore,” says Tyler Jackson. And his mom, Krissy, tells CNN, “It really helped his discovery and curiosity.... Having the car has really given him the agency to make choices on his own.”

These teens love competing in robotics events. But they learned innovation is most rewarding when it’s about people. Freshman Alex Treakle says that when he saw Cillian try the car for the first time, “The joy on his face really made my entire year.” 

Now to our five selected stories, including a major shift in voter sentiment in Turkey, a new book about hope, and why scientists say cows have feelings, too.


You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.

Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

The Chat

Karen Norris/Staff

You’ve told us that Brexit is a little easier to digest as a conversation. We invite you to eavesdrop again on our two British correspondents as they banter over the latest developments. After you do, let us know what questions you still have.

Jacob Turcotte and Rebecca Asoulin/Staff, Photos by AP
Emrah Gurel/AP
People sitting by the Bosporus in Istanbul read newspapers April 1, a day after local elections were held around Turkey. The opposition dealt President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan a symbolic blow by gaining ground in key cities in the elections.

Politics often rewards confidence, and punishes overconfidence. As President Erdoğan campaigned around Turkey to bolster his party in municipal elections, his previously tried-and-true divisive rhetoric proved alienating.

Margo Reed/The Philadelphia Inquirer/AP
Rabbi Linda Holtzman (second from r.) attends an interfaith service held in honor and solidarity with the people killed in the deadly attacks on mosques in New Zealand at Masjidullah Mosque in Philadelphia, March 15. ‘Blueprint,’ a new book by Yale Prof. Nicholas Christakis, argues that the most enduring societies are those most rooted in love.

Our reporter talks to authors who are responding to political divisiveness, cruelty, and societal cynicism by publicly reinforcing the roles of love and hope.

Yves Herman/Reuters
Cats and goats live together at the association Les Petits Vieux, a home for dozens of older animals, including dogs, cats, pigs, and goats, in Chièvres, Belgium. Over the past quarter century, people's perceptions of animals have been shifting.

In the 20th century, animals were largely seen as tools to be exploited. But in recent decades a shift has occurred as scientists recognize cats, dogs, and even cows as sentient creatures.

At its best, the film industry offers moviegoers a reflection of themselves. Our reporter looks at why those once strikingly monochromatic reflections are starting to change.


The Monitor's View

Reuters
Ekrem Imamoglu, the Republican People's Party candidate for mayor of Istanbul, visits the mausoleum of modern Turkey's founder Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, in Ankara April 2.

So many democracies today are beset with the politics of fear and smear that it is refreshing when some elections suggest voters say “Enough!” and choose candidates who do not see opponents as evil.

Turkey’s nationwide municipal election on Sunday was one good example. Many voters rejected the populist rhetoric of hate and division employed by President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, who has been in power for 16 years. They gave control of five of Turkey’s six biggest cities to the main opposition parties. And this despite Mr. Erdoğan’s mass jailing of dissidents and his control over much of the media and the judiciary.

Voters in those cities had tired of the president’s labeling of opponents as either terrorist collaborators, anti-Muslim, or agents of the West. The truth was easily available on social media. In one video that went viral, a woman asks: “Why should the man governing Turkey make a distinction between the people? Are the [opposition] parties always evil and you [Mr. Erdoğan] are good?”

The voters’ desire for peaceful rather than polarizing politics was reflected in the victory speech of the winner of the mayoral race in the nation’s capital. “No one has lost,” Mansur Yavaş of the Republican People’s Party (CHP) told supporters. “Ankara has won.”

The new mood was best seen in the contest for mayor of Istanbul, the country’s economic powerhouse. After his victory, Ekrem İmamoğlu of the CHP urged Turks to be careful of their words. “Even a single person being slighted or offended will sadden me.” He promised to “heal the wounds that have been opened” by the harsh rhetoric about faith and ethnicity by Mr. Erdoğan’s ruling Justice and Development Party.

During his campaign, Mr. İmamoğlu spoke of the need for leadership in civility and an end to government relying on fear to suppress dissent. “If the mayor isn’t genial then the citizen isn’t either,” he said.

Another recent example of a country opting for candidates offering reconciliation was Saturday’s election in Slovakia. In a rebuke to the governing party’s anti-immigrant and populist tactics, a political newcomer and activist, Zuzana Čaputová, was elected president, the first woman to hold the post in the central European nation. In her victory speech, she said, “I am happy not just for the result, but mainly that it is possible not to succumb to populism, to tell the truth, to raise interest without aggressive vocabulary.”

“Maybe we thought that justice and fairness in politics were signs of weakness,” she told supporters. “Today, we see that they are actually our strengths. We thought that the barrier between conservative and liberal is unbreakable, but we managed to do it.”

Democracy’s great strength lies in its ability to draw people back from the extremes of rhetoric that rive a society rather than raise it up. In Turkey and Slovakia, voters have chosen that sort of reversal of hate. The bonds of civic life were too strong for incivility.


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 shares spiritual ideas that not only helped him gain the upper hand over a tendency to react aggressively, but also led to the healing of a hand he’d damaged in a moment of anger.


A message of love

Tsvangirayi Mukwazhi/AP
A girl fetches water at a camp for displaced survivors of cyclone Idai in Beira, Mozambique, Tuesday, April, 2, 2019. Access to clean water has become increasingly important in this cyclone-hit city, as Mozambican and international health workers race to contain a cholera outbreak in the region.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us. Come back tomorrow: We’re working on a story about homeless women in Boston who find peace and joy through singing.

More issues

2019
April
02
Tuesday

Give us your feedback

We want to hear, did we miss an angle we should have covered? Should we come back to this topic? Or just give us a rating for this story. We want to hear from you.