2019
April
11
Thursday

Monitor Daily Podcast

April 11, 2019
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Noelle Swan
Weekly Editor

This weekend, millions of Americans will likely be scrambling to meet one of the most universal civic obligations: filing taxes.

Despite grumbles over complex tax codes, more than 90% of Americans see the tax bill as their duty as citizens. That’s no surprise in a country that waged its independence, in part, in defiance of taxation without representation.

But what if the nation used tax season as an occasion to facilitate participation in another civic duty – voting? Call it “taxation with representation.”

In 2018, more than 250 million Americans submitted a tax return. That’s more than double the number of people who voted in the 2018 election.

Coupling voter registration with tax preparation could not only increase the size of the voter pool, but also make it more representative of the actual population, argues Vanessa Williamson, a governance studies fellow at the Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center.

An experimental study conducted in Dallas and Cleveland found that offering voter registration as a part of tax filing “more than doubled the likelihood of an unregistered person registering to vote,” reports Ms. Williamson.

Two-thirds of Americans agree that voter participation is a fundamental problem in the United States. Getting two-thirds of eligible voters to the polls would be a good start.

Today, we’re watching Sudan, where the military has arrested the longtime dictator Omar al-Bashir and taken control of the country. 

Now to our five stories for today, exploring Mexico’s shifting tolerance of migrants, perceptions of wealth and greed in the United States, and an alternative way for low-income residents in Spain to earn their keep.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Breakthroughs

Ideas that drive change

Science is often viewed as a body of facts. But in practice it is a constant process of discovery. One new discovery suggests that humanity’s evolutionary history may not have been as neat and as linear as we were taught.

Jose Torres/Reuters
A woman gets a picture taken by an official of the National Migration Institute in Acacoyagua, Mexico, on March 27. She and other migrants are registering for humanitarian visas to cross the country on their way to the United States.

In the White House’s vision, Mexico itself should be a “wall,” blocking migrants from reaching the U.S. border in the first place. The country may be growing more willing to do that – but for its own reasons.

Q&A

We asked readers to share what concerned them the most about the recent college admissions scandal. Sociologist Rachel Sherman responds to questions about the advantages and moral dilemmas of the wealthy.  

Juan Carlos Toro/Special to The Christian Science Monitor
When Mireya Rodríguez’s daughter realized their new apartment had a bathtub, ‘she almost lost it with happiness,’ Ms. Rodríguez says. The nonprofit Todos con Casa helped the family find an apartment below market rate in exchange for some repairs.

Why would a landlord take less money in rent? A nonprofit in Spain is matching owners who want to help with tenants who need a break but are willing to fix up a place.

Atlanta Historical Center
After relocation, the Atlanta History Center began a two-year restoration of the cyclorama painting 'The Battle of Atlanta.' This included restoring seven feet of sky and accurately repainting defeated soldiers’ uniforms gray. Some 128 plaster figures that are the focal point of the diorama also were restored.

The rescue of Atlanta’s Cyclorama has shown a desire to not only save history, but to examine how some of its themes – nationalism, valor, and equality – resonate today.


The Monitor's View

AP
Scientists revealed this first image of a black hole after assembling data gathered by a network of radio telescopes around the world.

It may look like only a fiery doughnut. Or perhaps the Great Eye of Sauron, the foreboding nucleus of J.R.R. Tolkien’s fantasy classic “Lord of the Rings.” But for the first time, humans have finally seen what was once merely predicted: a black hole.

A picture of one – or, more accurately, the bright swirling glow surrounding the phenomenon, which itself absorbs light near it – was revealed this week. It was taken in 2017 using eight telescopes sited around the world that together acted as one giant telescope peering into the center of a distant galaxy.

Scientists and other thinkers have long speculated that black holes are real and observable. More recently indirect evidence showed the existence of these impossibly large and mysterious aspects of the known universe. Until now, no way had been discovered to take a look: Scientists compared the task to looking up from Earth and trying to spot an orange on the moon.

“We have seen what we thought was unseeable,” says Shep Doeleman, an astronomer at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, who headed the project. The image will now join that of “Earthrise,” taken in 1968 from the moon, as an iconic image that marks a new chapter in the understanding of space.

The success in capturing this illusive image represents a tremendous accomplishment for scientific curiosity, insight, and cooperation. Many people contributed but among the noteworthy was a young woman, Katie Bouman, who was a graduate student in computer science and led the creation of an algorithm that helped capture the image. 

The announcement came almost exactly a century after Sir Arthur Eddington used observations of a solar eclipse to show that light bends around dense objects, just as Albert Einstein’s general theory of relativity predicted. The image of the edges of a black hole, known as the event horizon, also seems to confirm Einstein’s calculations.

As is often the case in science, the image will lead to more questions. Bigger mysteries remain: How were black holes formed? What is it like inside one? What happens to light and matter sucked into these collapsed remnants of former stars? Black holes also distort time in ways that people not named Stephen Hawking find hard to comprehend. Ancient assumptions that the universe operates in a linear or clockwork way are bent out of shape.

Black holes “raise some of the most complex questions about the nature of space and time, and ultimately of our existence,” says Ziri Younsi of University College London, who worked on the project.

And that’s why they are worth studying. The next impossible task will be to peek inside these vast objects to reveal more answers – and ask the difficult questions about the nature of matter, time, and space. Never before has the finite hinted so strongly at the infinite.


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 explores how knowing our true identity as fundamentally spiritual helps us see beyond limitations, rise above fears, and experience our relation to God in a very real way.


A message of love

Feline Lim/Reuters
The 130-foot-high Rain Vortex, which is the world’s tallest indoor waterfall, is seen from inside Jewel Changi Airport in Singapore April 11. The terraced garden, with 1,400 trees, and the waterfall are at the heart of the new 10-story Jewel. The top floor, called Canopy Park, features bouncing and walking nets, a 165-foot sky bridge, two mazes, and a giant slide. It opens officially next week.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris and Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us today. Come back tomorrow when Laurent Belsie takes readers back to Nebraska, where a network of strangers came together to rescue animals stranded by floodwaters.

More issues

2019
April
11
Thursday

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