2019
August
27
Tuesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

August 27, 2019
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In today’s edition, our five hand-picked stories explore democracy (the Senate filibuster), stewardship (the Amazon), identity (education in Turkey), progress (for U.S. automakers), and hope (in a Seattle cafe).

But first, a helping hand can make all the difference. Especially to another 8-year-old struggling on the first day of school.

Courtney Moore of Wichita, Kansas, posted a photo on Facebook of her son, Christian, gently holding another boy’s hand: “I’m so proud of my son, he seen a kid balled up into a corner crying, so he went to console him, grabbed his hand and walked him inside of the school!”

Christian’s act of generosity is going viral. April Crites replied, “Tell your son I said thank you so very much! That little boy he helped is my son and is autistic, I worry every day that he’s going to get bullied for being different and your son just absolutely warmed my heart. If there were more children like him I wouldn’t worry about such things.”

You might ask why report on one boy’s kindness when there are more “important” events in the world today. Perhaps. But when political leaders or CEOs make similar gestures, we call it diplomacy, or disaster relief, or community relations. 

In second grade, as in diplomatic circles, acts of compassion may cost you social capital. Your friends may scoff. But such acts signal that you’ve got enough courage to do them anyway.

What could be a more profound early lesson? Kindness dispels fear. It ends tears. It says, you’re not alone. 

Christian Moore, well done.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

The filibuster was once a democratic tool to give voice to the government minority. But it’s not working that way anymore. 

Ueslei Marcelino/Reuters
Smoke rises over a deforested plot of the Amazon jungle in Porto Velho, Rondonia State, Brazil, August 24, 2019. Satellites have detected more than 40,000 fires in the Amazon since January, about a 35% increase over the average of the past eight years.

Inside the Amazon, a wealth of services for the whole planet

It can be easy to shrug off destruction of distant lands as someone else’s problem. But when it comes to the Amazon rainforest, what happens there touches us all.

Amanda Paulson and Jacob Turcotte/Staff
Scott Peterson/Getty Images/The Christian Science Monitor
History teacher Ayşe Alan, dean of the prestigious Koç School on the eastern outskirts of Istanbul, with student sculptures in the school's cafeteria, June 17, 2019. Educators are grappling with reforms set down by the ruling, Islam-leaning Justice and Development Party.

Turkey’s teachers are struggling with a new classroom curriculum that reflects the crosscurrents of secular and religious values shaping the society.

The Explainer

You might assume that all CEOs want deregulation. But our reporter looks at why certainty and consistency may be bigger priorities. 

Difference-maker

Courtesy of John Jensen/Recovery Café
Recovery Café's founding director, K. Killian Noe (right), shares a moment with a member, Roxy.

This story inspired me. It’s about the transformational power of a place where love, hope, and trust are served daily. 


The Monitor's View

It could be the world’s first hostile feud between big nations over climate change.

In recent days, as fires have raged across the Amazon to clear away trees, France and Brazil have resorted to harsh words or threats over the future of the vast rainforest. Their clash, while far short of war, is long on lessons about the meaning of sovereignty that lies at the heart of many climate debates.

To France, protection of the Amazon is a sovereign right for all humanity. About twice the area of France, the forest is an important carbon sink and temperature regulator for a warming atmosphere. Yet this year, deforestation of the Amazon has escalated under a new nationalist president, Jair Bolsonaro.

“The Amazon is burning and this is an issue that concerns the entire world,” said French President Emmanuel Macron last Thursday. And then he used a word as loaded as genocide. “We have a real ecocide that is developing everywhere in the Amazon,” he said.

To many environmentalists, “ecocide” is enough of a legal trigger to send a “green-helmeted brigade” from the United Nations to douse the fires – without Brazil’s approval. For now, Mr. Macron has only threatened to block a negotiated trade treaty between the European Union and a South American bloc of nations that includes Brazil as its biggest member.

In response to the pressure, Mr. Bolsonaro told a European journalist, “The Amazon is ours, not yours.” He claimed Brazil, as a sovereign state, has the sole right to develop the Amazon as it pleases and lift up the more than 20 million people who live in it, most of them poor.

Last Friday, however, Mr. Bolsonaro’s concept of sovereignty was broadened. Under pressure from large Brazilian farmers who rely on the rest of the world to buy their beef and soybeans, he sent the  military to drop water on the burning forests. He also said he would resume enforcement of existing environmental laws that, before his presidency, had helped reduce deforestation.

Then over the weekend, France was able to persuade other major Western powers to offer Brazil $22 million to help fight the fires. But Mr. Bolsonaro saw the gesture as an imperialist plot. “The fire that burns the strongest is that of our own sovereignty over the Amazon,” he wrote on Twitter.

It is hard to say how this feud will play out. The rainy season is coming to Brazil and the fires could end, for a while. Both sides need a deeper dialogue about who is really sovereign when it comes to climate change. Mr. Macron’s view is that sovereignty lives first with the individual, and thus requires that nation-states help those in extreme jeopardy from climate change, even in other countries. Brazil’s view is that sovereignty lies first with the state and only it decides for the individuals under its control.

One way around this clash is already happening in Brazil. To prevent overexploitation of the Amazon, previous governments have signed protective treaties with other nations that control parts of the Amazon. They have designated areas for sustainable use of the Amazon’s resources while protecting the bulk of the forests. They have started to ensure land tenure for small farmers and promote the traditional agricultural methods of Amazonian Indians. They also welcomed more than $1 billion in foreign aid aimed at developing industries that restore the forests while creating jobs. 

Such steps honor both national and individual sovereignty.

Differences over concepts of sovereignty need not rise to the level of hard words and actions. Both Brazil and France can find ways to uplift the local people of the Amazon so they do not need to cut the forests. Secure in their own sovereignty, the local people can then ensure Brazil’s sovereignty while also helping protect the planet. National sovereignty is not compromised when nations work together to the benefit of all.


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.

No one is beyond the transforming power of divine Love. For one man caught in the web of drug addiction, the news that he was God’s loved child and wasn’t condemned to an unhappy ending turned his life around.


A message of love

Henning Bagger/Ritzau Scanpix/AP
Peter Wenzel trains Molina, a young condor, in the Eagle Reserve in Bindslev, Denmark, Aug. 27, 2019. Molina came to the Eagle Reserve in November and has since been trained every day by Mr. Wenzel, whom Molina considers his parent. As an adult, the condor will have a wingspan of 3.5 meters and weigh 15 kilograms, making it the world’s largest bird of prey.
( 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 the potential reach of the $572 million decision against Johnson & Johnson for its role in the opioid crisis. 

More issues

2019
August
27
Tuesday

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