2020
December
16
Wednesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

December 16, 2020
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In early December, the Franklin County Sheriff's Office in Ottawa, Kansas, started to get calls from citizens concerned about a woman’s safety. 

“She’s walking along Highway 59,” they reported. Sometimes it was around 7 a.m. Sometimes the calls came in late afternoon. 

Deputies investigated and found Christine Wheeler of Princeton, Kansas, walking to work. Six miles to the Love’s Travel Stop off Exit 183 in Ottawa, Kansas. Then, six miles back. 

Moved with compassion, the deputies gave Ms. Wheeler a lift – more than once. They learned her story as they drove. It’s been a tough year. Car troubles. Some days, her sister or friends helped. But Ms. Wheeler was determined to feed and care for her two small boys. 

On Dec. 9, a few of the deputies decided to do something that wasn’t in the Franklin County sheriff’s manual: They quietly approached local Ottawa businesses and friends for donations.

Yesterday morning, a deputy asked Ms. Wheeler to step outside. “Oh gosh, I’m in trouble,” she thought. Then, a couple of the deputies showed her the gifts in the truck stop parking lot: a secondhand van complete with two child seats, auto insurance for a year, a grocery gift card, and $200, according to the Franklin County Sheriff's Office. 

“I can take them to the park!” she shouted with delight, referring to her twin boys. “I love it!”

In a small town in Kansas, the Christmas spirit went viral. It started with a few alert and caring neighbors. It gathered momentum, becoming a snowball of compassion and generosity. And, on a cold, gray December day, it enveloped a young family with joy.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Jonathan Ernst/Reuters
Supporters of President Donald Trump take part in a rally to protest the results of the election in Washington, Dec. 12, 2020.

In the face of electoral defeat, our reporter explores the ardent evangelical support for President Donald Trump. Historians liken it to a new “lost cause,” a post-Civil War mythology that Southerners remained more moral and more “Christian” than Northerners.

There’s not a lot of trust between two South Asian neighbors. So what’s behind Pakistan’s new accusations that India is sponsoring terrorists? Our reporter finds the answers lie in relationships with the U.S., China, and Afghanistan.

Patterns

Tracing global connections

Our columnist explores why Britain’s EU exit could mean a closer relationship with Washington and progress on fighting climate change, supporting NATO, and challenging China. 

Maxim Shemetov/Reuters
People stand in front of "Portrait of Leonid Brezhnev" by Soviet painter Yuri Korolyov during a press preview of the exhibition "NotForever. 1968-1985" at the State Tretyakov Gallery in Moscow, July 6, 2020.

Evictions from subsidized studios in Moscow are evidence of the end of Soviet-era, state-supported creativity. Our reporter finds a shift in values with the rise of Russian capitalism without private philanthropy for the arts.

Film

Lacey Terrell/Netflix
Haley Bennett (left), Glenn Close, and Owen Asztalos star in “Hillbilly Elegy.” The Netflix film is based on the memoir of J.D. Vance, who grew up in a poor Appalachian family and eventually earned a law degree at Yale University.

America’s rural poor are often overvilified or overromanticized. Our reporter looks at how accurately three recent films portray this slice of society and the paths out of poverty.


The Monitor's View

AP
A new Floating Solar Array at the Orlando (Florida) International Airport opened Dec. 10, 2020. The 19,350-square-foot island includes 360 solar panels.

Five years after the groundbreaking Paris climate accord, governments still find themselves scrambling to confront the crisis. At the recently concluded Climate Ambition Summit 2020,  United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres urged countries to declare themselves to be in a state of climate emergency. Nearly 40 already have.

But amid that alarm one part of the solution has been quietly underway. Companies that produce clean electricity (wind and solar power, which doesn’t result in the release of climate-warming carbon dioxide) have been growing at a spectacular rate, attracting enthusiastic investors that even include cautious pension funds. 

Far from being small feel-good boutique businesses with little energy to add to the grid, these companies are emerging as clean power giants. Their origins come from both the world of electric utilities, with little-recognized names like Enel, NextEra Energy, Iberdrola, and Orsted, as well as from oil and gas behemoths such as Britain’s BP, which see that the future of energy is in renewable sources. The clean energy companies aren’t tiny upstarts: The value of NextEra stock, for example, briefly surpassed that of ExxonMobil in value last fall.

In the United States, renewable electricity from wind, solar, and hydropower already makes up nearly 18% of the total output. That’s up from almost none 10 years ago. Globally, wind and solar produce about 9% of the electricity generated, a figure that should grow to 56% by 2050, according to BloombergNEF, which researches clean energy.

A dramatic drop in the cost of solar panels and wind turbines is making clean energy more and more cost competitive, even against abundant natural gas, and is restructuring the energy marketplace. Spending on renewable electrical power may for the first time exceed spending on oil and gas drilling, predicts Goldman Sachs. 

In his campaign, U.S. President-elect Joe Biden promised to look much more kindly on clean energy efforts. A newly formed renewable energy trade group, the American Clean Power Association, with some 800 member companies, officially debuts Jan. 1, and will try to hold him to his promises.

Around the world new records for the generation of clean energy are being set. In October, the Australian state of South Australia, with its 1.76 million people, briefly was powered by solar energy alone. Solar now consistently provides about half the state’s electrical needs. 

Because solar and wind provide variable levels of output (periods of lack of sunlight or wind), how to store electricity has presented a challenge. That’s why a recent report from Wood Mackenzie and the Energy Storage Association is so encouraging. It shows that some 476 megawatts of storage was deployed in the U.S. in the third quarter of 2020, an increase of 240% from the previous high, set in the second quarter.

Numbers and stats can overwhelm. But their message is clear: The conversion to a world powered by electricity from renewable, nonpolluting sources is underway. Clean energy  still faces challenges. But incubated by government incentives, private efforts have grown up, changing the way we light our lives and helping to slow the warming of our planet.


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.

Especially in times of uncertainty and unrest, it can seem as if we need to wait for some future time to find joy and harmony. But the healing Christ is always present to impart better health, fuller happiness, and deeper peace – right here and now.


A message of love

John Minchillo/AP
Myon Burrell (being hugged, center) is released from Minnesota Correctional Facility-Stillwater, on Dec. 15, 2020, in Bayport, Minnesota. The state's pardon board commuted the sentence of Mr. Burrell, who was sent to prison for life as a teen in a high-profile murder case that raised questions about the integrity of the criminal justice system. An Associated Press investigation earlier this year concluded that Mr. Burrell was convicted in 2003 despite a dearth of evidence and a flawed police investigation. 
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us. Come back tomorrow: We’ve got a commentary piece by a Black woman stopped by a white police officer. The outcome may lift your spirits.

More issues

2020
December
16
Wednesday

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