2021
March
29
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

March 29, 2021
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What do you do when your democracy is struggling?

That’s what the Monitor will be looking at in a series we’re starting – or restarting – today.

Senior Washington writer Peter Grier delved into elements of that question just two years ago in “Democracy Under Strain.” But the issue is ripe for another look. The 2020 U.S. presidential election and the attack on the U.S. Capitol Jan. 6 have sparked deep concerns about a pivotal moment in American democracy. Many Americans – and others around the globe – have wondered if the country’s leaders and “average” citizens alike can shape paths to progress, ones that require some sacrifice, some difficult conversations, some give and take from everyone. Which way will a country that has struggled, cataclysmically at times, to fulfill its founding promise, and has excluded many groups from full civic participation along the way, choose to go?

Peter says he found hope in the long view some sources took, offering perspective on earlier moments when the United States has been under threat. Hard times can force attention to serious problems, or bring them more directly into focus. They can remind people that democracy is a muscle that requires constant exercise.

And that led Peter to an analogy involving Teddie, a beagle he is caring for. A skilled escape artist, Teddie was quick to identify all the holes in his new household’s containment strategy. “So now we know where those are,” Peter says, “and we can fix them.”

So too with democracy.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Democracy under strain

Karen Norris/Staff

Four factors determine whether a democracy is under threat – and all four are present in the United States for the first time. This opener for our series looks at where the country goes from here.

A deeper look

Story Hinckley/The Christian Science Monitor
A pro-union sign outside Amazon's Bessemer warehouse features former Georgia gubernatorial candidate and voting rights activist Stacey Abrams as Rosie the Riveter. The unionization effort at this local plant has become the political epicenter of the labor movement as voting by workers ends on March 29.

In the South and in need of jobs, Bessemer, Alabama, may seem an unlikely place for a showdown between Amazon and union advocates. But its past history and present struggles have driven the moment – and attracted national attention.

Sunday Alamba/AP
Nigerian special forces board a vessel during a 2019 navy exercise in the Gulf of Guinea. The Nigerian government is spending $195 million on drones, fast patrol boats, and other equipment to combat piracy in its waters.

Piracy is soaring on the high seas off the coast of West Africa. Regional states are seeking to forestall outside intervention by stepping up local cooperation efforts.

Jacob Turcotte/Staff

Difference-maker

Courtesy of Anthill Creations
Pooja Rai, founder and CEO of Anthill Creations, tours a playground her nonprofit constructed in Bengaluru, India. Anthill partners with corporate sponsors and schools to build low-cost play spaces, using recycled materials.

When you start thinking about children’s play as a right, not a luxury, you look at open space – and materials – a little bit differently. That’s what spurred Pooja Rai to action. 


The Monitor's View

Reuters
Protesters in Yangon, Myanmar, hold posters last month reading "Amend the 2008 constitution" in support of constitutional reform.

To show that it alone holds sovereign power in Myanmar, the military has killed nearly 500 protesters since a coup two months ago. Many of the elected civilian politicians, such as Aung San Suu Kyi, are either in jail or in hiding. While the rain of bullets by soldiers has brought global condemnation, it also suggests the military brass knows its claim of authority is hollow. One reason: The legitimacy to rule in Myanmar could be rising elsewhere.

In recent days, members of the pro-democracy opposition have teamed up with some of Myanmar’s minority ethnic groups to write a new draft constitution, far from the eyes of military spies. This grassroots movement wants to replace the military-drafted 2008 constitution. While that document allowed some civilian rule since 2011, it kept much of the power in the army’s hands – including the ability to amend the document. When the military’s own party lost an election in November to Ms. Aung San Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy, it decided that even that limited charter had to go.

The Feb. 1 coup exposed the military’s false logic. To most people in Myanmar, power derives from the consent of the governed. That means the constitution itself must arise from individuals who want to protect their unalienable rights. Those rights already exist and can be neither created nor lost. The military believes it can simply kill away that idea.

Democracy advocates in Myanmar have learned from other countries that constitutions must be a bottom-up collective enterprise. In Belarus, for example, months of protests following a bogus election last August have led to a popular movement to rewrite the constitution as one way to oust the dictator, Alexander Lukashenko. In Chile, years of protests over economic inequality led to a referendum last year to initiate a civilian-led process of writing a new political framework and social compact. In Haiti, thousands of people took to the streets Sunday to defend their country’s constitution and reject an attempt by President Jovenel Moïse to amend it for his own purposes.

Many countries are trying to define sovereign power. They rely on unchanging, guiding principles such as the equality of all persons. The 17th-century philosopher John Locke said humanity must live by a “law of nature” based on each person’s ability to reason. That law, he added, originated by “one omnipotent, and infinitely wise maker.”

The real news in Myanmar is not the rising death toll but the rise of individuals reaffirming their ability to self-govern by writing a new social compact. Constitutions that liberate and endure are not just words. They are the result of people discovering the source of true sovereignty.


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.

When efforts to pay the bills come up short, where can we turn? Following Jesus’ instruction to seek the kingdom of God first and foremost is a solid starting point, as a man found when experiencing deep financial trouble.


A message of love

Emrah Gurel/AP
A full moon rises over the largest mosque in Asia Minor, the Çamlica Mosque in Istanbul, on March 28, 2021. In the U.S., March's full moon is sometimes called the "Worm Moon," named by Indigenous tribes in the South, where earthworm casts become visible as the ground thaws.

A look ahead

Thanks for starting your week with us! Tomorrow, we’ll take a look at the Derek Chauvin trial, which opened today in Minneapolis. Regardless of the verdict, racial justice advocates intend to keep pushing city officials to address policing problems.

More issues

2021
March
29
Monday

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