2021
April
05
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

April 05, 2021
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Clayton Collins
Director of Editorial Innovation

Hear the word “infrastructure” and – if you don’t go and find a new conversation partner – you might be treated to a lamentation about the state of U.S. roads and bridges, power grids, pipes, and digital networks.

The word evokes revitalization, expansion: fresh pavement and rebar to ease physical connections; broadband to ease virtual ones, serving rural students and digital workers who’ve fanned out to far-flung “Zoomtowns.”

The $2.3 trillion infrastructure plan that the Biden administration announced last week does lean into building. It’s ambitious, and has met with both praise and dismissal. Christa Case Bryant reports today on what’s perhaps unexpected about it, politically. 

Another element of the plan amounts to unbuilding. The creation of the interstate system meant the bisecting by blacktop of many communities of color, ripping their social fabric. Such moves have not gone unchallenged. Some populations seen as being “sacrificed” for others’ transportation needs have brought to bear civil rights legislation to keep new projects’ bulldozers at bay. Others have used grassy installations to patch imposed divides.

President Joe Biden’s proposal earmarks $20 billion for reconnecting such neighborhoods. That’s a kind of intentionality that Ben Crowther calls a good start. Mr. Crowther runs a program called “Highways to Boulevards” at the Congress for the New Urbanism, which welcomes what it sees as the start of a thought shift. 

“This is the first time that we’ve seen highway and transportation infrastructure considered through a social lens,” he told The Washington Post, “as well as a transportation lens.”


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

“Coup plot” drama is sparking global concern for a key Mideast kingdom of calm. Our reporter looks at how a royal family feud threatened to roil a region.

Eduardo Munoz/Reuters
A street is closed due to work in the road in Jersey City, New Jersey, March 31, 2021.

President Biden’s broad definition of infrastructure links it to the welfare of the people it serves. It’s also meeting with a rethink, by some Americans, of the role of government in their lives.

Denis Balibouse/Reuters
Noemie Bouchet, Arnaud Joal, and their newborn daughter, Bertille, talk by video with relatives unable to visit due to France's lockdown during the pandemic, in Geneva, April 14, 2020.

The moment in history, as well as an aspiring parent’s own time of life, is of course part of the calculus around when to start a family. We look at some personal responses to the current uncertainty.

The Explainer

Momentum toward clean energy continued even during an administration that didn’t prioritize it. Here’s a graphic-based look at where the U.S. stands – and how much more there is to do.

SOURCE:

Global Carbon Atlas; U.S. Energy Information Administration; Our World in Data based on Global Carbon Project, BP, Maddison, UNWPP; U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis

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Jacob Turcotte/Staff

Books

Robin Buckson/Detroit News/AP/File
Ron Teasley of Detroit, who played in the Negro Leagues in the United States, prepares to throw out the ceremonial first pitch at a charity baseball game at Hamtramck Stadium in Hamtramck, Michigan, in 2019.

Finally, the breaking of baseball’s color barrier is a more nuanced story than the one often shorthanded by the citing of the big-name pioneers. We found two great reads that hail some unsung contributors and fill in some important gaps.


The Monitor's View

Yousef Allan/The Royal Hashemite Court via AP, File
Jordan's King Abdullah II gives a speech to parliament in December.

Long a constitutional monarchy – more monarchy than constitutional – Jordan has been an island of convenient stability in the Middle East. That image was shattered over the weekend when the government of King Abdullah accused his half brother, former Crown Prince Hamzah, of “destabilizing Jordan’s security.” Prince Hamzah claims he is under house arrest. With suggestions of an attempted coup, the palace intrigue continues like a segment of “The Crown” or “Game of Thrones” or even an Oprah Winfrey interview of disaffected British royals. 

But the real spotlight should be on Jordanians. Their growing embrace of political equality has laid a broader groundwork for a challenge to hereditary rule in one of the Arab world’s many monarchies or emirates.

Jordan’s king, who can easily disband Parliament, has become more authoritarian as citizens increasingly demand basic rights and liberties. Last year, voter turnout was near a historic low for seats in a parliament described as merely decor. Hundreds of teachers were arrested for demanding better benefits. As more Jordanians connect by internet, they discover shared concerns. And as the historical demise of monarchies shows, they feel less like subjects and more like individuals capable of self-governance.

Prince Hamzah says he was not part of any conspiracy against the king. Rather, he said, “Even to criticize a small aspect of a policy leads to arrest and abuse by the security services.” That assessment of Jordan’s political climate is backed up by two global watchdogs, Freedom House and The Economist Intelligence Unit’s Democracy Index.

Monarchs, which claim authority by a belief that bloodlines bestow legitimacy, often feel threatened by their extended family. Issues over succession are often a source of instability. Jordan’s palace turmoil is a case in point. Yet these days such challenges to dynasties more often come from an awakening of people about the key concept of sovereignty – that each individual is worthy and democracies are best able to recognize that.

The era of personalization of power is giving way to one of power by persons who see each other as equals and demand institutions that are accountable to all. That recognition of shared equality is thicker than bloodlines.


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.

Innocence and goodness may not always seem like the most empowering of qualities. But actually, realizing our innate purity as God’s children opens the door to healing, redemption, and progress.


A message of love

Charlie Riedel/AP
A man kayaks at the end of a warm spring day on Shawnee Mission Lake, April 3, 2021, in Shawnee, Kansas.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for starting your week with us. Come back tomorrow. We’ll have a must-listen episode of “It’s About Time,” the fifth in a six-part podcast series. This one offers a remarkable look at time equity across gender, race, and ability.

More issues

2021
April
05
Monday

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