2021
June
03
Thursday

Monitor Daily Podcast

June 03, 2021
Loading the player...
Mark Sappenfield
Senior global correspondent

Thirty years ago, author James Davison Hunter looked over American politics with foreboding. In his book “Culture Wars,” he lamented how politics was being taken over by cultural issues on which compromise was impossible. Back then, it was mostly just abortion. Today, he told Politico in a recent interview, it’s so much more, too: “Part of our problem is that we have politicized everything.”

The “whole point of civil society,” Professor Hunter said, is to provide the mediation that prevents violence. The Constitution provides the framework, but it depends on citizens to do the work. But what happens when they don’t – when they instead use politics as a tool to attempt to not only defeat their opponents but also impose their will on them? “Part of what’s troubling is that I’m beginning to see signs of the justification for violence on both sides,” he said.

Much has been said about the threats to American democracy, but for Professor Hunter, this expansion of the culture wars is one of the deepest drivers. By his reckoning, the only peaceful way out is to find a way to break their hold. “Talk through the conflicts,” he said. “And whatever you do, don’t just simply impose your view on anyone else. You have to talk them through.”

“What is going to underwrite liberal democracy in the 21st century?” he asked. That is the question America must find a fresh answer to, together.


You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.

Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

A deeper look

Alfredo Sosa/Staff
Farmers Andrew Bowman (right) and brother-in-law Matt Hulsizer, partners in an 1,800-acre soybean and corn farm, cringe at cries of climate action. But they are proponents of a profitable wind energy business in Illinois' Knox County. Mr. Bowman helped negotiate a contract with Orion Energy for a 300-megawatt wind farm that is bringing in extra money for farmers and tax revenues for roads and schools in the county.

Progress within the clean energy sector may be pushing the debate about climate change toward irrelevance. Across the Midwest – from wind farms to R&D labs – farmers are finding climate action is good business. 

Patterns

Tracing global connections

At two meetings with U.S. allies this month, President Biden will try to thrash out a common policy on Russia, before his summit with Vladimir Putin in Geneva. It won’t be easy.

Populists worldwide have been criticized for their handling of the pandemic. But some, like Mexico’s president, keep strong support nonetheless. What does he symbolize for his supporters?

Difference-maker

Courtesy of Margaret Jankowski
Students in a 2013 sewing class test their new skills on a suite of machines donated by The Sewing Machine Project to a community center in New Orleans. So far, the project has shipped 3,350 machines to places in the U.S. and abroad.

Earning a living does more than put food on the table and money in the bank. It builds pride and hope. The Sewing Machine Project helps people do both.

Television

Atsushi Nishijima/Amazon Studios
Zsane Jhe, Thuso Mbedu, and Aubriana Davis star in "The Underground Railroad," adapted from the Pulitzer Prize-winning novel by Colson Whitehead.

Popular culture often stokes discussions about race and history. In “The Underground Railroad,” a TV adaptation of a prize-winning novel, the question the main character faces, a Monitor reviewer says, is also one for today: Where can Black people be free? 


The Monitor's View

United Arab List Raam/REUTERS
Yesh Atid party leader Yair Lapid (left), Yamina party leader Naftali Bennett (middle), and United Arab List party leader Mansour Abbas sit together in Tel Aviv, Israel, June 2.

Democracies around the world can take a cue from what just happened in Israel. After six weeks of negotiations, eight of the country’s 13 parties, with views as far apart as Venus and Mars, were able to forge a political alliance. If approved by parliament in coming days, this once-unthinkable team will form a new government that, as coalition leader Yair Lapid said, will “respect those who oppose it” while trying to “find the shared good.”

Such words are rare in the knock-’em-sock-’em politics of a country riven by more than its fair share of fractures. Yet they reflect a public sentiment in favor of what Mr. Lapid calls “national healing.” The pandemic, an economic crisis, an 11-day war with Hamas, and four inconclusive elections in two years, as well as fatigue with the 12-year rule of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, have set the conditions for an unusual unity government.

Just as important was Mr. Lapid’s role. When Israel’s president chose him May 5 as the architect in designing a new government, the leader of the centrist Yesh Atid party (There Is a Future) had to first reach deep into his past political failures and apply a lesson of modesty. Instead of becoming prime minister, he chose Naftali Bennett, leader of a small right-wing party, to take the job for two years. If the coalition survives that long, Mr. Lapid will then get his turn. Such sacrifice would be a first in Israel.

Another first was bringing in an Israeli Arab party, Ra’am, to help form the coalition. That will help create a spirit of reconciliation after weeks of Arab-Jewish domestic violence during the war with Hamas in Gaza. “The government will do everything it can to unite every part of Israeli society,” Mr. Lapid said. “We will focus on what can be done, instead of arguing over what is impossible.”

He claims only a centrist party can play such a role in convincing the left and right to make difficult compromises for a common goal. Yet he also claims Israelis have had “enough of anger and hate.” The coalition’s main goal, he says, is to take the country out of “the crisis within us” with a period of “quiet” politics that are “cleaner, decent.”

In a region of the world where history more often divides than unites, Mr. Lapid boldly states, “We’re not here to fight about the past but for the future.” His first success has been to see his political opponents differently. “I believe in the good intentions of my future partners,” he said after forming the coalition. No matter what comes next, Israel may never be the same.


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.

“Grace and Truth are potent beyond all other means and methods,” Mary Baker Eddy wrote. Turning to divine Truth empowers us to feel and express God’s healing, unifying grace, even when difficulties arise.


A message of love

Peter Nicholls/Reuters
Hannah Vitos of the Blenheim Art Foundation poses for a photograph inside artist Ai Weiwei's Gilded Cage (2017) sculpture on the grounds of Blenheim Palace in Woodstock, England, on June 2, 2021. The work was originally created for the "Good Fences Make Good Neighbors" multimedia exhibition in New York, which addressed the international migrant crisis and the constraints of life as a refugee.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte and Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us. Please come back tomorrow when our Chelsea Sheasley looks at the uproar around teaching critical race theory. It highlights deeper questions about the best way to instruct young people about their identities and role in the world.

Finally, we invite you to meet the humanitarians solving community problems. Meet your fellow Monitor subscribers. Join the conversations at Community Connect webinar events. These events – and reporter profiles – are included in your subscription. It’s our way of connecting you with the work of good Samaritans in the world.

More issues

2021
June
03
Thursday

Give us your feedback

We want to hear, did we miss an angle we should have covered? Should we come back to this topic? Or just give us a rating for this story. We want to hear from you.