2021
August
10
Tuesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

August 10, 2021
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Yvonne Zipp
Features Editor

There’s no place like home.

And home is always worth fighting for, as Mary Annaïse Heglar, cohost of the “Hot Take” podcast, writes

That’s one counter to a sense of “doomerism” that can rise from reports like this week’s from the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. While it’s too late to stop the Earth from heating up, it is not too late to prevent the most dire scenarios from becoming reality, as Stephanie Hanes writes in our top story. And there is, she says, still plenty of reason to reject fear and despair.

Some people draw hope from human innovation and the ability to problem solve their way out of past crises. Others take heart from the sense that “individual action actually does matter,” she says. And that doing “the next right thing,” as Jane Goodall famously puts it, is the way to solve big problems.

As Ms. Goodall recently told The New York Times, “You just plod on and do what you can to make the world a better place.” 

Still others, including Stephanie, her sources, and Ms. Goodall, point to young people and their willingness to help the Earth as a great source of hope.

It’s not hope as soft or fluffy – Emily Dickinson’s “thing with feathers.” It’s more a sense of resolve. Humanity has done hard things in the past, and can again.

One of her sources describes climate change as a “kitchen table issue,” one she sees people talking with their children about.

“The more people start thinking like that, the more big system changes happen,” Stephanie says.

The world is at a turning point, the scientist told her, “and she sees green sprouts everywhere. I do too.”


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Guglielmo Mangiapane/Reuters
A person holds an inflatable Earth as climate activists including Extinction Rebellion and Fridays for Future stage a protest demanding more action while G-20 climate and environment ministers hold a meeting in Naples, Italy, July 22, 2021.

Despite this week’s alarming report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, dire predictions don’t have to result in dire outcomes. That’s one of the report’s key takeaways.   

With the pandemic exacerbating the housing crunch in Mountain West resort areas, Colorado towns are redoubling efforts to preserve an inclusive sense of community.

Caitlin Ochs/Reuters
People are served at a restaurant in Manhattan Aug. 3, 2021, after New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio announced that proof of COVID-19 vaccination will be required for customers and staff at restaurants, gyms, and other indoor businesses.

Is the customer still always right? Restaurants are grappling with angry diners amid pandemic exhaustion, a labor shortage, and the redefinition of the value of service work.

Q&A

Courtesy of Alvin Hall
Author, educator, and broadcaster Alvin Hall recently won the inaugural Ambie Award for the best history podcast of 2021 from the Podcast Academy for “Driving the Green Book.”

Alvin Hall, host of the award-winning podcast “Driving the Green Book,” shares the little-known reality of Black Americans’ entrepreneurship in the segregated South and the reason he remains hopeful about race relations today. 

Book review

Journalists are expected to be hardheaded and focused on facts. What happens when reporters set out to cover matters of deep spiritual and religious significance?


The Monitor's View

Reuters
The European Union and Polish flags flutter in Mazeikiai, Lithuania.

Last June, the decadeslong project to bind European countries under democratic principles seemed to be fraying. Britain had left the European Union. A poll found most Europeans believe the EU to be “broken.” And the union’s new president, Slovenian Prime Minister Janez Janša, warned against the EU imposing “imaginary” values.

On Aug. 7, however, the EU’s core values were shown not to be so imaginary – but in fact, to be universal. Poland’s de facto leader, Jarosław Kaczyński, backed down in a tense clash with the EU over his attempt to purge the country’s Supreme Court. He promised to change Poland’s system of disciplining judges in a way that the courts would be independent of the executive branch.

For the EU, the standoff with Warsaw that began in 2017 was a challenge to its very identity. With no military power to enforce its decisions and no ability to kick out errant member states, the EU has long relied on democratic rule of law for its authority. At the center of such principles is the ideal of impartial judges, free of political influence. Mr. Kaczyński also seemed to accept that EU courts have primacy over the law of member states, a point Poland accepted when it joined the union in 2004.

Polish leaders have relented in large part because the EU’s administrative arm, the European Commission, has lately tried to act tougher against states that violate EU principles. This year, it threatened to withhold funds from Poland, wielding a financial stick for the first time. Meanwhile, the EU’s top court demanded that Poland suspend its attempt to put political pressure on judges.

Polish voters may also be shifting their support away from the ruling coalition, which includes Mr. Kaczyński’s Law and Justice party. The main opposition party, Civic Platform, headed by former European Council President Donald Tusk, has gained in popularity.

The EU has long found its unity in free trade between member states. But trade relies on fair courts that can act independently and uphold equality before the law. In democracies – even the nation states bound together in the EU – such liberal values remain a stronger unifier. There’s nothing imaginary about that.


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.

Letting God’s pure, ceaseless love guide our hearts and minds empowers us to be peacemakers and peacekeepers.


A message of love

China Daily/Reuters
An aerial view shows a herd of wild Asian elephants crossing the Yuanjiang River in Yuanjiang county in the Chinese province of Yunnan on Aug. 8, 2021. The wandering elephant herd, which has drawn global attention in the past year, is on its way back to its traditional habitat, according to provincial officials.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us today. Come back tomorrow. Education reporter Chelsea Sheasley has been talking to teachers about how they plan to put the lessons of the past year in place to keep children in school.

Also: We’re watching today’s headline stories, including the resignation of New York’s governor, on our First Look page. And see this story by Harry Bruinius on how this could mark the end of old-boys politics in New York.

More issues

2021
August
10
Tuesday

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