2021
August
11
Wednesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

August 11, 2021
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It was an oppressive, pitiless July day, when Barbara Mack saw a man who was homeless, red-faced and limp, on her way into a central Florida convenience store. She asked if he was OK. “Just resting,” he replied.

Ms. Mack went inside, grabbed two bottles of water, called out to the cashier that she’d be right back, and gave a bottle to the man outside. But when Ms. Mack returned, a woman in the long line gave her an earful about wasting her money and “enabling that homeless person.”

Ms. Mack admits that she lost it. She shouted (among other things) that “if she had an ounce of compassion in her whole body, she’d buy him a cold drink, too,” wrote Ms. Mack in her July 21 Facebook post.

After her rant, the store was stone silent. Then, the man at the front of the line asked the cashier to add a sandwich to his purchases for “the guy outside.” One by one, everyone in line (except the scolding woman) bought something for him. “When I went outside, he was eating his ice cream and drinking his water with a pile of stuff all around him, a big old grin on his face,” Ms. Mack wrote. Her Facebook post has been shared 140,000 times. 

I reached out to Ms. Mack, but she declined to be interviewed. She did recount her story to Fox News. Still, even if her story can’t be fully verified, research shows that a simple act of kindness can be a powerful catalyst. It reminds us of what generosity looks like, and of how we want to be but sometimes forget because we’re tired, rushed, and hot. 

Thanks for the reminder, Barbara Mack. 


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Hannah Beier/Reuters/File
Students are led onto the bus after the school day ends at Kratzer Elementary School in Allentown, Pennsylvania, April 13, 2021.

As students return to the classroom, educators say they are better prepared this year, having learned to communicate more with parents, and to be flexible as health and safety standards shift.

The Explainer

As Iran’s new president takes office, conservatives are in charge of all branches of government. What might that mean for a nuclear deal, lifting of sanctions, and Iran’s support of militia groups in the Middle East?

Tsvangirayi Mukwazhi/AP
Zambian President Edgar Lungue (center) greets his supporters after he officially opened a terminal at the Kenneth Kaunda International Airport in Lusaka, Zambia, Aug. 9, 2021. The president is seeking a second term in a general election on Aug. 12 after a campaign held under COVID-19 restrictions that critics say have penalized the main opposition candidate, Hakainde Hichilema.

Our reporter finds that some leaders in Africa and elsewhere are using COVID-19 restrictions to curb free speech and tip elections in their favor. As a result, democratic principles are under assault.

As Americans rethink their family and work priorities, the traffic and housing patterns in and around cities are changing. Our reporter looks at some of the effects of the shifts.

Books

Courtesy of Katie J. Stanley
Sheep farmer and author James Rebanks talks about sustainable agriculture practices to a group of students on his farm in Cumbria, England, in 2019.

Can family farms support not only livestock but also the environment? A British sheep farmer tells of his path toward cherishing the animals, wild plants, and natural landscape for future generations.


The Monitor's View

AP
The leading opposition figure in Uganda, singer Bobi Wine, speaks to reporters near Kampala last January.

For each new American president in recent decades, one rite of passage has been to launch a U.S. initiative to lift up Africa. For Barack Obama, the focus was on more electricity for the continent. For Donald Trump, it was negotiating trade pacts with individual countries. The emphasis was on tangible help.

For President Joe Biden, whose initiative was launched in July, the starting point is more intangible. The focus is on partnerships with Africans, mainly youth and women, who share American values such as democratic governance and accountability.

To make his point, Mr. Biden sent a high-level delegation to Africa in early August, but only to four of its stronger democracies (South Africa, Botswana, Tanzania, and Niger). His top official for foreign aid, Samantha Power, speaks of treating Africans as equals, not dependents, based on “mutual respect.” 

This values-based approach is best suited for working with Africa’s entrepreneurs, especially women and the 3 in 5 people who are under 25 years old and very digitally connected. (By 2100, about 40% of the world’s population will be in Africa.) Mr. Biden also wants to enlist the 2.4 million foreign-born Africans in the United States to shape and lead investments in small businesses.

The geopolitical wind is behind the president’s approach. “The pandemic has created unique momentum for engagement with Africa,” says Landry Signé of the Brookings Institution.

In addition, the African Continental Free Trade Area took effect in January. Dozens of countries in the 55-member African Union are now working on lowering trade barriers within the continent’s 1.2 billion-person market. Once COVID-19 is controlled, Africa could be the world’s fastest-growing economy. Of the world’s 30 fastest-growing cities, 21 are in Africa.

One other shift is rising dissatisfaction with China’s massive spending on resource extraction and infrastructure in Africa, which has put many nations in high debt to Beijing. Per Afrobarometer surveys, 7 out of 10 Africans support democracy and accountable governance. More prefer the U.S. model of development (32%) over the Chinese one (23%).

“When the U.S. is engaged [with Africa], we have better quality; we have more accountability and sustainable development which will also follow,” says Mr. Signé. In particular, the Biden administration wants to steer Africa away from nonsustainable fossil fuels and toward a reliance on wind and solar power.

Mr. Biden’s top assistant for Africa, Dana Banks, says the president will focus on “vibrant” Africans who align with democratic principles. Perhaps this partnership-based, values-laden approach will stick. And the next president won’t have to start yet another new initiative for Africa.


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.

Women in the workforce have been particularly affected by the pandemic. But recognizing that God’s goodness and care for all His children can never run out inspires the resilience and strength to overcome – and help others overcome – challenges.


A message of love

Andrew Kelly/Reuters
Sterling Bevirt, the son of Joby Aviation founder JoeBen Bevirt, reacts while looking at a Joby Aviation air taxi ahead of the company's listing at the New York Stock Exchange in New York on Aug. 11, 2021.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us. Come back tomorrow: We’re working on a story about how Canada’s Indigenous people could shape solutions for water protection. It’s the third in our series about citizen engagement in solving water problems.

More issues

2021
August
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Wednesday

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