2021
September
28
Tuesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

September 28, 2021
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Last month, Jason Crawford launched a nonprofit to study something we often take for granted: progress.

“We wake up in the morning on a soft mattress,” says Mr. Crawford. “We go take a shower under hot running water. We pull fresh milk, eggs, and orange juice from the refrigerator. We commute to work on a train or in a car. We take the elevator up to a high-rise where we sit in a comfortable, air-conditioned office next to plate-glass windows and earn a living by typing on a computer. And we forget that, just 100 years ago, people could not do many of those things.”

Mr. Crawford founded The Roots of Progress to establish a philosophy of progress. Why is it that some civilizations, locales, and institutions flourish, while others stagnate? His theory posits if research can pinpoint how human advancement occurs, we may be better able to replicate the conditions and qualities that make it possible. 

It’s more than just an arcane academic pursuit, says the Silicon Valley software engineer. He believes that societal fears of fresh endeavors – often rooted in exacerbated fears of risks that don’t account for reasonable trade-offs – can stall progress. 

To counter that, the nonprofit’s founder wants to acknowledge problems with technological advancement and what we can learn from those instances, but also tell stirring stories that illustrate the history of breakthroughs. The Roots of Progress aims to offer a vision of the possibilities for solving problems such as poverty, climate change, pollution, job loss, and pandemics.

“The most important goal of this new organization,” says Mr. Crawford, “is to make sure that the next generation of scientists, engineers, and startup founders is inspired and motivated to continue moving the world forward.”


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Ben Gray/AP
Former President Donald Trump speaks during his Save America rally in Perry, Georgia, on Sept. 25, 2021. A CNN poll in September found that 59% of Republicans say supporting Mr. Trump’s claim that he won to be a crucial part of their partisan identity.

What does it mean to be a Republican, post-Trump? Less than a year after 2020, a poll finds that claiming the election was stolen is now a defining characteristic.

Story Hinckley/The Christian Science Monitor
Republican gubernatorial candidate Glenn Youngkin takes a turn at the cash register at Todos Supermarket in Woodbridge, Virginia, ahead of the Nov. 2 election.

With the economy and public health increasingly linked, will voters see mask and vaccine mandates as helping businesses or hindering them? The Virginia governor’s race may provide a test case.

Patrik Jonsson/The Christian Science Monitor
Gardens bloom at the Westside low-income housing development in Chattanooga, Tennessee, on Sept. 11, 2021. Considered a "distressed asset," the complex is set to be torn down, replaced with mixed-income housing, and reconnected to the city's downtown.

Call it inequitable urban planning: In a bid to ease traffic flow, some cities built roads and highways that hemmed in low-income neighborhoods. Here’s how one major Tennessee city is trying to redress that de facto segregation.

Jacob Turcotte/Staff

Points of Progress

What's going right
Staff

Our latest roundup of progress ranges from the invention of a new self-healing material to fresh techniques to study the world’s most impenetrable jungles. 

Staff

Difference-maker

Courtesy of PARSA
Mohammad Tamim Hamkar presents awards at the Afghan Scouts Annual Camporee at PARSA's National Afghan Scouts Training Centre on the outskirts of Kabul in August 2019.

Did you know that there are scout troops in Afghanistan? Meet the duo who trained Afghan boys and girls for community service and now face fresh challenges following the takeover by the Taliban.


The Monitor's View

Reuters
A woman rides a bicycle in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, Sept. 27.

Two years ago, just before the pandemic, a wave of youth-led protests hit several Muslim countries, from Sudan to Lebanon to Iraq. While the main goal was democratic reform, protesters also shared a second demand: End political favoritism along ethnic or religious lines that aids corruption. Now partly because of the pandemic, young people in another Muslim country, Malaysia, are on a similar march.

In late July, young Malaysians took to the streets to protest the government’s poor handling of the pandemic in the Southeast Asian nation. Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin was forced to resign. Then in September, his replacement, Ismail Sabri Yaakob, made a key concession to activists. He ended government efforts to block a 2019 law that was supposed to lower the voting age. Now 18- to 20-year-olds will soon be able to cast ballots, giving greater influence to young people in reshaping Malaysia’s democracy.

That influence could end up challenging the country’s race-based politics. For decades, the government has granted economic favors to the country’s majority Malay ethnic group, which is largely Muslim. That resulted in official discrimination against ethnic minorities, notably Chinese and Tamil. Last year, a youth-led political movement sprang up to end such discrimination and create inclusive politics.

“Young people are not susceptible to racial politics,” said the movement’s founder, Syed Saddiq Syed Abdul, a former lawmaker and government sports minister who is 28 years old. “They are more concerned about influencing their actual policies.” He hopes to register the movement as an official political party, the Malaysian United Democratic Alliance, or MUDA, which means young in the Malay language.

A new spirit of civic equality has emerged in Malaysia, much like that in other Muslim countries divided by ethnicity or religion. With access to social media, young people are able to bypass government-controlled news and read about their shared interests.

In July last year, 222 young Malaysians held a two-day “digital parliament” reflecting the real Parliament to discuss and “pass” new laws affecting youth. The virtual meeting drew more than 200,000 viewers. They saw a potential for a new Malaysia, one that treats all citizens as individuals, endowed with the same dignity and freedom of conscience, and with equal moral standing.


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.

Sometimes it can seem as if facts take a back seat to opinion or emotion. But getting to know God as infinite, pure Truth itself is a powerful basis for finding clarity, harmony, and mental as well as physical healing.


A message of love

Michael Probst/AP
Fog covers the landscape in the Taunus mountain region near Wehrheim in Hesse, Germany, Sept. 28, 2021.

A look ahead

You’ve reached the end of our package of stories for today, but we’re already hard at work on a fresh set of articles for tomorrow. Among them is an interview with the author of a book about the complex politics of Black women’s hair. 

More issues

2021
September
28
Tuesday

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