2022
January
04
Tuesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

January 04, 2022
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Trudy Palmer
Cover Story Editor

Good news: People value people. In a survey of 17 “advanced economies” conducted in the first half of 2021, Pew Research Center asked nearly 19,000 adults what in their lives they “find meaningful, fulfilling or satisfying.” 

In all but three countries, the first response was family, defined broadly to include a wide range of relatives. In Spain, South Korea, and Taiwan, family wasn’t the first answer, but it ranked in the top five.

And that’s not the only time people surfaced as a key source of meaning and fulfillment. Friends and community members ranked among the top five responses in 12 of the 17 countries.

Survey-takers noted many other meaningful aspects of life, of course: career, material well-being, nature, health, service, and so on, but Pew describes the most prevalent responses as “finding meaning in others.”

Call me naive, but I find it reassuring that people value people so highly. That’s a firm foundation from which to expand our sense of family beyond bloodlines and extend friendship to those who don’t look – or vote – like us.

For me, the line between family and friends is often blurry. I have friends who’ve been my family for decades now, though there’s not a drop of common blood between us. And I have family members – like my daughter – who are close friends.

My plan for 2022? Blur that line with more people more often.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Americans who have served in the military are sometimes put on a pedestal when it comes to patriotism. Yet the armed services are finding they need to confront serious challenges of extremist thinking.

Don Ryan/AP/File
A northern spotted owl sits on a tree branch in the Deschutes National Forest near Camp Sherman, Oregon, in 2003. In a win for the species, the Fish and Wildlife Service recently moved to protect huge swaths of owl habitat that the Trump administration had opened for logging. But the spotted owls are being encroached on as barred owls move into their region.

When one species is threatened, should conservation plans include killing invasive rivals? That’s the choice facing wildlife officials and animal advocates regarding the spotted owl – and such ethical quandaries may expand. 

CRB Coffea, IRD-CIRAD/Courtesy of Kew Press Office
Coffee cherries are poured out of a bucket labeled "Stenophylla" on Reunion Island in the Indian Ocean. Stenophylla has the rich flavor of the well-known arabica coffee but grows in warmer climates.

Climate change is making it harder for coffee farmers to make a living. This flavorful but long-forgotten variety of West African coffee grows in warmer temperatures, offering a potential solution. 

In polarized Brazil, religious groups have often clashed with one another. But in an unlikely partnership, two women of different faiths find common ground to preserve their African heritage.

Nick Squires
Guides and visitors ride their bikes in the Great Roman Quarry, located just a few miles from the Colosseum, near the ancient Appian Way Roman road.

Even the most popular tourist sites can still hold secrets. In the case of Rome, an underground bike tour offers a new perspective on the Eternal City and its history.


The Monitor's View

AP/File
Desmond Tutu speaks to University of Oklahoma graduates in Norman, Okla., after receiving a honorary degree in 2000.

Amid a gradual erosion of liberalism around the world, the life of South African Archbishop Desmond Tutu offers a reminder of the powerful effect of persistent good.

So far in this young decade, each year has opened with an event reflecting the state of democracy somewhere in the world. In 2020 Hong Kong police clashed with protesters, who rallied in the hundreds of thousands on New Year’s Day to champion universal suffrage. 

Last year supporters of President Donald Trump mounted a violent insurrection at the U.S. Capitol Jan. 6 to try to block Congress from certifying an election that he had lost.

This year the trend continued – not with tear gas and batons but rather with a quieter opportunity to ponder the long arc of humanity’s pursuit of democratic ideals. Amid warnings that the world is tilting more and more toward autocracy, even in democracy’s strongholds, tributes from around the globe marked the passing of Archbishop Tutu, an exemplification of persistent good.

One of the champions of justice and human rights during South Africa’s long struggle against apartheid, Archbishop Tutu understood that no human system based on hate and exclusion could withstand the power of moral courage. 

“He knew in his soul that good would triumph over evil, that justice would prevail over iniquity, and that reconciliation would prevail over revenge and recrimination,” said South African President Cyril Ramaphosa. “He knew that apartheid would end, that democracy would come. ... He was convinced, even to the end of his life, that poverty, hunger, and misery can be defeated – that all people can live together in peace, security, and comfort.”

In the days since Mr. Tutu’s death Dec. 26, the question has been posed whether anyone today, in South Africa or elsewhere, is equal in stature to those like Archbishop Tutu, whose lives were forged by the great crucibles of justice in the 20th century – men and women such as Mahatma Gandhi, Nelson Mandela, Martin Luther King Jr., Andrei Sakharov, and Helen Suzman.

The desire for new champions is understandable in the face of the challenges of climate change, an erosion of democratic norms, persistent racial injustice, and ongoing threats to human rights. History will surely record new names such as Alexei Navalny and Greta Thunberg. More will emerge.

For Mr. Tutu, who matched undaunted moral courage with an equal measure of humility, the cause of human progress found its deepest reservoirs of hope and strength in taking action, even modest steps. 

“Do your little bit of good where you are,” he said. “It’s those little bits of good put together that overwhelm the world.”

The coming year holds significant challenges for democracy. Elections in places like the United States, Hungary, India, South Korea, Brazil, and France will test the durability of constitutional norms, fair ballot practices, and the allure of authoritarian populism. There may be forward steps here and backward steps there. 

The assurance that humanity’s progress toward greater equality and universal dignity will continue will always reside most safely in each individual’s capacity for self-government, reason, and conscience.


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.

Getting to know God as Spirit, and ourselves as God’s spiritual offspring, brings about a fuller sense of life – one marked by greater inspiration, unselfishness, and healing.


A message of love

Robert F. Bukaty/AP
The sun shines over Casco Bay, but does little to warm the frigid air for a walker on the Eastern Promenade, Jan. 4, 2022, in Portland, Maine. Early morning temperatures were in the single digits Fahrenheit.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us today. Come back tomorrow for an in-depth look at Wisconsin – a test case in the ongoing struggle over who gets to administer U.S. elections and how.

More issues

2022
January
04
Tuesday

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