2022
August
23
Tuesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

August 23, 2022
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Ali Martin
California Bureau Writer

Millions of American kids are back in school this month, including my own – a seventh grader and a high school junior. 

For me, this new school year comes with a sense of relief. At our annual orientation, Superintendent Evan Anwyl made a few welcome announcements: Children are back in class with only a few COVID-19-related protocols. Masks are optional. Parents are allowed on campus this year, which means we can attend performances and help out in classrooms. I missed that last year. 

But the most touching moment was when Mr. Anwyl revealed this year’s theme: kindness. Simple, actionable kindness. 

Mr. Anwyl chose kindness for a few reasons: On a broad scale, he says that we’re coming out of pandemic schooling, still reckoning with a hostile political environment, and seeing an escalation of meanness on social media and in person.  

A widely reported CDC study released earlier this year shows that sadness, hopelessness, and plans for suicide are all up among students.

At our school, in particular, Mr. Anwyl explained via email, there has been “an uptick in kids simply being quicker to anger and, more importantly, expressing very valid emotions, such as anger, disgust, shame, etc., in unhealthy ways.”  

Kindness, he said, helps students find “constructive ways of handling such emotions.” 

He closed with something that gave me pause: “We don’t have bad kids or bad families. I want to make that perfectly clear. We have both kids and families that need more encouragement and education to gain and use more positive tools of interaction and being.”

Releasing someone from a predetermined end is the kindest act I can imagine.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

A deeper look

DAVID GOLDMAN/AP
A woman looks at a civilian’s car hit by Russian forces that is being exhibited alongside damaged Russian military equipment in Mykhailivs’ka Square in Kyiv, Ukraine. Even as the war thunders on, Ukrainians are finding the courage to begin their healing process.

For Ukrainians, the absence of loved ones killed in war is a constant presence. Their remembering and honoring reveals grace in grief, and an essential humanity that defies the barbarism of the conflict.

Maxim Shemetov/Reuters
Flowers and candles are placed next to a portrait of Russian pro-war media commentator Daria Dugina, in Moscow, Aug. 22, 2022, the day after she was killed in a car bomb attack.

The pro-war activist slain in a car bomb in Moscow likely was targeted as a Kremlin proxy. But for most Russians, the unknowns surrounding her killing may have clouded any political message.

Cooperation is helping some Japanese women break into politics. For many others, it’s a way to cope with election losses and incremental progress.

Points of Progress

What's going right

Progress in our news roundup means a return to the past. That includes higher tiger counts in Nepal, and the Smithsonian’s policy of openness toward giving back artifacts to their origin communities.

Books

Humor, inspiration, and hope resound throughout a quartet of outstanding audiobooks. Listening to stories evokes the days of radio plays or campfire storytelling, making the experience immediate and absorbing.


The Monitor's View

AP
Students listen to a speech during their graduation ceremony at Georgetown University in Washington last May.

Forty-three million borrowers owe the U.S. government $1.62 trillion in student debt, according to federal statistics. In March 2020, federal pandemic relief legislation suspended repayment. That pause is set to expire Aug. 31. President Joe Biden is expected to announce a decision this week to either extend it or cancel a portion of the debt owed by students or their parents. He may do both. 

The grace period has already been extended six times, twice during the Trump administration and four times since. But this round is different. The White House has never waited this close to the deadline to reveal its intentions. That has left borrowers wondering if they will soon face monthly payments again – or if they will suddenly be forgiven $10,000, a figure Mr. Biden has often endorsed. 

The tangible prospect of debt cancellation has also renewed a larger debate about how societies balance the values of civic equality and individual responsibility.

Democratic Sen. Michael Bennet of Colorado suggests that a focus on student debt is too narrow. In a recent Senate floor debate, he said, “An across-the-board cancellation of college debt ... offers nothing to Americans who paid off their college debts, or those who chose a lower-priced college to go to as a way of avoiding going into debt or taking on debt. Really importantly, it ignores the majority of Americans who never went to college, some of whom have debts that are just as staggering and just as unfair.” 

The bigger question, he argued, is “how to create a pathway to economic security for every American.”

Still, student debt levels do seem staggering. In the past two decades the cost of higher education has risen about 200%. American families have struggled to keep pace. Student debt has risen 600% during the same period. The average federal student loan balance is $37,667. That cost, together with rapid changes in the nature and needs of the workplace, has frayed the underlying calculation of higher education: that investing in a college degree ensures a more prosperous future.

In response to the current debate, a growing list of companies is helping employees to use a tax benefit to pay off student loans. Since 2016 more than 90 apps have been launched to help people locate scholarships to attend a school or manage how they repay their loans. The U.S. Education Department is trying to find a formula tying the pace of loan payments to borrowers’ incomes.

Many of these initiatives point to the ability of borrowers to rethink their approach to debt for education. One empowering quality is gratitude.

“While gratitude may seem like a soft skill to integrate into finances,” wrote Melanie Lockert in an essay for The College Investor, describing her approach to paying down her student loans, “it can completely change your money mindset and the way you spend money, hold on to money, make money, and more.” 

Another approach is to see debt as not a trap but as an opportunity to change habits. “Taking out a loan is a choice, and personal responsibility shouldn’t be supplanted by taxpayer bailouts,” argued Matthew Noyes, who graduated from the State University of New York at Albany. In an essay for the Foundation for Economic Education, he described paying off $27,000 within a year of graduating by taking on extra work and being frugal. 

The debate over student debt may lead Americans to find new models for safeguarding access to college. Higher education itself begins with the individual cultivation of character and promise. A great rethinking of student debt is surely needed.


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 we may get caught up in unhelpful thoughts about ways we don’t measure up to some standard. But there’s actual power – life-changing, spiritual power – in knowing we’re loved and why.


A message of love

Ibraheem Abu Mustafa/Reuters
A Palestinian artist draws a painting inside the damaged house of Gaza artist Duniana Al-Amour, who was killed during Israel-Gaza fighting earlier this month, in Khan Younis, in the southern Gaza Strip, Aug. 23, 2022.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by and Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us today. Come back tomorrow, Independence Day in Ukraine, where veteran correspondent Howard LaFranchi is exploring the meaning of the holiday six months into the current conflict.

More issues

2022
August
23
Tuesday

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