2022
October
17
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

October 17, 2022
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Clayton Collins
Director of Editorial Innovation

If you keep innovators in view, it’s hard not to feel at least a little optimistic.

I recently wrote in this space about a teen inventor in Florida who’s developing motors for electric vehicles that don’t rely on the extraction of rare-earth elements. 

Now comes news that some Dutch students – with an eye to the carbon dioxide emitted in an EV’s entire lifespan, from manufacturing to recycling – have developed a prototype that can capture more carbon than it emits. 

“They imagine a future,” Reuters reports, “when filters can be emptied at charging stations.”

Separately, in Amsterdam, autonomous boats roam, scooping river trash. In Portland, Oregon, ​​Disaster Relief Trials train the riders of electric cargo bikes to deliver messages and supplies should a natural disaster break the city’s infrastructure.

Regions that lack communications infrastructure to begin with may get help from a U.S. startup making backpack-size solar-powered “cellular base stations” – essentially independent internet service providers. A pilot project is planned in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

And in response to deepening drought, a “modular” approach to seawater desalination was approved last week by California regulators. It will supply a small water utility south of Los Angeles. It passed muster with many environmentalists who’d opposed a larger private effort because of its projected effects.

“This could be replicated … up and down the coast,” an environmental scientist told Yahoo News.

Small steps, big ideas. All face hurdles and course corrections. All spring from daring to hope. 


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Korean Central News Agency/Korea News Service/AP
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un inspects a missile test at an undisclosed location in North Korea between Sept. 25 and Oct. 9, 2022. Independent journalists were not given access to cover the event depicted in this image distributed by the North Korean government.

After World War II, the use of nuclear weapons was put behind an uncrossable red line. Do current world tensions threaten to put them back in play – or will international cooperation renew an old bulwark?

Patterns

Tracing global connections

Leaders so sure of themselves that they do not listen to opposing views are shirking their responsibility to govern wisely, whether they be in London, Washington, Moscow, or Beijing.

Florence Lo/Reuters
Visitors stand in front of a giant screen displaying Chinese President Xi Jinping next to a flag of the Communist Party of China, at the Military Museum of the Chinese People's Revolution in Beijing, Oct. 8, 2022. Mr. Xi is poised to win a rare third term in power at this week's Communist Party Congress.

Chinese leader Xi Jinping is expected to win a rare third term in this week’s 20th Communist Party Congress. Understanding how Mr. Xi has transformed China over the past decade can offer clues for what comes next.

SOURCE:

CGTN, Ash Center for Democratic Governance and Innovation, Transparency International, World Bank

|
Jacob Turcotte/Staff

Could more have been done to save lives as Hurricane Ian struck Florida? The answer hinges partly on government evacuation orders, but also on individuals’ ability and willingness to heed those orders.

Qadri Inzamam
Dalit stand-up comedian Manjeet Sarkar performing at a cafe in Bengaluru, India, on Sept. 10, 2022. “Being on the stage gives me a sense of liberty and equality,” says the comedian, who uses humor to challenge the Hindu caste system.

Comedy can be a tool to talk about the taboo. In India, a growing number of Dalit stand-ups are opening up about caste and demanding equality – onstage and off.


The Monitor's View

Reuters
Protesters in Sudan march against military rule last July.

At a time of global concern about democracy, violent crackdowns against protesters in Iran and Myanmar illustrate the difficulty of challenging authoritarian rule. Yet in two countries, Sudan and Venezuela, the tactics of pro-democracy activists may be showing how peaceful transitions are not just possible but perhaps inevitable.

Both countries are being nudged by regional and Western leaders toward talks to restore inclusive and accountable government bound by the rule of law. That goal, observers say, may rest on a characteristic the two countries share – a commitment by activists to nonviolence. As the United States Institute of Peace noted earlier this month, “an asset that can help Sudan build the more responsive governance it needs is the country’s remarkably vibrant, deeply rooted tradition of nonviolent civic action.”

Sudan and Venezuela face similar crises. They are ruled by disputed governments that have overseen acute economic and humanitarian crises. In Sudan, 8.3 million people face severe hunger, according to the World Food Program. In Venezuela, 95% of the population lives in extreme poverty, and nearly 7 million have fled since 2014, according to the United Nations. In both countries, security forces have responded to public protests with violence and detentions. 

The international community had hoped that isolating the two regimes – one a military junta that seized power in a coup last year, the other an autocratic regime that 50 countries regard as illegitimate – would compel them to change. There is now growing recognition that that strategy, which includes targeted sanctions, has not worked. And amid changing global energy security conditions, the Biden administration and others see a benefit in bringing the two oil-producing nations back in from the cold. Both have lately signaled an openness to talks.

That receptiveness, however, may be motivated less by the dangling of international carrots than by a recognition that intimidation has not quelled popular aspirations for a just society. In Sudan, for example, the junta’s tanks are up against a concept of nonviolent resistance called silmiya, which the Sudanese filmmaker Mohamed K described in a recent study as “the atmosphere of love.”

That ethos is one reason why nonviolent campaigns are “10 times likelier to transition to democracies within a five-year period” compared with countries that have violent anti-government campaigns, according to Harvard University professor Erica Chenoweth. Nonviolent civic protests, she noted in an interview with The Harvard Gazette, achieve three important goals. They unite society around shared values, empower moderates, and deprive repressive regimes of justifying violence against their own people.

“The way to change society is to change ideas,” said Giannina Raffo, a Venezuelan activist who helps develop websites and apps for peaceful campaigns by civil society groups. One key concept involves defending the “freedom to express ourselves without fear and to be able to criticize and combat everything we consider ... antidemocratic,” wrote Antonio Perez Esclarin, a professor at Simón Rodríguez National Experimental University in Caracas, on his blog.

Autocracy may be having a global moment, but the peoples of Sudan and Venezuela are showing that peaceful struggle against a violent ruler can help set a precedent for rule by law, freedom, and equality. The process itself reflects the ultimate goal.


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 stability – in our lives, or in the world at large – can seem out of reach. But getting to know God as unchanging good empowers us to feel more fully God’s stabilizing presence.


A message of love

Jose Luis Gonzalez/Reuters
Alonso Marquez is embraced by his father and mother, after 10 years without seeing each other in person. The reunification meeting for relatives separated by deportation and immigration called "Hugs, Not Walls” took place in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, along the Rio Bravo border between Ciudad Juarez and El Paso, Texas, Oct. 15, 2022.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte and Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for starting your week with us. Come back tomorrow for a report on how one community in southwest Nigeria, long neglected by local government, has come together to tackle the devastating effects of deforestation.

More issues

2022
October
17
Monday

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