2022
October
31
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

October 31, 2022
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Trudy Palmer
Cover Story Editor

How would you answer this question: “What do you most want to improve about your own society and how?”

It’s not an easy question, but that’s what the nonprofit Heart of a Nation encouraged American, Israeli, and Palestinian teens to write about for an essay contest earlier this year. It’s the perfect prompt for an organization committed to “bettering, not battering, these societies we love.”

A panel of teen judges evaluated about 30 submissions, picking one winner from each society as well as top scorers in the categories used for assessing the essays. We’re sharing the winning essays in the Daily starting today. They will also be published by The Jerusalem Post in Israel and Al-Quds in the Palestinian territories. 

The writers’ experiences and identities range widely. The American winner, Asher Weed, is home-schooled, traveling full time in a recreational vehicle. Yosra Kamalat, the top scorer in the idealism category, is a multilingual Muslim, Afro-Bedouin, Palestinian woman living in Israel who enjoys the arts.

Whatever their backgrounds, the writers care deeply about communicating across cultures, combating climate change, improving opportunities for women, and caring for the most vulnerable people in society.  

When I asked the winners via email what gives them hope, a strong sense of conviction came through. “I know that people strive for the better,” wrote Noga Novis Deutsch, who lives on a kibbutz in Israel. “And I believe that we can truly work together to make the change we want to be.”

Asher finds encouragement among his peers. “Younger generations are taking notice of the injustices and problems that plague our society today and educating themselves on creative avenues to solve those problems,” he wrote. 

Fortunately, along with being thoughtful and articulate, the writers are also just regular teens, enjoying both video and board games, baking, collecting rubber ducks, and, in Noga’s case, practicing aerial acrobatics.

For a deep dive into teen thought around the globe, you can find the winners and the top scorers in each category all in one spot here. Enjoy.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Eric Risberg/AP
Police tape blocks a street outside the home of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and her husband, Paul Pelosi, in San Francisco, Oct. 28, 2022. Mr. Pelosi was attacked and severely beaten by an assailant who broke into their home early Friday, according to authorities. Threats against members of Congress have grown sharply in recent years.

Plots against elected officials tend to rise around big political events, like next week’s midterms. But the overall trend is stark: Threats against members of Congress have increased tenfold over the past five years.

Rick Bowmer/AP
Independent Evan McMullin poses for photographs during a campaign event Thursday, Oct. 20, 2022, in Salt Lake City. The race for Utah's U.S. Senate seat is the most competitive the reliably red state has seen in decades. Republican Sen. Mike Lee acknowledges that his race with Mr. McMullin will likely be close. The race has taken shape as a referendum on the direction former President Donald Trump has taken the GOP.

America seems split into two rigid partisan camps. Is it possible, in the right place, with the right issues, to dissolve this model and form coalitions with previously antithetical groups of voters? In Utah, one candidate is trying to do just that. 

Russia’s chaotic mobilization of troops has ended, its goals largely met. But the public is still coming to grips with the psychological stresses of the process – and of the ongoing war in Ukraine.

Commentary

Karen Norris/Staff

The world’s climate change and population problems may seem daunting, but this Heart of a Nation Teen Essay Competition winner offers practical, bite-size solutions that could make a big difference. To read other winning entries, visit Teens Share Solutions to Global Issues.

Sarah Matusek/The Christian Science Monitor
Dora Haynes (center, in visor) gets game-ready with fellow Colorado Peaches ahead of the last scrimmage of the season at Addenbrooke Park in Lakewood, Colorado, Oct. 25, 2022. “Every week she looks forward to getting with these ladies,” says her husband, Ed Haynes. “Now she’s got a big family.”

Joy doesn’t take a timeout with age. Older women in Colorado find it on the field.


The Monitor's View

Reuters
State workers transport electronic ballot boxes to voting stations in Manaus, Brazil, Oct. 29.

At a time of concern about a global erosion of the rule of law, some of the world’s youngest democracies are offering evidence that the ideal of government by the people is both resilient and enduring. The latest example is Brazil, where a tense presidential election concluded Oct. 30 in a peaceful vote for change.

The result defied predictions of political violence. It showed that, even in the most deeply divided societies, credible democratic institutions provide a bulwark against the destabilizing effects of disinformation.

“If there is anything Brazilians should appreciate tonight, it is the efficiency and reliability of their voting system,” Valentina Sader of  the Atlantic Council wrote after the vote. “It allowed for confidence in the results being released within hours of voting sites closing, effectively constraining any credible questioning of the result.”

The election pitted the hard-right incumbent president, Jair Bolsonaro, against Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, a socialist former president. Both are controversial. Mr. Bolsonaro’s critics decry his harsh security tactics, dismissal of the pandemic, and policies that accelerated deforestation of the Amazon rainforest. Meanwhile Lula, as he is popularly known, was convicted and imprisoned for corruption (the charges were vacated by Brazil’s Supreme Court in April 2021, but he was not exonerated). Voters on both sides expressed a shared desire for integrity in their leaders. For months leading up to the election, which started with a first round on Oct. 2, Mr. Bolsonaro predicted widespread ballot fraud, without evidence, and vowed not to accept defeat. In the end, Lula won by 1.8 percentage points. Notably, although Mr. Bolsonaro had yet to concede by midday Oct. 31, his top allies in Congress accepted the outcome without hesitation.

The campaign saw an uptick in violence from 2018, the last presidential election year. One source of mistrust was widespread disinformation and wild accusations by the campaigns shared on social media. The Superior Electoral Court, a panel of judges that oversees Brazil’s elections, reported a 1,671% increase in complaints about false posts and videos compared with municipal elections two years ago.

Election officials deployed several measures to counter that trend. In July, they forged a pact with social media platforms to moderate false content. When that did not work, they imposed their own measures to block the spread of information that they found demonstrably untrue. They took other measures, too, including an “integrity test” of voting machines across the country on election day morning. Those trials measured electronic and paper test ballots for accuracy.

Ahead of the first round of balloting four weeks ago, Justice Edson Fachin, a member of the electoral court, said, “I have the unshakable certainty that democracy bends, but does not bend or break with fake news.”

In Brazil’s elections, much of the world saw the future of the Amazon at stake. But the peaceful, transparent vote provides a lesson for countries striving to preserve the integrity of their own ballots.


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.

There’s inspiration and healing to be found in striving to know and live out from our nature as God’s children – as a woman experienced firsthand after injuring her toe.


A message of love

Dmitri Lovetsky/AP
People ring the memorial bell as they gather to commemorate victims of Soviet repressions during the Great Terror, the Soviet dictator Josef Stalin's purges, at Levashovo Memorial Cemetery on the outskirts of St. Petersburg, Russia, Oct. 30, 2022. About 45,000 of the executed were buried in the Levashovo cemetery from 1937 to 1953. Oct. 30 is the Day of Remembrance for the Victims of Political Repressions in Russia.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for starting the week with us. Come back tomorrow for a look at Georgia’s tight Senate race, with incumbent Raphael Warnock and his challenger Herschel Walker offering starkly different ideas about how best to address America’s inequities and divisions.

More issues

2022
October
31
Monday

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