2022
November
14
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

November 14, 2022
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Clayton Collins
Director of Editorial Innovation

She had the right to vote. She had the will to vote. All Natalie Harris needed was a ride to the polls in Georgia’s Gwinnett County, northeast of Atlanta.

Ms. Harris has used a wheelchair since a nightclub shooting in New Jersey left her paralyzed 27 years ago. Her specially equipped car broke down two years ago.

Then there’s the long, steep hill climb to her nearest bus stop. Voting by mail? “I just didn’t trust it,” she says. Also, “I want to go out ... on Election Day and vote. It gives me that feeling of being included.”

It’s a hard-won feeling. In years past, “I never thought of the importance of voting because I was too busy fighting to survive,” she says.

In early November she was considering a paid paratransit service. But her sister had seen a sign for a free ride service. Ms. Harris booked it.

The driver who showed up explained to her that his van did not have a power lift. He offered to physically pick up her chair. A day away from a surgical procedure, Ms. Harris didn’t dare risk it. The driver stayed with her for more than two hours, calling around – while she did, too – for options. Her frustration grew.

“I went in the house and said, ‘I am so sick and tired,’” she recalls. She called a local news outlet. To her surprise, a reporter called her back and promised to see what she could do. What the reporter found: a Nov. 3 video by the Monitor’s Jingnan Peng, which led to the station calling Zan Thornton of Georgia ADAPT, a statewide disability rights group that also runs a free ride service on a mission to leave no would-be voter stranded. 

“We going to the polls!” Ms. Harris recalls shouting when Thornton and their spouse, Elizabeth, arrived with FOX 5. “I call them my new buddies,” she says. She has already reserved a ride with them for Georgia’s Dec. 6 Senate runoff.

“This right here? Them coming out to get me after doing their civic duty? It leaves me speechless,” Ms. Harris says. “And I have a lot to say.

“I’m willing to fight for democracy. I’m ready.”


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Kevin Lamarque/Reuters
Chinese leader Xi Jinping meets with U.S. President Joe Biden on the sidelines of the G-20 summit in Bali, Indonesia, on Nov. 14, 2022. During their first face-to-face meeting as heads of state, they agreed on key steps to halt a downward slide in relations between the two superpowers.

Recent domestic victories have only solidified the deeply divergent worldviews of President Joe Biden and Chinese leader Xi Jinping. But at their first face-to-face meeting, the leaders flexed their ability to find common ground, setting the stage for more responsible competition.

A week or more to count votes is not unusual. But this year’s tallying was slowed by voters who, worried about election integrity, chose to drop off mail-in ballots on Election Day.

Ousted from office 16 months ago, Benjamin Netanyahu embraced the invective of his ultranationalist allies. It worked. At stake as he negotiates a new coalition are issues central to Israel’s democracy: minority rights, security laws, and an independent judiciary.

The Explainer

Altaf Qadri/AP
Daily wage laborers take a tea break at a wholesale market in New Delhi on Nov. 12, 2022. Experts say denial of fair wages, mounting debt, and lack of means for redress during COVID-19 have left workers deeply stressed and likely contributed to last year's increase in suicides.

While many countries avoided the predicted uptick in suicides during the pandemic, new data shows India’s toll rose in both 2020 and 2021. Experts say the deaths point to an urgent need for a more holistic suicide prevention strategy.

Books

Karen Norris/Staff

Eating well doesn’t have to mean spending hours in the kitchen. With a soupçon of inspiration and some clever shortcuts, busy families can look forward to mealtimes. 


The Monitor's View

Reuters
Refugees who have fled fighting in Myanmar have settled temporarily near the Moei River in Mae Sot, Thailand.

Half of Southeast Asia’s nations have authoritarian regimes, which made it a welcome surprise last Friday when the region’s grouping of 10 countries decided to open talks with the pro-democracy opposition in war-ravaged Myanmar.

This bold step will not only help drain legitimacy from the country’s ruling but isolated military, but also send a message of the need for political inclusion, as Indonesian President Joko Widodo put it. “We must not allow the situation in Myanmar to define [the Association of Southeast Asian Nations],” said the leader of ASEAN’s most populous country.

ASEAN’s decision to engage the pro-democracy National Unity Government – a group run by elected leaders ousted in a 2021 military coup – runs counter to the regional body’s policy of not interfering in each other’s domestic affairs. But many ASEAN leaders have become disgusted with the military’s massacres, executions, and bombings of civilians in Myanmar – actions supported by Russian-provided weapons with tacit support from China.

The civil war in Myanmar, in other words, has become a threat to ASEAN’s tradition of creating a region of stability that provides low-key – and inclusive – diplomacy in coping with Asia’s dangerous fault lines.

After the coup against the elected government of Aung San Suu Kyi in February last year, ASEAN did set a five-point plan for the military to end its scorched-earth tactics against a national uprising and restore democracy. But the regime under coup leader Senior Gen. Min Aung Hlaing has only increased its attacks even as the National Unity Government’s forces have set up an alternative “shadow” government and worked closely with Myanmar’s suppressed ethnic minorities.

Myanmar’s economy is near collapse and, with the military now only in control of an estimated 20% of the country, ASEAN has seen how much the people of Myanmar want their democracy back – much like the world has seen Ukrainians fight for their freedom.

Despite the bloc’s authoritarian members, its neighborly move to reach out to Myanmar’s democratic forces sets a model of inclusion for both the country and the region.


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.

The more we understand of our unity with God, good, the better equipped we are to support reformation and redemption and to move forward with freedom.


A message of love

Murad Sezer/Reuters
People dance at a metro station in central Kyiv, Ukraine, as Russia's attack on Ukraine continues, Nov. 12, 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. Our Simon Montlake will be looking at what the U.S. midterm results mean for the Republican Party’s evolving relationship with former President Donald Trump.

More issues

2022
November
14
Monday

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