2022
December
22
Thursday

Monitor Daily Podcast

December 22, 2022
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The notion of progress can be fraught. Whose progress? Whose ideals? Whose metrics?

In the West, progress has long been inextricably intertwined with economic and technological growth. In the postwar period, economists like Walt Whitman Rostow envisioned progress as a linear path toward modernization. Wealthy nations had arrived. Poor nations could follow in their footsteps with the right economic policy and machinery. Yet that kind of progress has trapped humanity in a seeming paradox: unprecedented wealth and technological capacity paired with deepening inequality and environmental degradation.

The technocratic view of progress has earned its share of critics. Post-development scholars began insisting in the 1980s that “developed” societies offer no model to follow, given the damage done by overconsumption. They decried society’s obsession with economic and technological advancement, which tended to silence other cultural ways of thinking about progress.

As the Monitor’s Points of Progress writer, I’ve thought a lot about the meaning of progress. First, I learned what progress is not. It’s not a one-size-fits-all model. It’s not a tool to get others to do things your way. It’s not a race with any particular destination at all. Instead, progress is incremental. It’s messy and imperfect. And it can feel painfully slow and incomplete.

While 25,000 unhoused individuals moved into homes in Houston this year, for instance, another 500,000 Americans remained on the streets or in shelters. But that step forward transformed lives. And how the city made it happen can be instructive.

At the Monitor, we take a somewhat unfashionable stance on progress. The idea is this: Some values are so innate to human nature, they are universal. Progress occurs as these values unfold around the globe. Values like ingenuity, dignity, and cooperation are not ideological, nor do they prescribe a particular political solution. Looking back at 2022, I found these and other values paving the way for solutions to emerge, fine-tuned to the needs of the place.

Economic and technological advancements do matter. But maybe these are better seen as the result, rather than the source, of progress. The good news is that we can all tend and nurture the values that bring our humanity to light. That drives real progress.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Letter from the Capitol

Jacquelyn Martin/AP
Vice President Kamala Harris (left) and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi hold the Ukrainian flag flown on the front lines that was presented to them by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy after he addressed a joint meeting of Congress in Washington, Dec. 21, 2022.

The unlikely wartime leader, the first to speak to Congress since Winston Churchill, celebrated the West’s victory in winning global hearts. He added that Russian freedom would start by defeating “the Kremlin in their minds.”

Alastair Grant/AP
Demonstrators show support for a strike by nurses outside St Thomas' Hospital in London, Dec. 20, 2022. Nurses staged a walkout of hospitals amid a growing crisis across the National Health Service, as staffing and management issues impede the institution's ability to provide health care.

The British people rely upon the National Health Service like no other institution. With the NHS “on the brink of collapse,” the country is fretting over the future of its long-trusted safety net.

2022: A space-comic odyssey

Asteroid dust. Pulsating auroras. An astral slide deck. This past year brought a flurry of scientific advancement in space exploration. Each development opens a new window into the mysteries of the universe.

Jules Struck/Contributor

Points of Progress

What's going right

In 2022, we chronicled 233 moments of progress around the world. In each case, values pointing to a global, shared humanity cleared the way for the right solution to take shape. We take a look at five of the values that drove much of the progress we saw.

Film

Vince Valitutti/Metro Goldwyn Mayer Pictures
Ron Howard’s “Thirteen Lives” is a nail-biter about the real-life rescue of young, Thai soccer players from a mountain cave system.

Our critic’s choices for the year’s top films feature a variety of themes, including the tenacity needed for a daring, real-life Thai rescue – and the defeat of a formidable fictional headmistress. 


The Monitor's View

Reuters.
Ismail Sha studies with a rechargeable lantern in Cape Town in October. Power outages happen daily in South Africa. New partnerships with wealthy nations will help countries like South Africa, Indonesia, and Vietnam move from coal to green energy.

The world’s top industrial nations put the finishing touches on a $15.5 billion deal last week to help Vietnam shift toward a greener energy future. The agreement follows similar plans already reached with two other coal-dependent nations, South Africa and Indonesia.

These “Just Energy Transition Partnerships” harness public and private funding to achieve a shared benefit, in this case reduced greenhouse gas emissions. What they reflect, however, may be even more important than what they do. In a period of persistent distrust within and among nations, they help show how humanity is forging new bonds of cooperation amid common threats.

“The present period of polycrisis has provided multiple tests for the concept of global trust,” the Edelman Trust Institute observed in a year-end collection of short essays on restoring trust. “History suggests that some of the most important steps forward in global cooperation came even at moments when trust was difficult to come by, and that these joint actions helped rebuild trust.”

The energy partnerships, said United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres in comments last week about the Vietnam agreement, mark an “all hands on deck” partnership between rich and developing nations “to realize an energy transition that is global, sustainable, just, inclusive, and equitable.” 

The war in Ukraine offers another measure of unity emerging from crisis. Russian President Vladimir Putin “wanted to split the European Union, it became united,” former Finnish Prime Minister Alexander Stubb told the European news website Euractiv. “He wanted to destroy NATO. It’s back with a new purpose.” 

The Edelman essays on restoring trust illustrate how societies are repairing trust in response to overlapping challenges like polarization, inflation, the pandemic, climate change, and hunger. In developing nations, governments and technology companies have sought to overcome trust deficits by expanding digital access to public services like health care and financial services like banking. That has helped them democratize economic opportunity and reduce economic vulnerability, write Nandan Nilekani, co-founder of Infosys, and Tanuj Bhojwani, co-author of “The Art of Bitfulness."

Manu Meel offers a view of a new generation’s response to polarization. A member of Generation Z, he founded BridgeUSA, an organization that promotes dialogue on college campuses across the United States. He hopes to restore faith in democracy among a generation shaped by repeated crises stretching from 9/11 to Jan. 6. That involves “cultivating a certain temperament that exists above ideology: a temperament that values open-mindedness over closed-mindedness; empathy over exclusion; building spaces that bring people in as opposed to building spaces that keep people out.”

“We are living in what should be a golden age of cross-border learning,” writes Parag Khanna, founder of Climate Alpha, a real estate analytics firm. “Both West and East have much to share in ... the essential task of rebuilding trust in government worldwide.” Faced with extremity, humanity is uniting in opportunity.


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.

When we open our hearts to the timeless Christ that Jesus so fully lived, blessings naturally result.


A message of love

Marcio Jose Sanchez/AP
A young Haitian migrant stands next to his father after receiving holiday toys at an entry point in Tijuana, Mexico, Dec. 20, 2022.

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us today. Come back tomorrow to explore sparks of intimate illumination, during this season of hope and joy. 

More issues

2022
December
22
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