2023
January
09
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

January 09, 2023
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Clayton Collins
Director of Editorial Innovation

On this last single-digit date in January it’s worth giving the topic of resolutions one last spin before leaving it behind, perhaps alongside a short-lived decision to switch to mushroom coffee. (Email me; we’ll talk.) 

Want to be tactical about setting goals? There’s no shortage of advice-givers. Most stress the need for self-knowledge.

Mel Robbins, who speaks about change and motivation, counsels linking new goals to whatever you value most. Valerie Tiberius, a philosophy professor at the University of Minnesota, suggests preserving a commitment to the values that guide your actions.

“Think about the qualities you’d want to preserve if your consciousness were going to be transported into another body,” she writes in a Wall Street Journal excerpt from her new book, “What Do You Want Out of Life?” What traits would you prioritize? (For Ms. Tiberius: integrity – and a sense of humor.) 

On a practical level, resolutions can call for figuring out what to suspend and what to adopt. For a society trying to turn the page on the pandemic, that means sizing up adopted practices and deciding if they’re better than what came before. 

One of our newest staff writers, Jackie Valley, has begun exploring what digital technology has in store for education. To decide what to adopt, educators will need to weigh the trade-offs that digital transformation brings.

Workplaces, too, now weigh the value of human connection against the efficiency of demonstrably effective remote teams. What offers the greatest gain? How will values guide these decisions in 2023 and beyond?

“Once we have an idea of what really matters to us, we can try to live up to or realize those values in our actions,” Ms. Tiberius writes, “to do the things that matter to us and be the people we want to be.”


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Today's stories

And why we wrote them

Eraldo Peres/AP
Protesters, supporters of Brazil's former President Jair Bolsonaro, storm the National Congress building in Brasília, Brazil, Jan. 8, 2023.

The storming of Brazil’s state institutions by those unhappy with election results appears to mimic the Jan. 6 insurrection in the U.S. It is a wake-up call for Brazilian leadership about the perils of polarization.

Some House Republicans contend that a weak speaker is a good thing – giving members more say on legislation. But there’s a fine line between a more democratic process and dysfunction.

Alex Brandon/AP
Republican Rep. George Santos (center) is sworn in by House Speaker Kevin McCarthy in Washington early Saturday, Jan. 7, 2023. The new member of the 118th Congress has admitted to fabricating much of his education and employment history.

In addition to personal integrity, there is also what might be called systematic integrity. In the case of George Santos, there are questions about why the traditional layers of political vetting didn’t identify an apparent fabulist.

Dominique Soguel
Soldiers distribute bread to shellshocked residents of Sviatohirsk, Ukraine, Oct. 27, 2022. For months, shifting front lines in eastern Ukraine had left older residents cut off from basic goods and services, as well as family.

Older people in eastern Ukraine have borne hard lives for decades. Surviving Russian military occupation last year required them to tap even deeper reserves of endurance.

Difference-maker

Marisa Vitale Photography/Courtesy of Tiyya Foundation
Somali chef Malia Hamza and Guatemalan chef Sonia Ortiz have both developed recipes for Flavor From Afar restaurant in Los Angeles. The restaurant provides purpose and community to refugees transitioning to life in the United States.

When refugees start over, they leave behind careers, loved ones, and beloved places. Flavors From Afar restaurant dishes up meaningful paths forward, building on tastes from home.


The Monitor's View

The return of divided government in Washington has put immigration on the table – and the need to find common ground. The time is also ripe because of a rapid influx of migrants at the southern border.

A basis for unity is, in fact, already evident, and not just in the United States. From Chile to Texas, diverse efforts to address migrant crises and their causes reflect a common emphasis on the rule of law. What that shows, as Ali Noorani, former president of the Washington-based National Immigration Forum, has argued, is that “there is a clear border security narrative that balances compassion with security. One that acknowledges and addresses fears, but still advances values.”

American border agents intercepted a record 2.2 million migrants and arrested 143,000 people attempting to cross in the United States from Mexico during the 2022 fiscal year, which ended Sept. 30. That mirrors a trend elsewhere in the world as more and more people uproot themselves or are forced to flee as a result of conflict, persecution, climate change, and economic hardship. In Italy, the number of migrant arrivals has tripled since 2020.

The migrant crisis in Honduras has helped motivate a series of legal reforms, a key point of origin for many seeking new opportunity in the U.S. Since taking office a year ago, President Xiomara Castro has sought to uproot systemic corruption and address violence against women – two commonplace causes of displacement.

In the United States, Republicans see a crisis of security in the current wave of illegal migration. On Saturday, newly installed House Speaker Kevin McCarthy said Republicans would make border security their priority.

Many Democrats see a crisis of official cruelty on the border. More than a quarter of migrant encounters reported by U.S. Customs and Border Protection in 2022 involved people caught and expelled multiple times under a pandemic-era health law that allows the government to send migrants back before they can apply for asylum.

This law is at the center of the partisan divide. The Supreme Court is set to decide later this year if the rule, an emergency health provision, can be used to override the legal asylum process. Migrant experts expect a surge if it is overturned.

Criticized from the left and right, President Joe Biden announced a new asylum policy for migrants from four distressed countries – Venezuela, Nicaragua, Haiti, and Cuba – designed to streamline applications before they arrive at the border. Mr. Biden made his first presidential trip to the border on Sunday and then went to Mexico City today for two days of talks on trade and migration with his North American counterparts.

Arizona Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, a Democrat turned independent, has vowed to reintroduce legislation she sponsored last fall with North Carolina Republican Sen. Thom Tillis that, combined new financial resources for borders security, would provide 2 million so-called Dreamers – people who were children when they arrived in the U.S. with parents entering illegally – a pathway to citizenship.

That bill, South Dakota Republican Sen. Mike Rounds told Bloomberg, showed that border security and compassion are not incompatible. “You can’t give up when you’re talking about archaic laws right now that need to be repaired,” he said.

The last time Congress seriously considered immigration reform, in 2013, the late Arizona Republican Sen. John McCain argued that “the status quo threatens our security, damages our economy, disregards the rule of law, and neglects our humanitarian responsibilities.”

Those same concerns may be resonating once again.


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.

Even when we’re facing persistently challenging situations, we can know that the Christ is already there, ready to convey the truth that will set us free.


A message of love

Muhammad Sajjad/AP
Women wait to buy subsidized sacks of wheat flour from a sale point in Peshawar, Pakistan, Jan. 9, 2023. People are suffering from recent price hikes in Pakistan.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for starting your week with us. Come back tomorrow. Fred Weir will be writing from Moscow on groups of soldiers’ mothers. They’ve long been influential in Russia. Now, as the invasion of Ukraine grinds on, the Kremlin is trying to find new ways to work with them.

More issues

2023
January
09
Monday

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