2023
January
13
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

January 13, 2023
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Noelle Swan
Weekly Editor

It started with a blind date.

It was 1952, and young Coretta Scott was in her second semester at the New England Conservatory in Boston. She was devoted to her singing and not particularly looking for romance. Nevertheless, a nudge from a friend had spurred her to give a shot to a young fellow named Martin Luther King Jr. 

It wasn’t exactly love at first sight. “He was too short and he didn’t look that impressive,” she recalls in her memoir, “Coretta: My Love, My Life, My Legacy.” But the substance of the conversation changed her view. “The longer we talked, the taller he grew in stature and the more mature he became in my eyes.”

The couple married a year and four months later. The couple remained devoted to each other, despite reports of his infidelity.

Some 70 years later, a tribute to the couple’s love – for each other and for humanity – was unveiled Friday on Boston Common in the form of a 22-foot-tall bronze sculpture. The Embrace was inspired by a photograph of the famed couple hugging after Martin was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.

Unlike most MLK memorials, this newest sculpture honors both Martin and Coretta as pillars of the American civil rights movement. Both Kings “are monumental examples of the capacity of love to shape society,” artist Hank Willis Thomas explained after his design was chosen.

Love was a sustaining current throughout the Kings’ lives and work. It was the most powerful tool the movement had to find justice for Black America. “Justice is love correcting that which revolts against love,” Martin famously told hundreds gathered in Montgomery, Alabama, on the eve of the Montgomery bus boycotts. 

During an early sermon titled “Loving Your Enemies,” he preached that “the way to be integrated with yourself is to be sure that you meet every situation of life with an abounding love.”

Coretta held fast to that ideal. 

When her husband was assassinated, their 12-year-old daughter, Yolanda, asked, “Mommy, should I hate the man who killed my daddy?”

“No, darling,” Coretta told her oldest child. “Your daddy wouldn’t want you to do that.”


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Today's stories

And why we wrote them

Fred Greaves/Reuters
Rain-swollen Sacramento and American rivers spill onto the landscape near downtown Sacramento, California, Jan. 11, 2023. Recent deadly storms have unloaded rainfall that’s 400% to 600% above average in some parts of the state, which experiences more wet-dry weather extremes than any other state in the U.S.

California’s recent floods come atop other extreme events including fire and drought. Officials and residents are grappling with the wild swings in weather – and some adaptations may be helping.

The White House is highlighting key differences between President Joe Biden’s situation and that of former President Donald Trump. But even allies admit the optics aren’t good.

Ints Kalnins/Reuters/Reuters
U.S. Bradley Fighting Vehicles being deployed for NATO's Operation Atlantic Resolve in Garkalne, Latvia, Feb. 8, 2017. The U.S. is supplying Ukraine with Bradleys, and Germany and France are supplying their own models, as the West deepens its commitment to the war effort.

The West’s stance on supplying Ukraine with heavy arms has shifted from caution to deep commitment. In part it’s because Ukraine has shown an ability to fight effectively, but it’s also a response to Russia’s own resolve and the war’s sheer brutality.

Maintaining peace in Asia requires cooperation. By building up its military, Japan is shouldering more security responsibility, and taking a step toward its vision of a stable region following a shared set of rules and norms.

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The Monitor's View

There have been more than 50 documented campaigns of disinformation in Africa in recent years, directly affecting nearly every country on the continent. Most have come from external sources like Russia and China seeking influence and control of strategic natural resources – although Africa’s authoritarian regimes have been prolific falsifiers, too. “The objective is less to convince as to confuse citizens,” the Africa Center for Strategic Studies noted last year. Another goal: undermine democracy. 

One country gaining notice for how it is strengthening its digital defenses is Ghana. It is one of a handful of African countries with a national cybersecurity strategy able to track and respond to digital threats, including disinformation. The West African country jumped 40 places in the Global Cybersecurity Index in just three years, ahead of Ireland and New Zealand. 

The strength of Ghana’s approach is a commitment to civic unity and freedom of expression – democratic principles that face rigorous challenges around the world as countries come to grips with the free flow of information via social media. In Ghana, cybersecurity policy is under civilian leadership and oversight. Businesses and the banking sector participate in monitoring and responding to threats. Judges and prosecutors have been specially trained to assess digital evidence.

Those measures are particularly noteworthy in Africa where only two of 54 countries have laws pertaining specifically to disinformation. Still, the laws have also raised concerns among media and human rights experts for the restrictions and penalties they impose. In 2021, a total of 34 African countries shut down the internet nationwide 182 times. Ghana, meanwhile, ranks third among African countries in internet freedom, its government constrained by law from censoring content and media content. 

“Ghana has placed a citizen-centric, multistakeholder approach at the core of its efforts to address the country’s cybersecurity challenges,” wrote Kenneth Adu-Amanfoh, chairman of the Accra-based Africa Cybersecurity and Digital Rights Organization, in an essay for the Africa Center. “This has enabled Ghana to build cyber capacity in a transparent manner that has helped reinforce trust between government and citizens.” 

A citizen-centered approach to countering disinformation – instead of, for instance, mandating or urging content moderation on social media platforms – has proved effective elsewhere. In 2007, for example, the tiny Baltic state of Estonia came under a withering cyberattack on government and public websites, email servers, and the banking sector. Linked to Russia, the incident bore the hallmarks of a strategy that Moscow has since deployed both internally and externally to further its interests.

Since then, Estonia has become a model for civic media literacy and “digital competency” in an age of mass disinformation. Public schools teach students how to question critically what they see on their cellphones and computer screens. Those lessons are woven into every subject, from math to art.

“The purpose of education is to support students and help them become a person who adequately perceives the environment around them and critically understands and evaluates information,” Britt Järvet, a strategic planning adviser in Estonia’s education ministry, told the BBC last year.

The disinformation campaigns that have shaken democracies, including the United States, in recent years have shown that lies require broad and willing participation.

Ghana now has a different message: that the slings and arrows of false content cannot harm societies united in digital discernment.


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.

Starting from the standpoint of everyone’s nature as God’s child elevates the way we see ourselves and others of all races.


A message of love

Hamad I Mohammed/Reuters
Michael Docherty, who rides for the pro team HT Rally Raid Husqvarna Racing, throws an epic rooster tail of sand and dust during Stage 11 of the Dakar Rally in Saudi Arabia, Jan. 12, 2023. The South African racer, who began riding at the age of 6, had led in his class coming out of the previous stage. The race ends Jan. 15 in the Saudi city of Dammam, on the Persian Gulf.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris and Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us this week. Monday is a federal holiday in the United States, honoring Martin Luther King Jr. The Daily returns Tuesday with a portrait of female journalists in Somalia who break news – and gender norms.

More issues

2023
January
13
Friday

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