2023
March
14
Tuesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

March 14, 2023
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Favour Odenyi is a high school senior in San Francisco who enjoys coding and fixing bicycles. She’s also a fairly new reader of the Monitor because of an assignment for a youth leadership program.

At first, Favour wasn’t thrilled. She admits feeling “numb” to the news. And she’s hardly unique. A poll conducted last year by Media Insight Project found that while a majority of 16-to-40-year-olds read the news daily, only 32% enjoy it.

As she started her assignment, Favour found reading the Monitor challenging. The war in Ukraine had just broken out, and world events were confusing. But slowly, she started to feel something else: hope. She was intrigued by an effort to preserve old-growth forests and by an Army chaplain who encourages soldiers to be ethical leaders. She felt drawn in by an article about an Eritrean family who struggled to get asylum in Israel but eventually found a place to live in Canada with a Jewish family. Favour found she wasn’t content to just read the news; she felt impelled to act.

There was a boy in her Advanced Placement calculus class who was struggling with their group project and hardly participating. “I decided to see if what I was reading was actually useful,” recounts Favour. Instead of just keeping to herself as she normally does, she offered to help after class. Then they sat together at lunch and chatted. “I was putting into practice what I was learning in the Monitor,” she says. “Like, just open up a little bit, just the same way that family opened up to complete strangers. It was definitely a big step on my end.”

Favour wrote about her experience reading the Monitor in an award-winning essay sponsored by DiscoveryBound, a national youth leadership program for Christian Scientists. “A transformation was happening,” Favour writes, “one that enabled me to explore how I could apply the values gained from reading the news, in my daily life.” You can read Favour’s full essay here


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

The Explainer

The failure of two U.S. banks in recent days poses a test of confidence – and of regulatory reassurance – at a time when the economy is already challenged by inflation and rising interest rates.

Ron Johnson/AP
Odelia Rogers kisses a button with a photo of former President Donald Trump before Trump speaks at a campaign event Monday, March 13, 2023, in Davenport, Iowa.

Since launching his bid for the White House last year, Donald Trump’s grip on the GOP was widely proclaimed to be weakening. But that belies a set of strengths that are in many ways now becoming evident.  

Patterns

Tracing global connections

The U.S. has long been the preeminent outside actor in the Middle East. Now China is asserting itself there, stealing Washington's diplomatic thunder. What does this portend?

Arlette Bashizi/Reuters
An internally displaced Congolese woman collects water from a tap during the visit of a U.N. Security Council delegation to a camp for people forced by fighting to leave their homes, near Goma in the Democratic Republic of Congo, March 12, 2023.

Few outsiders know that fighting has forced over 5 million people from their homes in eastern Congo. That lack of attention has allowed their plight to go unresolved for 20 years. A new cease-fire offers only a little hope.

Decorated author Toni Morrison’s approach to creativity involved drawing her settings and jotting inspiration on paper scraps. What does her process tell us about her path toward influencing American culture?


The Monitor's View

Reuters
Demonstrators in Colombo, Sri Lanka, take part in a "Women for Rights" protest on March 8.

Few countries navigated a more difficult course last year than the island nation of Sri Lanka. It defaulted on its foreign debt. Then food and fuel shortages sparked protests that toppled the government. Inflation peaked at 70%. Yet rather than being prologue to prolonged helplessness, Sri Lanka’s annus horribilis set the stage for a possible model of economic recovery.

The country of 21.6 million people has started to repair confidence with foreign creditors and restore price stability through financial discipline. The International Monetary Fund is expected to approve a $2.9 billion bailout on Monday, which would unlock foreign money for needed infrastructure. Last week, the United States lauded the government’s commitment to transparency.

What may be more important is an overhaul of Sri Lanka’s social contract. Last week, the government adopted a plan to uplift women and security. Parliament is working on a gender equality bill. In a country where women make up 35% of active workers but only 5% of the national legislature, these measures acknowledge the importance of gender inclusivity to economic health.

“The status of women in the Asian region is not satisfactory,” President Ranil Wickremesinghe said last week. When he announced the gender equality bill in December, he noted that female students account for 50% of higher education enrollment. That represents an undertapped economic resource. “We have a responsibility to increase women’s representation not only in parliament and politics, but in all other areas as well.”

Sri Lanka’s recovery comes at a time when global lenders are increasingly divided over how to contain a global debt crisis. At the end of January, according to the IMF, 28 countries were at high risk of default. A recent meeting of G-20 finance ministers found little agreement on how to solve that. China, the world’s largest lender, remains a key stumbling block. Other major creditors say Beijing’s lack of transparency obstructs coordinating debt leniency or recovery plans.

That underscores the importance of internal reform in debtor nations, where public patience is short. In Sri Lanka, 79% think corruption is rife, according to Transparency International. Freedom House ranks the country as only “partly free” in political freedoms and civil rights. Last week, the government postponed local elections because it could not pay for them.

Institutional reform, economists argue, is vital. But the protest that toppled Mr. Wickremesinghe’s predecessor last year signaled a different kind of renewal already underway.

“There’s really been an awakening of the citizen, from being complacent to dynamic activism with greater agency,” Bhavani Fonseka, a Sri Lankan human rights lawyer, told the International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance. “This new activism we’re seeing among the citizenry also gives hope that people are being creative in how they hold politicians [and] public officials accountable.”

The IMF’s expected financial assistance will unlock investments in Sri Lanka’s future. But the country’s own investment in equality may ensure the biggest payback.


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 actively welcome thoughts from God, good, into our consciousness, healing is a natural result.


Viewfinder

NASA/Jpl-Caltech/University of Arizona/Reuters
Mars is no stranger to sand dunes. But this is the first time scientists have seen nearly perfect circular ones, courtesy of a Nov. 22, 2022, image from the high-resolution imaging experiment camera aboard the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, which has been recording the dunes since 2006. Studying the formations is giving scientists insight on Mars’ weather patterns.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris and Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us. Please come back tomorrow, when we’ll look at how “Vermeer,” a sold-out exhibition in Amsterdam, is a testament to the 17th-century painter’s enormous, ongoing popularity.

More issues

2023
March
14
Tuesday

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