2023
March
30
Thursday

Monitor Daily Podcast

March 30, 2023
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Last week, an international climate change report found that the only way to avoid the worst impacts of climate change is for the world to act quickly and dramatically to reduce heat-trapping gas emissions. And like dozens of other climate reporters around the world, I wrote about it. 

But I’ll admit – it wasn’t my favorite assignment.  

Mostly that’s because I don’t love United Nations reports, as important as they are. They tend to be long and laden with a brutal combo of scientific and diplomatic jargon. And this one was actually a report about a report (or multiple reports), a reality that can make the person writing yet another one feel like a character in the movie “Office Space.” 

I even groaned about it at dinner that night. And then I saw my sixth grader’s face light up.  

“The IPCC?” she asked excitedly. (That’s the acronym for the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.)  

I confirmed, warily. This seemed strange.

“That’s so cool,” she gushed. “Can you tell me about nitrous oxide? I know a lot more about methane.”

Wasn’t expecting that one.

We talked about heat-trapping gases. And I quickly realized that I was, thanks to the “Synthesis Report for the Sixth Assessment Report,” a new tween celebrity.   

This started to make more sense at her parent-teacher conference. Her teacher had started a climate change unit for the class, a way to combine science, math, politics, and social issues. The wall was covered with sticky notes where students had asked questions and shared concerns about climate change; they would soon be developing their own solutions and ideas for addressing it.   

“The kids are so into it,” the teacher told me.

We often hear about children being anxious because of climate change. But as I learned (from my new, trendy status) they are also deeply curious about it. As with many things, that curiosity brings with it excitement and joy. And especially for those of us who might forget how cool it is to have an international report from hundreds of scientists about the most important environmental issue of our time, the interest from kids also brings a huge amount of hope.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

At a time of high inflation, pushing household budgets to the limit, workers are speaking up through union action – and the boosts won by employees have been sizable.

SOURCE:

U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics

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Jacob Turcotte/Staff
Adnan Abidi/Reuters
Police officers restrain a woman as supporters of India's main opposition Congress party protest after the party’s leader, Rahul Gandhi, was disqualified as a lawmaker by India’s Parliament, in New Delhi, India, March 27, 2023. Critics say his expulsion is an assault on the integrity of India’s democracy.

Critics have called the expulsion of opposition leader Rahul Gandhi an assault on the integrity of India’s democracy – but it’s also inspiring rare unity among different parties, which could sway upcoming elections.

The Explainer

Cheney Orr/Reuters
Nicholas Pinkins hugs his daughter Nicole as he stands with his family outside the wreckage of their home after thunderstorms spawned high straight-line winds and tornadoes that ripped through Rolling Fork, Mississippi, March 27, 2023.

Some research suggests tornado risks may be shifting modestly eastward. That raises the question of whether some of the poorest U.S. states are ready to respond when a town like Rolling Fork, Mississippi, is hit.

Patterns

Tracing global connections

Leaders with autocratic tendencies have flourished around the world in recent years. This week some of them have been humbled by popular pushback.

Books

AP/FIle
Shirley Chisholm, as a candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination, speaks with students at Meredith College in Raleigh, North Carolina, on March 21, 1972. Her candidacy was popular with young people because of her opposition to the Vietnam War.

When Shirley Chisholm became the first Black congresswoman, and later, the first Black candidate to make a bid for the presidency, she paved the way for generations of Black Americans in politics. 


The Monitor's View

Reuters
Ethiopian leaders witness the signing of an agreement between the government and Tigrayan forces in Nairobi, Kenya, Nov. 12, 2022.

Over the past half-century, nearly 50 countries have sought to heal the injustices of an internal conflict through the use of truth commissions. These official panels have no singular design, but they do share some common ingredients: full disclosure of harmful actions; restoration for victims; and a sliding scale of penalties for perpetrators based on their honesty, remorse, and the nature of their crimes. This mix of traditional justice and mercy, called transitional justice, is aimed at societal reconciliation.

Two countries in East Africa are now edging toward their own models of transitional justice. Each in its own way is showing that restoring trust between former foes is essential to reviving democracy. And that starts with humility.

In Sudan, which is Africa’s third-largest country, the military junta that seized power in a coup 17 months ago began talks this week with pro-democracy leaders to ensure the armed forces operate under civilian command. “During our history, the armed forces have supported dictatorial governments, and we want to put an end to that,” coup leader Gen. Abdel Fattah al-Burhan told troops last Sunday.

In neighboring Ethiopia, which is Africa’s second-most populous state, the government launched a nationwide listening tour this month to engage the public on how to unite a society emerging from a devastating two-year civil war. Last week it removed two rebel factions central to that conflict from its list of terrorist groups – a conciliatory move that one minister said was necessary “to end the politics of hatred and evil.”

These fragile first steps stir understandable skepticism. Since seizing power in October 2021, the Sudanese military has racked up scores of human rights abuses attempting to quell nonviolent protests – including mass arrests and the killing of more than 125 demonstrators. Pro-democracy groups remain split over whether to seek a negotiated transition. Those who oppose such a move fear that doing so legitimizes the junta.

The war in Ethiopia killed an estimated 600,000 people. The United Nations and human rights groups like Amnesty International have reported credible evidence of ethnic cleansing and the use of rape and mass starvation as tools of war. No faction to the fighting was found to be immune to such a tactics.

The peace agreement that ended the war in Ethiopia last November was the first to include a new African Union framework for transitional justice. In January, the government published recommendations aimed at seeding a national conversation and will convene roughly 60 public meetings on reconciliation and justice.

That has won the government some cautious goodwill from the international community. A team from the International Monetary Fund arrived in Ethiopia this week to prepare financial support for economic reforms, drought relief, and reconstruction. Visiting the country earlier this month, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said that lasting international support required that Ethiopians acknowledge “the atrocities committed by all parties ... and their commitments to each other” to achieve equitable justice.

That condition reflects a key lesson learned in other post-conflict societies – that reconciliation, as Rwanda President Paul Kagame has said, “was not going to come from outside.” After the 1994 genocide in his country, “We looked each other in the eyes and asked: How do we reconcile and start building? So we had to make a choice. This was the thinking. Forgiving is a process as well as a choice.”

However imperfectly, Ethiopia and Sudan may now be making a similar choice.


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.

Injury doesn’t have to be an inevitable part of athletics – as a skier experienced when he realized his God-given spiritual nature and found healing from a knee injury.


Viewfinder

Libkos/AP
A Ukrainian woman soldier kisses her husband as they meet at a railway station close to the frontline in Kramatorsk, Ukraine, March 29, 2023. Fighting in nearby Bakhmut has ground on for months, with heavy casualties on both sides. The city holds limited strategic value, but its symbolism in the larger war has mounted.
( 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 citizen crowdfunding efforts in Ukraine, which have been meaningful for both noncombatants and those fighting on the front lines.

Also, news arrived late today of a criminal indictment of former President Donald Trump. You can read a wire report here and we’ll have more on this story tomorrow.

More issues

2023
March
30
Thursday

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