2023
April
07
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

April 07, 2023
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Peter Grier
Washington editor

The word “unprecedented” was used in news a lot this week. Mostly it preceded the word “indictment,” as outlets ran extensive coverage of former President Donald Trump’s arraignment in New York on charges related to hush money payments.

But the media’s focus on Mr. Trump left less room than usual for other big stories. Here’s what we may have missed this week while Mr. Trump dominated cable news:

Wisconsin voters tipped control of their Supreme Court to liberals, a shift that could end the state’s abortion ban. It was the most expensive judicial election in American history.

Chicago elected county Commissioner Brandon Johnson mayor. He defeated a more conservative Democrat who ran as being tougher on crime.

Tennessee’s Republican-dominated House expelled two Democratic members for their role in a gun control demonstration inside the State Capitol. The protest followed a deadly school shooting in Nashville.

The Biden administration, in a long-awaited report, admitted that the United States should have begun withdrawing from Afghanistan earlier than it did. The 2021 evacuation swiftly collapsed into violence.

Roy McGrath, who was briefly chief of staff for former Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan, died in an FBI shootout in Tennessee. Mr. McGrath was a fugitive after failing to appear at his March 13 trial on embezzlement and other charges.

And so on. The Trump story is big, no question. But the media spotlight is glaring and narrow. Many important events happen outside the framework of the top-of-the-hour headlines.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Ammar Awad/Reuters
With the Dome of the Rock behind them, Palestinians demonstrate in the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound as Muslims attend Friday prayers in the holy month of Ramadan, in the Old City of Jerusalem, April 7, 2023.

For several days, almost defiantly, Jerusalem enjoyed the fruits of diplomacy. But extremists exploiting the Passover-Ramadan season once again incited violence that radiated out to a tense region, shortening a moment of Palestinian safety and joy.

Daniel A. Varela/Miami Herald/AP/File
Kids stand on stage near Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis before he signs HB7, also dubbed the “Stop WOKE” bill, during a news conference at Mater Academy Charter Middle/High School in Hialeah Gardens, Florida, April 22, 2022. At least 18 states have enacted restrictions on teaching critical race theory since 2021.

Has the idea of an open marketplace of ideas – once a bedrock American principle – lost its value?

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The Ditch Riders

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Sophie Hills/The Christian Science Monitor
Levar Mullen leans on his bike next to the "Wheel Deal," a strip of Reisterstown Road in Baltimore famed among urban dirt bikers who perform stunts there.

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The Monitor's View

Photo by Melanie Stetson Freeman/The Christian Science Monitor
A poster shows what gang members are learning in a Chicago anti-gun violence program.

Year after year, the politics of gun violence in the United States has been stuck on what seems to be one binary choice: more gun control versus more mental health care. Meanwhile mass shootings persist at a pace of more than one per day.

One American city is trying to avoid that trap.

In Syracuse, a city of 425,000 people in upstate New York, the homicide rate is three times the national average. “We’re ready to try something new,” proclaimed an editorial on Tuesday on the news site syracuse.com. The city is poised to launch a new gun violence prevention strategy that sees every citizen – including those committing violence – as agents of change.

“I don’t want to wait until a young man is behind bars to figure it out,” said pastor Lateef Johnson-Kinsey, director of a new office set up by the mayor last year to reduce gun violence, in a recent radio interview. “Your community must become your youth ministry.”

The city conducted a granular study of gun violence. It found that between 2012 and 2021, homicides rose yearly by an average of 26.5%. It sought input from community violence experts in other cities and used crime data to identify the sources of violence down to specific gang members.

The study helped officials understand that gang members believe violence is a salve for their hopelessness, a result of poverty and broken homes. It also helped them recognize why disparate violence prevention initiatives haven’t worked. Solving gun violence, Mayor Ben Walsh said in his State of the City Address in January, requires a coherent approach. It means fixing blight in neglected neighborhoods and caring for the mental health of police officers.

Syracuse’s strategy centers on two ideas that have proven effective elsewhere, in cities like Boston and Chicago. One is that gang members themselves are vital resources in social healing. The other is to think of redemption as a job. Officials have identified 50 “top brass” shooters in four gangs. Their goal is to enroll these “gentlemen,” as Mr. Johnson-Kinsey calls them, in a program that includes counseling, job training, and better schooling.

But with compassion comes expectations. By focusing on the instigators of gang violence, the city hopes to create new role models for their peers. It wants participants to see themselves as government employees whose job is equal parts individual reform and community renewal. The program includes a modest monthly stipend – or “scholarship,” as Mr. Johnson-Kinsey calls it.

A similar program in Boston describes that approach as a process of being “uncornered” – a shift in mindset alike for individuals and communities caught up in gun violence. “Uncornered provides the scaffolding of resources that allow gang members to help themselves and those they love take advantage of new opportunities,” an article in Social Impact Review noted in February. It has “a more universal meaning. Most people would not think of a gang member as a solution, but rather as a problem. In this new way, we are all Uncornered in our thinking.”

Syracuse will need time to see if its plan’s many well-researched elements can work. For a nation caught in a debate about gun violence, the city is only the latest community charting a way out of the mental impasses of division and fear.


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.

Nani_500px_Getty Images

Through his resurrection, Jesus Christ didn’t only save himself. He also proved life to be eternal and opened the door for each of us to find the spiritual truth of our being.  


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Cheney Orr/Reuters
Rep. Justin Pearson gestures in the Tennessee House of Representatives after the vote on April 6, 2023, in Nashville, to expel him after he broke legislative rules by participating in protests advocating for gun control in the House chamber. House members also voted to expel Rep. Justin Jones for the same reason, while Rep. Gloria Johnson, who also participated, avoided expulsion by one vote. Accusations of racism arose because Mr. Johnson and Mr. Jones are Black, and Ms. Johnson is white. Expulsion has been used extremely rarely, for offenses such as sexual harassment.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us. Come back Monday, when we’ll have a story about how former President Donald Trump is raising money after his arraignment this week in New York.

More issues

2023
April
07
Friday

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