2023
August
22
Tuesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

August 22, 2023
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Lost your appetite for politics? If so, the TV series “Breaking Bread With Alexander” is for you.

Alexander Heffner had a hunger for more civility in political discourse. He also had a craving to taste cuisine across the United States. So Mr. Heffner devised a show for Bloomberg TV in which he shares meals with politicians in their home states. In Episode 1, he devours vegan chicken and waffles in New Jersey with Democrat Sen. Cory Booker. The topic of conversation between mouthfuls: How can we develop empathy and compromise in politics?

“The hyper divisiveness and partisanship in the culture has become overwhelming,” says Mr. Heffner in a call. “The thread through all these episodes was, ‘We’re not imagining enough what bipartisan policies or accomplishments would look like.’”

During Episode 6, Mr. Heffner eats flapjacks with West Virginia Sen. Shelley Moore Capito. They discuss how it’s possible to model civility with political colleagues one disagrees with. Yes, he knows that sounds like a cliché. But it can lead to bipartisan collaboration, such as a recent infrastructure law that includes funding to expand broadband in rural West Virginia.

Mr. Heffner’s goal was to create the politics equivalent of Jerry Seinfeld’s series “Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee.” The idea is to humanize politicians. There are laughs, but the show is often reflective. In North Dakota, Republican Gov. Doug Burgum served bison and candidly discussed abortion and the death penalty.

“Governor Burgum was an example of owning intellectual honesty in an age of politics that demands an ideological consistency,” says the series creator.

Mr. Heffner hopes these conversations will expand empathy and understanding among voters.

“Manifesting that constructive energy in ways that can improve and heal the country is what this series is trying to do,” says Mr. Heffner. “It’s not an overnight process.”


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Courtesy of Carlton Ward Jr/Wildpath/File
Riders herd cattle at Doyle Carlton's Horse Creek Ranch, a family-run operation in DeSoto and Hardee counties, in Florida. A conservation easement on the ranch protects more than 4,000 acres of wetlands.

Ranches are some of the last strongholds for nature and scientific discovery in the Sunshine State – but they’re disappearing fast at the hands of developers.

Aakash Hassan
Reporter Asma Bhat pauses as she helps break down The Kashmir Walla newsroom, Aug. 21 in Srinagar, India. The independent news organization in Kashmir vacated its offices after the Indian government blocked its website and social media accounts.

Press freedom, a bellwether of democracy, is under assault in India. The government’s closure of an independent news website in Kashmir bodes ill for media elsewhere in the country.

The Supreme Court’s June ruling ending affirmative action upended about 50 years of college admissions practices. At some universities, the college essay is playing a large role in shaping what comes next.

Books

Sometimes living up to our highest ideals means breaking with the past. A white historian reflects on her 1950s Virginia childhood and how she rejected the tenet of racial segregation. 

In Pictures

Alfredo Sosa/Staff
A kayaker waits his turn at locks 34 and 35 in Lockport, New York. The newer steel locks sit next to the 1825 Flight of Five, a five-lock stair that lifted boats 60 feet in a stretch of 450 feet.

What do our usual modes of transportation keep us from seeing? Riding his bike from Ontario to Rhode Island, the Monitor’s director of photography caught unexpected glimpses of an oft-forgotten past.


The Monitor's View

AP
A man hugs a child during a May 4 prayer service at a church in Belgrade, Serbia, a day after a 13-year-old killed eight fellow students and a guard.

Perhaps the most enduring streets protests of 2023 have been in Serbia, a country of nearly 7 million in southeast Europe. Since early May, after 19 children and young people were killed in two unrelated mass shootings just a day apart, tens of thousands of Serbs have rallied weekly in major cities under the slogan “Serbia against violence.”

Incredibly, 1 in 4 citizens has joined the protests and about half support them, according to one poll. And this is in a country with the world’s third-highest rate of gun ownership – after the United States and Yemen – and with relatively strict gun laws.

The staying power of the protesters reveals a society seeking solutions to the root causes of violence. “Serbia needs to stop and ask itself how far it has come and where and how it should go after this,” declared the country’s teachers union in June.

The government’s initial response to the mass killings was to order anyone with unregistered weapons and ammunition to hand them over to the police by June 8. More than 100,000 guns were turned in. Sales of guns were also banned for two years. Yet protest leaders know more must be done. An American expert on the Balkan countries, Eric Gordy, wrote in The Atlantic that a critical mass of Serbs wants “institutions that are truthful and responsible” and “a culture that is, if not tolerant and understanding, then at least relatively nontoxic.”

The protests have been partly aimed at mass media that promote hate speech or fictional depictions of aggression. One TV broadcaster has already canceled a show that condoned verbal and physical violence. They are also aimed at reforming the police, who are widely seen as corrupt.

Yet for all the outward focus of the protests, many Serbs have looked inward. “We will fight for Serbia without violence only if each of us rolls up our sleeves and makes our contribution. No one else can do that work but us,” Dragana Rakić, a leading politician of the Democratic Party, told the news site Danas.

Self-reflection on each person’s role in violence – watching it on TV, for example, or implying harm to political opponents – may now be more common in Serbia. “Serbs have stopped shoving, they say thank you and pardon more,” one grandmother in Belgrade told The Economist. She said the country is “rediscovering kindness” after the shootings. Such gestures are no longer seen as a weakness, she added.

As one pollster told Euractiv media, “There has been an awakening of citizens who were apathetic.” Each week, many of them are on the street protesting. Others are bringing peace into their daily lives. Both may help silence the guns.


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.

Wherever in the world we may live, we can support progress by letting divine wisdom and a spiritual view of ourselves and others inspire our actions as citizens.


Viewfinder

Ashley Landis/AP
Sha'Carri Richardson of the United States celebrates winning the women's 100-meter during the World Athletics Championships in Budapest, Hungary, on Monday. The event is seen as second only to the Olympics in prestige, and the field included four of the eight fastest sprinters in 100-meter history. The win capped a comeback for Ms. Richardson, who was barred from the 2021 Tokyo Olympics after testing positive for marijuana.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thank you for joining us today. Please come back tomorrow when the Monitor’s Linda Feldmann sets up the Republican presidential debate in the United States tomorrow night.

More issues

2023
August
22
Tuesday

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