2023
August
30
Wednesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

August 30, 2023
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A major hurricane has hit Florida – again. But while last year’s Hurricane Ian made landfall in the heavily populated Fort Myers area and dumped epic rains, Hurricane Idalia today was less destructive to human communities.

In fact, as the storm churned past Cuba into the Gulf of Mexico, it headed squarely toward one of the least populated coastal areas in the state, an area known as the Big Bend, where the Florida panhandle turns southward. Still, it’s a fresh reminder of how one of the nation’s fastest-growing states faces rising risks due to climate change

And there’s still plenty for affected people to reckon with, in Florida and beyond. Photos showed buildings on scenic Cedar Key half underwater as the Category 3 hurricane created a massive storm surge. Many people along the coast followed evacuation orders, but some did not.

As emergency response crews worked to keep power on and help people in need, residents in the state capital of Tallahassee were coping with floods from 4 inches or more of rain. Farther south, Tampa dodged a head-on strike but faced a still-large surge – amplified this afternoon by a “king tide” (a high tide with extra-strong gravitational pull).

“Two of our three bridges that go over to Pinellas [County] are currently closed because of flooding,” Tampa Mayor Jane Castor told CBS News today. Yet “we have not been [directly] hit in over 100 years.”

The storm was able to rapidly intensify as it neared the Florida coast, briefly reaching Category 4 wind speeds, due to this year’s unusually warm water temperatures, which act as fuel for hurricane intensity. Idalia also flooded Cuba’s western edge and by this afternoon was bringing its winds and rains northeast into Georgia and the Atlantic coast. 


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

The Greater Idaho movement’s recent momentum toward the goal of redrawing Oregon’s boundary highlights the depth of the urban-rural divide in America. 

Jacob Turcotte/Staff
AP
A gay Ugandan man covers himself with a pride flag as he poses for a photograph in Uganda, March 25, 2023. A prominent leader of Uganda's LGBTQ+ community on Thursday described anguished calls by others like him who are concerned for their safety after the passing of a harsh new anti-LGBTQ+ bill.

LGBTQ+ rights are under particular threat in Africa. In the face of some of the most punitive laws anywhere in the world, LGBTQ+ advocates in Uganda are taking a stand by simply being themselves.

The Explainer

From rising migration to daring expressions of political discontent, what it means that Egypt, a country of nearly 113 million people, is nearing economic collapse.

Asia Palomba
The town of Montemitro is one of several in Italy's Molise region where 15th-century Croatian refugees settled, creating the conditions for the genesis of "na-našo," a hybrid Italian-Croatian linguistic blend still spoken today.

The number of people who speak “na-našo,” a centuries-old Croatian dialect found in Italy’s Molise region, is dwindling. But young people brought up in the language are determined to see it survive.

Karen Norris/Staff

In Pictures

Oscar Espinosa
Jordy Navarra, chef at Toyo Eatery in Manila, delicately grates a bit of "asin tibuok" salt on top of flan de leche ice cream, one of his restaurant’s signature desserts. The artisanal salt is made only in Alburquerque, on the Philippine island of Bohol.

A sought-after artisanal salt made only in one coastal Filipino town was on the cusp of being lost to history. Local salt makers have persisted in bringing the age-old tradition back to life. 


The Monitor's View

Reuters
Semen Kryvonos, director of the National Anti-Corruption Bureau of Ukraine (NABU), speaks with a reporter in Kyiv, Ukraine, Aug. 18.

One shock for Ukrainians from Russia’s invasion last year was that their once-brotherly neighbor did not see Ukraine as a sovereign equal. Moscow’s war has now reinforced Ukraine’s internal struggle to expand equality – in rule of law, between the sexes, even in taxes.

A decade before the war, only 3% of Ukrainians said the law is equal for everyone. Oligarchs were untouchable. Organized criminals acted with impunity. Yet after two democratic revolutions, the war, new tools for honest governance, and an invitation to join the European Union, Ukrainians have changed their attitude to ensure everyone is equal before the law.

This week President Volodymyr Zelenskyy announced he would double down on curbing a prime source of inequality – official corruption – with new reforms that would harden punishments for corruption crimes. “We have to implement systemic changes,” he told an interviewer. “This is the way to fight corruption.” One example: Ukraine plans to offer a reward to whistleblowers who report corruption.

That legal front against graft is as critical and closely watched as the war front. In a survey by the Kyiv International Institute of Sociology, Ukrainians said curbing corruption is second in importance to winning the war. There’s a reason for their conviction. The share of people who consider corruption to be “very widespread” fell by more than 20 percentage points compared with 2018 and 2021.

“In the fight for Ukraine’s national identity,” stated a report this year by the Global Initiative Against Transnational Organized Crime, “transparency and accountability may be as important as missiles and artillery.”

The report also notes this: “With the war, collaboration between Russian and Ukrainian organized crime interests became impossible due to the political situation. ... Many Ukrainian crime bosses chose to leave the country, as did many oligarchs.”

Mr. Zelenskyy admits progress against corruption has been slow, yet made more urgent with almost monthly cases of corruption exposed in military recruitment and procurement as well as humanitarian aid. Still public trust in the police and anti-corruption bodies has risen.

In the war with Russia, Ukraine’s other front – a campaign for equality before the law – has made progress similar to that by the country’s military counteroffensive: slow but steady. War reporting isn’t always dodging bullets and telling tales from the battlefield. It is also tracking strategic shifts in thought.


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 wrong has been done, a genuine desire to love God and love our neighbor is a powerful starting point for healing and solutions. 


Viewfinder

Emilie Holtet/NTB/AP
Young children hike in Brekkeskogen, Norway, Aug. 30, 2023. As many as 11,000 preschool kids started their day this week hitting the paths, part of an initiative by the country's tourism association. Kristin Oftedal of the Norwegian Trekking Association, a volunteer organization, says they boost outdoor activity for young people out of the conviction that “outdoor children are happy children.”
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

You’ve come to the end of today’s Daily. Thanks for your support of the Monitor. We hope you’ll join us again tomorrow, when Ned Temko looks at a tale of two crashes: Russia’s failed moon rover landing and Yevgeny Prigozhin’s plane. President Vladimir Putin’s strength is reinforced, but is Russia’s waning?

More issues

2023
August
30
Wednesday

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