2023
September
27
Wednesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

September 27, 2023
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Sarah Matusek
Staff writer

Yesterday, the sun-baked high plains of Colorado welcomed U.S. Secretary of the Interior Deb Haaland. At a media event, she touted the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law’s $4.7 billion meant to help states plug orphaned oil and gas wells. 

Colorado, the fifth-largest crude oil producer in the United States, has hundreds yet to plug.

“Millions of Americans, including many Coloradans, live within just 1 mile of an orphaned oil or gas well,” said Secretary Haaland in Adams County, at a defunct site in a flat field.

“These are environmental hazards that jeopardize public health and safety by contaminating groundwater, emitting methane – which adds to the climate crisis,” she said.

The potential government shutdown has thrown the immediate future of all federal spending into doubt. But the longer-term commitment from all parties seems strong. With ambitious goals to reduce pollution, Democrat-led Colorado relies on partnership with and revenue from the oil and gas industry to cap these wells. Yet there have been disagreements around the financial commitment of operators, reports The Colorado Sun. And there are competing visions of the state’s – much less the country’s – energy future. 

Still, one trade group leader says he supports plugging and reclaiming these sites based on a shared value. Safety, says Dan Haley, is a “nonpartisan” issue.

“We’re Coloradans at the end of the day,” Mr. Haley, the president and CEO of Colorado Oil & Gas Association, said on a call. “We value clean air; we value clean water.” 

Collaboration, after all, is a natural resource, too.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Elizabeth Frantz/Reuters
House Speaker Kevin McCarthy calls for an impeachment inquiry into President Joe Biden while delivering a statement on allegations surrounding Mr. Biden and his son Hunter Biden, on Capitol Hill in Washington, Sept. 12, 2023.

A Republican impeachment inquiry opens tomorrow, so far without firm evidence of impropriety by Joe Biden, experts say. That sets this moment apart from previous presidential impeachments.

Mohamed Sharuhaan/AP
President of the Maldives Ibrahim Mohamed Solih casts his vote at a polling station in Malé, Maldives, Sept. 9, 2023. Opposition leader Mohamed Muizzu took a surprise lead over the incumbent, but neither secured enough votes to win. Maldivians return to the polls Sept. 30.

In the Maldives, voters have an opportunity to elect either a pro-China or pro-India president. Whoever wins, the future administration will need to balance foreign relations with Maldivians’ expectations of sovereignty.

Jacob Turcotte/Staff
Cristina Sille/Reuters
Argentine presidential candidate Javier Milei holds a chain saw during a campaign rally in Buenos Aires, Sept. 25, 2023. The common campaign-event prop is a nod to his plan to slash public funding and his desire to get rid of politics as usual in Argentina.

Argentine presidential candidate Javier Milei’s message of cutting out the political establishment – complete with a waving chain saw at campaign events – appeals to a diverse, and growing, political base. But his approach isn’t without social and economic risk.

Soaring rents and overcrowded dorms are making housing a priority on many U.S. campuses. How is one state trying to ease the burden and help students feel more at home?

Points of Progress

What's going right

In our progress roundup, supporting people who want to teach, as well as those already educating children, yields more job satisfaction and adds new professionals to the field.


The Monitor's View

A bit of shocking news last week forced much of the world to study up on a long-simmering rift in India. Canada accused the Indian government of killing a Canadian citizen near Vancouver who was a prominent activist for an independent Sikh state in his native homeland. While much of the focus has been on Sikh separatists and the diplomatic fallout for India, another spotlight turned on Punjab, the Indian state where Sikhs are in the majority.

There the separatist sentiments that fueled a decade of violence between Sikhs and the state half a century ago have significantly diminished. Instead, many of today’s Sikhs are bridging divides, joining hands with Hindus to restore historic Muslim mosques in Punjabi villages. Some of the funding comes from Sikhs living abroad. Sikh and Hindu families have donated land where new mosques now stand.

These projects – more than 165 so far, according to one Islamic association’s count – demonstrate that religions can lay a foundation for unity by practicing their shared tenets, such as meekness and sincerity. “This kind of brotherhood should prevail across India,” Mohammad Mursalin, a resident of the Punjabi village of Kutba Bamaniya, told Religion Unplugged. “Love must be nurtured, and animosity must dissolve. ... All religions emphasize love; none advocate hate.”

The mosque-building marks a healing counterpoint to the lingering tense relations between Sikhs and India’s nationalist Hindu government. Many Sikhs living abroad still worry they are being surveilled by Indian intelligence services, yet even “hard-core faith groups” in the Sikh diaspora have become apolitical, says Gurharpal Singh, an emeritus professor at the University of London’s School of Oriental and African Studies. The reason for that shift is significant. “They’ve become much more spiritually oriented,” he told The New Yorker last week.

That coincides with a prevailing sense of spiritual accommodation at home. A comprehensive Pew Research poll on religious tolerance in India in 2021 found that 95% of Sikhs feel very proud to be Indian. Some 70% of Sikhs said a person who disrespects India cannot be a Sikh, while 82% of Sikhs said they feel very free to practice their religion.

As new mosques rise, the community affections they represent may be aiding calls for a formal process of reconciliation to address the violence against Sikhs during the 1980s, especially now amid rising Hindu nationalism under Prime Minister Narendra Modi. Erasing communal divisions, wrote Dharamvira Gandhi, a Hindu former member of Parliament from Punjab, in a newspaper opinion piece, requires repentance, forgiveness, “large-heartedness and broad-mindedness.” Those qualities are consistent with Sikhism’s core tenets of equality, humility, and love-inspired service to others.

It isn’t just mosques. The unity felt in many Punjabi communities has led to shared religious festivals and joint restoration projects of historically significant Hindu and Sikh temples. Such actions are solvents for the fears and suspicions that now have set two democracies at odds with each other.


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.

We can rely on God for healing inspiration that helps us effectively care for our children – as a dad experienced after his daughter broke her foot at school.


Viewfinder

Juan Karita/AP
Magin Herrera López, Bolivia's vice minister of environment and biodiversity, stands next to transporters carrying blue-bearded macaws as he gives a press conference at the El Alto airport in Bolivia, Sept. 27, 2023. Eight blue-bearded macaws, which are critically endangered, were repatriated from Canada and will be sent to their natural habitat in the Bolivian Amazon, according to Mr. López.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

We’re so glad you could join us today. Please come back tomorrow for Christa Case Bryant’s profile of the House Freedom Caucus, the group of conservatives that is rolling Congress toward a government shutdown. She looks into how the group has evolved over the years.

We also invite you to keep informed on Tuesday’s fraud verdict against Donald Trump here.  

More issues

2023
September
27
Wednesday

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