2024
February
20
Tuesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

February 20, 2024
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Clayton Collins
Director of Editorial Innovation

What goes into deciding whether another person is deserving of life? 

Certainly a lot of trust that a criminal justice system can keep capital punishment from ever being erroneously applied. 

Like many political issues, the death penalty mostly sets up as a debate with party-line predictability. Stephen Humphries, a Monitor culture writer, and Riley Robinson, a staff photographer with a gift for portraiture, went to Oklahoma, long the state with the highest per capita rate of execution. It was an emotional trip.

What they found was a tough-on-crime state pausing for a thought shift. Not away from accountability, but toward more restorative approaches to ensuring it. Stephen’s story today is about an openness to transformation.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Riley Robinson/Staff
Alan Knight (far left), Father Bryan Brooks, and others hold a prayer vigil outside the Oklahoma State Penitentiary in McAlester, Nov. 30, 2023.

Here’s Stephen’s report. Only five states executed people last year. Oklahoma was one of them – and some GOP state lawmakers worry they cannot trust their system to get it right.

Today’s news briefs

• Assange legal challenge: Seeking to stop the WikiLeaks founder from being sent to the United States to face spying charges, Julian Assange’s lawyers argue in London that his actions exposed serious criminal actions by U.S. authorities and were “of obvious and important public interest.” 
• More Gaza evacuations: A new Israeli order for parts of Gaza City to be evacuated may be an indication that Palestinian militants are showing stiff resistance in areas of northern Gaza. The U.S. is working with Egypt and Qatar to broker a cease-fire and hostage release. 
• A major merger: Capital One Financial Corp. is set to buy Discover Financial Services for $35 billion. The deal would bring together two of America’s biggest lenders and credit card issuers. 
• Haiti names assassination suspects: A judge indicts the widow of slain President Jovenel Moïse, Martine Moïse; former Haitian Prime Minister Claude Joseph; and the former chief of the Haitian National Police, Léon Charles, in the July 2021 assassination.

Read these news briefs.

Poland’s new government wants to clean up the excesses of its populist predecessor. But do so too quickly and it risks falling into the same patterns that caused the former government to violate public trust in the first place.

ABACA/Reuters/File
Lightning strikes through the sky over Ajmer city, India, June 1, 2023. Lightning claims more than than any other weather event in India, but gets little attention.

India is often at the front lines of climate change, but one of the largest natural threats to public safety gets the least attention. Why is progress on lightning safety so slow?

Books

The novels of Black writers don’t often receive the attention they deserve, except during Black History Month. This February brings five debut novels worth reading – now or any month.


The Monitor's View

Reuters/file
A solar-powered irrigation system in the Indian state of Jharkhand.

For decades, one of the world’s lesser-known food agencies, the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), provided grants and loans to small-scale rural farmers who grew mainly three grains: wheat, rice, and maize. Then as climate change forced a need for more innovation in farming, the fund realized it must listen to all farmers, especially Indigenous ones. Today it supports “underutilized” grains – such as barnyard millet, foxtail millet, finger millet, and little millet – many of which can survive extreme weather.

The great shift in thinking was that ingenuity may lie far behind the lab scientist devising new species of crops. It is freely found among those small farmers who till less than 25 acres and produce one-third of the world’s food.

Last week, at a global meeting of IFAD in Rome, the focus was on how innovation anywhere can help create a food-secure future. “Many innovations are developed in collaboration with the people we work with on the ground,” said the fund’s president, Alvaro Lario. “Agri-entrepreneurs in developing countries are some of the most innovative and dynamic entrepreneurs in the world.

“We don’t bring innovations to them – they bring innovations to us.”

He added that rural people’s unique knowledge of farming and local landscapes is increasingly offering solutions to adapting to climate change. “There are real grounds for hope,” Dr. Lario said.

For the rural poor who often live in harsh environments, living sustainably is second nature, requiring individual creativity as well as collaboration with others. When material resources are limited, such as during a drought, rural people rely on an unlimited resource: innovation.

An estimated two-thirds of the world’s poor people work in agriculture. Their centuries-old abilities at problem-solving remain a largely untapped resource for a world coping with new weather patterns. The task for food agencies like IFAD, said Dr. Lario, is to ensure “that the voice of small-scale producers and vulnerable rural communities resonates ... from the local levels to global forums.”


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.

Each of us is divinely equipped to take on difficulties with confidence, strength, and calm.


Viewfinder

Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press/AP
People skate along a section of the Rideau Canal in the capital city of Ottawa, Ontario, Feb. 19, 2024. The Rideau Canal Skateway first opened in the winter of 1971. The season typically begins in January, once the ice on the 7.8-kilometer-long (4.8-mile) “rink” is at least 30 centimeters (11.8 inches) thick.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

We’re grateful for your readership. Come back tomorrow for another look at trust. It has plummeted in recent years between the United States and China. Ann Scott Tyson traces the causes and effects, and explores what the way forward might be.

More issues

2024
February
20
Tuesday

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