Texas is pushing the boundary of state authority over immigration. If a new law goes into effect next week, it will essentially set up dueling immigration systems.
Our name is about honesty. The Monitor is owned by The Christian Science Church, and we’ve always been transparent about that.
The Church publishes the Monitor because it sees good journalism as vital to progress in the world. Since 1908, we’ve aimed “to injure no man, but to bless all mankind,” as our founder, Mary Baker Eddy, put it.
Here, you’ll find award-winning journalism not driven by commercial influences – a news organization that takes seriously its mission to uplift the world by seeking solutions and finding reasons for credible hope.
Explore values journalism About usHow long is too long to wait for justice and progress? Impatience can be a good thing. It drives change. But change doesn’t often come on the schedule we would like.
Today, Anna Mulrine Grobe writes about Native Americans who have fought for decades to get better care for their military veterans. This year, a long-awaited breakthrough finally came.
“The hope,” Anna writes, “is that these developments will not only improve care, but also foment faith that, even after decades of neglect, change is possible.” Stories like hers show the importance, especially in trying times, of patience amid impatience.
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Texas is pushing the boundary of state authority over immigration. If a new law goes into effect next week, it will essentially set up dueling immigration systems.
• Supreme Court to hear Trump case: The Supreme Court has agreed to decide whether former President Donald Trump can be prosecuted on charges he interfered with the 2020 election and has set a course for a quick resolution.
• Mitch McConnell to step down: The Republican will leave his post as Senate leader in November, though he plans to serve out his term, which ends in 2027. The Kentucky lawmaker is the longest-serving Senate leader in history.
• Texas wildfires: A fast-moving wildfire burning through the Texas Panhandle grows into the second-largest blaze in state history, forcing evacuations and triggering power outages.
• Supreme Court considers gun case: The court hears a challenge to a Trump-era ban on bump stocks, a gun accessory used in a Las Vegas massacre that was the deadliest mass shooting in modern U.S. history.
• Navalny funeral: The funeral for Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny, who died earlier this month in a remote Arctic penal colony, will take place March 1 at a church in southeast Moscow after several locations declined to host the service.
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Talks convened by the World Health Organization seek to address issues of pandemic prevention and response, from transparency and global equity to misinformation. But consensus is difficult to reach.
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Native Americans serve in the U.S. military at exceptionally high rates, yet face significant post-service challenges. Efforts are underway to better support veterans on the Navajo Nation.
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Can going to a museum be therapeutic? A partnership of therapists, health care workers, and educators in France thinks so, and it’s creating pathways for museum visits and art interactions to be a part of mental health care.
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In our progress roundup, belonging in the place you call home includes being allowed to watch soccer in Iran, having opportunities as a writer in India, and owning the land beneath your manufactured house in the U.S.
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Those making plans for restoring postwar Gaza, as well as Israeli border communities destroyed in the Oct. 7 attack, do not need to look long for ideas. After many wars and disasters, people have created opportunities for recovery, shifting the focus from what was lost to what might better reflect a society’s values.
The most relevant model might be Lahaina in Hawaii. The coastal town on the island of Maui was leveled by a wildfire last August, leaving its people dispersed and many structures destroyed. While Gaza is shaped by complex land security issues between two historically divided peoples, for residents of Lahaina, rebuilding raises concerns that Palestinians would find familiar. They seek to preserve their community from dislocation and decisions made by more powerful outside interests.
A bill working its way through the Hawaii Senate sets out this goal: “There is an opportunity to rebuild Lahaina by preserving and reintroducing its valued resources in a manner that reflects the values and priorities of its residents and businesses, and addresses future challenges, including climate change and affordable housing.”
That aspiration reflects local sentiment. Although residents remain mostly scattered, they speak of the rebuilding of their town in biblical terms of resurrection and redemption. The work of protecting property and restoring economic activity starts with establishing joy and unity. They see the fire’s devastation as a call to knit the community and government more closely together and rethink the uses of the local environment, which had been altered over the past century by commercial agriculture.
“The biggest part we’re learning through this process of rebuild is that [every stance or opinion] should also be equal in encouragement,” Kaliko Storer, a Maui community advocate, told Island News in December. “It’s not the different things we do, but it’s the heart in which we do [it]. If the heart is in the right place for the right reasons, supply and provision [follow].”
The Senate bill acknowledges the principle of letting the community lead. It would establish a board composed of nine local residents to oversee $100 million in state matching funds for rebuilding projects that they determine. That marks a shift away from the way the state manages other local administrative boards. Its purpose, one senator told West Hawaii Today, is to give the people of Lahaina “liquidity and agency” to rebuild deliberately, reflecting local values.
Restoring communities by restoring community has worked elsewhere. Following the 2020 earthquakes in İzmir, Turkey, residents formed housing co-ops in collaboration with the local municipality to ensure that new housing reflected their needs and concerns.
“We didn’t know our neighbours before we initiated the co-operative effort,” one resident told The Conversation earlier this month. “But now, we design and build our homes together and try to make our neighbourhood more liveable.” That process has strengthened local self-government, seeding collaboration between residents, local universities, and professional associations on issues such as civil rights.
“There’s always a chance to new birth of something even better,” Kuhio Lewis, CEO at the Council for Native Hawaiian Advancement, told Island News. “But it has to be from the people’s perspective.” The post-disaster resilience in Lahaina shines a light for postwar restoration in Gaza and Israel.
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.
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If we’re feeling stuck at an impasse, we can count on the divine Mind for solution-inspiring wisdom that benefits all involved.
Thank you for spending time with us today. Tomorrow, we’ll look at the farmer protests that have been hitting countries across Europe. They’re about many different things, but Monitor columnist Ned Temko points to one common thread: resentment of European Union regulations that keep pushing agriculture toward more ecological responsibility. We’ll take a look at what the unrest might mean for the EU’s desire to be an environmental leader.