2024
May
15
Wednesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

May 15, 2024
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Mark Sappenfield
Senior global correspondent

The Axios Finish Line newsletter on Tuesday highlighted New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof and his new memoir, “Chasing Hope: A Reporter’s Life.” “What I’ve learned from four decades of covering misery is hope — both the reasons for hope and the need for hope,” he writes in a recent column

I interviewed Mr. Kristof in 2020. He made similar comments then. They speak to a truth I have found in working for The Christian Science Monitor. If you are not looking for something, you will rarely see it. Hope and agency and grace are always there. Journalists like Mr. Kristof help ensure we don’t forget that fact.  


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

The Explainer

The new FAFSA application will eventually be easier to complete. But the current process for federal student aid in the United States has stymied applicants, especially those from nontraditional homes. 

Today’s news briefs

• Biden and Trump to debate: President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump agree to hold two campaign debates.
• Slovakian leader shot: Slovakian Prime Minister Robert Fico is shot by an assailant following a political event. Leaders from across the political divide are denouncing the apparent assassination attempt. 
• Blinken in Ukraine: Ukrainian forces have withdrawn from some parts of the country’s northeast and are battling Russian troops in other areas. U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken seeks to reassure the ally of continuing American support.
• U.S. inflation dips: Led by lower food and auto prices, inflation in the United States cooled slightly last month after three elevated readings.

Read these news briefs.

Shannon Stapleton/Reuters
Palestinian women shop at a roadside stand near Ramallah in the West Bank, May 3, 2024.

The West Bank has not been untouched by war in Gaza, which has catalyzed settler attacks and military raids. With jobs in Israel lost and public sector wages unpaid, the cumulative weight of the war is dragging down the economy, too.

Francis Kokoroko/Reuters
Wanlov the Kubolor, a musician and an LGBTQ+ rights activist in his 40s, speaks in his home studio in Accra, Ghana, about Ghana's anti-LGBTQ+ bill.

A new law in Ghana threatens to roll back LGBTQ+ rights, part of a bigger wave of antigay legislation in Africa. But activists are not giving up the fight. 

An investigative reporter in Venezuela was forced to flee his country for uncovering corruption. A new documentary on that work helps explain why political change is in sight for the first time in over a decade.

Zinara Rathnayake
A student prepares vegetables before lunch begins at Mini-Makphet, a vocational restaurant in Vientiane, Laos.

Laos is among Asia’s least-developed nations. Vocational restaurants are helping young people to dream.


The Monitor's View

Reuters/Kevin Lamarque
U.S. President Joe Biden takes a garden walk with Chinese President Xi Jinping during a summit near San Francisco, Nov. 15, 2023.

U.S. President Joe Biden on Tuesday announced billions of dollars of new tariffs on goods from China ranging from steel products to electric cars. The move may reassure blue-collar voters, who could decide whether Mr. Biden keeps his job in November. Yet it sends an aggressive signal at an already tense point in the competition between Beijing and Washington for global influence.

Great-power rivalries, however, are seldom uniformly antagonistic. On Tuesday, Chinese and American envoys launched a new partnership in Geneva to reduce the security risks of artificial intelligence. That followed a first meeting in Washington last week of the new top policy chiefs on climate change from the two countries.

These diplomatic channels show how a shared recognition of mutual threats can motivate rivals to dissolve suspicion and build trust. The two initiatives have a common ingredient. The AI talks fulfill a commitment made by Mr. Biden and Chinese leader Xi Jinping during a garden summit in San Francisco last fall. The head of the U.S. climate delegation, John Podesta, hosted his counterpart, Liu Zhenmin, for dinner in his home.

Such personal touches in diplomacy enable adversaries to find their common humanity. “Trust depends on a mix of calculation and bonding,” wrote Nicholas J. Wheeler, a professor of international politics at the University of Birmingham in England, in his book “Trusting Enemies.” “The calculative element disappears,” he noted, as rivals “place a high value on the other’s security and care about that person’s well-being as an end in itself.”

On both issues, U.S. and Chinese negotiators have a ready model of interpersonal diplomacy to draw upon. Mr. Podesta and Mr. Liu inherited a working group shaped by the mutual respect and shared affections their predecessors cultivated during a long collaboration. Their next meeting is already booked, in Berkeley, California, at the end of May.

Reviewing his first summit with Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev in Geneva in 1985, then-President Ronald Reagan said his priority was “to eliminate the suspicions which each side had of the other. The resolution of the other questions would follow naturally after this.” Alan Gotlieb, a former Canadian ambassador to the United States, held a similar conviction. “Sometimes personal relationships don’t fit into analysis schemes," he told a University of Toronto conference in 2011. "They’re one card, but the most important card in international relations.”

A broad range of competitive and ideological disputes divide Washington and Beijing that the new Biden tariffs may now complicate. But on two critical issues, climate change and AI, the rivals may be poised to nourish new views of each other beyond adversity.


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.

An honest effort to “pray without ceasing,” as the Bible puts it, is a strong starting point for overcoming obstacles and feeling God’s care more fully.


Viewfinder

Baz Ratner/Reuters/File
A motorcycle drives between baobab trees near Morondava, Madagascar. The so-called “upside-down trees,” which can live for thousands of years, have long been a subject of fascination, reverence, and mystery. A new study suggests that the trees originated in Madagascar some 41 million years ago and spread to mainland Africa and Australia on ocean currents. The trees are known as “the mothers of the forest” in the Malagasy language.
( 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 Ann Scott Tyson looks at China’s big expansion of renewable energy, and how that could change the calculus of climate action and global energy. 

More issues

2024
May
15
Wednesday

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