2019
March
19
Tuesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

March 19, 2019
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Where some see only rising waters, others see rising resilience.

From Mozambique to the U.S. Midwest, storms have wreaked havoc and hardship. Cyclone Idai tore across southern Africa leaving an estimated 1,000 dead. In Nebraska, record flooding has forced evacuations in dozens of towns. Some 200 miles of levees have been breached in four states, and 14 bridges have been washed out.

But the devastation is being met by a surplus of goodwill. “We’ve had more volunteers than what we need, and I mean people are willing to do anything to help out,” said Craig Risor, a coordinator at one of four shelters in Norfolk, Nebraska.

Across the Midwest, generosity and grit are native qualities. Most people don’t have to ponder whether or not to open their wallets, their homes, or their hearts.

Nebraska’s Fremont Municipal Airport is “a scene of human generosity,” wrote one columnist. As donations of diapers, toiletries, and blankets arrived on planes from Iowa, flights left full of evacuees. The president of Silverhawk Aviation said his firm provided about 20 free flights for about 150 people.

Three people have reportedly died in the flooding, including James Wilke. The Nebraska farmer jumped on his John Deere to assist a trapped motorist. As Wilke drove over a bridge, it collapsed into a swollen creek.

“He was always the first to go help somebody,” his cousin told the Omaha-World Herald. “He was a person who wouldn’t just talk about making things better. He would do it.”

Now to our five selected stories, including how some countries are countering autocracy, Venezuela’s road to stability, and the best biographies of March.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Global report

Dominic Lipinski/PA/AP
A vigil drew people to the New Zealand War Memorial on Hyde Park Corner in London March 15. Other members of Britain’s royal family followed Queen Elizabeth II in expressing their condolences over the shootings in Christchurch, New Zealand.
Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff
A worker spools wire mesh on the factory floor at Riverdale Mills Corp. in Northbridge, Massachusetts. The factory is one of the largest manufacturers of welded wire mesh in the world. Business has been adversely affected by rising costs for materials, due to U.S. tariffs on imported steel.

Points of Progress

What's going right
SOURCE:

Freedom House

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Jacob Turcotte/Staff
Ariana Cubillos/AP
Mothers and relatives wait outside a clinic’s intensive care room for infants during a widespread power outage in Caracas, Venezuela, March 7.

Books


The Monitor's View

AP
New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern, center, hugs and consoles a woman in Wellington as she visited Kilbirnie Mosque to lay flowers for the Christchurch attack victims.

A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

A message of love

Francois Mori/AP
Protesters rally during a national day of strikes in Paris March 19. Unions for education, private, and public sector workers called for demonstrations against President Emmanuel Macron’s economic policies. The demonstrators also advocate for higher wages and pensions and for welfare programs.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us. Come back tomorrow. We’re working on a story about the homeless in Italy who are selling newspapers and restoring their dignity.

More issues

2019
March
19
Tuesday
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