2021
March
16
Tuesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

March 16, 2021
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Mark Sappenfield
Senior global correspondent

Four weeks after a historic winter storm, residents of Jackson, Mississippi, are still having to boil their water. Burst pipes and power failures were a familiar story across the American South after the storm. Some Texans went without power for days. But Texas applied for federal aid almost immediately, and recovery is underway. So did Louisiana. Mississippi still has not, according to the Clarion Ledger.

The Jackson water crisis fits a pattern. It took 11 months before power was completely restored in Puerto Rico after Hurricane Maria. Repeated concerns about lead in the water of Flint, Michigan, were ignored. When infrastructure fails in communities with little financial might or political power, the wait for the most basic services can make parts of the United States appear like a developing nation. 

As in Jackson, these issues are often intertwined with race. Jackson’s water system is in a deplorable state because much of the city’s wealth disappeared with white families who left as segregation-era laws were overturned. The city is now 80% Black. “White flight has led to divestment,” Mayor Chokwe Lumumba told The New York Times.

The crisis, he added, “hopefully ... allows us to build the resolve to address it.” Honest resolve to help is in many ways as important a building project as any pipes or plumbing.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

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Schoolchildren of Gustav-Falke elementary school play during break in classes for children of critical workers in Berlin on Jan. 28, 2021. German schools sent students home in December amid a surge in COVID-19 cases.

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It’s About Time: Can We Change the Past?

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Difference-maker

Courtesy of Gabriel Passos/Gastromotiva
Through this Gastromotiva program, current and former students of the nonprofit, many of whom lost their jobs because of the pandemic, have turned their home kitchens into small delivery restaurants. Above, two people work in such a kitchen in Rio de Janeiro.

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The logo of the International Monetary Fund at its headquarters in Washington.

A Christian Science Perspective

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A message of love

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Women in Dublin, Ireland, display signs at a March 16, 2021, protest against violence, following the charge of a British police officer in the London kidnapping and murder of Sarah Everard in early March. As her death sparked outrage over the wider issue of women's safety in Britain, Prime Minister Boris Johnson said Monday night that the government would more than double funding for neighborhood safety measures, The Associated Press reported.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thank you for joining us today. Please come back tomorrow for an essay from a writer who had to deal with doubts about his future – even from his family – when he lost his sight. But his grit, and humility and patience with himself, helped him find success.

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2021
March
16
Tuesday
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