2022
May
05
Thursday

Monitor Daily Podcast

May 05, 2022
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Mark Sappenfield
Senior global correspondent

In a nation struggling to find common purpose across polarized lines, the draft Supreme Court opinion overturning Roe v. Wade offers one possible path. As written, the opinion would return the question of abortion law to state legislatures. Each state could then navigate its own way through this politically divisive issue.

A graphic in The New York Times points to some logic in this: In many of the states most likely to ban abortion, a majority of residents oppose abortion. Moreover, America has a tradition, grounded in the Constitution, of strong states’ rights. We already see this occurring from LGBTQ rights to Medicaid benefits. Within the United States, one can live in very different Americas. 

But there are consequences. Most obvious is women losing a right they have had for 50 years, and a decision that could open the way for a rollback of other rights. During the Great Migration, millions of Black Americans left the South to escape Jim Crow laws. But Americans’ ability to move from state to state has been declining for decades due to rising housing costs and other factors. At a time when red and blue states are diverging, this could lock many Americans in states that don’t share their ideals, The Atlantic notes.     

My thought also turns to the conviction that guided Abraham Lincoln through the Civil War: The United States – as a single entity – is of inestimable value to the world. It is our determination to work through differences together, holding to a larger and more universal ideal, that gives America its power and offers a glimpse of a way forward for humanity and all its divisions. This delicate balance between diversity and unity has defined America since its founding, and the months and years ahead will offer a new test.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Evelyn Hockstein/Reuters
The U.S. Supreme Court is reflected in the sunglasses of Hannah Fuller, who is in her mid-20s, during a protest after the leak of a draft opinion written by Justice Samuel Alito preparing for a majority of the court to overturn the landmark Roe v. Wade abortion-rights decision later this year, in Washington May 3, 2022.
Eloisa Lopez/Reuters
Supporters of Ferdinand "Bongbong" Marcos Jr., the son and namesake of the late Philippine dictator, cheer during a campaign rally in San Fernando, Pampanga province, Philippines, April 29, 2022.
Haziq Qadri
Mohammad Maqbool stands near a bunker in Gundishat village, India. The villagers take shelter in these bunkers when the armies of India and Pakistan exchange fire.
Courtesy of The Mars Society/MDRS
At The Mars Society's Mars Desert Research Station in the Utah desert, members of the station's Crew 240 conduct extravehicular activity in early 2022. Crews of scientists are testing the technological and psychological demands that a real-life Mars mission would impose.

The Monitor's View

Reuters
Workers use their helmets to pour water to cool themselves off near a construction site on a hot summer day on the outskirts of Ahmedabad, India, April 30.

A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

A message of love

Abubaker Lubowa/Reuters
Ugandan police officers detain university students near the Parliament who, having chained themselves together, were protesting the steep rise in the cost of goods and services, in Kampala, Uganda, May 5, 2022. Their earlier attempts to speak with members of Parliament had failed.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thank you for joining us. Please come back tomorrow when Scott Peterson looks at how residents of Ukraine’s long fought-over Donbas region are faring now that the main thrust of the war has come to them.

More issues

2022
May
05
Thursday
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