2022
June
09
Thursday

Monitor Daily Podcast

June 09, 2022
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Mark Sappenfield
Senior global correspondent

“Hate destroys a man’s sense of values and his objectivity.”

I have thought of this statement by Martin Luther King Jr. often in recent years. Many Americans are looking deeply into why the nation seems so fractured. This week, with the news of the assassination of a former judge in Wisconsin and an apparent attempt to kill Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh, that question is only more urgent. What have we become? Are things spinning out of control?

There are many answers to these questions, with Story Hinckley examining the topic in today’s issue. But I see great foresight in Dr. King’s words. Nonviolent resistance was not about simply being nonviolent. It was the recognition that anger and hatred, when not mastered, beget violence. The society that thinks it can indulge one and avoid the other is fooling itself. 

A bipartisan bill to protect Supreme Court justices would be a welcome sign of unity. But it would address effects, not causes. Our political discourse today is significantly driven by hatred and anger, fueled in the name of righteousness. 

The principles that drove out British colonialism in India, overturned Jim Crow laws in the American South, and defeated apartheid in South Africa were based on the power of the personal struggle for truth and love. Mohandas Gandhi wrote that true change comes from the person who “always tries by close and prayerful self-inspection and self-analysis to find out whether he is himself completely free from the taint of anger, ill-will, and such other human infirmities.” 

Anyone who thinks they are not a part of the solution mistakes the problem. We can protect Justice Kavanaugh and others not just by the vigilance of authorities but by examining how we’re thinking about our neighbor and the world. 


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Evelyn Hockstein/Reuters
A police officer tells demonstrators in support of reproductive rights not to stand in front of Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh's home in suburban Maryland, on May 7, 2022. Threats of violence against public officials have been rising – including an arrest this week of an armed man near Justice Kavanaugh’s home.

Patterns

Tracing global connections

A deeper look

Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff
A mural of an Indigenous woman called "Mending" fills the side of a building in the North End of Winnipeg, Manitoba, on May 11, 2022. The mural incorporates elements of North, Central, and South American cultures.

Book review

Clyde Click/Fugees Family
Luma Mufleh speaks with a group of students. She founded the Fugees Academy charter schools to meet the needs of immigrant children, some of whom were bullied in the public schools because of race, religion, or immigration status.

The Monitor's View

AP
Pro-democracy protesters rally in Khartoum, the capital of Sudan, on June 3.

A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

A message of love

Martin Meissner/AP
Falconer Laura looks into the eyes of Hugo, a Eurasian eagle-owl, at a hunting fair in Dortmund, Germany, June 8, 2022.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris and Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thank you for joining us today. Please come back tomorrow when our Erika Page looks at how young adults are reimagining worship as less hierarchical and more participatory – and the kinds of communities that are taking shape.

More issues

2022
June
09
Thursday
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