Parenting has always been stressful. But the crescendo of modern anxieties makes parenting, itself, a health threat, says the U.S. surgeon general. Reaching out for help can be the quickest and most important response.
Our name is about honesty. The Monitor is owned by The Christian Science Church, and we’ve always been transparent about that.
The Church publishes the Monitor because it sees good journalism as vital to progress in the world. Since 1908, we’ve aimed “to injure no man, but to bless all mankind,” as our founder, Mary Baker Eddy, put it.
Here, you’ll find award-winning journalism not driven by commercial influences – a news organization that takes seriously its mission to uplift the world by seeking solutions and finding reasons for credible hope.
Explore values journalism About usThe greening, and sometimes the “pedestrianizing,” of pockets of big cities is a long-running international story. It’s one with some clear positives. Green, less traffic-filled cities are cooler and quieter, for example. But doing it right requires a continuity of leadership and a vision that’s inclusive.
As Jingnan Peng reported recently from Louisville, Kentucky, a central requirement is the trust of residents. Reimagining public space affects residential access and needed commerce. Collective aims need to be clear.
Erika Page reports today on how, in Barcelona, Spain, a city increasingly wary of tourism, “superblocks” are being met with hopeful interest, but also with some skepticism. Encouragingly, the city seems to be taking residents’ concerns to heart.
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And why we wrote them
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Parenting has always been stressful. But the crescendo of modern anxieties makes parenting, itself, a health threat, says the U.S. surgeon general. Reaching out for help can be the quickest and most important response.
• Georgia school shooting: The 14-year-old suspect in the killing of two fellow students and two teachers, and the wounding of nine others, in a Sept. 4 shooting at a high school had been interviewed by law enforcement last year over online threats.
• New French prime minister: President Emmanuel Macron names Michel Barnier, the European Union’s Brexit negotiator, as France’s new prime minister after more than 50 days of caretaker government.
• U.S. labor market cools: With layoffs low, workers are less likely to lose jobs. For job hunters, the search is tough. Since peaking in March 2022, the number of listed job openings has dropped by more than a third.
• U.S. hunger rises: It reached its highest point in nearly a decade last year, with 18 million households, or 13.5%, struggling at some point to secure enough food, according to a Sept. 4 report from the Department of Agriculture.
• India as plastic polluter: A new study in the journal Nature finds that India leads the world in generating plastic pollution, producing 10.2 million tons a year, far more than double the next big-polluting nations, Nigeria and Indonesia.
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Did the summer offer a reset to roiled college campuses? As classes resume, students face new rules around protesting – and some flux around financial aid, artificial intelligence, and the viability of higher ed.
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Many governments would like to regulate social media giants more closely, but are wary of free speech implications. Three recent court cases offer an alternative route to tighter control – criminal justice law.
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Barcelona’s groundbreaking green drive to make its streets more livable has attracted international attention. But it’s local residents who are the focus of its concerns.
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Tim Burton and Michael Keaton are clearly having a good time in this sequel to the 1980s cult classic “Beetlejuice.” Fans of the original will welcome Burton’s beguiling gothic vibe, but there are Great Pumpkin-sized plot holes.
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After the school shooting in Winder, Georgia, on Wednesday, much of the attention has been on what failed. Most of all, federal and local officials acknowledge they knew about the troubled teen, who is accused of killing four people, and had questioned him a year earlier. At the time, they said, they could not definitively connect him to threats posted online.
Yet this focus on how to better predict violence may mask a simpler approach to preventing it. A growing body of evidence shows that teaching empathy toward people who are troubled is more effective in curbing gun violence than trying to profile would-be assailants. And it taps into resources already at hand – neighbors, community leaders, and students.
“We don’t have to leave it up to the police to make sure our people are all right,” said Jahsani Peters, a high school senior in New York City who has worked at a community-based program countering violence. “We just try to help people see the good in life. That there are other ways to handle problems without violence or having to raise your voice and get crazy with somebody,” he told Chalkbeat, an education journal.
While still rare, school shootings have risen sharply in recent years, but so have two other trends. Forty-one U.S. states now fund violence intervention programs. They rely on people within communities – often former perpetrators of gun violence and those directly affected by it – to defuse conflict through presence and listening. Such intervention has reduced gun violence by as much as 60%, according to the Center for American Progress.
A similar emphasis is finding its way into classrooms. A curriculum developed by the Harvard Graduate School of Education, for example, includes teaching caring and compassion starting in elementary school. Two recent international studies measured the social benefits of such learning.
One, a University of Galway study published in June, concluded that teaching empathy “enables individuals to relate to one another in ways that promote trust, care, and cooperation.” The other, in China, found that early lessons in empathy result in “mindfulness and caring for others.” One lasting effect from that, it noted, was a greater sensitivity toward people who appear to be isolated or outcast.
Predicting the next school shooting or identifying the next potential shooter may never be completely possible. But one strong defense is already plain. It involves seeing students, not as targets or vulnerable, but as able to help create a welcoming and safe environment in schools.
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.
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As we’re receptive to the spiritual light of God that is ever present, we find that troubles such as sickness dissolve.
Thanks for engaging with your Monitor Daily today. For tomorrow, we’re working on a couple of pieces about immigration. One looks at efforts to confront human traffickers in source points such as Guatemala. Can those steps succeed? And on our “Why We Wrote This” podcast, we talk to Denver-based writer Sarah Matusek about her coverage of immigration issues, and how she works to keep fairness at the fore.