2019
March
04
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

March 04, 2019
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Clayton Collins
Director of Editorial Innovation

There’s doing good. And then there’s making good.

The first can be about altruism, or about reputation management. The second can be a heavier lift. It requires acknowledgment of an old injustice and a will to redress it.

That fights a human tendency to want to leave the past behind, and it tends to carry some cost even for those who weren’t a party to the problem.

Democrats eyeing 2020 presidential runs are now testing new approaches, including subsidies and other tax credits, to the idea of monetarily compensating African-Americans for slavery’s brutal legacy.

Other bids to shift thought come with the power and agility of celebrity. Jon Stewart, for example, has taken up a fight to get 9/11 first responders compensated for health problems attributed to their heroic work. “The fact that we continue to need to do this,” he wrote, “is beyond my comprehension.”

And still others are acting from a sense of knowing that reparation can come with a focus on what can be gained rather on what must be given up.

Septuagenarian Florence Schlonger represents the fifth generation of her family to occupy a 320-acre Kansas farm. When it came time to leave, the Wichita Eagle reports, she reflected on this: The original prairie homestead stood on the hunting grounds of the Kaw Nation. 

So when the property sold, she cut a $10,000 check – gratefully received – to an organization dedicated to preserving Kaw heritage. She called it “a small acknowledgement … that the pride in our farm passed down through our family came at a great cost to your people.”

That act, Ms. Schlonger says, was “a privilege.”

Here are our five stories for your Monday, including a high-tech solution to helping the homeless and a home-grown solution to modernizing a controversial cultural practice. 


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Alfredo Sosa/Staff/File
An employee works the line at Integra Tool & Manufacturing Inc. in Wausau, Wis. The US has been experiencing gains in manufacturing jobs.

A US economic sector that many had written off has been showing strong new life. Our reporter looks at the trend’s durability and at the debate over where credit lies.

Pavel Golovkin/AP
The founder of the Baring Vostok investment fund, Michael Calvey, is seen on a screen, with public observers and journalists below, during a court session in Moscow Feb. 28.

There’s a lot of opacity around Russia’s often cutthroat business world. This next piece, about an American’s arrest, draws back the curtain – and tells a bigger story about what’s hindering Russian economic growth. 

Amid a housing crisis, how best to determine who needs help, and what kind? Some West Coast cities think they’ve found an answer.

Courtesy of SAFE Maa
Cultural elders from the Loita Maasai meet to commit to abandoning the practice of female genital cutting, or FGC, Feb. 6 in Olmesutie, Kenya.

Cultures are always evolving, with outside influence a factor. But when solutions come from within rather than being imposed, a sense of receptivity can often grow.

Today’s last piece looks at what happens when college-hunters begin to look past institutions’ reputations and more at the appeal of the countries where schools are based.


The Monitor's View

Reuters
President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador greets people during his arrival in Badiraguato, Mexico, Feb. 15.

Three months after taking office, Mexico’s new president, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, or AMLO as he is known, is enjoying a double success. His popularity is 65 to 85 percent, depending on the poll. And his proposed reforms are gaining political traction. This “honeymoon” might be normal in many democracies. Mexico, however, is hardly normal these days.

Among other woes, its murder rate keeps setting record highs. The flow of migrant “caravans” from Central America is causing conflict with the United States and inside Mexico. And widespread theft of gasoline from pipelines, which was harming the energy sector, needs an urgent response.

Many Mexicans are hopeful about AMLO’s reforms, which include better social programs and the creation of new job and education opportunities for young people. His broader goal is to achieve social reconciliation and pacification of high-crime areas as well as a quenching of what he calls a “thirst for justice” after more than a decade of increased violence.

Much of his success can be attributed to his transparency. Five days a week AMLO holds a meeting on public security at 6 a.m. and then a televised press conference at 7 a.m., during which he delivers messages about reforms under way and responds to journalists’ wide-ranging questions. Mexicans clearly appreciate his open, down-home communication.

To address immediate needs, the leftist leader has dispatched security forces to places hit particularly hard by organized crime and oil theft. Last week, Congress overwhelmingly approved his controversial proposal for a hybrid military-police force, or “National Guard,” although only after adding measures to ensure civilian control. AMLO promises the force will be trained to honor human rights. The measure must still be approved by a majority of state legislatures, which is expected.

To ensure a National Guard can reduce crime, it must have enough training, numbers, and resources. Such a federal force is required as state and local police are notoriously corrupt. Eventually better local policing and an improved justice system will still be needed. Much work lies ahead to realize AMLO’s vision of a peaceful landscape that addresses past injustices and prevents new ones.

On migration, AMLO seeks to integrate the economies of southern Mexico and the northern tier of Central America. He wants new infrastructure, such as a regional train in the Yucatán Peninsula, and more private investment to create jobs. The hope is that those people thinking of migrating would instead find security and employment, allowing them to stay in the region. In the interim, he proposes that migrants from Central America arrive in a regularized fashion with their rights respected and humanitarian needs met, as well as be able to work.

The short-term challenges are enormous. Mexico’s immigration services are woefully inadequate. In addition, the country must deal with a US administration less tolerant of irregular migration. The US plans to send more and more migrants seeking asylum back to Mexico to wait for their cases to be judged. Mexico is struggling to care for them. Because of its dependence on trade with the US and a reliance on US investment, Mexico wants to avoid a public clash with the Trump administration.

With his broad vision, transparent approach, and strong public support, AMLO is off to a good start. He faces serious challenges in the energy sector and in winning the confidence of international and Mexican investors. Yet given Mexico’s many troubles, the momentum deserves some celebration.


A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

Here’s a poem that speaks to the power of Christ, divine Truth, as our “shelter from all storms.”


A message of love

Curtis Compton//Atlanta Journal-Constitution/AP
Students, teachers, and local residents hold a prayer circle March 4 in the gymnasium of Beauregard (Ala.) High School for those who lost their lives in a Sunday night tornado. More than 20 people were killed in the southwest part of the state. Severe storms destroyed mobile homes, snapped trees, and left a trail of destruction amid weather warnings extending into Georgia, Florida, and South Carolina.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

See you tomorrow. You might have noticed that we’re telling more stories chiefly through graphics. Watch for one on the rising demands placed on workers who are also caregivers at home – and at what employers are (and aren’t) doing to help out. 

More issues

2019
March
04
Monday
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