2019
May
15
Wednesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

May 15, 2019
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Mark Sappenfield
Senior global correspondent

The plan seemed like something out of “Oliver Twist,” circa 2019. Students in Rhode Island’s Warwick School District who could not pay for lunch would instead be given cold “sun butter and jelly” sandwiches (whatever those are). There is no word on whether those wanting seconds would be greeted by hair-netted servers yelling “More?”

Nobody likes solutions like these. At its worst, it becomes “lunch-shaming” – turning kids who can’t afford food into objects of derision. Elsewhere, students who can’t pay for lunch have had to wear wristbands or get hand stamps.

An article in The New Food Economy, however, shows the other side. Lunch debt is becoming a major concern as cash-strapped public schools struggle to meet budgets. What should they do?

In Warwick, the $77,000 deficit has prompted tens of thousands of dollars in donations from parents and philanthropists – including nearly $50,000 from yogurt-maker Chobani, NPR reports. “No child should be facing anything like this,” said CEO Hamdi Ulukaya in a tweet.  

At the moment, donations seem to be the only answer. The broader question is about what we expect a public education to provide. In many districts, teachers are paying for snacks and supplies out of their own salaries. How does food fit into that calculus? Says one expert to The New Food Economy: “School meals are just as important to student success as textbooks and teachers in the classroom.”

Now on to our five stories. They include a look at China’s emerging vision for Hong Kong, a Belize reef that could help save other reefs, and a different kind of memoir on race in America. 


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Brian Snyder/Reuters
Democratic presidential candidate and former Vice President Joe Biden speaks at a campaign stop in Manchester, New Hampshire, May 13.

While young progressives get most of the headlines (from both the right and the left), more Democratic voters resemble Joe Biden: older centrists. In New Hampshire, voters say his calls for unity resonate in a deeply divided country.

As US-China trade war ramps up, how will it affect you?

There’s a lot of breathlessness and opining about what the U.S.-China trade battle means. Here’s a look at what is actually being affected and how.

SOURCE:

Fung Business Intelligence and Bloomberg (drawing on US International Trade Commission data); Peterson Institute for International Economics; U.S. Census and Bureau of Economic Analysis

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Jacob Turcotte/Staff

Hong Kong has long been more than a hub for trade and finance. In many imaginations, the “fragrant harbor” represents the quintessential world city – and a test of where the wind is blowing in Beijing.

Chris Iovenko
A diver inspects coral off the coast of Laughing Bird Caye in Belize. A decade ago, Belize’s Barrier Reef Reserve System was in such decay that UNESCO added it to its List of World Heritage in Danger. But thanks to a multipronged conservation effort, the reef is once again thriving.

A biodiversity superstar, coral reefs worldwide are under tremendous threat. In Belize, bold efforts to change environmental laws and replant coral helped save its reefs from extinction, providing a model for others. 

Karen Norris/Staff
Sarah Huny Young
Writer Damon Young is co-founder of Very Smart Brothas, now part of The Root website. In his recently published memoir, ‘What Doesn’t Kill You Makes You Blacker,’ he uses personal stories to address institutional racism.

Straightforward discussions about race are not always comfortable for Americans. How might cultural critic Damon Young’s memoir, ‘What Doesn’t Kill You Makes You Blacker,’ change that? We sought him out to ask. 


The Monitor's View

The world has never faced a mental challenge quite like this.

Despite a well-organized global effort to stop an outbreak of the Ebola virus in Congo, including the use of a new vaccine, the numbers have only worsened. Since October, when the outbreak began, more than 1,000 have died. The toll is the second largest in history for Ebola. And the fatality rate is higher than in previous outbreaks. In the past month, the virus has spread only faster and farther in the northeast provinces of Africa’s second-largest country.

If all that sounds fearful and suggests a wider epidemic, you may understand why officials have pinpointed a key reason for the lack of progress against the disease: fear itself.

As response teams have worked diligently to curb the outbreak, local armed groups and politicians have whipped up fears among the Congolese and exploited false rumors. This has led to more than 100 acts of violence against health workers. After each attack, officials note, the outbreak increases.

“The tragedy is that we have the technical means to stop Ebola, but until all parties halt attacks on the response, it will be very difficult to end this outbreak,” says Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, director-general of the World Health Organization.

In a study of Congo’s crisis published in March, scholars discovered that fewer people sought medical care as fear of the disease rose. The fear has stayed one step ahead of the facts. It has also led people to abandon any concern for others.

Some global experts have called for the European Union to send a “white-helmeted security battalion” to the area. They note President Barack Obama sent 3,000 American troops to Liberia during the 2013-2016 Ebola outbreak in West Africa.

Yet militarizing the Ebola-hit area with foreign forces may not be the answer. In fact it may only add to a deeper cause of the outbreak: a general mistrust of outsiders bred by a vacuum of governance in eastern Congo after decades of conflict.

Restoring trust is now essential to quell the fear. Biodefense first requires a buy-in by local communities.

That means greater transparency and consistency in delivering humanitarian aid as well as better communication about goals and methods. Medicine alone is not sufficient.

What’s needed immediately is a cease-fire in the area, perhaps brokered by international leaders and Congolese officials. This would create a comfort and a calm that might allow health workers to operate safely. Only by loosening the grip of fear can Congo conquer the grip of Ebola.


A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

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.

For today’s contributor, who was anxious at the thought of being at the mercy of forces beyond her control, the idea that God’s plan for all is unequivocally good brought peace and lifted fear of an uncertain future.


A message of love

Wolfgang Rattay/Reuters
Ottmar Hoerl, a German conceptual artist, poses in Bonn's Muensterplatz square amid hundreds of Ludwig van Beethoven sculptures made of plastic to mark the 250th anniversary of German composer’s birth.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thank you for joining us today. With the the Alabama Senate passing a law Tuesday that essentially bans abortion, we wanted to give you a heads-up that the next installment in our abortion series is coming Friday. It looks at the dramatic shift in anti-abortion activism, from extreme rhetoric to a focus on the humanity of the woman, and how that is having an effect in nearby Louisiana.

More issues

2019
May
15
Wednesday

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