2019
May
20
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

May 20, 2019
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Looking around at commencement exercises this weekend, of which there were many, it was hard to miss the emphasis on community – on the village that helps bring graduates to that special day, and the village that those graduates should aspire to join.

At The George Washington University in Washington, D.C., an MBA graduate spoke of the acts of generosity that helped her overcome loneliness and thrive far from her home in India. At the Benjamin Franklin Institute of Technology in Boston, Honduran immigrant Regis Lino-Kelly spoke of wanting to mirror the support he got as he moved from starting school unable to speak English to graduating with a bachelor’s degree in engineering and a great job. “It’s not just about us,” he said. “It’s about making sure our community is taken care of as well.”

And then there is Robert Smith. At Morehouse College, a historically black school for men, the billionaire private equity entrepreneur astonished graduates by announcing he would pay off their loans with a $40 million grant. And, he told the Class of 2019, he expected them to give back through hard work and character. “That degree is a social contract,” he said. “More than the money, the awards, the recognition ... we will all be measured by how much we contribute to the success of the people around us.

“We have all the opportunities of the American dream. ... [We] will show it to each other through our actions and through our words and through our deeds.”

I encourage you to listen to Mr. Smith’s powerful commencement address, which you can find here. And now, we’ll turn to our five stories, which look at challenges involving activism, equity, and democratic engagement.


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Today's stories

And why we wrote them

For many, cars still symbolize an open-road mobility that’s part of the American dream. But the rising financial burden of car ownership may be changing that.

A deeper look

COURTESY OF DIETLIND JOCHIMS
A young Somali who fled strife in his homeland sits in a church in Hamburg, Germany, where he lived while avoiding deportation by the state in 2017.

To some, it’s a religiously based moral stand. To others, it’s a bid by groups to put themselves above the law. The debate is playing out as congregations take dramatic steps to shield migrants. 

Maheder Haileselassie/Special to The Christian Science Monitor
Meaza Ashenafi, president of the Federal Supreme Court of Ethiopia. Ms. Ashenafi is the court's first female chief.

How do you keep people engaged in reform once at least some goals are achieved? Maintaining that urgency is a key challenge for Meaza Ashenafi, an activist who recently became the first woman to serve as Ethiopia’s Supreme Court chief justice. 

The Explainer

The obligations of companies toward workers are murky in an era when an Uber driver isn’t an acknowledged company employee. We look at emerging models of how to provide job benefits in the gig economy.

Difference-maker

It’s a common lament: Many eligible voters take a hands-off approach to the issues. So Sabine and Daniel Röder are trying several ways to get fellow Europeans involved – and interested in solutions to the challenges facing Europe.


The Monitor's View

Despite a severe drought and the hottest summer on record, voters in Australia just reinforced a chilly lesson for global campaigners on climate change. The lesson: Cuts in carbon use must be balanced by economic justice. 

In a May 18 election, Prime Minister Scott Morrison’s center-right coalition won a surprise victory in large part because it pledged fewer restrictions on coal emissions than the Labor Party. Pollsters had missed the fact that voters in the coal-dependent “soot belt” did not want to bear an unfair burden in tackling global warming. Australia is the world’s second-largest exporter of coal for power.

The unexpected election result comes after similar setbacks in other countries that suggest climate harmonization should go hand in hand with social and economic harmonization.

In Washington state last November, for example, voters again shot down a “carbon fee” because it was seen as unfair to working families and small businesses. At the same time in France, the so-called yellow vest protests erupted over a proposed fuel tax that would have placed a heavy toll on rural drivers. President Emmanuel Macron has since retreated on many green policies, learning a hard lesson that the political elite cannot get too far ahead of voters who perceive inequities in solutions to climate change.

In Canada, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau faces a legal and electoral rebellion in several provinces against a plan to impose a carbon tax. One big issue: whether government will stick to a promise to recycle all the revenue from a carbon tax back to energy consumers (“equalization payments”).

Few countries have yet to find an equitable allocation of the costs in curbing carbon pollution. In democracies, politicians can differ over details of the shared sacrifice. In Australia, which is the developed country that has been most vulnerable to climate change, compromise may still be possible between political parties. To gain a working majority in Parliament, Prime Minister Morrison will need to cut a deal with smaller parties that advocate strong climate action.

Extreme heat has put Australia’s feet to the fire. Eventually the Aussies may show the rest of the world how to distribute the obligations of creating a clean, green future.


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.

Advised by his accountant that saving his business would be impossible, today’s contributor was struck with a conviction that God did not create anyone to toil, suffer, and fail, but instead to thrive and be joyful. Soon after came a business idea that turned the company around.


A message of love

Andreas Fitri Atmoko/Antara Foto/Reuters
Visitors release paper lanterns during a ceremony on Vesak Day, also known as Waisak Day, the celebration of the birth of Buddha, at the Borobudur temple in Magelang, Central Java province, Indonesia, May 19. The sky lanterns symbolize light and enlightenment.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris and Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for starting your week with us. Come back tomorrow for Howard LaFranchi’s story about what the U.S. stance on abortion has meant for women’s rights around the world.

More issues

2019
May
20
Monday

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