2019
September
23
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

September 23, 2019
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Clayton Collins
Director of Editorial Innovation

Today we look at how shifting political norms test the Constitution, where multinationalism is spurned and sought, completeness (despite discomfort) in a historical record, and promises around social equity in higher ed.

First, the weekend was bookended by a climate strike and today’s action summit

Urgency can bring out fighters. “We need to get angry and understand what is at stake,” teen climate activist Greta Thunberg told Democracy Now recently. For Emily Atkin, anger was the motivator for her blog, Heated. “I strongly believe that anger, carefully directed, is essential to ... effective action,” she told the Columbia Journalism Review

But hope is a motivator, too, even among longtime warriors you’d expect to be tired. 

“We have the technology we need,” Al Gore wrote yesterday in The New York Times, calling for the will to deploy it. “We’re dancing as nimbly as we can,” wrote Bill McKibben in Time, writing from an imagined 2050, a time of global trust, “and so far we haven’t crashed.” 

Hope is not a strategy, but it can be a constructive orientation. One essayist worries that nurturing her son’s love for nature – not just teaching him to combat its perceived enemies – might set him up for a hard future if losses mount. 

“[K]ids who play in the woods become adults who [take] care of the planet,” writes Rebecca Hesiman in High Country News. “But ultimately, it wasn’t the statistics that made up my mind. It was a feeling – hope. Taking our son camping has become my stubborn way of hanging onto hope that a beautiful future is still possible.”


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Hamad l Mohammed/Reuters
Men work at the damaged site of a Saudi Aramco oil facility in Buqayq, Saudi Arabia, Sept. 20, 2019.
Courtesy of the Christiansborg Archeological Heritage Project
An artist's rendering of the former Danish slave fort known as Christiansborg Castle, in Ghana's capital, Accra. Today, the fort is the site of an archaeological dig that explores, among other topics, the role some Ghanaians played in the trans-Atlantic slave trade.

Q&A


The Monitor's View

AP
Ayman Odeh, leader of the Arab Joint List parties, meets constituents in Nazareth, Israel, while campaigning for the Sept. 17 election.

A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

A message of love

Alfredo Sosa/Staff
A dog rests on the steps of the Pyramid of the Sun on Sept. 21, 2019, in Teotihuacán, Mexico. The city of Teotihuacán was built by hand more than a thousand years before the swooping arrival of the Nahuatl-speaking Aztec in central Mexico.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Come back tomorrow. Sara Miller Llana will be reporting from Toronto. Amid a fairly binary conversation about Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s character, she has been listening for the nuanced perspectives of minority voters in that city. 

More issues

2019
September
23
Monday
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