2020
August
21
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

August 21, 2020
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Linda Feldmann
Washington Bureau Chief

This week, national Democrats’ nightly telethon offered a mix of moving testimonials and apocalyptic warnings about President Donald Trump. Brayden Harrington, a 13-year-old who struggles with a stutter, showed courage in addressing the nation – sharing how presidential nominee Joe Biden, who has also faced down a stutter, has helped him.

In contrast, the Obamas raised alarm bells against a second Trump term. The former president, speaking from Philadelphia, depicted his successor as a threat to democracy.

“We can’t let that happen,” former President Barack Obama said.

Next week, it’s the Republicans’ turn. They’ll have their own human interest speakers – including Nick Sandmann, the Kentucky teen who sued media outlets for misrepresenting his actions at a Washington rally – and dire warnings against a leftist takeover in November. Already, we know that the Trumps will not confine themselves to Washington. On Monday, they’ll visit a Farmers to Families Food Box site in North Carolina, then drop by the (small) GOP convention in Charlotte. 

It’s also a safe bet that President Trump, a student of TV stagecraft, watched the Democrats carefully and will build on what worked. As with last night, fireworks are on the program. 

But for perspective on the health of American democracy, consider events across the ocean. In Belarus, dictator Alexander Lukashenko faces the biggest threat to his rule in 26 years amid mass protests and worker strikes. In neighboring Russia, opposition leader Alexei Navalny is fighting for survival after his apparent poisoning. 

Here in the United States, political competition remains vibrant. But the watchdogs are on alert. Exhausting or exhilarating, an election season like no other is nearing the homestretch. 


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Today's stories

And why we wrote them

A deeper look

Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff
A horse stands in the foreground of another wind farm on a hilltop near Mountain View in southwestern Wyoming. America’s self-proclaimed “energy state,” Wyoming is rich in fossil fuels but is increasingly harnessing wind and solar energy to power homes.

In an age of global warming, coal consumption is dropping and renewable energy is rising. Nowhere is that trend – and the tension caused by the shift – more evident than in Wyoming, a state with prodigious amounts of fossil fuels and wind resources.

Henry Gass/The Christian Science Monitor
Leon Reed, a criminal defense attorney, during his 10-day walk from Fort Worth to Austin, Texas, to raise awareness for police reform. Amid a national debate around policing reform, local police budgets are coming under scrutiny from activists and local officials.

Activist calls to defund the police are playing out in city budget meetings in Texas, showing the limits of what is possible as well as points of agreement in funding public safety. 

Difference-maker

Alexei Avdeichev/Courtesy of The Center for the Revival of the Cultural Heritage of Krokhino
“We realized this is a real historical vacuum. It was a trauma that affected many, many people and is not talked about at all.” – Anor Tukaeva, urban studies expert and a founder of the Krokhino Cultural Heritage Revival Center.

Russia’s peasant life was destroyed during the rise of the Soviet Union, literally covered over with water and dirt. But some, like Anor Tukaeva, are doing the hard work of bringing that history back into the light.

When so much else has shuttered because of the coronavirus, an unlikely pandemic success story has emerged. Online chess has not only survived, but also thrived – evolving in the unlikeliest of circumstances.


The Monitor's View

A vital piece of the climate change puzzle is falling into place faster than expected. Electric-vehicle makers are outgrowing their pioneer days when they sold mainly subcompact cars sipping juice from limited batteries. Now electric SUVs and even larger vehicles are hitting showrooms.

The sweet spot in today’s auto market are SUVs, those suburban do-it-all workhorses. Industry leader Tesla is pursuing these customers aggressively with its Model Y. General Motors just announced Lyriq, a Cadillac SUV. Jaguar and Audi are also selling electric SUVs while BMW, Mercedes-Benz, and EV startups Fisker and Rivian have SUVs on the way.

Then there are the electric pickup trucks, such as GMC’s Hummer, planned for shipment in 2021. Tesla’s futuristic-looking cybertruck and an all-electric Ford F-150 are among those on the way too. Last September, Amazon stole headlines when it ordered 100,000 electric-powered delivery vans from Rivian. The pandemic slowed the building of a manufacturing plant for these EVs. Rivian says it’s still on track to begin delivering them next year.

To really cut tailpipe emissions in the transport sector, the EV industry is now aiming at conventional trucks and buses. Their tailpipes cough out nearly a quarter of the greenhouse gas emissions from transportation.

Just over 2,000 electric trucks were on U.S. roads at the end of last year, according to consulting firm Wood Mackenzie. But that number is expected to grow to more than 54,000 in the next five years. Long-haul trucks will need a system of charging stations that is still to be developed. But trucks that are used on short trips during the day, and can sit and recharge overnight, already make sense.

Trash hauler Republic Services, for example, plans to buy 2,500 garbage trucks from startup Nikola to be delivered by 2023. The trucks will have a range of 150 miles, more than enough for a day’s work.

When the world emerges from the pandemic it may find that the peak year for sales of fossil fuel-powered vehicles has already happened. Worldwide, total EV sales of all types are expected to shoot up from 2.5 million in 2020 to 31.1 million by the end of the decade, consulting firm Deloitte forecasts. GM alone is planning to spend $20 billion in the next five years on EVs and autonomous vehicles, and says it will introduce 20 EV models by 2023. The global trend is bolstered by government policies, especially in Europe and China, that include buyer subsidies and restrictions on emissions of CO2.  

Half of all vehicles sold a decade from now will be electric or hybrid, projects Seth Goldstein, chair of the EV committee at investment research firm Morningstar. “Most electric vehicles can go 300 miles or greater on a single charge,” he says, a number needed for most consumers to consider them.

In addition, the long-term costs of owning an EV in the U.S. are thousands of dollars lower than gasoline-powered models, a new study from the U.S. Energy Department has found. The study took into account variations in electric power rates and gasoline prices, and found owners would save $3,000 to $10,500 driving an EV over a 15-year period.

As more people ask what they can do about climate change, the EV industry is making that choice easier with better technology and large-scale production. And as EVs start to dominate the highways, the climate change puzzle may not seem so difficult to solve.


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.

Sometimes it can feel as if the only thing we have in common with someone is constant disagreements. But as a teenager experienced with her relationship with her sister, an honest prayer to think and act in a more inspired, loving way can turn things around – a lesson that’s stuck with her ever since.


A message of love

Visar Kryeziu/AP
Swimming against the current has felt like a theme of 2020. But imagine, for a moment, a swimming hole where that current doesn’t exist and the water only swirls lazily. Think of the feeling of floating, arms outstretched, watching the clouds pass overhead. There are no noises, other than the sound of the water, and it’s almost like being suspended in time. This year, there’s something extra-appealing about escaping to a private backyard pool or a local quarry turned swimming hole. For those moments, plunging into the cool water brings only thoughts of good old-fashioned fun. It’s simple, but refreshing. Click "view gallery" to see more images. – Sophie Hills, Staff writer
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thank you for joining us. Please come back Monday, when Peter Grier looks at President Donald Trump, the Republican National Convention, and the politics of the pandemic.

More issues

2020
August
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