2021
May
24
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

May 24, 2021
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Clayton Collins
Director of Editorial Innovation

Progress can be hard to find in stories that are frustratingly cyclical (Israelis vs. Palestinians) or relentlessly incremental (the response to global climate change).

New developments suggest some movement on climate, though, at a time when evidence of the need for action appears as stark as ever – with climate-related disasters, for example, now producing more internally displaced people than wars do. 

New modeling by the International Energy Agency shows a “narrow but still achievable” path to global emissions goals by 2050. Global renewable energy capacity grew last year at its fastest rate since 1999.

The work of generating cleaner power remains halting in the United States. The first big offshore wind farm in federal waters was approved this month off Massachusetts. (It got some NIMBY pushback even in that progressive state.)

Can private businesses be the catalysts for deepening climate action? Besides being called “quick” by a delighted President Joe Biden last week, Ford’s new all-electric pickup truck can power a house for days (Texans, take note). A South Korean firm you’ve never heard of now uses autonomous drones to inspect wind turbines off Taiwan.

Practical innovation fosters trust. Yes, some corporations may take arguably unconscionable tacks in pursuing profits, but a new 14-country Edelman Trust Barometer puts businesses ahead of governments, nongovernmental organizations, and media. (Speedy vaccine development helped a lot.) That’s a thought shift, and maybe a nudge.

“People now expect corporations and CEOs to keep focusing on big social and political issues,” reports Axios, “even after the pandemic.”


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Today's stories

And why we wrote them

Mahmoud Illean/AP
Israeli border police scuffle with protesters in the Sheikh Jarrah neighborhood of East Jerusalem, where several Palestinian families are under imminent threat of forcible eviction from their homes, May 15, 2021.

A young generation of Palestinian activists sees social media platforms as game changers for a renewed struggle against Israel. But their frustration is also directed at their own political leaders.  

A deeper look

Richard Mertens
Tavern on Sixth, which recently opened in Kenosha's downtown. The owner, Kyle Kavalauskas, is setting out tables on a recent Saturday for the 11 a.m. opening. It's one of several new businesses that have opened in the downtown, where many businesses were damaged in unrest after the shooting of Jacob Blake.

The unrest that began a year ago this week in Minneapolis with the killing of George Floyd spilled into Kenosha, Wisconsin, last August with the shooting of Jacob Blake. Our writer found Kenosha today deep into introspection, and working to address root causes.

#TeamUp

U.S. schools are letting out and teachers are harvesting deserved gratitude. Our columnist reflects, through collected stories, on how that can run deeper than restaurant discounts and potted plants. 

The Respect Project

Bridging the conflicts that divide us

Seeking common ground with people who don’t think the way you do – and not just through superficial discourse – is a mark of respect. Our reviewers picked six books that help show the way. 


The Monitor's View

In early June, Vice President Kamala Harris will travel to Guatemala on a new assignment to help Central America reduce the flow of migrants to the United States. A prime focus of the visit will be helping the region adapt to what she calls “extreme climate incidents,” such as back-to-back hurricanes last year that affected nearly 9 million people. On that score, her work is part of a global trend.

A new report by the Internal Displacement Monitoring Center (IDMC) finds the world has seen “significant advances” in countries taking steps to reduce the risk of displacement from weather-related hazards, such as floods, storms, and wildfires. Much of the progress has occurred since 2010 when a U.N. Climate Change Conference formally recognized a link between climate change and migration for the first time.

The report calls on nations to provide better data whenever weather events drive people to move. The reason is to stir solutions. “Rather than buy into sensational headlines about ‘mass climate migration,’ we must provide robust information on the scale, patterns and impacts of the human mobility involved,” it stated.

From the data compiled by IDMC, storms and floods last year caused three times the displacement than did violent conflicts. Of the more than 40 million people newly displaced within their countries by either conflicts or weather, 30 million were a result of weather and other disasters – the highest number on record.

The Harris trip to Guatemala is a foretaste of what the world may be doing more often. In April, the Biden White House requested $861 million from Congress for the three countries – Guatemala, Honduras, and El Salvador – that are a major source of cross-border migration into the U.S. Current aid to the region, says Peter Natiello of the U.S. Agency for International Development, has already begun to strengthen economic opportunities, security, and governance, and to build “resilience to climate change.”

In areas hit hardest by weather extremes, such aid has provided drip irrigation, introduced agroforestry, and helped farmers diversify their crops. “Those are increasing incomes, and those people say that they are less inclined to migrate than the national average,” said Mr. Natiello. President Biden’s plans for the region includ​e​ making a transition to clean energy, such as solar microgrids for rural areas.

Reducing the risk of climate change, the IDMC report says, will counter the notion that such disasters are “natural.” If successful, the Harris mission in Central America could mark a shift in global thinking on climate change.


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.

If we feel as though we don’t have the energy to do what we’re called upon to do, a heartfelt desire to let God’s love shine through us is a rejuvenating place to start.


A message of love

Tagliapietra/Masini/LaPresse/AP
A crew, backdropped by the bell tower of St. Mark's, takes part in the Vogalonga, a traditional noncompetitive rowing event, in Venice on May 23, 2021. This edition was dedicated to the 1,600th anniversary of the birth of Venice.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for starting the week with us, and please come back tomorrow. After more than a year of cocooning, Americans are ready to travel. We’ll take a look at who’s visiting Washington, D.C., as that destination city emerges from the Jan. 6 riots and pandemic restrictions.

More issues

2021
May
24
Monday

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