2022
March
18
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

March 18, 2022
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People are paying eye-popping prices for gasoline, but on Monday, more than 320 drivers in California got gas for free.

Yep. Cars lined up at an Arco station in San Diego where volunteers pumped up to $50 in free gas for each vehicle. Drivers also got a 15-pound box of food, courtesy of the San Diego Food Bank. In all, donors who backed this effort gave away $15,000 worth of gasoline.

This generosity was organized by the Rev. Shane Harris, who is a national civil rights leader and the founder of the nonprofit People’s Association of Justice Advocates. He calls gas prices an “emergency” for people with low incomes and the working middle class. State politicians are debating how to bring relief, but they have yet to act.

And so he did. “I prayed, and I just went straight to work,” he told me in a phone interview. He contacted friends in business, people at nonprofits, and others in the community. In less than two days, he had a gas station and donors lined up.

Californians pay the highest gas taxes in the country, and the highest gas prices. On the day of the Gas Me Up campaign, the average price of a gallon of regular gas in San Diego County was $5.76. That’s $1.44 higher than the national average that day.

Mr. Harris’ group collected data from people who registered for the event. Most of them earn less than $30,000. Manning the pumps, he heard stories about folks having to choose between medicine and gasoline, or facing impractical, long trips on public transportation.

Several states are considering suspending gas taxes. California lawmakers nixed that idea partly because they weren’t sure the savings would get passed to consumers. Now some lawmakers are pushing a $400 rebate for all California taxpayers. Mr. Harris supports a bigger stimulus check that’s targeted at low- and middle-earners who have cars.

It’s not clear how California and other states will react. But Mr. Harris is not waiting to find out. He’s already organizing Gas Me Up 2.0, and fielding calls from people in other parts of the state who want to follow his lead.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

A deeper look

Prominent Republican voices have risen in support of Ukraine. But the party’s voters in Ohio reveal an American mindset that far predates Trumpism: a wariness of engaging in foreign conflicts.

Anas Alkharboutli/dpa/Reuters
In the wake of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, Syrians paint a mural in solidarity on the wall of a destroyed home in Binnish, Syria, Feb. 24, 2022.

Ukraine’s resilience in the face of Russia’s military onslaught has caught Syrians’ attention. They recall how relentless and brutal Russian tactics wore down their own resistance.

Steven Senne/AP
Clock technician Dan LaMoore adjusts clock hands on a large outdoor clock under construction at Electric Time Co., Nov. 2, 2021, in Medfield, Massachusetts. Many northerners in the U.S., living with high-latitude-induced early sunsets, favor permanent daylight saving time. Another camp of Americans would go with standard time instead.

Though known for gridlock lately, the U.S. Senate by unanimous consent this week approved making daylight saving time permanent. Its consensus isn’t shared across the nation, though.

Listen

Illustration by Jules Struck

Why Black English is about more than just grammar

When society labels different dialects as good or bad, it affects how we see ourselves – and each other. Speakers of Black English understand that more than most. Here’s Episode 4 of our podcast series “Say That Again?”

Episode 4: Talking Black, With Pride

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Film

Disney+/AP
Confident teen Meilin Lee (voiced by Rosalie Chiang) faces new challenges when she learns that strong emotion causes her to change into a giant red panda in the Pixar film "Turning Red."

Young people are often helped by seeing depictions of their experiences on film. The latest Pixar movie, “Turning Red,” covers familiar ground in the exploration of identity, but also experiments with more directly addressing puberty. 


The Monitor's View

As in many professions, architects are hunting for new ways of thinking to help solve the climate crisis. Material solutions in building design, such as recycled steel or reflective paint, are fine but finite in their influence. Their efforts received a boost this week after the annual Pritzker Prize, otherwise known as the Nobel Prize for architecture, was awarded to someone who brings “brilliant, inspiring and game-changing ways” toward sustainability in structures.

He is Francis Kéré, the first African to win the prize and whose origin from a small village in the heart of the Sahel in Burkina Faso accounts for his refreshing approach in a profession still famous for grand cultural icons than for environmental leadership.

“He knows, from within, that architecture is not about the object but the objective; not the product, but the process,” reads the Pritzker jury’s citation.

His early fame came in helping design a school in his village after an education in Germany. He let the whole village participate in the design, drawn on sand for all to see. Then he enlisted them to construct the Gando Primary School, using local wood to compact the stone floors and local clay to make bricks mixed with cement. The people learned skills that they could later use to find work, showing that good architecture can transmit ideas widely.

The result was a welcoming structure with a “floating” roof that allows passive ventilation in a hot climate and wall openings that bring filtered light for students to learn even without electricity. The school’s design is also a work of art built on vernacular motifs. “Everyone has the right to beauty; it should be a human right!” Mr. Kéré told Radio France Internationale.

Mr. Kéré showed the villagers that ideas to deal with climate or other challenges are always at hand. “It is not because you are poor that you should not try to create quality,” he said in a statement after receiving the prize.

By starting his profession in one of the world’s poorest places, he challenged the notion that climate solutions start with big institutions. “We cannot say that we do not have a voice; everyone can contribute to tackling the major issues of our time,” he told Dutch magazine De Groene Amsterdammer. “By acting locally, you can generate a global impact. For example, you can choose to build a school building with clay and inspire people all over the world, instead of waiting for the government.”

The Pritzker jury found his body of work, which now extends with designs from Africa to China, is rooted in the “unique” aspects of each community. His buildings “have presence without pretense and an impact shaped by grace,” it stated. For his profession, those types of qualities can be a guide in responding better to the world’s biggest challenges.


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.

God’s thoughts – angels – are available to everyone. The more we know God as divine Love, the more we’ll recognize and respond to these angel thoughts as they guard and guide us in our own lives and in helping others.


A message of love

Thomas Peter/Reuters
A man sweeps glass at a school near the place where a shell hit a residential building in Kyiv, Ukraine, as Russia's invasion of the country continues, March 18, 2022.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for wrapping up your week with us. Join us again on Monday, when we’ll share portraits of people from various countries volunteering to fight for Ukraine.

More issues

2022
March
18
Friday

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