2022
April
07
Thursday

Monitor Daily Podcast

April 07, 2022
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Mark Sappenfield
Senior global correspondent

By its nature, science reveals the extraordinary. But there are moments when it opens windows that astonish even scientists themselves. Today might not go down in the history books, but two new discoveries are a reminder of how science can peel back layers of the extraordinary. 

In one find, paleontologists in North Dakota say they have uncovered fossils of creatures that died the day an asteroid hit the Earth 66 million years ago, wiping out the dinosaurs. Among the highlights is an almost perfectly preserved dinosaur leg with skin still intact, and the remains of fish that appear to have breathed debris from the asteroid impact more than 1,800 miles away. “This really should not exist and it’s absolutely gobsmackingly beautiful,” Phil Manning, a professor at the University of Manchester who is working with the researchers, told the BBC’s “Today” radio program. “I never dreamt in all my career that I would get to look at something a) so time-constrained, and b) so beautiful, and also tells such a wonderful story.” 

Elsewhere, astronomers have found what might be the oldest galaxy ever seen – some 13.5 billion light-years away. If confirmed, that would mean we’re looking at a galaxy only 330 million years after the big bang, when the universe was still taking baby steps toward what it would become. 

Fabio Pacucci of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics told The New York Times he’s as “excited as a kid who spots the very first firework in a magnificent and highly anticipated show.” 

From North Dakota to the edges of space, science’s show of discovery never fails to amaze. 


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

The globalized economy gave rise to greater interdependence and mutual prosperity. The Ukraine war threatens to redivide the world. How one country responds could be decisive: China.

Ketanji Brown Jackson was confirmed as the first Black female Supreme Court justice Thursday. But the vote shows how both the country and the Supreme Court have changed.

Universities and organizations around the world are helping Ukrainian students and professors ensure their academic pursuits are not lost. The lessons could last beyond Ukraine.

Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff
Great Pyrenees dogs watch over Navajo-Churro sheep on Irene Bennalley’s BarQ RZ Ranch, on March 1, 2022, outside Toadlena, New Mexico, in the Navajo Nation. The sheep flourish in the harsh environment.

In the Navajo Nation, a connection to heritage and identity was lost when the U.S. government nearly exterminated Navajo-Churro sheep. Today, flocks are on the rebound, signaling hope on the reservation.

Taylor Luck
Historian and archivist Mohammed Bennani at his family home-turned-library, where he keeps going his grandfather's waqf, or charitable trust, by providing a weekly feast in Tunis, Tunisia, Jan. 18, 2022.

In Tunisia, an ancient Islamic social welfare system of charitable trusts, underutilized for decades, is seen by some as a way to lighten the burden on a cash-strapped government.


The Monitor's View

After a tense five-day political standoff that left Pakistan without a government, the Supreme Court ruled on April 7 that Prime Minister Imran Khan “was not within his rights” when he dissolved Parliament to thwart a vote to remove him from power.

The high court’s decision did more than affirm the constitutional separation of powers and the principle of rule of law. It demonstrated that judicial independence can thrive in a country that defines its national identity on the basis of Islam. The political fallout of the ruling may also deprive Russian President Vladimir Putin of a key ally at a pivotal moment in the war in Ukraine.

The unanimous decision immediately reinstated the National Assembly and spells a political end for a leader who rose to power on his popularity as Pakistan’s most beloved sports hero. A former captain of the national cricket team, Mr. Khan has overseen a disastrous economic record since being elected in 2018, as well as a sharp diplomatic shift away from the West. He lost his parliamentary majority last Sunday. The legislature will now vote Saturday on whether to replace the prime minister.

“It’s a bold but much welcome move by the Supreme Court, especially for constitutional supremacy,” Marva Khan, a law professor at Lahore University of Management Science, told Bloomberg. “Having a unanimous judgment on the matter further strengthens the value of this precedent.”

A fragile democracy since independence in 1947, Pakistan has yet to see a single prime minister serve a complete five-year term. The military is notorious for meddling in the country’s political affairs. Significantly, however, a 2010 constitutional amendment transferred the power to appoint judges from the president – an office that combines ceremonial political functions and commander in chief of the armed forces – to a panel of judicial peers. That contrasts sharply with other Islamic countries like Iran and Saudi Arabia, where Islamic law predominates and judges are subordinate to influential religious leaders.

The reform 12 years ago has had a measurable effect. A 2020 study found a decrease in the appointment of judges with past political careers. Courts have better restrained the government’s misuse of eminent domain in taking private property. In general, judges have displayed greater impartiality in rulings against the government. That corresponds with international studies that show a strong link between judicial independence and overall development.

Mr. Khan himself provided another measure of the reform’s effect. The embattled prime minister emerged from a meeting with legal advisers ahead of the court ruling and vowed to accept whatever decision it made.

The court effectively quashed an allegation by Mr. Khan that the bid to oust him was a “foreign conspiracy” orchestrated by Washington. The person most likely to benefit from its decision is Shehbaz Sharif, an opposition leader and brother of former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif. The military has already signaled its interest in re-prioritizing ties with the West after Mr. Khan’s drift toward China and Russia. A first order of business for a new caretaker government will be setting a course for elections and resetting dialogue with lenders like the International Monetary Fund.

For the moment, however, a constitutional crisis has been averted and a key democratic norm reaffirmed.


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 find ourselves in troubled waters – whether literally or figuratively – we can look to God for inspiration that guides and protects.


A message of love

Ali Khara/Reuters
An Afghan girl waits to receive a rice sack, as part of humanitarian aid sent by China to Afghanistan, at a distribution center in Kabul, Afghanistan, April 7, 2022.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thank you for joining us today. Please come back tomorrow when our Stephanie Hanes looks at how one organization in Florida is part of a broader push to re-imagine the way American society values, understands, and helps children.

More issues

2022
April
07
Thursday

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