2022
April
28
Thursday

Monitor Daily Podcast

April 28, 2022
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Diagnosing what ails the United States has become something of a cottage industry, with everyone offering their opinions and solutions. Anyone who has read my columns will know I have been as guilty as anyone. But something shared with me by a colleague made such an impression, I couldn’t help but highlight it.

This is a recording of United States Chief Justice John Roberts bidding farewell to his retiring colleague, Justice Stephen Breyer, whose last day on the bench was yesterday. The audio clip is only one minute long, and I’d strongly encourage you all to listen.

Chief Justice Roberts is a man whose actions have repeatedly shown a deep desire to find common ground on the court. His decisions have sometimes confounded expectations from an apparent desire to locate some vanishing space between partisan poles. Again and again, he has sought to do everything in his power to prevent the court from becoming an expression of the nation’s divided politics.

But it was in his farewell to Justice Breyer that something even deeper came to the surface. It did not matter that, ideologically speaking, Chief Justice Roberts and Justice Breyer often disagreed. In the trembling of Chief Justice Roberts’ voice was a genuine love for a man who, though often in the minority over the course of his 28 years, held to his ideals, his sense of humor, and his firm belief in the court’s independent role. The affection made the rifts of partisanship seem small.

Nearly 250 years into the American experiment, yesterday’s recording is a warning and a spark of hope. The strength of American democracy could well depend on whether the nation at large can find that spirit of fellowship so beautifully expressed by Justices Roberts and Breyer, which gives a diverse and divided nation its essential unifying force.


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Today's stories

And why we wrote them

In recent years, Germany has made strong and sometimes difficult moves in an attempt to act morally. But the Ukraine war offers unique challenges for a pacifist nation that has long sought to engage Russia.

Efrem Lukatsky/AP
Ukrainian sappers carry a Russian military drone backdropped by an Antonov An-225, the world's biggest cargo aircraft, destroyed by Russian troops during recent fighting, at the Antonov Airport in Hostomel, on the outskirts of Kyiv, Ukraine, April 18, 2022. Drones have proved an effective tool for intelligence gathering and combat in the conflict.

At some point, militaries will likely allow artificial intelligence to decide when to pull the trigger – and on whom. Ukraine is showing just how close that moment might be.

A deeper look

Gaelen Morse/Reuters
Retired Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn hugs Shonna Bland, owner of Top Notch Diner, during a campaign event ahead of next month's GOP primary election in Cortland, Ohio, April 21, 2022. The former Trump national security adviser has endorsed candidates in a number of Republican primaries.

Donald Trump’s former national security adviser is rallying the faithful and looking to future elections. He’s become an icon for a GOP base that’s increasingly suspicious of a corrupt “deep state” and elites.

Safina Nabi
Rapper Rumi looks out over the Jhelum River in Srinigar, India. He's been making music for 10 years, but says the past three have been difficult as authorities crack down on political dissent and free speech.

Rap music has served for years as a protest language in Kashmir. But a crackdown on free speech is pushing artists underground as they weigh taking a stand against personal risk.

Difference-maker

Sometimes compassion takes people in unexpected directions. This biologist turned a love for animals into an international quest for justice.


The Monitor's View

Political protests often shift from what people are against to what they are for. That process may now be underway in Sri Lanka. The island nation off the tip of India has been caught in its deepest economic crisis since independence in 1948. That has sparked a sustained nationwide movement seeking to oust President Gotabaya Rajapaksa, his Cabinet, and the entire legislature.

Yet as protesters defy curfews and fend off police cannons, their frustrations over acute shortages of food and fuel have turned toward their deeper aspiration: a society united by democratic values rather than divided by rival identities.

One protest placard put it succinctly to elected leaders: “You divided us to come to power. Now we are uniting to send you home.”

Divisions run deep in Sri Lanka. The country has a long history of ethnic and religious strife. But now as the protests go on, Christians and Muslims, Sinhala Buddhists and Tamil nationalists, students and professionals, farmers and teachers, are finding common cause. In early April, a large group of them held a “people’s parliament.” That was followed by a “people’s university” on social media to encourage “diversity, inclusion, and equality to uphold social justice through knowledge sharing.” One group of protesters set up tent camp near the presidential residence to remind Mr. Rajapaksa daily that they seek a new government. Local bakeries and restaurants responded by bringing them food and water.

“Sri Lanka’s economic collapse, and the anger it generated, has given rise to a protest movement that is so large, so sustained, and so widespread that it can be called a nonviolent people’s uprising,” Alan Keenan, an analyst at the International Crisis Group, told Al Jazeera. “The country has never seen such a nationwide movement involving all communities.”

There is no single cause for Sri Lanka’s current crisis. The country endured a 26-year civil war between the Sinhalese majority and Tamil separatists. Since 2005 its politics have been dominated by a single family whose rule has been marked by corruption, economic mismanagement, and violence.

It has a debt-to-GDP ratio of 110% and an inflation rate of more than 20%. The government is currently in talks with a range of creditors – including China, the World Bank, and the International Monetary Fund – to restructure portions of its overall $51 billion in external debt. When the pandemic struck, the public was already at a breaking point.

In what may be the clearest sign yet that the demonstrations are having an effect, Mr. Rajapaksa offered a rare apology last week. “Today people are under immense pressure due to this economic crisis. I deeply regret this situation,” he said during the first meeting of his new Cabinet on April 19. He exhorted his ministers to avoid exploiting their offices for personal gain. “We must always tell the truth to the people. There is no point in hiding the reality from the people.”

In Sri Lanka, presidential contrition is as unprecedented as the country’s current crisis. The people may doubt his sincerity, but it is a confirmation of what they are discovering – that democracy and its institutions derive their strength and authority from the shared purpose of a united citizenry.


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.

Is antagonism inevitable when opinions differ? Recognizing that we are all God-empowered to express patience and grace is a firm foundation for harmony and progress.


A message of love

Michael Probst/AP
Ukrainian refugee children and helpers ride a chain carousel in Frankfurt, Germany, April 28, 2022. About 180 children were invited by the fun fair for free rides.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte and Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thank you for joining us today. Please come back tomorrow when China correspondent Ann Scott Tyson talks of what life is like in Beijing amid the COVID-19 crackdown. One tip: Keep your eyes peeled for carrots.

Monitor staffers Jessica Mendoza and Jingnan Peng have also been interviewed about their “Say That Again?” podcast by our good friends at the Common Ground Committee. The subject is “How Our Accents Can Divide and Unite Us,” and you can listen to the interview here.

More issues

2022
April
28
Thursday

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