2022
July
14
Thursday

Monitor Daily Podcast

July 14, 2022
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As many of you already know, our friend Amanda Ripley wrote an opinion piece recently for The Washington Post. In it, Amanda confessed to selectively avoiding the news these days. This is, well, odd, considering she has been a journalist for 20 years. We interviewed her for our Respect Project because of her conviction – and her work toward proving – that no conflict is unsolvable. 

But that was the problem. “All individual action felt pointless once I was done reading the news,” she wrote in the Post. “Mostly, I was just marinating in despair.” A recital of brutality and woe is not a recipe for action. It’s really not “news for humans,” as she puts it. What humans need is a sense of hope, agency, and dignity. 

She was kind enough to mention the Monitor as a publication that was trying to do things differently, and that comes to mind as I read today’s issue. We have the perseverance of a member of Congress who, despite years of failures and frustrations, managed to build a meaningful coalition for bipartisan gun reforms. We have the courage and dignity of the man who, before he died last month, was the last surviving World War II Medal of Honor recipient. And we have the wonder of a remarkable milestone in space.

Readers will know that recent days have seen us hit the most difficult topics head-on, from Ukraine to abortion to Jan. 6. But these sparks of hope are news, too. In the comments below Amanda’s article, one reader imagined a new kind of motto for journalism: “Democracy Thrives Through Hope, Agency, and Dignity.” We wholeheartedly agree. 


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Today's stories

And why we wrote them

A deeper look

Story Hinckley/The Christian Science Monitor
Sen. Chris Murphy speaks with voters following a town hall event in Litchfield, Connecticut, on July 5, 2022. Many of his colleagues say a new gun safety law, the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act, wouldn’t have happened without his willingness to listen to opponents and put substance ahead of politics.

Washington often rewards politicians who take the safe road, avoiding the scent of defeat. But the recent bipartisan gun rights bill tells a different story: the power of perseverance.

Q&A

Democratic Sen. Chris Murphy of Connecticut was instrumental in securing cooperation across the aisle on federal gun safety legislation. He shares why it worked and where he hopes to find bipartisan agreement next. Part 2 of 2.

Ji Chunpeng/Xinhua/AP
Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi bumps elbows with Saudi Foreign Minister Faisal bin Farhan Al Saud in Wuxi, east China's Jiangsu Province, Jan. 10, 2022. As U.S. President Joe Biden visits Saudi Arabia this week, the majority of Saudi crude oil that is loaded onto tankers is headed for the South China Sea.

President Biden is in the Middle East with hopes of restoring a trusting partnership with Saudi Arabia. Can he succeed? That may depend on each ally honestly saying what it needs from the other.

Amanda McCoy/Star-Telegram/AP
Hershel Woodrow Williams, World War II veteran, salutes the flag during the national anthem at the groundbreaking ceremony for the National Medal of Honor Museum, March 25, 2022, in Arlington, Texas. He said receiving the Medal of Honor was a “lifesaver,” because “it forced me to talk about experiences that I had, which was a therapy that I didn’t even know I was doing.”

Courage gets praised, but all too often overlooked. Medal of Honor recipient Hershel “Woody” Williams will be remembered as “a person who used every ounce of his being to serve others.”

NASA/ESA/CSA/STScI/Webb ERO Production Team/Reuters
An observation of a planetary nebula from the NIRCam instrument of NASA's James Webb Space Telescope, released July 12, 2022. Astronomers say such photos are more than new data – they are also fuel for imaginative speculation that can drive humanity’s endeavors to understand the deepest reaches of the cosmos.

Bringing joy to viewers with their dazzling colors and contours, the first images from the James Webb Space Telescope are also a reflection of ingenuity – revealing a whole new layer of the cosmos.


The Monitor's View

If it continues another year, a 22-year-long drought in America’s Southwest could lead to, among other things, the end of hydropower on the Colorado River. Yet such predictions also have an upside. Many desert cities built on distant water sources are learning to harness their resources more efficiently even as their population grows.

The parching of the Southwest is “not all doom and gloom,” Andrew Erdmann, New Mexico’s chief water planner, told the Albuquerque Journal. The state’s new 50-year water plan due to be released this month, he said, reflects “optimism and reason to be hopeful that we’re adapting effectively to the changes expected.”

The crisis in water security is tapping new reservoirs of human cooperation and innovation. Last year, for example, federal officials cut water allocations from the Colorado River to users across seven states; that might once have been disastrous, but several cities that have long depended on the watershed hardly flinched. In June, Los Angeles posted its lowest water consumption ever recorded during the first month of summer. In San Diego, where water use per resident has dropped 43% from 1990 levels, water officials say the city has enough water capacity to grow comfortably at 1% a year through 2045. In Las Vegas; Phoenix; and Albuquerque, New Mexico, water planners express similar confidence.

These cities are embracing a mix of conservation strategies, including recycling, desalination, new technologies to detect leaks, and stormwater catchment. Los Angeles and San Diego pay their residents to replace thirsty front lawns with rock and cactus gardens. So does Las Vegas, which draws 90% of its water from the Colorado River. The city has seen daily water consumption per resident drop from 314 gallons to 222 gallons in recent years. All indoor water is recycled throughout the city.

One important element in changing water-use habits among urban residents may be encouragement rather than punishment. In California, for example, Gov. Gavin Newsom has urged residents voluntarily to cut their water use 15% below what they consumed in 2020. Statewide, Californians have yet to meet that goal. But as the state has shown in the past, mandatory rationing tends not to produce long-term change.

“If I have the opportunity to educate, that’s always the first option for me, always,” Damon Ayala, a Los Angeles water controller, told the LA Times. “We obviously can issue a warning citation or a monetary citation, but what we’re really looking for is behavior change.”

In her groundbreaking studies on how people work through resource problems, the late political economist Elinor Ostrom noted that sustainable outcomes result from “innovativeness, learning, adapting, trustworthiness, and levels of cooperation.” In the Southwest, city residents may be showing how those qualities can often turn scarcities into shared security.


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.

World events can seem overwhelming at times, even to the point of affecting us mentally and physically. But as we pray to see more clearly God’s love and direction for all of us, we not only heal problems in our own lives; we are also contributing to universal good.


A message of love

Rafiq Maqbool/AP
Two protesters greet each other as they leave the prime minister's office building in Colombo, Sri Lanka, July 14. Protesters began to retreat from government buildings they had seized amid an economic and political crisis, establishing a tenuous calm.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thank you for joining us today. Please come back tomorrow when we look at how one New England city’s open door to refugees is testing residents’ compassion.

More issues

2022
July
14
Thursday

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