2023
April
27
Thursday

Monitor Daily Podcast

April 27, 2023
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Tulare Lake is both a curiosity and a disaster. For now, it is a 100 square-mile bowl of waist-deep water in California’s Central Valley, submerging prime dairy farms and almond groves. With the Sierra Nevada’s record snowpack melting, the lake could double in size, threatening a town of 20,000 and a prison housing 8,000.

Tulare Lake has never entirely left. Once the United States’ largest freshwater lake west of the Mississippi, it dried up after World War II, its water gradually diverted for farms and cities. But it comes back every few decades when the snowpack runoff is heavy – the last time in 1983. 

The lake is a reminder of what California once was and what perhaps it will be. For thousands of years, it was one of a necklace of marshy lakes through the now parched heart of the San Joaquin Valley, a portrait of California before it was profoundly recast by human thirst. Today, it shows the urgency of the work ahead. 

“Weather whiplash” of plentiful precipitation followed by drought has always been a California thing, but meteorologists suggest it is getting worse. In a state where water is increasingly precious, how can such “big melts” be managed? 

Two reservoirs there are already experimenting with new ideas, hoping to save more water while also avoiding flooding. Early results are promising, reports the LAist. In Texas, worsening flooding is leading to new “pocket prairies” in urban areas, while China is pioneering “sponge cities” that use permeable materials, rain gardens, and green roofs to absorb water. They represent new ways of thinking, and the Monitor has reported on both. 

As one expert in Texas told us: “We tend to be biased towards technological solutions and engineering solutions rather than natural solutions. We don’t think of nature solving our problems.”


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Today's stories

And why we wrote them

Mary Altaffer/AP/File
Demonstrators stand in support of Trayvon Martin in New York City in 2012. Stand-your-ground laws proliferated after that case.

A series of high-profile shootings for seemingly mundane things reveals an on-edge society. This does not take place in a vacuum.

SOURCE:

Gallup, "Race, Justifiable Homicide, and Stand Your Ground Laws: Analysis of FBI Supplementary Homicide Report Data" by John K. Roman

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Jacob Turcotte/Staff

Patterns

Tracing global connections

Becoming the most populous nation in the world gives India new geopolitical clout and economic potential. Has the country’s time really come?

Katumba Badru/Special to The Christian Science Monitor
A man making rolex, an iconic street food snack, at a stall in Kampala, the capital of Uganda, on March 11, 2023.

Street foods often offer a window into a time and place. Uganda’s rolex tells a story about the East African country – and its global connections.

Points of Progress

What's going right

In our progress roundup, there’s recognition that different sectors of society may require tailor-made solutions to problems. In Liberia, when teenagers had access to health information with fewer adults around, pregnancy rates dropped.

On Film

Courtesy of Mobra FIlms/IFC Films
Matthias (Marin Grigore, center left, leaning in), Csilla (Judith State), and her boss (Orsolya Moldován) sit together in Romanian film “R.M.N."

What happens when humanity and bigotry collide? “R.M.N.” does not offer easy remedies. But, writes film critic Peter Rainer, “no one who makes a movie this vehement can fail to harbor a hope for what humans, at their best, can be.”


The Monitor's View

It isn’t often that strikingly different approaches to the same problem unfold in politics side by side, enabling societies to measure their relative merits. Yet as gang and drug cartel violence spreads into new areas of Latin America, countries across the region have become laboratories for two strategies that could not be less alike.

In El Salvador, the government has arrested more than 65,000 males accused of gang activity over the past year, some not yet teenagers. The homicide rate has plummeted, and public approval for President Nayib Bukele has soared. Leaders in neighboring countries like Honduras and Guatemala have taken note.

In Colombia, meanwhile, the government has pledged to bring “total peace” to a country that has been destabilized for decades by criminal violence and guerrilla warfare. Skeptics have scoffed at that ambition. But the careful preservation of a delicate truce between rival street gangs this week has reinforced a useful lesson that innocence and the desire for peace are innate and renewable.

Shortly after his inauguration last August, Colombian President Gustavo Petro invited gang leaders in the port city of Buenaventura, a longtime crossroads of criminal violence, to sit together in talks. A shared recognition emerged almost immediately. As one gang delegate told Al Jazeera, the two sides agreed that “it’s unfair that Buenaventura, having a people that is so peaceful, has so much violence and that it’s us that are killing each other. So [we] decided that this had to end.”

Months then passed without a homicide in the city. But earlier this month, the disappearance of one gang’s spokesperson threatened to push the two sides back toward conflict. A broad grouping of civil society organizations banded together to support a resolution. On Tuesday, the government announced that the truce had been restored. The agreement included a recognition that peace requires “confronting with institutional programs the roots of the deep inequality” in Colombian society. “

Total peace,” Mr. Petro has argued, rests as much on tackling corruption and uneven economic opportunity, particularly for women and minorities, as it does on turning violent actors into peace partners.

In El Salvador, human rights groups note, Mr. Bukele’s approach to gang violence required first weakening the independence of democratic institutions like parliament and the judiciary. In Colombia, the Office of the High Commissioner for Peace has instructed all government agencies, including the military, to seek to build peace that “protects the life and liberties of the citizens.”

If “we sow love, [if] we dialogue from our differences and finally we manage to understand each other,” Mr. Petro said in his Christmas message to the nation last December, “we will reap in the work that each one of us does for our country.”

Across Latin America, an experiment in peacemaking is unfolding in dragnets and dialogue. One has set democratic values aside in the pursuit of security. The other recognizes that the common good rests on the ability of even those who perpetuate violence to express self-governance.


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.

Becoming more familiar with the truth of our being as God’s children than with the problems we face helps us find healing.


Viewfinder

Fatima Shbair/AP
Beekeepers in Rafah, in the Gaza Strip, use smoke to calm bees before lifting honeycombs from a beehive, on April 27, 2023. The bee harvest is underway in the region.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us. Please come back tomorrow when we look at countries’ efforts to evacuate their citizens from Sudan. How are they addressing the problem, and what does that tell us about the differing values that guide them?

More issues

2023
April
27
Thursday

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