2023
July
14
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

July 14, 2023
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Linda Feldmann
Washington Bureau Chief

The excitement at the National Zoo’s meerkat exhibit was palpable. Sadie the meerkat mama darted back and forth between her publicly viewable habitat and an area “backstage,” her three pups close behind. Frankie the papa meerkat darted about, too, at times scurrying to the top of a log to stand watch. Think Timon the meerkat from “The Lion King.”

It was feeding time.

Sadie and Frankie’s pups are the first meerkat births at the National Zoo in 16 years, and like all zoo births, they’re cause for celebration. Just as exciting was the birth a few weeks later of a western lowland gorilla, a critically endangered species. The baby girl – named Zahra in a zoo website poll – earns her share of oohs and aahs as she cuddles with mama Calaya in the Great Ape House.

This spring, we also welcomed baby black-footed ferrets, Panamanian golden frogs, and Andean bear cubs. I say “we” because the National Zoo is basically my backyard – close enough to hear the lions roar. And it’s not hard to get wrapped up in the zoo’s highs and lows. Nearly three years ago, during the pandemic shutdown, I wrote about the zoo’s surprise baby panda, called Xiao Qi Ji – “little miracle” – because of his mother’s advanced age.

Now we’re counting down to the departure of our panda family to China later this year, per a long-standing agreement with the China Wildlife Conservation Association. National Zoo spokesperson Jennifer Zoon says in an email that the plan holds, but, she adds, “it’s our goal to have giant pandas ... and continue our conservation research.”

I’m sticking with the happy side of zoo life, a source of wonder and joy in a divisive time. Or as Timon the meerkat sang in “The Lion King” – no worries.


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Today's stories

And why we wrote them

Riley Robinson/Staff
Anna Schindler washes the basement racks at Waterbury Sports, July 14, 2023, in Waterbury, Vermont, to prevent mold following severe flooding. Ms. Schindler works in the salon upstairs from the store. Many volunteers – neighbors, friends, family members, and strangers – have showed up to help local residents and businesses in the aftermath of the flood.

Back in 2011, Tropical Storm Irene gave flooded Vermont a wake-up call. Efforts since then to build resiliency – alongside a humanitarian spirit – are helping this week.

SOURCE:

National Weather Service

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Jacob Turcotte/Staff

The Explainer

Kim Hong-Ji/Reuters
An official measures radiation levels of a fish imported from Japan at Noryangjin fisheries wholesale market in Seoul, South Korea, July 6, 2023. Radioactivity checks have been conducted regularly since the 2011 Fukushima disaster.

In Japan, plans to release treated wastewater from the Fukushima nuclear power plant have fishing communities and neighboring countries sounding alarms. But in this case, the fear doesn’t match the facts. 

Both parties in Congress traditionally line up behind the military. But culture-war issues like abortion are changing that dynamic. Exhibit A: Sen. Tommy Tuberville’s monthslong blockade of Pentagon confirmations.

Podcast

Decisions, decisions: Covering the Supreme Court

It’s an understatement to say there’s a lot to sift in June when it comes to U.S. Supreme Court rulings. For a Monitor team, it’s about focusing on the human impact, including of quieter cases, and honoring public expectations for judicial ethics and high principles.

A Reporting Team’s Supreme Test

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Simon Montlake/The Christian Science Monitor
Gay Brice watches her granddaughter, Willow, play on the beach on June 16, 2023, in the seaside town of Worthing, England.

Despite being the original spots for beach getaways, England’s seaside towns can’t compete with today’s cheap foreign tour packages. That is spurring them to rethink their approach to tourism.


The Monitor's View

With global public debt hitting a record $92 trillion last year, it is worth noting what is happening at Pakistan’s agency for tax enforcement. To assist homeowners in being honest about their taxes, the agency plans to increase the appraised value of homes by 13% to 15% in August – part of a plan to increase total tax revenue by nearly a third. For one of the world’s most debt-burdened nations, this is the latest effort to curb one of Pakistan’s more corrupt practices – tax avoidance, including below-market house appraisals.

It is also an example of the many reforms that the South Asian country has lately promised in order to receive loans from the World Bank and International Monetary Fund (IMF) to avoid a debt default.

With a debt burden close to the size of its economic output, Pakistan loses an estimated $3.6 billion a year to tax evaders – enough to be free of foreign debt if the money stayed in the system. The “whole nation has to move towards a tax culture,” Ahsan Iqbal, a top economic minister, said after the IMF approved a $3 billion rescue loan for Pakistan on July 12. “Everyone has to stop tax evasion.”

Nearly half of humanity, or about 3.3 billion people, live in countries that spend more on paying back debt than on funding education or health care, according to a new United Nations report. To reduce Pakistan’s debt, warned IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva in February, “those that are making good money ... need to contribute to the economy” by paying their taxes.

The IMF, which is the world’s lender of last resort for countries in financial crisis, has only recently begun to consistently attach anti-graft conditions on its loans. Its latest loan to Pakistan, for example, includes a plan to curb theft in the power sector. When the IMF began to focus on corruption in 2018, then-IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde said the effort would help “harness the immense power of sunlight to put the global economy on a healthier and more sustainable path.”

Pakistan has been receiving IMF help since 1958. Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif says he prays this latest loan will be the last one, adding, “It is my faith that Pakistan will progress and no one can stop it.”


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.

When we turn to God’s uplifting messages about the truth of our being, we discover our innate freedom, as a man found after he had a bad fall.


Viewfinder

Gonzalo Fuentes/Reuters
Aircraft of the Patrouille de France create the tricolor French flag during the annual Bastille Day military parade in Paris, July 14, 2023. Known in France as the Fête Nationale or Le Quatorze Juillet, the national holiday was marked this year with fewer fireworks shows, out of concern about both renewed social unrest in the wake of recent riots and the risk of fires amid intense heat and dry conditions. July 14 marks the storming of the Bastille prison in Paris in 1789, a major event in the French Revolution.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thank you for joining us. Please come again Monday, when our reporters look at whether the FBI can restore trust in a time of extreme polarization.

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2023
July
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