2024
April
08
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

April 08, 2024
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Clayton Collins
Director of Editorial Innovation

A path of totality isn’t one that we get to cross often as citizens of Earth. And that on-the-ground swath of dark, beneath a sun totally eclipsed by the moon, ran right through northern Vermont. 

So Monitor photographer Riley Robinson, based in Burlington, was joined there by Boston-based reporters Troy Aidan Sambajon and Jingnan Peng. Their multimedia story leads today’s Daily.

It was more than a deadline scramble by three young journalists to record responses to a rare phenomenon. It was also an opportunity to immerse, with no more until 2044, in an upward-looking communal event.

“I had a couple moments when my throat tightened,” says Jing. “It was mind-boggling and beautiful in a way I hadn’t seen before.”


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Riley Robinson/Staff
From right, Diane Kacin, Pam Stamp, and Nancy Adams take in the solar eclipse before totality, on the shore of Lake Champlain April 8, 2024, in Burlington, Vermont. The three have been friends since they were 10 and planned their eclipse trip 11 months ago. They traveled from Rhode Island and Connecticut.

In a country seemingly fractured about most things, on Monday, Americans came together under one sky.

Today’s news briefs

• Palestinians return to Khan Yunis: Israeli troops withdraw from the heavily damaged southern Gaza city, wrapping up a key phase in Israel’s ground offensive against Hamas. Defense officials said that troops were regrouping as the army prepares to move into Rafah.
• Data privacy deal: U.S. lawmakers strike a deal on draft bipartisan legislation that would restrict consumer data that technology firms can collect, and give Americans the power to prevent selling of personal information. 
• Polish opposition party gains: The nationalist party Law and Justice comes first in local government elections, an exit poll shows, in a setback for Prime Minister Donald Tusk’s ambitions to cement his grip on power. 
• Next, the men’s final: University of Connecticut’s Huskies and Purdue’s Boilermakers have dominated this year’s NCAA college basketball tournament. They meet April 8 in Glendale, Arizona, for the national championship.

Read these news briefs.

China and the United States share a desire to stabilize relations, but a recent trip by the U.S. treasury secretary highlights a critical, longstanding pain point: China’s export of cheap, surplus products.

What is bitcoin’s endgame? The question grows more pertinent due to a planned “halving” of the cryptocurrency this month. It comes down to a matter of trust, as with other matters around valuing currencies.

Leah Fabel for The Hechinger Report
Student Nomi Badboy says the community created by Minneapolis College’s recovery program and the support it offers have made college feel possible.

Community colleges are increasingly embracing students who are recovering from substance use disorder, creating programs and tackling challenges like funding and staffing. Their involvement offers a path to access – and second chances.  

Commentary

Carolyn Kaster/AP
South Carolina players and coaches celebrate after their Final Four college basketball championship win against Iowa April 7, 2024, in Cleveland. South Carolina won 87-75.

The excitement around Sunday’s Final Four championship pitted an undefeated powerhouse against an Iowa star who captivated the United States. But it was also about a long and steady growth of respect for women athletes.


The Monitor's View

Reuters
An aerial view shows a deforested area during an operation to combat deforestation near Uruara, Para State, Brazil.

A few years ago, world leaders pledged to “halt and reverse” global tree loss by 2030 in response to climate change. Brazil and Colombia show how that might be done. The two South American countries slowed deforestation in the Amazon River basin between 2022 and 2023 by 36% and 49% respectively, according to new data from the University of Maryland.

Those reductions rest on the idea that environmental challenges are opportunities for renewing trust in societies torn by conflict or weakened by corrupt and distant governments. That represents a growing consensus among conservationists and peace-builders that their fields are inseparable.

Both Brazil and Colombia have tied environmental progress to local empowerment. In Brazil, President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva returned to power last year vowing to reverse the rapid acceleration of rainforest loss that occurred under his predecessor. He restored conservation regulations and bolstered law enforcement in the country’s forests. Perhaps more importantly, President da Silva, popularly known as Lula, has made Indigenous peoples in the Amazon basin key stewards of his conservation strategy.

In Colombia, where splintered guerrilla warfare has endured for more than half a century, armed groups have engaged in illicit deforestation to fund their causes. President Gustavo Petro has made forestry protection central to his goal of negotiating peace simultaneously with dozens of armed factions and criminal gangs. That strategy is similar to a community-based conservation strategy in Rwanda that draws neighbors together in mandatory local initiatives each month to encourage peaceful coexistence.

Colombian officials have traveled the country promoting a toolkit for local environmental action that emphasizes Indigenous rights, community leadership, and shared stewardship of natural resources. The country has reversed tree loss in part by encouraging armed militias to become partners in protecting biodiversity.

Such community meetings often entail a touch of humility on all sides. “Please excuse us for talking so long, but we’ve never had this opportunity,” one local leader told Colombian officials during a public gathering on peace and environmental issues that lasted three hours.

“The story of deforestation in Colombia is ... deeply intertwined with the country’s politics,” Alejandra Laina, director of natural resources in the Colombia office of World Resources Institute, told the BBC last week. “There is no doubt that recent government action and the commitment of the communities has had a profound impact on Colombia’s forests.”

In countries emerging from conflict or periods of political instability, environmental problems often exacerbate instability. Yet as the editors of the journal Environment and Security noted last month, “bottom-up initiatives that strengthen community cohesion while addressing climate impacts and environmental degradation” show promise. In Brazil and Colombia, progress in saving forests also marks progress in mutual respect and rule of law.


A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

Recognizing everyone’s spiritual goodness and safety in God crowns our outreach to others with healing love.


Viewfinder

Jean Bizimana/Reuters
Participants hold a candlelight vigil during a commemoration event known as Kwibuka, whose name means “remembering,” as Rwanda marks the 30th anniversary of the 1994 genocide at BK Arena in Kigali, April 7, 2024. Rwandan President Paul Kagame said Sunday, “Our journey has been long and tough. Rwanda was completely humbled by the magnitude of our loss, and the lessons we learned are engraved in blood. But the tremendous progress of our country is plain to see and it is the result of the choice we made together to resurrect our nation.”
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for starting a new week with us. Please come back tomorrow for more. We’re working on a story – told mostly through graphics – about the role of immigrants in the U.S. economy and society.

And an editor’s note: In Friday’s Viewfinder, the individuals in the picture were in Jacumba Hot Springs, California, not waiting to be taken there.

More issues

2024
April
08
Monday
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