2024
April
22
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

April 22, 2024
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It’s Earth Day – an event that began in 1970 to prompt us humans to think more carefully about our planet. This year’s theme is its struggle with plastics, waste from which is expected to triple over the next 30 years. And plastics are only one of many daunting environmental challenges. What does that mean for the future?

Two stories today – one on plastics, one about sustainable communities – point to key ingredients in making progress. There’s the willingness to accept complexity, a pragmatic bent, an understanding that both urgency and a commitment to the long game matter. You’ll hear from people who hypothesize, collaborate, test. They’re solution-oriented, and committed to finding a sustainable path forward.


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Today's stories

And why we wrote them

Caitlin Ochs/Reuters
After students were arrested for protests against the war in Gaza, a coalition of Columbia faculty spoke on their behalf and in support of freedom of expression April 22, 2024.

Protests against the war in Gaza have led to a breakdown of trust on an Ivy League campus. What lessons does Columbia hold for campuses nationwide?

Today’s news briefs

• Congress tightens grip on TikTok: The Chinese-owned social media platform repeats its free speech concerns about a bill that would ban the popular social media app in the United States if ByteDance did not sell its stake within a year. 
• Ukraine braces for new push: A new U.S. $61 billion package for Ukraine puts the country a step closer to getting an infusion of new firepower. In the meantime, Russia aims to achieve its most significant gains since the invasion.
Israeli military official resigns: Maj. Gen. Aharon Haliva is the first senior Israeli figure to step down over the failures surrounding the Oct. 7 Hamas attack.

Read these news briefs.

Jenny Kane/AP
With a school in the background, a homeless person walks in Fruitdale Park, March 23, 2024, in Grants Pass, Oregon. The rural city has become the unlikely face of America’s homelessness crisis as its case over anti-camping laws goes to the U.S. Supreme Court.

Is it “cruel and unusual punishment” to criminalize sleeping outside? Amid a housing crisis, the Supreme Court is going to wade into the complex problem of homelessness in U.S. cities.

Alfredo Sosa/Staff
Martina Wiedemar and Joao Almeida pose for a photo at their agroforest in Gandum Village, Aug. 28, 2023, in Montemor-o-Novo, Portugal.

Projects are sprouting up around the globe to build environmentally focused communities. These efforts aim to be practical and inviting, not idealistic. 

The rapid growth of plastic pollution is grabbing attention – on Earth Day and in global treaty talks. Our story and charts show the scale of the problem and possible paths toward solutions.

SOURCE:

Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development; Our World in Data; Morales-Caselles et al. (2021), "An inshore–offshore sorting system revealed from global classification of ocean litter"; United Kingdom Food Standards Agency

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Jacob Turcotte/Staff
Victor J. Blue/Reuters
Former U.S. president and presumed Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump sits in court on the first day of opening arguments in his trial for falsifying documents at Manhattan Criminal Court in New York, April 22.

For the first time ever, a former U.S. president is on trial in a criminal case. As arguments began before a New York jury on Monday, the public is hearing Donald Trump’s hush money defense argument for the first time.

Vivien Fellegi
A pup greets volunteer Duane Taylor at the Ukraine-Romania border.

War-torn Ukraine is overpopulated with strays. One volunteer is coming to their aid, with food and empathy.


The Monitor's View

Almost as soon as the presidential primaries began in January, one narrative of this election year in the United States was dominant: that Americans merely faced a rematch between a current and a former president that most said they did not want. Yet a second and more compelling narrative may be unfolding in the U.S. House of Representatives, one about the capacity for the renewal of the American model of self-government.

On Saturday, a wide bipartisan majority of the House passed four bills funding military assistance to Ukraine, Israel, and Taiwan. The measures also included humanitarian aid for war-torn Gaza and Sudan. The bills follow the recent adoption of legislation to prevent a government shutdown and extend a covert surveillance law.

The flurry of activity in the House could mark the maturing of a new generation of leaders learning to temper partisan passions through reason and consensus. In one way, this was forced on the lawmakers. Republicans hold only a two-seat majority, making House Speaker Mike Johnson vulnerable to being ousted by just a few Republicans, as his predecessor was. To keep his job, he had recently favored strong immigration reforms over funds for Ukraine. Yet after hearing the nation’s highest intelligence briefings about the Russian threat in Ukraine and Europe, he apparently shifted his thinking. That change of heart led him to ignore the threat of a revolt of a few within his own ranks and move forward on legislation that had been stalled for months.

“I could make a selfish decision and do something different,” he told reporters last week, “but I’m doing here what I believe to be the right thing.”

The speaker’s decision reflects the design of American democracy to favor what James Madison called “the mild voice of reason, pleading the cause of an enlarged and permanent interest.” A study published last year by the Center for Effective Lawmaking at the University of Virginia found, based on 40 years of congressional activity, that bipartisanship is the key to effective legislating – especially amid division and polarization.

The reason for that may be rooted in what consensus requires. House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries last week praised Mr. Johnson for being “open, honest, and highly communicative.” Rep. Jim Himes, a Democrat from Connecticut, told Politico, “I don’t think I agree with him politically on anything, but I do think he has integrity. And I do think he’s acting like a leader.”

Another quality at work was a willingness to listen to alternative views. “Only by having humility can leaders bring people together,” wrote Marilyn Gist, professor emerita of the Center of Leadership Formation at Seattle University, in The Hill in 2020. “When leaders display regard for others’ dignity ... compromise is much more likely.” This year’s election narrative might be about to change.


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.

In caring for the world around us, a spiritual view of our environment is an empowering starting point.


Viewfinder

Peter Dejong/AP
Divers with gloved hands gently nestle the first self-bred corals from the World Coral Conservatory project among their cousins at a coral reef at Burgers’ Zoo in Arnhem, Netherlands, April 22, 2024. The aim is to preserve endangered corals that could be reintroduced to the wild if conditions improved in the future.
( 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 Linda Feldmann looks into a new and more active phase of President Joe Biden’s 2024 campaign.  

More issues

2024
April
22
Monday

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