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Monitor Daily Podcast

April 21, 2021
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TODAY’S INTRO

What we learned from the Derek Chauvin trial

As we digest the rare guilty verdict for a police officer in the death of Black man, three things stand out in the Derek Chauvin trial.  

• First, the unified stand taken by Minneapolis police. There was no code of silence, no corrupt brotherhood of the badge. Rather, we saw multiple officers construct a blue wall of integrity. Police Chief Medaria Arradondo testified that what former officer Chauvin did was “not part of our training, and is certainly not part of our ethics or our values.”

• Second, the wisdom of putting on the stand a 9-year-old girl who had witnessed George Floyd’s death. Even a child, jurors were told, understood Mr. Chauvin’s behavior was wrong. 

• Third, the composition of the jury: six white jurors, and six Black or multiracial people. Seven were women; five were men. They included a nurse, an immigrant, an auditor, and a grandmother. This was a jury of America – and it reached a united conclusion.

Still, a man died under the knee of a cop. “I would not call today’s verdict justice, however, because justice implies true restoration,” Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison said after the verdict. “But it is accountability, which is the first step towards justice.” 

Yes, a first step. This case alone won’t transform the U.S. criminal justice system. But it produced a seismic impulse for humanity to confront racial inequality (more on that below). And in a court of law, George Floyd’s life mattered.

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With trial over, what next for racial justice?

We looked at how much – or how little – progress has been made on racial equality in American policing since George Floyd’s death nearly 11 months ago.

Ann Hermes/Staff
Jessica Smith waves a Black Lives Matter flag as traffic is stopped in the streets around the Hennepin County Government Center as protesters react to the guilty verdict announced in Derek Chauvin's trial on April 20, 2021, in Minneapolis.
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On Tuesday, a jury issued a verdict all too rare in American history, convicting former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin on all counts for the murder of George Floyd.

But despite the honking car horns and shouts of solidarity outside the Hennepin County Courthouse, the mood could not be considered happy.

“This is definitely a victory, but there’s still a lot of work to do,” says State Rep. John Thompson, a Democrat who became involved in politics after a police officer fatally shot his friend Philando Castile in a St. Paul suburb five years ago. “This fight has been going on since before I was born, back to the days of Martin Luther King, Jr., and before him.”

Lee-Ann Stephens, an educator in St. Louis Park, a suburb of Minneapolis, also expresses an ambivalent mixture of relief and hope, tempered with a certain amount of realism. 

“I cried. I cried. I felt like I’ve been holding my breath for almost a year,” Ms. Stephens says. “I cried from relief, recognizing this is a milestone, but it’s not the finish line, and there’s still so much more work to be done. But this is a great start to the work that needs to continue.”

With trial over, what next for racial justice?

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There have been other moments of police violence against Black men captured on video over the past few years.

As part of a new moment in human history when nearly everyone is equipped with video-recording phones, witnesses – and sometimes even the mandated clip-on cameras of police officers themselves – have captured the violent deaths of men such as Eric Garner, Philando Castile, Rayshard Brooks.    

“Say their names” became a rallying cry, and such videos, especially, helped launch Black Lives Matter, organized and led by a younger generation of Black Americans, who demanded the nation address its history of racial injustice with mass protests not seen since the civil rights movement of the 1950s and 1960s.

The name George Floyd, however, resonated globally, and from the start there appeared to be something different about the impact of the 9 1/2 minutes of footage that captured his murder at the corner of 38th and Chicago in Minneapolis.

“Just a human, just a man, lying on the pavement being pressed upon, desperately crying out,” said prosecution team member Steve Schleicher in his final arguments Monday. “A grown man, crying out for his mother. A human being.”

On Tuesday, a jury issued a verdict all too rare in American history, convicting former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin on all counts, including murder.

But as the Monitor reported Tuesday, despite the honking car horns and shouts of solidarity outside the Hennepin County Courthouse, the mood could not be considered happy.

“The exhaustion is real, the constant emotional turmoil we experience is real,” says JaNaé Bates, communications director of Isaiah, a St. Paul-based network of faith organizations that promotes racial justice in Minnesota. “And the idea that the only off-ramp for that is a conviction – it’s incredibly frustrating, because we know the problems go far beyond one cop.”

Ann Hermes/Staff
Protesters comfort each other outside the Hennepin County Government Center as a guilty verdict is announced in Derek Chauvin's trial on April 20, 2021, in Minneapolis.

A year ago the shocking footage of Mr. Floyd’s murder sent a jolt through white America. With millions at home and more attuned, his death sparked a number of unprecedented if modest initial responses. 

The controversies over athletes taking a knee began to wane, the NFL admitted it was wrong to oppose players like Colin Kaepernick, and athletes in leagues overseas began to say Mr. Floyd’s name and take a knee.  

Brands began to acknowledge and remove the racist stereotypes implicit in their packaging, more organizations began to remove memorials to Confederate leaders, and companies like Twitter and Square began to make Juneteenth a paid holiday. Merriam-Webster agreed to include a definition of systemic oppression in its entry on “racism,” and news organizations, including The Christian Science Monitor, began to capitalize Black – an acknowledgment of the sui generis experiences of Black Americans throughout the nation’s history.

Even President Donald Trump, who long emphasized law and order, responded by signing an executive order last June, calling for police departments to train officers on de-escalation techniques and use of force standards – which “will be as high and as strong as there is on earth,” the former president said.

Yet many Black Americans temper such glimmers of hope after Tuesday’s verdict with a more sober assessment, noting that centuries of systematic oppression will not just easily disappear. 

“We can’t reconcile the tension that exists between police and Black communities unless we speak truth about the extent of that violence – deadly violence directed at Black communities, and what that looks like in historical perspective,” says Hasan Kwame Jeffries, professor of history at Ohio State University. “This verdict defies history because historically, it’s rare that police get indicted and it’s even rarer that they get convicted.”

Law enforcement officers kill an average of 1,000 people a year. About 1% of those officers face charges afterward. Since 2005, just seven police officers have been convicted of murder, according to Philip Stinson, a Bowling Green State University professor.

The massive protest movement and the shocking video indeed helped make a difference after Mr. Floyd’s murder, Professor Jeffries says. “But one of the things that was a big difference, and that we need to take away from this, is we saw what happens when prosecutors actually want to prosecute police.”

Maryland revokes police bill of rights

Police officers and prosecutors work closely together in the justice system – many have referred to it as an intimate fraternity between those within the constant stress of some of the most high-stakes jobs, and most prosecutors hesitate to aggressively go after their own, experts say. Police officers, too, are granted additional protections, like qualified immunity and other legal shields from prosecution. 

In 1974, Maryland was the first of some 20 states, including Minnesota, to enact a bill of rights for law enforcement officials, which added extra protections for police officers accused of misconduct, including limits on the length of time in which citizens could allege complaints, limits on the discipline handed down to officers who violate procedures, and a requirement that only other police officers could investigate those accused.

But this month Maryland became the first to repeal these special protections, its legislature overriding the veto of Republican Gov. Larry Hogan.

It was indeed the murder of Mr. Floyd that propelled these changes, says Lawrence Grandpre, director of research for Leaders of a Beautiful Struggle, a grassroots organization in Baltimore. People went from “awareness to truly desiring or demanding some sort of change.” 

But the repeal “doesn’t fit the neat mythology of, we rose up, we protested, and now we have achieved victory,” Mr. Grandpre says. “What happened in Maryland is a decadelong organizing effort that’s culminated in meaningful, but not revolutionary progress.”

Lee-Ann Stephens, an educator in St. Louis Park, a suburb of Minneapolis, also expresses an ambivalent mixture of relief and hope, tempered with a certain amount of realism. 

“I cried. I cried. I felt like I’ve been holding my breath for almost a year,” Ms. Stephens says. “I cried from relief, recognizing this is a milestone, but it’s not the finish line, and there’s still so much more work to be done. But this is a great start to the work that needs to continue.”

When Mr. Chauvin’s trial began March 29, polls suggested that fewer white Americans, not more, expressed support for the goals of the Black Lives Matter movement. 

About 43% of white respondents said they supported the movement last year after images of Mr. Floyd shocked the nation. But a year later, only 37% expressed support – the same number measured before Mr. Floyd died under Mr. Chauvin’s knee, the polling company Civiqs found.

Ann Hermes/Staff
From left, Nicole Solis and Corelle Nakamura hold hands outside the Hennepin County Government Center as they wait for the verdict in Derek Chauvin's trial on April 20, 2021, in Minneapolis.

More significantly, perhaps, white opposition to Black Lives Matter significantly increased over the same time, jumping from 35% last year to 49% at the start of Mr. Chauvin’s trial.

Fox News host Tucker Carlson, who has the highest-rated show in cable news, suggested on Tuesday that Mr. Chauvin’s trial was hardly fair, and that the “unanimous and unequivocal verdict” was really a result of fear. 

“Everyone understood perfectly well the consequences of an acquittal in this case. After nearly a year of burning and looting ... by BLM, that was never in doubt,” Mr. Carlson said during his broadcast Tuesday, in which he cut off an interview with a former sheriff’s deputy who said the verdict was just and characterized Mr. Chauvin’s actions as “savagery.”

But there have been signs of change in the concrete steps being taken by corporations, the media, and a number of state and local governments – like supporting reparations and reinvesting in community resources, many activists say.

“The practice of how law enforcement deals with folks of color, those are the things that are on trial more,” says Nathan Hampton, a principal in the Minneapolis public school system. “I think what happened with Mr. Floyd and his death kick-started a lot of changes, and I hope these changes continue to work and serve people in the community.”

In Houston’s Third Ward

The day after Mr. Chauvin’s conviction, in Mr. Floyd’s childhood neighborhood in Houston’s Third Ward, residents gather by the handful to pay their respects at a mural of Mr. Floyd painted on Scott Food Store’s back wall. A Black Lives Matter flag hangs to its left. Flowers adorn the cracked concrete underneath it. Old-school soul music plays from speakers across the street. 

Dennis Roundtree, senior pastor at Acts Tabernacle Holiness Temple, slowly walks up to the mural of Mr. Floyd’s face. He stares at the painting, as if to lock eyes. He and Mr. Floyd both went to nearby Yates High School. They didn’t know each other back then, but they grew up only a few classes apart. 

Dr. Roundtree thinks Mr. Floyd’s death didn’t just affect his community in the Third Ward. It changed the nation forever going forward. 

“I think George Floyd will go down in history like Martin Luther King Jr., Malcolm X, and it goes on,” Dr. Roundtree says.

Shirley Gilliam, an educator at the Houston Independent School District, and Candra Handy, who also works at HISD, say it’s their first time seeing the memorial. With each step, they say they could feel their emotions rising up.

She thinks Mr. Chauvin’s conviction on all three counts signifies that their community’s pleas have been heard.  

“It has brought such awareness to Black life. When you take one of our own ...” Ms. Gilliam pauses and collects herself. 

As an educator and mother, she understands the tragedy of Mr. Floyd’s death ripples beyond Mr. Floyd’s family and, ultimately, the nation’s collective grief. Ms. Gilliam says she can’t help but feel compassion for Mr. Chauvin’s family. “There are two families that have been destroyed by this – and over what? Over not being human? Over ...” Her voice trails off again. 

Now, she thinks Mr. Chauvin’s conviction will cause officers to think twice and act with compassion for others in the future.

“Now, they’re going to care,” she says. “They’re going to care and they’re going to think about it.” 

“The whole country listening”

Other activists point to the need to continue the unprecedented momentum of the past year.

“We got the whole country listening to us right now,” says Brian Fullman, lead organizer of Barbershops and Black Congregation Cooperative, a coalition of beauticians, barbers, and faith leaders in Minnesota. “This isn’t the time to slow down our work. This is the time to expand.”  

“I have not organized my community around the Chauvin trial, but around systemic oppression and abuse and the culture of policing across the country,” Mr. Fullman says. “We know those things will continue, and so if you don’t line up and get involved, the protesting is for nothing. You have to get to the inside and have a plan.”

State Rep. John Thompson, a Democrat whose district includes part of St. Paul, echoed those sentiments, saying the verdict was an important step rather than a final destination in the march for racial equality.

“This is definitely a victory, but there’s still a lot of work to do,” says Mr. Thompson, who became involved in politics after a police officer fatally shot his friend Philando Castile in a St. Paul suburb five years ago. He, too, has introduced a bill that would end special protections for police officers charged with civil violations or violent crimes.

“This fight has been going on since before I was born, back to the days of Martin Luther King Jr., and before him,” Mr. Thompson says. “So as long as I got breath in my body, I’m going to fight.”

Chauvin convicted: Why this big trial broke from pattern

We explored the historical context and future relevance of the George Floyd case to the U.S. justice system. Can we equate legal justice with moral progress? 

Nick Ut/AP/File
The owner of a clothing store reacts to seeing her burning business in Los Angeles on April 30, 1992. Her store was one of more than 300 burned by rioters after the acquittal of four police officers on trial for beating Rodney King.
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When police violence goes on trial, so often the result has been different from Tuesday’s guilty verdict against Derek Chauvin. The conviction on three counts including second-degree murder was an outlier, compared with cases relating to the police beating of Rodney King or the death of Trayvon Martin at the hands of a community watch volunteer. The Minneapolis trial featured a graphic, lengthy video of the incident, and prosecution testimony from emotional bystanders and the defendant’s fellow officers.

And the outcome of a legal proceeding is not necessarily the same as the delivery of justice. A trial weighs a specific incident. It does not delve into what happened in the months and years before those actions, the surrounding culture, or deeper moral implications – even if certain cases seem to take on the weight of those broader societal issues.

“Our community conceptions, our lay conceptions of justice don’t actually match up terribly well with law,” says Monica Bell, a professor of law and sociology at Yale University. “Let’s think about the work we have to do so that we don’t have to have these types of trials ever again.”

Chauvin convicted: Why this big trial broke from pattern

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The scene was all too familiar – a police officer on trial for violence against a Black American. But in this case the outcome was exceptional, as a jury found former Minneapolis officer Derek Chauvin guilty of three counts, including second-degree murder, in a rare rebuke of law enforcement treatment of people of color.

Across the country, millions of people found that, in the words of George Floyd’s family, they could breathe again. The case involving Mr. Floyd, who died as Mr. Chauvin knelt on his neck, would not end like that of the 1991 beating of Rodney King, in which Los Angeles officers were acquitted or escaped charges. It would not end like the 2012 shooting of Trayvon Martin, with a Florida neighborhood watch member acquitted on grounds of self-defense. It would not end like the 2014 killing of Michael Brown by a Ferguson, Missouri, police officer, with a prosecutor declining to bring charges.

But the outcome of this one case doesn’t necessarily point to a sea change in U.S. jurisprudence, say experts on the interaction between police and minority groups. The Chauvin case was an outlier – with a graphic, lengthy video of the incident, and prosecution testimony from emotional bystanders and the defendant’s fellow officers.

And the outcome of a legal proceeding is not necessarily the same as the delivery of justice. A trial weighs a specific incident. It does not delve into what happened in the months and years before those actions, the surrounding culture, or deeper moral implications – even if certain cases seem to take on the weight of those broader societal issues.

“Our community conceptions, our lay conceptions of justice don’t actually match up terribly well with law,” says Monica Bell, a professor of law and sociology at Yale University. 

The conditions that led to the nine minutes and 29 seconds of Mr. Chauvin kneeling on Mr. Floyd still exist in other communities, says Professor Bell, and will continue to exist if citizens don’t act. 

“Let’s think about the work we have to do so that we don’t have to have these types of trials ever again,” she says.

Uncommon to bring charges

There have been many instances of law enforcement using extreme force against minority suspects in recent years that have roiled the nation and outraged some citizens. Very few of these incidents have resulted in convictions of the officers involved.

To begin with, it is uncommon for prosecutors even to bring charges in those circumstances. The shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson is a case in point: A grand jury declined to indict the officer involved, Darren Wilson. Two St. Louis prosecutors considered whether to charge Mr. Wilson. Both decided against it. 

Susan Walsh/AP/File
Michael Brown Sr. and Lesley McSpadden, the parents of Michael Brown, are shown giving an interview in Washington on Sept. 27, 2014. Both federal and state prosecutors determined there was not enough evidence to bring charges against the police officer who fatally shot Mr. Brown, who was 18 and unarmed, in 2014. Mr. Brown's parents later settled a civil suit against the city of Ferguson, the police chief, and the officer who shot their son.

“Can we prove beyond a doubt that a crime occurred?” said Wesley Bell, the top prosecutor in St. Louis County, when announcing his decision in July 2020, six years after the shooting. “The answer to that is no.”

Lack of definitive evidence can be an impediment at trial. George Zimmerman – not a police officer but a community watch volunteer – described his tussle with Mr. Martin as a life-and-death struggle. He was initially not charged, as police said there was no evidence to rebut his self-defense argument. Tried in 2013, Mr. Zimmerman was acquitted of second-degree murder and manslaughter charges.

Juries can be sympathetic to the way police frame violent encounters even if some evidence presents another side to the story. The severe beating that Los Angeles police officers gave Rodney King following a speeding stop in 1991 was among the first such cases recorded on video by a bystander. At trial the four officers said they were alarmed by Mr. King’s “bizarre” behavior and his refusal to lie down as requested. The defense analyzed the tape blow by blow, slowing it down and robbing it of shock value. All four officers were acquitted of assault.

Mark J. Terrill/Ap/File
Los Angeles police Sgt. Stacey Koon listens to Deputy District Attorney Alan Yochelson, after demonstrating how fellow officer Laurence Powell used a baton on Rodney King in Simi Valley, Calif., March 20, 1993. Mr. Koon was one of four LAPD officers ultimately acquitted in the assault of Mr. King.

In that context, the guilty verdict in the Chauvin case is unusual. The primary reason Mr. Chauvin was convicted may have been the extraordinary video of his encounter with Mr. Floyd, which provided an unfiltered view of what the then-officer did, and how calm he seemed as he did it.

“That’s one thing that’s very different between this case [and the case of Mr. Zimmerman], where you had only the word of Zimmerman, which put the jury in a box, and which to a great degree foreordained the outcome,” says Robert Spitzer, a political scientist at the State University of New York at Cortland.

Breaking the “blue wall” of silence

Other officers testified that Mr. Chauvin’s use of force was excessive, and medical testimony named him as the cause of Mr. Floyd’s death. The video also viscerally demonstrated the sheer length of time involved, more than nine minutes.

It’s important to remember that the legal standard in such cases is that jurors envision they are an officer on the scene, having to make an instant assessment about whether to use force, says Professor Spitzer. Mr. Chauvin’s actions extended far beyond that time frame. On the video, he did not even appear stressed. 

That’s in contrast with a case earlier this month in which, during a traffic stop near Minneapolis, a police officer fatally shot a suspect, Daunte Wright, who had lurched back into his car. Body camera footage showed the officer shouting “Taser!” repeatedly before shooting Mr. Wright, and police officials said she mistook her gun for a Taser. She has now been charged with second-degree manslaughter. 

When tensions are high and people are making split-second decisions, even professionals can make mistakes, says Professor Spitzer.

“When you boil these down on a case-by-case basis, there are lots of factors at work, which all complicates the relationship between an individual case and individual facts versus what seems to be happening nationwide,” he says.

How individual cases add up

Still, it’s possible for those individual cases to add up and eventually affect the country at large, says Brandon Terry, a professor of African American studies at Harvard University. He’s cautiously optimistic that the way the nation talks and thinks about police use of violence is changing.

Joe Burbank/Orlando Sentinel/AP/File
George Zimmerman (right) is shown at the conclusion of at his trial in Sanford, Florida, on July 13, 2013. Mr. Zimmerman, a neighborhood watch member, was acquitted in the 2012 shooting of Trayvon Martin on the grounds of self-defense.

“It’s a really vibrant part of American culture, which is a litigious culture, to treat trials as moments of civic reflection,” Professor Terry says.

For instance, looking back to 1992, it’s not hard to see a more careful discourse on the subject in 2021. Back then, the media and public referred to the “Rodney King” trial, even though it was police officers, not Mr. King, who were the defendants. Today, it’s the “Derek Chauvin” trial, since he was the one charged – not the “George Floyd” trial.

There have been cracks in the “blue wall” of police silence, with many law enforcement officers testifying. That’s a big change even if it is intended to paint Mr. Chauvin as an outsider and head off more sweeping reforms, Professor Terry says. And some states are moving on reform bills in any case – Maryland this month passed legislation to limit police officer use of force and restrict no-knock warrants.

“People are connecting the Chauvin trial much more tightly to a demand for democratic accountability in policing and ... they have much more sophisticated visions about what that would look like,” he says.

Progress on what Professor Terry calls “procedural justice” – rules that govern institutions – is not the same as progress on the deeper moral questions of substantive justice.

Julie Fletcher/AP/File
Protesters hold up signs in a rally for slain Florida teenager Trayvon Martin in Sanford, Florida, on March 31, 2012. The case prompted nationwide discussions about racial profiling, with President Barack Obama expressing sympathy for Mr. Martin's family.

But think of all the young people who mobilized in the biggest social movement in American history last year, he says, in part because they are ashamed of what happened to Mr. Floyd, and because they think their society can be better than it is.

“Do I think [the verdict] will stop police brutality? Absolutely not. But movements need victories,” says Professor Terry.

It remains to be seen how far this conviction can push voters, politicians, and police departments to start rethinking policing in a way that will prevent deaths such as Mr. Floyd’s from happening in the first place, adds Colorado University law professor Aya Gruber, who has studied leniency standards toward those who kill minorities.

It is a statement on American society that it takes a nine-minute video that horrified much of the rest of the world to get a police brutality conviction, Ms. Gruber says.

“Seeing this as the finishing line is totally premature,” she says. “This is the starting line.”

US seeks China’s cooperation on climate. What will it cost?

Beijing sees cooperation on climate issues as a bargaining chip. We explored whether the U.S. is ready to make that trade for itself and the rest of the world.

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At a two-day virtual global summit he is hosting starting Thursday, Earth Day, President Joe Biden will proclaim America’s return to a leadership role on climate change and ask greenhouse gas emitters – of which China is by far the largest – to commit to new reductions in carbon emissions.

But experts say seeking China’s cooperation on climate while confronting it on other geopolitical priorities will almost certainly make cooperation a bargaining chip.

The Chinese are “not going to significantly cooperate with the U.S. on reducing their coal dependence and coal emissions, for example, when at the same time the U.S. is accusing them of grave human rights violations in Xinjiang province,” says Derek Scissors at the American Enterprise Institute.

In a pre-summit speech Monday, Secretary of State Antony Blinken warned, “Climate is not a trading card; it is our future.”

But Mr. Scissors isn’t so sure: “If the problem of climate change is really, really important to us, as the Biden administration says it is, and if you really think the Chinese need to do more to address this serious global risk, then the U.S. is going to have to put some things on the table.”

US seeks China’s cooperation on climate. What will it cost?

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Florence Lo/Reuters
A giant screen in Beijing shows news footage of Chinese leader Xi Jinping attending a video summit on climate change with German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Emmanuel Macron, April 16, 2021.

President Joe Biden brought a China policy to the White House based on three C’s: compete, confront when necessary, and cooperate when it’s possible and even vital to both countries’ interests.

Now the “cooperate” element of the policy toward America’s principal global rival is about to be put to the test by two more C’s: climate change.

On Thursday, Earth Day, President Biden will open a two-day global summit where he’ll proclaim America’s return to a leadership role on climate change and at which he wants greenhouse gas emitters – of which China is by far the largest – to make new, game-changing carbon-reduction commitments.

But winning China’s cooperation with the United States on climate-related issues, even as the U.S. pursues an increasingly confrontational relationship on many other geopolitical priorities, is unlikely to come easily, many China experts say.

Moreover, some add, China will almost certainly consider its cooperation on climate as a bargaining chip for U.S. concessions on competition and confrontation, and another C: criticism.

“The Chinese are already doing things on climate change for their own advantages, but it’s a separate thing when it comes to cooperating with the United States,” says Derek Scissors, an expert in U.S.-China relations and Chinese global investment and trade policy at the American Enterprise Institute (AEI) in Washington.

“They’re not going to significantly cooperate with the U.S. on reducing their coal dependence and coal emissions, for example, when at the same time the U.S. is accusing them of grave human rights violations in Xinjiang Province and IP theft,” he adds. “It’s costly for them to cooperate, so they are going to seek to offset those costs with things they want from the U.S. somewhere else.”

In the run-up to the climate summit, the Biden administration has been busy courting China by inviting Chinese leader Xi Jinping and pressing the Chinese to unveil new concrete steps to improve on their existing international commitments.

Indeed, Mr. Xi on Wednesday confirmed his attendance at the virtual summit, with Foreign Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin saying the Chinese leader’s acceptance reflected the country’s willingness to cooperate with the U.S. on the basis of mutual respect.

An existential threat

On the surface, U.S.-China cooperation on climate might seem to be carrying the day. Last week White House special climate envoy John Kerry had three days of conversations in China, at the conclusion of which the two powers agreed to work together to address what both sides agree is an existential threat.

We “are committed to cooperating with each other and with other countries to tackle the climate crisis, which must be addressed with the seriousness and urgency that it demands,” the world’s two biggest carbon emitters said in a statement issued Saturday.

Moreover, the U.S. and China have already committed to working together in some international arenas. For example, the two powers co-chair the working group on sustainable finance at the G-20 forum of the world’s major economies.

U.S. Embassy Seoul/AP
The U.S. special envoy for climate, John Kerry, at a round table meeting with reporters in Seoul, South Korea, April 18, 2021. During two days of talks in Shanghai in advance of the virtual summit on Earth Day, Mr. Kerry and his Chinese counterpart Xie Zhenhua agreed that the U.S. and China would cooperate on climate change.

On Monday, Secretary of State Antony Blinken gave a pre-summit speech in which he laid out both the daunting challenges and the significant opportunities – including job creation, innovation, and development of a sustainable and more equitable economy – in addressing the climate crisis.

With his backdrop the Chesapeake Bay – which he called “the crown jewel of the world’s estuaries,” all of which he said face grave threats from climate change – Mr. Blinken said that in reasserting its global climate role, the U.S. would not hesitate to criticize countries that aren’t stepping up.

And he had another warning: “Climate is not a trading card; it is our future.”

China-Europe cooperation

Yet as good as that may sound as rhetoric, AEI’s Mr. Scissors says he’s not sure he believes it.

“If the problem of climate change is really, really important to us, as the Biden administration says it is, and if you really think the Chinese need to do more to address this serious global risk, then the U.S. is going to have to put some things on the table,” he says.

Noting that China accounts for almost half of global coal production and continues to add new coal-fired energy plants, Mr. Scissors adds that China knows its action on climate “is worth a lot” to the world, including the U.S. “Anyone who thinks the Chinese are going to trade all that away for free is not dealing in reality,” he says.

Still, there are also experts who note on the other hand that China is the global leader in green technologies – production of solar panels and electric vehicles, for example – and has deep and strengthening ties to the European Union and European countries on climate-related issues like trade.

“If you look at cooperation, China is already working very closely with the Europeans,” says Sanjay Patnaik, director of the Brookings Institution’s Center on Regulation and Markets in Washington. Citing a policy tool that Beijing unveiled last month, he adds that “China is already the largest carbon market in the world, in close cooperation with the Europeans.”

Mirroring a European Union model, China’s ambitious carbon market aims to reduce greenhouse gases by capping carbon emissions and then allowing carbon emitters like coal-fired plants to trade their allotted allowances.

On the other hand, Mr. Patnaik says President Biden could have a hard time “cooperating” with China and other major carbon emitters while it remains unclear just what U.S. climate policy is or how much cooperation the Biden administration will get from Congress to implement bold climate measures.

“Biden is in a bind. He’s telling the world America is back,” Mr. Patnaik says, “but what does that mean?”

U.S. policy adjustments

Indeed, others say the U.S. certainly has the potential to play a significant leadership role on the climate issue, including with China – but that it will take getting its own climate house in order to then act from a position of strength.

At the summit Mr. Biden reportedly is planning to announce that the U.S. is setting an ambitious new goal of cutting its emissions almost in half by 2030.

“As the U.S. steps up, it can put more pressure on others such a China and India,” says Amar Bhattacharya, a senior fellow at Brookings’ Center for Sustainable Development. He then foresees a shift in the U.S. approach “to the opportunities” presented by climate action, “including the opportunities for cooperative action.”

Still, even some Chinese experts bluntly present the potential for cooperation with the U.S. on climate in the very “trading card” context Secretary Blinken suggests the U.S. will not accept.

“China maintains an open attitude when it comes to climate cooperation and welcomes dialogue,” Zhang Monan, senior fellow at the U.S.-Europe Institute at the China Center for International Economic Exchanges, said in a Bloomberg interview this week. “However, if countries continue to pressure China or adopt confrontational and non-cooperative tactics,” she added, “then China will address this with corresponding actions.”

AEI’s Mr. Scissors says the Biden administration is consistently using tough rhetoric with China, but by and large has not yet “committed themselves to taking the truly costly actions on China.” And he says China is using the moment to “message” the U.S. that by acting on its hardened rhetoric, it’s going to prompt consequences in other areas of U.S. interest.

“What I see,” he says, “is the Chinese are thinking: ‘Maybe we can push [the U.S.] away from some of the stuff we really don’t like – and then maybe we can be cooperative on climate.’”

The Explainer

Cuba after the Castros: Three questions

As a leadership era of six decades ends, we wondered: What kind of change might it portend for life on this communist isle?

Ariel Ley Royero/ACN/AP
Raúl Castro (right) raises the hand of Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel after Mr. Díaz-Canel was elected first secretary of the Communist Party at the closing session of the Cuban Communist Party's 8th Congress at the Convention Palace in Havana on April 19, 2021.
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Cuba has seen significant changes since the 1959 revolution, from economic openings to wider internet access. And now, one more: For the first time in more than 60 years, there is no Castro at the helm.

Raúl Castro, brother of the late Fidel, stepped down as head of Cuba’s Communist Party April 19. He will be replaced by President Miguel Díaz-Canel, who represents a younger generation of Castro loyalists.

Observers expect Mr. Castro will remain the most influential person on the island. His leadership carried the torch of the Castro name and the imagery of the revolution, even as he also pushed the state to adapt to new realities. But now, many hope his departure could ease further reforms. Without their predecessors’ revolutionary bona fides, Communist leaders of the new generation are expected to be more beholden to popular demands to validate their leadership. If the past several years serve as an example, Cuba will see and hear more from citizens itching for change.

But Mr. Castro will likely continue his influence behind the scenes. “As long as I live,” he said in his speech, “I will be ready with my foot in the stirrup to defend the homeland, the revolution, and socialism with more force than ever.”

Cuba after the Castros: Three questions

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For the first time in more than 60 years, there is no Castro at the helm of Cuba’s communist government. Raúl Castro stepped down on April 19, though observers suspect he will remain the most influential person on the island. But that doesn’t mean Cuba hasn’t changed since the 1959 revolution that lifted Mr. Castro and his late brother Fidel to power. From an opening economy to wider internet access, the island has slowly seen significant changes to human rights and freedoms.

Why is Mr. Castro stepping down?

The move was expected: Mr. Castro pledged in 2018 to step down as head of Cuba’s Communist Party this year. Announcing his retirement last week, dressed in his iconic olive fatigues, he said he’s “fulfilled his mission and [is] confident in the future of the fatherland.” He will be replaced by President Miguel Díaz-Canel, who succeeded him as president in 2018 and represents a younger generation of Castro loyalists. Mr. Castro isn’t the only member of the old guard retiring this year: A handful of big-name leaders of his generation will also be stepping aside.

Mr. Castro carried the torch of the Castro name and the imagery of Cuba’s revolution, but he also pushed the communist state to adapt to a new reality during his time at the helm, agreeing to talks with the Obama administration that ushered in (short-lived) changes in Cuba’s relationship with the United States.

In his speech, he gave a nod to his impending role behind the scenes, even without a formal title: “As long as I live I will be ready with my foot in the stirrup to defend the homeland, the revolution, and socialism with more force than ever.”

What does this mean for Cuba?

This leadership change is happening amid one of the worst economic crises in decades. Cuba’s economy shrank by 11% last year, amid the pandemic, currency reforms, and restrictions enacted by the Trump administration. All of this combined hit hard the sources of income lots of Cubans – and the government – depend on, like tourism and remittances. But many hope some chains will come off with Mr. Castro’s departure, which might make long-needed economic reforms easier to push through the one-party system.

“This should clear the way for stepping up the pace on economic reform,” says William LeoGrande, a Cuba expert at American University.

Without their predecessors’ revolutionary bona fides, Communist leaders of the new generation are expected to be more beholden to the demands of the population to validate their leadership. This won’t mean a reversal of the centralized, communist system – in fact the theme of this year’s Communist Party meeting was “continuity.” But it could lead to loosened restrictions on private business or breaking into long-held government monopolies. The government has already opened up sales of beef and dairy products to parties other than the state.

What is life like in Cuba today?

Some observers are calling the economic situation in Cuba – rife with long food lines and shortages – the worst since the so-called special period that followed the fall of the Soviet Union. Although things are bad, the environment in Cuba is completely different than it was in the 1990s, says Dr. LeoGrande.

“I think the political perils the government faces are probably higher because of the changed circumstances: Cuban society is more heterogenous than it was then … inequality is more visible today,” he says. “And then, of course, there’s the internet.”

If the past several years serve as an example, Cuba can expect to see and hear more from its citizens and dissidents itching for change. Late last year the government came under historic pressure from artists and activists, who took to the streets after videos of police detaining protesters were caught on cellphones and shared widely online. Increased internet access has allowed activists to raise awareness around everything from violence against women and freedom of expression to animal rights.

Of course, access to regular internet is still pricey, limiting who can tap into the tool. And freedoms of expression and gathering – although less stringent than several decades ago – are still limited on paper and in practice, with the government continuing to crack down on those who speak out against it. 

Points of Progress

What's going right

From American bald eagles to sustainable palm oil, progress takes flight

Awareness can power change. In our weekly global progress report, we find the palm oil industry responding to calls to reduce deforestation and a women-only Kenyan village teaching others about gender and property rights. 

Staff

From American bald eagles to sustainable palm oil, progress takes flight

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1. United States

Bald eagle populations in the contiguous United States have quadrupled since 2009, according to a U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service report. Despite being a beloved national symbol, only 417 bald eagle nesting pairs were confirmed in the mainland U.S. about 60 years ago. Today, there are an estimated 316,700 birds, up from 72,434 in 2009.

Bald eagles were among the first species protected under the 1973 Endangered Species Act. Combined with a ban on the pesticide DDT – believed to have decimated bald eagle populations after World War II – experts say decades of government protection and conservation efforts brought the bird off the brink of extinction and set the stage for the recent population boom.
CBS News

MIKE SEGAR/REUTERS
A bald eagle perches above the Hudson River in New York.

2. Brazil

Lawmakers in Brazil have laid the foundation for a nationwide system to compensate farmers, Indigenous people, local communities, and others who protect critical ecosystems. Legislators voted in favor of the payments for ecosystem services (PES) policy in March, allowing them to establish a market that reimburses people for efforts to safeguard the environment in line with Paris Agreement goals, including carbon offsets through forest conservation. Resources are expected to primarily come from private companies, foreign investors, and donations from wealthier governments. The new law prioritizes family farms, traditional communities, and Indigenous peoples.

The PES concept has been employed sporadically in local and regional programs throughout Brazil since 2005, but until now, there has not been a national legal framework for such initiatives. While programs established with these new guidelines may still encounter challenges, including obstructionist government officials and generally weak environmental law enforcement, national PES policies have helped other countries incentivize sustainable resource management on a large scale, and they are expected to do the same in Brazil.
Thomson Reuters Foundation

3. Italy

Volunteer initiatives in Italy are bringing communities together to fight food waste. Government surveys suggest Italian families waste roughly 187 pounds of food annually, but food waste awareness has grown in recent years and prompted some communities to seek new solutions. In the southern city of Bari, the award-winning Avanzi Popolo 2.0 project is helping redistribute excess food to those in need through an online platform where users can virtually fill and exchange grocery baskets. These baskets are then collected and delivered by volunteers.

Another program called Recup works with 11 markets in Milan, sending around groups of volunteers at the end of the day to collect leftover products – mostly produce – that traders would rather donate than throw away. Organizers say Recup creates an opportunity for young people, retirees, and foreigners to work together to better their community. “Our aim is not just welfare and simple recovery of food but rather to promote collaboration and intercultural and intergenerational exchange,” said Lorenzo Di Stasi, one of the program managers.
News48, World Economic Forum

4. Kenya

A women-only community in rural Kenya is empowering residents and inspiring other villages to pursue equal land rights. Founded in 1990 as a refuge for Samburu County women who’d been rejected from society after experiencing sexual violence, Umoja housed about 50 families at its peak. They built homes and a school, which 37 women and their children still use today. In addition to supporting the village residents, Umoja women also visit nearby communities to educate others about the importance of women becoming landowners.

According to the country’s constitution, women have equal rights to own property in Kenya. However, it’s customary for fathers to pass down land to their sons, and advocacy network Kenya Land Alliance reports that women hold less than 2% of titled land across the country. Now, Umoja women are leading the way in shifting norms about gender and land ownership. Officials say the community’s recent application for the legal deed to a tract of grazing land – something one of Umoja’s founders says would have been impossible 30 years ago – is a reflection of growing recognition of women’s property rights in the region.
Thomson Reuters Foundation

5. China

New rules issued by the Ministry of Education in China ban severe punishments for students, such as caning or verbal abuse. The guidelines reinforce an existing ban on corporal punishment, which has been in place since 1986 but is inconsistently enforced, and also forbids humiliation as a form of discipline. Data on classroom abuse is scarce, but news reports show that public beatings, making children kneel on the ground for hours, and other harsh punishments still occur in some educational institutions, with parents sometimes deferring to teachers on these practices.

TINGSHU WANG/REUTERS
Children play during a break from school in Xujiashan village, Sichuan province. Corporal punishment has been against Chinese law since 1986.

The change comes after a series of student deaths, reportedly linked to classroom trauma, strengthened calls for clearer government guidelines. The ministry encourages teachers to have students write apologies for minor incidents, such as forgetting homework, while more serious offenses, such as bullying, may prompt suspension or counseling. The government has yet to outline the consequences for violating these rules.
Agence France-Presse, Xinhua News Agency

World

Major companies in the palm oil supply chain are taking concrete steps to address deforestation after facing significant public pressure, a new study has found. A key ingredient in many foods, soaps, cosmetics, and biofuels, palm oil is a major driver of deforestation and Indigenous displacement, with plantations covering more than 66 million acres around the world, according to Rainforest Rescue. By clearing forests, palm oil producers threaten biodiversity and eliminate trees, an important tool for absorbing carbon dioxide.

Following years of public pressure campaigns, companies now “see palm oil as a reputational risk,” concludes the study from the international environmental charity CDP, which runs a disclosure system for governments, companies, and investors to report their environmental impact. Analysts from CDP found that the palm oil industry is doing more to shrink its environmental footprint than other industries involving deforestation-driving commodities, including cattle, cocoa, coffee, natural rubber, soy, and timber products. In an analysis of hundreds of agri-commodity companies, nearly all that created or consumed palm oil were taking at least one legitimate measure to mitigate deforestation.
Reuters, Rainforest Rescue

LIM HUEY TENG/REUTERS
The oil palm is native to Africa but has been introduced elsewhere, as seen here in Klang, Malaysia.

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The Monitor's View

Manifold justice for George Floyd

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Many Americans, especially those of African descent, have long looked to the justice system for affirmation that the ideal of equal treatment before the law extended to them. That affirmation came in part with the April 20 conviction of a former Minneapolis police officer for the killing of a Black man. Yet any joy on that point has been muted by calls to see justice in all its different aspects, from retribution to mercy. Those calls reflect a country digging deeper than ever for the values-laden underpinnings of an often-marred American system of justice.

To fulfill the promise of justice for all, said Vice President Kamala Harris after the verdict, is “not just a Black America problem or a people-of-color problem. It is a problem for every American. ... And it is holding our nation back from realizing our full potential.”

On many levels, this trial set a high standard for future cases of police abuse. Its more useful lesson is that justice is more than a fair verdict of guilt and a deserved prison sentence. Along the way, less punitive aspects of justice are not only possible but also necessary.

Manifold justice for George Floyd

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Reuters
A resident in Minneapolis takes a selfie in front of a mural of George Floyd after the verdict in the trial of former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin.

Many Americans, especially those of African descent, have long looked to the justice system for affirmation that the ideal of equal treatment before the law extended to them. That affirmation came in part with the April 20 conviction of a former Minneapolis police officer for the killing of a Black man. Yet any joy on that point has been muted by calls to see justice in all its different aspects, from retribution to mercy.

A good example was the reaction of Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison. “Since the investigation and prosecution of this case began last May, everyone involved has pursued one goal: justice,” he said. “I would not call today’s verdict justice, however, because justice implies true restoration. But it is accountability.”

Besides the kind of justice that restores – or heals – relationships between people, civil rights veteran the Rev. Al Sharpton suggested after the verdict that justice should even extend to preventing such police killings: “We don’t find pleasure in this. We don’t celebrate a man going to jail.”

These comments reflect a country digging deeper than ever for the values-laden underpinnings of an often-marred American system of justice.

The trial itself reflected this public desire for greater understanding of justice. For one, it was televised, a rarity in Minnesota. The jury was very racially mixed and worked quickly together to reach a verdict. And two top Minneapolis police officers spoke against the excessive use of force by Derek Chauvin, breaking the “blue wall of silence” that often hides police abuse.

Mr. Chauvin himself showed no remorse, although his sentencing in about eight weeks will provide an opportunity for the family and friends of his victim, George Floyd, to speak directly to him. Perhaps then another aspect of justice might emerge – the potential to offer healing components beyond the punitive if Mr. Chauvin acknowledges his crime and its impact, accepts the grief and any forgiveness offered by the Floyd family. Rebuilding the broken bonds in our society is the more daunting task, but the most needed.

Since the killing last May, much of U.S. society has moved toward a consensus on ways to prevent police brutality. State legislatures have introduced more than 1,000 police reform bills and resolutions. More than 200 cities and towns now have citizen advisory boards to monitor police conduct. A federal police reform bill in Mr. Floyd’s name passed the House and awaits action in the Senate. U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland has launched a civil investigation into the constitutionality of the use of force by the Minneapolis Police Department.

To fulfill the promise of justice for all, said Vice President Kamala Harris after the verdict, is “not just a Black America problem or a people-of-color problem. It is a problem for every American. ... And it is holding our nation back from realizing our full potential.”

On many levels, this trial set a high standard for future cases of police abuse. Its more useful lesson is that justice is more than a fair verdict of guilt and a deserved prison sentence. Along the way, less punitive aspects of justice are not only possible but also necessary.

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.

What is social justice?

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Racial and other barriers have affected the world for centuries. But each of us can contribute to resolving remaining social injustice issues by committing to express more of our God-given compassion, understanding, and unity.

What is social justice?

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Today's Christian Science Perspective audio edition

What does social justice look like? To me, social justice would be the effect of erasing barriers – racial, gender, cultural, and so on – through the kind of compassion that Jesus expressed, which uplifts and heals. This involves living with more honesty, fairness, unselfishness, goodness, etc.

Social justice, I am learning from my study of Christian Science, means more than a hoped-for, idealistic, or imagined state of things. Rather, social justice represents a present spiritual fact – the unity and equality of God’s creation. Each of us is an individual, spiritual idea of divine Love, God, and our oneness with God and one another is an eternal reality. This oneness can be realized today if demonstrated by expressions of understanding, compassion, and affection toward each other. Despite the glass ceiling that feels unbroken for people of color and the slowness of improvement in social justice and equality, all men and women are forever free to express their spiritual oneness, or unity, with God.

Jesus of Nazareth proved this. He achieved immortal greatness despite being persecuted by the leadership of his own faith. He achieved what he did, not as a great Jew, but because he understood the infinite capacities of man as God’s image. Eighteen centuries later, his loyal follower Mary Baker Eddy, the Discoverer and Founder of Christian Science, led a movement that reinstated Jesus’ healing method, even though she was a woman in what was then a man’s world. Her vital purpose in following Christ Jesus included demonstrating the God-bestowed right of each individual to be free from limitation and oppression of every kind.

And the study and application of Christian Science makes this an achievable possibility for every individual today. Neither disregard for human rights nor racial or other injustice can stop the love that flows freely from God, divine Love, to each of us as God’s child.

Love for others enabled Jesus and his followers to rise above the social injustices of their day. For example, the Apostle Peter recognized that Cornelius, a Roman military officer – whom Jewish law forbade him to mix with – was an equal child of God and therefore shared equally in God’s love. Peter accepted an invitation to Cornelius’ home, and told Cornelius, as well as those gathered with him, “Of a truth I perceive that God is no respecter of persons: but in every nation he that feareth him, and worketh righteousness, is accepted with him” (Acts 10:34, 35).

The divine fact ever remains that the spiritual creations of God are individual, intact, and indispensable. Each individual identity relates essentially to the entirety of God’s creation.

I was the first of my siblings to attend an integrated school in our small town in the southwestern United States. Feeling little compassion or empathy from my classmates, dejected and isolated, I was tempted to drop out during my second year of high school. Then one day, I reached out to God to help me. Almost immediately I felt the presence of God assuring me that everything was going to be all right. Soon afterward I was given some Christian Science magazines. In reading them, I began learning that God loves me and everyone. With this new view, I continued in school.

At the end of our senior year, all the graduating seniors took a week-long celebration trip – all except my cousin and me, who were excluded. This was hurtful. Many years later, my willingness to forgive was sorely tested. Some of my former classmates called and encouraged me to attend our 50th alumni celebration. One apologized for not including the Black students in that senior trip so many years before.

Unsure if I should attend, I began praying with the Lord’s Prayer. The following line, with its spiritual interpretation from “Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures” by Mrs. Eddy, was especially meaningful: “And forgive us our debts, as we forgive our debtors.

“And Love is reflected in love” (p. 17).

Inspired by this and other ideas on forgiveness, I attended the event, and have since enjoyed newly formed friendships with some of those classmates. This experience caused me to be more willing to let go of hurt, fear, and suspicion and to express more compassion.

We each have a contribution to make to the higher understanding of divine Love that alone can resolve remaining social injustice issues and erase the racial and other barriers that have plagued this nation that I love, and other countries, for centuries. Every individual spiritual awakening brings ever closer the fulfillment of this promise: “One infinite God, good, unifies men and nations; constitutes the brotherhood of man;... annihilates ... whatever is wrong in social ... codes;...” (Science and Health, p. 340).

Adapted from an editorial published in the Oct. 26, 2020, issue of the Christian Science Sentinel.

A message of love

Minneapolis responds to a historic verdict

Ann Hermes/Staff
Staff photographer Ann Hermes was in Minneapolis for the announcement of the verdict in the trial of Derek Chauvin. Among the range of feelings she witnessed while talking with people and photographing them yesterday and today, she said a sense of resolve stood out, with people determined to make this moment a turning point in America's reckoning with racism. This gallery includes several of her portraits from Minneapolis along with comments her subjects shared with her.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us. Come back tomorrow; it’s Earth Day! And on the eve of a global climate summit, we’re working on a story about why President Joe Biden’s big environmental proposals are framed around U.S. jobs, not climate alarms.

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