2022
January
14
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

January 14, 2022
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TODAY’S INTRO

Documenting, for the first time, all the slaveholders of Congress

Linda Feldmann
Washington Bureau Chief

“More than 1,700 congressmen once enslaved Black people.” 

This headline in Monday’s Washington Post is at once arresting and unsurprising. After all, a majority of the nation’s Founding Fathers also enslaved Black people, as did at least 12 presidents. It stands to reason, then, that many members of Congress had been slaveholders, too.

What’s surprising, perhaps, is that no one had researched this aspect of Congress going back to its founding in 1789 – until now. The reporter, Julie Zauzmer Weil, tells me it took her three months to research more than 5,000 former members and “many months more” for the story writing and creation of graphics and a searchable database. The final presentation and article are worth the wait. 

We learn that slaveholders in Congress represented 37 states, not just in the South, and that former slaveholders served in Congress well into the 20th century. This project is more than just a piece of excellent journalism, it’s a gift to historians and anyone seeking a deeper understanding of America’s “original sin.” Since the project’s publication, readers have sent Mrs. Weil evidence of at least 18 more slaveholders. 

“The country is still grappling with the legacy of their embrace of slavery,” she writes. “The link between race and political power in early America echoes in complicated ways, from the racial inequities that persist to this day to the polarizing fights over voting rights and the way history is taught in schools.”

Understanding that past, she makes clear, will help the country address it – a fitting thought for the coming holiday honoring slain civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. 

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Trump 2024? Some supporters quietly hope he won’t run.

Although Republican voters strongly approve of Donald Trump, that doesn’t mean they all favor a Trump 2024 campaign. Some fans would prefer a fresh face to pick up Mr. Trump’s mantle going forward.

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In modern times, defeated one-term presidents have typically retired into a life of quiet public service. None has sought his party’s nomination again since Herbert Hoover in 1940. The only U.S. president to serve nonconsecutive terms was Grover Cleveland, back in the 1800s. 

Former President Donald Trump, still the dominant figure in the Republican Party, has hinted strongly that he plans to mount another campaign. And polls show that most Republican voters want Mr. Trump to run again.

But not all of them do – including some Trump fans. A Marquette University Law School poll in November found that just 60% of Republicans wanted Mr. Trump to seek the White House again, despite 73% holding favorable views of the former president. 

At a Republican gathering in Weston, Florida, party activists all express strong support for Mr. Trump. But many have reservations about a Trump 2024 campaign. It all suggests a Trump-GOP relationship that is perhaps more complicated than conventional wisdom would dictate. 

“I really don’t think it’s Trump’s time any longer,” says Peggy Brown, a Republican and a Trump supporter who’s currently serving in the nonpartisan role of Weston mayor.

Trump 2024? Some supporters quietly hope he won’t run.

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Linda Feldmann/The Christian Science Monitor
Nancy Cooke, president of the Weston Republican Club in Florida, addresses the group's monthly meeting at the Wings in Weston restaurant on Jan. 4, 2022. “I want Donald Trump to run [in 2024]," she says, "but I can see both sides of that issue.”

It’s a Tuesday night at Wings in Weston, a chicken joint in a tony suburb of Fort Lauderdale, and the Weston Republican Club is holding its monthly meeting. Some 40 people have gathered to hear from candidates for City Commission and have a bite to eat. 

Images of Donald Trump dominate a makeshift stage along one wall. To the left stands a cardboard cutout of the grinning former president. Another cutout of his face glowers from the center. Below that, a banner proclaims: “Don’t Blame Me, I Voted for Trump.”

Which makes it all the more surprising that, when asked about a possible Trump campaign in 2024, many here are notably unenthusiastic. 

“I want Trump’s policies without Trump,” says one man. “If he didn’t run,” offers another, “that would take a big argument away from the Democrats.”

“I really don’t think it’s Trump’s time any longer,” says Peggy Brown, a Republican who’s currently serving in the nonpartisan role of Weston mayor. She would prefer to see Mr. Trump transition into more of “an elder statesman. He could be a mentor to whoever comes in.”

Make no mistake: These Republican activists all still love the former president. And if he wins the nomination in 2024, they say they’d move mountains to return him to the White House. “Without question,” says Mayor Brown. “I’m unapologetic.”

But on the question of whether he should jump in, many have reservations. Some worry Mr. Trump is too controversial, too polarizing. That perhaps his time has come and gone. At least one attendee expresses unhappiness with the former president’s full-throated endorsement of COVID-19 vaccines. Some note that the party has a wealth of potentially strong alternatives waiting in the wings – including their own governor, Florida’s Ron DeSantis, who leads polls of potential 2024 GOP candidates if Mr. Trump doesn’t run.

To be sure, it’s still early in the 2024 election cycle. Most voters, even activists, have yet to focus much on the next presidential race. While Mr. Trump has hinted strongly that he plans to mount another campaign, he’s said he won’t reveal his decision until after the November midterms.

Nationally, polls show that most Republican voters do want Mr. Trump to run again. A Quinnipiac poll released this week found 69% of GOP voters favor another Trump run. Still, that was down from 78% in October.

A Marquette University Law School poll in November found that just 60% of Republicans wanted Mr. Trump to run again, while 40% did not. The same poll showed 73% of Republicans holding a favorable view of Mr. Trump. 

That 13 percentage point gap between those who view Mr. Trump favorably and those who want him to run again – “there’s the interesting slippage,” says Charles Franklin, director of the Marquette poll. “Give it time, and we’ll see what happens.” 

It all suggests a Trump-GOP relationship that is perhaps more complicated than conventional wisdom would dictate. Last November’s election of Republican Glenn Youngkin as governor of Virginia – a state that voted for President Biden by 10 percentage points – demonstrated that the GOP can be competitive in seemingly blue states when Mr. Trump isn’t on the ballot. Notably, Mr. Trump did not stump with Mr. Youngkin during the race. 

The next Grover Cleveland?

In modern times, defeated one-term presidents have typically retired into a life of quiet public service. None has sought his party’s nomination again since Herbert Hoover in 1940. The only U.S. president to serve nonconsecutive terms was Grover Cleveland, back in the 1800s. 

Shannon Stapleton/Reuters/File
Former President Donald Trump looks on during his first post-presidency campaign rally at the Lorain County Fairgrounds in Wellington, Ohio, June 26, 2021.

Yet Mr. Trump clearly remains the dominant Republican in the country today. Even elected Republicans who have openly opposed him concede the point. 

“There’s no other option right now in the Republican Party,” Rep. Peter Meijer of Michigan – one of 10 House Republicans who voted to impeach then-President Trump over the Jan. 6 riot at the U.S. Capitol – said last month on NBC’s “Meet the Press.” 

Republicans’ views of the former president’s role going forward, however, are nuanced. One poll conducted by the Pew Research Center last September found that two-thirds of Republican voters – including independents who lean Republican – want Mr. Trump to remain “a major national figure for many years to come.” But that group was divided into two camps: 44% who want him to run again in 2024 and 22% who would prefer he support another presidential candidate who shares his views. 

The bottom line is that “the Republican base is still very supportive of Donald Trump,” says Carroll Doherty, director of political research at Pew. But “some people are saying, let’s wait and see what happens.” 

Lately, Mr. Trump has been focused on shoring up his role as kingmaker, putting out some 100 press releases endorsing candidates in GOP primaries for House, Senate, governor, and other key offices. 

He’s taken particular aim at two high-profile GOP incumbents. One is Wyoming Rep. Liz Cheney, who has publicly condemned Mr. Trump for what she sees as his role in inciting the Capitol riot. 

The other is Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp, who angered Mr. Trump by refusing to help him overturn the 2020 election result in Georgia. The former president recruited former Sen. David Perdue to mount a primary challenge against Governor Kemp.

In coming weeks, Mr. Trump plans to travel the country, campaigning for his endorsees and holding rallies. Next up is Jan. 15 in Arizona, a battleground state where Mr. Trump has claimed without evidence that the election was stolen from him. He had scheduled a press conference for Jan. 6 at Mar-a-Lago, his Florida estate, with plans to talk about the “stolen election.” But two days before, he canceled it amid reported concerns by advisers and prominent Republicans that it would be a distraction. 

The scheduling change served as a reminder that the former president, who often welcomes controversy, can be persuaded to avoid it when it might hurt his cause.

A Trumpist, either way

David Strom, a GOP consultant from Minneapolis, had reservations about Mr. Trump in 2016, and didn’t vote for him. But given the president’s record on the economy, judicial appointments, and foreign policy, he supported him wholeheartedly in 2020. 

Looking ahead, however, Mr. Strom lists two main concerns about the former president mounting another campaign: his age (he’ll be 78 in 2024), and his “rough edges.” He thinks the GOP would be better off with a fresh face at the top. 

“There’s just a very large number of people whose repulsion toward Trump had to do with their judgment of his character,” he says.

He adds that, regardless of whether the former president runs again, his political legacy is already profound. 

“The working-class coalition Trump has built is the new face of the Republican Party,” Mr. Strom says. Even if Mr. Trump isn’t the 2024 nominee, he predicts “the winner will almost certainly be from that wing of the party – a Trumpist.”

Many Trump supporters say they’ll be with him to the bitter end. One is Maciek Niedzwiecki, a Polish immigrant who lives in Reno, Nevada. During the 2016 campaign, Mr. Trump inspired him to become an American citizen, and while Mr. Niedzwiecki missed the election by a month, he happily pulled the lever for Mr. Trump in 2020 – and wants him to run again in 2024. 

Mr. Trump’s personal style doesn’t bother him, he says, because the president’s job isn’t to be a spiritual or moral leader. It’s about the issues: a strong border, energy independence, trade deals that put America first, fighting socialism. 

“I look at the president as more of a CEO,” say Mr. Niedzwiecki, a 40-something father of two who works for a biofuel company. “He’s not taking any hits from people, and [he’s] standing his ground.”

Back in Weston, Florida, at the local party meeting, some attendees are just as enthusiastic. 

“Yeah, I think he should [run],” says Lenny Heda, who has a tech support business. “I’m no sycophant,” he adds. “His stance on pushing the vaccine stuff – I disagree.” 

But on a Trump 2024 campaign, he’d be all in. “I would take a bullet for the guy.” 

Nancy Cooke, president of the Weston Republican Club, says she wants Mr. Trump to run again, "but I can see both sides of that issue.”

This story has been updated to include a comment from Nancy Cooke.

The Explainer

The Supreme Court and vaccine mandates: Three questions.

The Supreme Court blocked a vaccine mandate for large employers. Beyond that, the conservative majority indicated a skepticism for big government solutions to big problems, such as climate change.

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The Supreme Court on Thursday prevented the Biden administration from enforcing its mandate that employees of large firms must be vaccinated against COVID-19 or regularly test for the virus.

The move effectively ends the government’s most ambitious attempt to counter rising COVID-19 cases by pushing unvaccinated Americans to get shots. The vaccine-or-test requirement, issued by the Department of Labor’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration, would have covered 84 million people, according to OSHA figures.

At the same time the high court allowed the administration to proceed with a smaller Department of Health and Human Services mandate that requires most health care workers at facilities that receive federal money to be vaccinated. This rule would cover about 10 million people, according to the administration. In many of these facilities 35% or more of the staff remain unvaccinated, the court majority noted in its opinion.

Combined, the rulings present a complex Supreme Court majority attitude toward government activities that has far-reaching implications for the future.

The Supreme Court and vaccine mandates: Three questions.

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Evan Vucci/AP
Louisiana's Attorney General Jeff Landry and Deputy Attorney General Bill Stiles stand outside the Supreme Court Jan. 7, 2022, after arguments about a proposed requirement for large employers and a separate vaccine mandate for most health care workers. On Thursday, the Supreme Court blocked the large-employer mandate while allowing the one for health care workers to take effect.

The Supreme Court on Thursday prevented the Biden administration from enforcing its mandate that employees of large firms must be vaccinated against COVID-19 or regularly test for the virus.

The move effectively ends the government’s most ambitious attempt to counter rising COVID-19 cases by pushing unvaccinated Americans to get shots. The vaccine-or-test requirement, issued by the Department of Labor’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration, would have covered 84 million people, according to OSHA figures.

At the same time the high court allowed the administration to proceed with a smaller Department of Health and Human Services mandate that requires most health care workers at facilities that receive federal money to be vaccinated. This rule would cover about 10 million people, according to the administration. In many of these facilities 35% or more of the staff remain unvaccinated, the court majority noted in its opinion.

Combined, the rulings present a complex Supreme Court majority attitude toward government activities that has far-reaching implications for the future. Here are three key questions about what the justices ruled:

What’s the court’s reasoning?

In blocking enforcement of the employee mandate, a majority of six justices held that OSHA had gone beyond the bounds of its own mandate by in essence acting as a general public health agency.

The congressional statute which established OSHA tasked it with “ensuring occupational safety” in order to “provide safe and healthful employment,” noted the unsigned majority opinion. 

Nowhere has Congress authorized the agency “regulate the hazards of daily life,” wrote the majority. OSHA might be able to oversee the working conditions of researchers who deal with the COVID-19 virus, or workers in particularly cramped or crowded conditions. But the administration’s indiscriminate approach fails to make this distinction, according to the majority.

“The court is not inherently opposed to vaccine mandates or requirements, but they want to see it very closely tied to a strong reasoning and to agencies that handle health care,” says Carmel Shachar, executive director of the Petrie-Flom Center for Health Law Policy, Biotechnology, and Bioethics at Harvard Law School.

In dissent, Justices Stephen Breyer, Sonia Sotomayor, and Elena Kagan said that the majority opinion was in fact preventing OSHA from accomplishing its core mission – ensuring safety for workers on the job – simply because doing so would have effects on their safety outside the workplace as well.

Workers are uniquely vulnerable to COVID-19, the dissenting justices wrote. The virus spreads by person-to-person contact in confined indoor spaces. On the job, workers have little control over their environment, and thus little capacity to mitigate risk.

The majority is imposing a limit on OSHA’s authority found nowhere in its governing statute, according to Mr. Breyer, Ms. Sotomayor, and Ms. Kagan.

“OSHA’s responsibility to mitigate the harms of COVID-19 in the typical workplace do not diminish just because the disease also endangers people in other settings,” dissenters wrote.

The high court majority reasoning in the HHS case was a reverse image of its OSHA ruling. One of the core powers of the department’s Medicare and Medicaid activities is to ensure that health care providers safeguard patients, the majority wrote. HHS secretaries over the years have “established long lists of detailed conditions with which facilities must comply to be eligible to receive Medicare and Medicaid funds,” according to the majority opinion.

The COVID-19 vaccine mandate for health workers thus falls well within the authority that HHS has been granted by Congress, wrote the majority.

“That very critical difference ... is that [HHS] is doling out funds. They’re saying to major health care providers, if you want these federal funds, here’s the conditions you meet. OSHA’s not doling out funds,” says James Hodge, director of the Center for Public Health Law and Policy at Arizona State University.

What are the major implications?

In the wake of the OSHA ruling, other U.S. government executive agencies may be facing a new era in which their ability to act on their own could be circumscribed, say some experts. 

Much of the nation’s actual day-to-day governance takes place in administrative agencies. The Environmental Protection Agency, National Transportation Safety Board, OSHA, and similar entities decide crucial questions about pollution, highway safety, workplace protections, and so on. This is particularly true given today’s gridlocked congressional politics. Lawmakers are unable or unwilling to provide guidance on such matters on their own.

But conservatives have chafed at the growing power of the administrative state – “deep state,” some might call it – and the OSHA decision could reflect that. A newly empowered conservative Supreme Court majority might steer the law governing agencies in new directions. 

OSHA was trying to respond in a big way to a big problem, says Cary Coglianese, law professor, political scientist, and director of the Program on Regulation at the University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School. 

But the court on Thursday pretty clearly indicated that such radical change in a regulatory context will be viewed skeptically.

“It’s clear that a majority of the court will be suspicious of grand exercises of regulatory authority by federal agencies,” says Professor Coglianese.

Going forward, regulators can’t expect that old authorizing statutes will suffice if they want to expand activities, he says. Congress could pass new laws giving them new powers. But with Washington politics in its current polarized state, that seems very unlikely.

“This has implications far beyond just the OSHA vaccine ... mandate,” says Professor Coglianese. “This has implications for climate change. This has implications for any area that requires some big governmental intervention, particularly regulatory intervention, where there isn’t some new legislation squarely directed at that problem.”

What happens now?

The Supreme Court’s Thursday OSHA decision prevented the Biden administration from beginning to enforce its major employer vaccine mandate. The ruling sent the case back to the 6th Circuit Court of Appeals for further consideration on the merits in light of what the Supreme Court ruled. High court justices suggested that a narrower approach might pass judicial muster. But the administration may just move on.

“For all practical purposes, as a legal matter, it’s ... dead in the water,” says Professor Coglianese.

Biden administration estimates held that the employer vaccine mandate, if implemented, would have prevented hundreds of thousands of hospitalizations, and saved more than 6,500 lives.

As a practical matter, the human impact of the mandate’s downfall might be less than those projections indicate. The mere threat of a federal mandate may have pushed thousands of workers to get a shot, despite the fact that OSHA hadn’t begun enforcement, and seemed a long way from doing so.

Many businesses are already requiring vaccination for all of their employees, so the lack of a federal requirement may not have enormous effects, but “this is a setback,” says Professor Shachar of Harvard Law School.

One thing is clear: Companies have lost a potentially useful scapegoat. 

El Salvador questions role of past atrocities in creating new future

Amid political polarization and an increasingly authoritarian government, teaching about El Salvador’s violent past may be key now more than ever. Civil war survivors and NGOs hope to fill that educational void.

Jose Cabezas/Reuters
A man sets candles at a memorial during a ceremony Dec. 11, 2021, to commemorate the 40th anniversary of the massacre of nearly 1,000 civilians by Salvadoran soldiers, in the village of El Mozote, El Salvador.
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Seventh grade teacher Laura Quinteros decided to add literature and museum visits related to El Salvador’s civil war to her classroom curriculum several years ago. Then the phone calls from upset parents started coming in: Many didn’t want her touching on such a sensitive topic with their children. Three decades after the war came to a close, historical memory and discussing the past are still taboo for many politicians and families. 

The clash between those who want to remember and those who prefer to forget has gained new visibility in El Salvador in recent years, as the current administration is accused of actions that feel reminiscent of the past, such as an increased reliance on the military. But as the nation commemorates 30 years since signing a peace accord on Jan. 16, survivors and nongovernmental organizations are stepping up to use education as a tool to make sure history isn’t repeated.

“The hope is in the youth,” says civil war-era massacre survivor Dorila Marquez, who shares her experience with student groups that visit her town of El Mozote. “There are few of us left who lived the massacre in the flesh. So I encourage students to learn the history.”

El Salvador questions role of past atrocities in creating new future

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Laura Quinteros, a seventh grade teacher at a private school, noticed something missing from her class reading list: Salvadoran literature.

So she added “Fireflies in El Mozote,” a first-person account of a 1981 massacre when soldiers killed nearly 1,000 unarmed civilians. Although her students are too young to remember the days when El Salvador was in the midst of a civil war between the U.S.-backed Salvadoran government and a left-wing guerrilla insurgency, she didn’t want the lessons and realities of the war to end with those who lived it.

“Historical memory should be revived,” Ms. Quinteros says. 

But not everyone here agrees.

On Jan. 16, El Salvador marks 30 years since the government of the day and rebel guerrillas signed a peace accord to end a 12-year civil war. El Salvador, like many in the region, is still grappling with how to come to terms with its dark past. During the civil war, the military and death squads sowed terror by murdering nuns, priests, and peasants, and disappearing political dissidents and student leaders.

The atrocities were documented by a Truth Commission, which counted 75,000 dead and 5,000 disappeared, most at the hands of the military. But present-day politicians, businesses, and communities have direct ties to one side of the conflict or the other, making the war a tender topic. And some politicians, such as former President Alfredo Cristiani, argue that efforts to document the past, like the Truth Commission, are biased, and it’s better to “forget this painful page” and move on.

From Colombia to Guatemala, Peru to Nicaragua, the question of how to talk about past national conflicts can be difficult. In El Salvador, the clash between those who want to remember and those who prefer to forget has gained strength in recent years, as the current administration displays increased reliance on the military.

And although politics, pandemic exhaustion, and issues such as gang violence and migration all threaten to overshadow the memory of El Salvador’s civil war, those who believe that knowing history is the best way of not repeating it are stepping up.

People often prefer to avoid talking about recent conflicts, says Virginia Garrard, a professor at the University of Texas at Austin who researches historical memory in Latin America. Perpetrators directly involved in past abuses may feel threatened by efforts to recall them, and younger Salvadorans feel the country is “picking at scabs” of events long past. “They want to get on with it,” she says.

Turning the page

Shortly after the peace accords were signed in 1992, politicians promised to educate students about the civil war, says Claudia Garcia de Cartagena, director of education programs at the Museum of the Word and Image (MUPI), an organization founded by former left-wing guerrilla fighters that is dedicated to preserving historical memory of the civil war and more distant history.

But these promises fell short. Most curriculum reforms over the past 30 years only scratched the surface of the conflict and have increasingly been seen as a partisan matter, with leftists pushing to include the civil war history in the national curriculum, and more conservative politicians ignoring or countering them.

Then, President Nayib Bukele, a young populist, took office in 2019. Under his leadership, El Salvador has seen authoritarian rule, political polarization, frequent attacks on political enemies, and militarization, according to watchdogs.

Mr. Bukele, who was born a year after the war started, has minimized its importance, angering victims and nongovernmental organizations. “El Salvador has turned the page on the postwar era,” Mr. Bukele said in his election victory speech. 

This week, his Nuevas Ideas party proposed making the anniversary an opportunity to commemorate the war’s victims. But critics see this as a bid to rewrite the past. “What they want,” says Celia Medrano, a human rights expert here, “is to force people to forget that at one moment in our history, we understood that we have to talk through things” in order to move ahead.

“They are betting on forgetting history,” Ms. Medrano says.

But civil war survivors like Dorila Marquez can’t forget.

Perhaps no case is quite as sensitive in El Salvador as the 1981 massacre in the remote village of El Mozote, carried out by an elite, U.S.-trained Salvadoran military unit. Ms. Marquez was 24 when troops stormed into her village and, over the course of the next three days, killed nearly 1,000 people, the youngest of whom was 8 months old.

Evidence gathered by the Truth Commission shows that the victims, almost half of whom were under the age of 12, were unarmed. Yet the military maintains that those killed were guerrillas. A criminal case against more than a dozen high-level military officers involved in El Mozote was reopened in 2016 when an amnesty law was overturned, but the trial has moved slowly. Without a ruling, the events are still disputed.

Ms. Marquez says despite the government’s announcement that it wants to honor victims, she has not been invited to any kind of anniversary ceremony. Although she’s discouraged with the lack of justice, she has placed her faith elsewhere.

“The hope is in the youth,” says Ms. Marquez, who shares her experience with student groups that visit El Mozote. “There are few of us left who lived the massacre in the flesh. So I encourage students to learn the history.”

Jose Cabezas/Reuters/File
Relatives participate in a ceremony in 2016 to commemorate the 35th anniversary of the El Mozote massacre in El Salvador, in which Salvadoran troops killed nearly 1,000 villagers, half of whom were children.

Acceptable to speak openly?

Groups like MUPI are trying to teach that history. The organization trains teachers, such as Ms. Quinteros, to incorporate lessons about the country’s past into their curriculum. Nearly 200 educators have been part of the program since it began in 2015, reaching thousands of young Salvadorans. 

Students are taught to “analyze their reality and see what is needed so that this history is not repeated,” says Ms. García de Cartagena from MUPI. The course focuses on first-person testimonies, so as to elicit empathy for everyone involved, whether they were guerrilla fighters who took up arms against inequality or government soldiers who took the job to feed their family.

About six years ago, Ms. Quinteros felt it had become acceptable to speak openly about the war, and sought out MUPI’s training. A former guerrilla leader had been elected president, and the right-wing ARENA party, founded by a death squad leader, was no longer in power.

But when Ms. Quinteros introduced “Fireflies in El Mozote,” she was met by a backlash. Some of her students came from upper-class military families, for whom the subject was still taboo. While teaching about the war, Ms. Quinteros discovered that one student’s grandfather was accused of civil war-era human rights abuses.

“That student got uncomfortable,” she recalls, but she did not see it as a reason to “forget [history] or erase it.”

Dr. Garrard, the historian, says family ties often motivate a desire to forget the past. “If your version of the story is on the wrong side of history, that’s another reason to just say, ‘Let’s not talk about it,’” she says. She sees MUPI’s work in Salvadoran schools as unique in the region, where much of the effort to preserve historical memory is confined to museums.

Students’ “own experience starts to fit into something,” she says. Citizens become “part of a larger narrative in a way they didn’t necessarily understand” before. 

“Never stop questioning”

Some students who have studied the civil war period see disturbing echoes in today’s El Salvador.

Mr. Bukele’s administration has been accused of harassing civil society members, journalists, and opposition politicians, and of quashing public debate. “This doesn’t allow the country to have harmony, peace, and development,” says Aaron Manzano, a recent graduate who learned about the war in MUPI’s after-school program. As in the 1980s, today everyone has to pick a political side, he says.

Karen Rivera, a former student of Ms. Quinteros’, recalls that she began noticing an increased military presence on the streets during the pandemic as part of Mr. Bukele’s response. “But then they stayed.”

If she hadn’t learned about the civil war in school, she might not have noticed this or been alarmed by it, she says.

And the classes have taught her a broader lesson. They “helped me to learn to never stop questioning everything that is happening around me,” Ms. Rivera says. “Living without questioning is dangerous.”

Points of Progress

What's going right

Animal crossings, and other networks for safety

Both special construction projects and better planning have saved lives. In Canada, a busy highway features pathways that protect animals and people alike. And in Bangladesh, cyclone preparation includes layers of warnings and the personnel to staff the effort.  

Animal crossings, and other networks for safety

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Along with everyday road safety and emergency preparedness, we look at improved quality of life for LGBTQ people in Chile and formerly incarcerated Nigerians. 

1. Canada

Wildlife crossings in Canada’s Banff National Park are inspiring transportation authorities to build animal-friendly roadways elsewhere. In the early 1980s, the Trans-Canada Highway running through the country’s oldest national park averaged about 100 elk-vehicle collisions annually. The once-infamous roadway now boasts the highest density of animal crossings in the world, with at least 38 underpasses and six overpasses, and has served as a proving ground for the conservation strategy. “There was just a lot of skepticism from biologists,” said Tony Clevenger, a senior wildlife research scientist at the Western Transportation Institute at Montana State University in the United States, who was asked to monitor these structures by the Canadian government. “But our data showed the wildlife crossing measures were highly effective.”

His team proved not only that these bridges and tunnels reduced deer collisions by 86%, but also that the structures allowed otherwise isolated bear populations to breed. The Banff project has informed animal crossing projects in other countries, including the U.S. and Costa Rica.
Mongabay

Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff/File
Drivers pass under a wildlife corridor in Banff National Park in Alberta in July 2019. These structures allow wildlife to traverse the park and avoid contact with vehicles.

2. Chile

Chile has legalized same-sex marriage, making it the eighth Latin American country to embrace marriage equality. Both congressional houses voted by an overwhelming majority to approve the measure, which was quickly signed into law by President Sebastián Piñera, a center-right leader whose term ends in March and who once opposed the legislation. He changed his position this past summer, stating, “The time has come to guarantee that freedom and that dignity to all people.”

Same-sex couples have been able to form civil unions in Chile since 2015, but now they can enjoy equal spousal benefits and adoption rights as married couples. The bill, which was first introduced in 2017, reflects a shift in opinion on LGBTQ issues. Most Chileans now support same-sex marriage.
NPR, Al Jazeera

Esteban Felix/AP
Rafael Teran (left) and his boyfriend, Cristian Garcia, take a selfie in front of the La Moneda presidential palace after lawmakers approved legislation legalizing marriage and adoption by same-sex couples, in Santiago, Chile.

3. Nigeria

An organization in Nigeria is working to lower recidivism with job training and support. In Nigeria the rate at which formerly incarcerated people return to prison jumped from 35% in 2007 to 50% in 2019. Dream Again, which began as a small effort to bring libraries to correctional centers throughout the country, prepares those behind bars for reentry into society. With five staff members and eight volunteers, the group works with prison authorities to coordinate its “Rethink, Reform, and Re-enter” program. Phase one focuses on mentally and emotionally supporting incarcerated people, phase two is about job skills training, and phase three involves material support for newly released participants.

To date, Dream Again has worked with 2,000 individuals in six prisons across Nigeria. One participant, Emmanuel Kusa, says the group helped him start his own soap-making business after he struggled to find work outside prison. “I am so happy bearing in mind my one-year stay in prison was not in vain,” said Mr. Kusa. “I see it as going there to learn.”
Prime Progress

4. Bangladesh

Bangladesh has dramatically reduced its cyclone-related deaths, and could serve as a model for other nations facing extreme weather events. Since 1970, when Cyclone Bhola killed 300,000 to 600,000 people, Bangladesh has lowered storm fatalities by a hundredfold while the frequency of destructive cyclones has increased. Today, the South Asian country has improved meteorological capacities and developed a more sophisticated early warning system.

Nowadays, local mitigation committees disseminate information about incoming storms through text, radio, and mosque broadcasts, and by knocking on doors. Bangladesh has also increased the number of cyclone shelters from 44 to more than 14,000, with the newer buildings housing up to 2,500 people. Another boon to the country’s preparedness is the national cyclone volunteer corps, which achieved gender parity in 2020. Women now make up half of the 76,000 volunteers – an important development considering women are often in charge of caring for families but don’t typically have the same access to information as men. Experts say the shift has made shelters safer for women and reduced the disproportionately high number of female casualties during storms.
The New Humanitarian, Bulletin of the World Health Organization

World

Renewable energy had another record-breaking year of growth in 2021, according to a report from the International Energy Agency. Countries around the world installed an additional 290 gigawatts of renewable power capacity over the past year, beating the previous record for renewable growth set in 2020. Despite the ongoing pandemic and rise in cost of raw materials, new climate policies drove an uptick in renewable development.

On the current trajectory, by 2026, the capacity for generating renewable energy will exceed that of nuclear and fossil fuel energy combined, but experts say it’s still not enough to meet the net-zero carbon emissions target by midcentury. “We need to move up another gear now,” said Heymi Bahar, lead author of the report. “It is possible, we have the tools. Governments need to show more ambition, not just on targets but on policy measures and plans.”
The Guardian, International Energy Agency

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How a remote Ugandan village became a hub of progress

Ojok Okello has transformed a small village in his home country into a hub of progress by listening to what the community needs. This is episode 8 of our “People Making a Difference” podcast. 

Courtesy of Jjumba Martin
Ojoko Okello is the founder of the Okere City project, a multifaceted rural development effort, in Okere, Uganda.

Ojok Okello has two master’s degrees and has worked for international aid groups in Africa for more than a decade. 

But as a stranger returning to his father’s ancestral village in northern Uganda, he put all that experience aside. And he listened. “I became a student again,” says Mr. Okello. 

The villagers told him what they needed: a preschool. An adult literacy program. A local bank. A boxing club. And as the villagers rallied around each project, the Okere City Project, a hub for progress in a remote corner of Uganda, was born.  

“For me, it wasn’t about imposing my expertise and experience and skills and knowledge. It was about being a recipient of these ideas from the community and using my skills and knowledge to reshape and refine them,” he says. “So basically it was about respect, about involvement, and about learning.” – Dave Scott, audience engagement editor

You might have seen the Monitor story about Ojok Okello’s work on Feb. 19, 2021. We wanted to check in with him, and take you a little deeper with an audio interview. This story is meant to be heard, but we appreciate that listening is not an option for everyone. You can click here to read a full transcript.

Okere City: A Ugandan hub of progress

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Reversing the odds on the gambling industry

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In recent weeks, three men who helped build the world’s biggest sports betting company have launched an unusual campaign. They are warning investors of “the risk of acute social harm” in supporting today’s more addictive forms of gambling.

All three businessmen, Stewart Kenny, Fintan Drury, and Ian Armitage, were instrumental in the rise of Paddy Power, an Irish bookmaker that is now part of Flutter Entertainment, a global operator. Their new organization, Stop Gambling Harm, comes out of moral misgivings over not foreseeing how online and mobile betting activities have come “at a great cost to the most vulnerable in society.”

The three believe society will soon turn on the industry, piling up class-action lawsuits as new technologies help lower the resistance and the barriers for those with addictive behaviors. In the coming year, they hope to convince investors in Ireland and the United Kingdom that the industry must get ahead of society, taking less profit by instituting such reforms as mandatory spending limits for those under 25 years old.

Reversing the odds on the gambling industry

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AP
A gambler plays a slot machine in Atlantic City, N.J.

It might be hard to find a former coal industry executive fighting for tough climate laws. The same holds true for former bosses in the alcohol and tobacco industries who regret making money off those vices and want to make amends. Not so in the gambling industry.

In recent weeks, three men who helped build the world’s biggest sports betting company have launched an unusual campaign. They are warning investors of “the risk of acute social harm” in supporting today’s more addictive forms of gambling.

Their personal remorse is being turned into public remedy.

All three businessmen, Stewart Kenny, Fintan Drury, and Ian Armitage, were instrumental in the rise of Paddy Power, an Irish bookmaker that is now part of Flutter Entertainment, a global operator. Their new organization, Stop Gambling Harm, comes out of moral misgivings over not foreseeing how online and mobile betting activities have come “at a great cost to the most vulnerable in society.”

“The internet was the explosion,” Mr. Kenny told RTÉ News. “In fairness to the industry, we didn’t realize how much it would take over people’s lives.”

The three believe society will soon turn on the industry, piling up class-action lawsuits as new technologies help lower the resistance and the barriers for those with addictive behaviors. In the coming year, they hope to convince investors in Ireland and the United Kingdom that the industry must get ahead of society, taking less profit by instituting such reforms as mandatory spending limits for those under 25 years old.

They are targeting investors because they have learned from the inside that both industry executives and government find it all too attractive to maximize revenue from gambling, either in profits or in taxes. “You could argue the government is as addicted to tax revenue as the unfortunate gambling addicts are to online slots,” Mr. Kenny told the Racing Post.

A rise in gambling addiction – especially during the isolation of COVID-19 – could overload mental health services, Mr. Kenny warns. Now a therapist, he says many people who have suffered from gambling addiction encouraged him to speak out.

“The industry of which I was part for decades has for far too long hoped for a ‘magic wand’ solution that would curb gambling addiction without affecting profits,” he wrote in the  Daily Mail. 

It is worth noting that the three businessmen relied on talent, hard work, and teamwork for success in their profession. They now want to help those who fall for the false promise of luck as a force in life. A study last year by the University of Oxford found a half-million people in the U.K. spend 40% of their disposable income on gambling.

Simply nudging the industry toward more reforms that help problem gamblers, however, may not be enough. The pervasive concept of chance must be addressed.

In a 2020 book, “The Myth of Luck,” philosopher Steven D. Hales of Bloomsburg University in Pennsylvania writes: “We cannot master luck because there is literally nothing to defeat. We will see that luck is no more than a persistent and troubling illusion.

“Cleaning our mental house of dusty old concepts that we’re hanging onto because we keep hoping that they will one day be useful – that is liberating. To give up luck is to regain our own agency in the world.”

To be sure, moral remorse over one’s past in gambling promotion can bring practical benefits.

Yet spiritual liberation from a notion of luck would have lasting impact.

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 painful memories are faced and healed

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Acknowledging God as everyone’s common Parent offers a powerful starting point in healing racial strife and its effects – as a woman experienced when prayer lifted mental baggage that had been swept under the rug for decades following a situation she’d faced in high school.

When painful memories are faced and healed

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Today's Christian Science Perspective audio edition

When I was a high school student, our class took a field trip off campus. Students who had cars agreed to have others carpool with them. After driving for a few minutes, the student driver of the car I was in slammed on his brakes to avoid colliding with another vehicle. He simultaneously screamed a warning at the other driver, and then, to my surprise, out of his mouth came the “N-word,” uttered with contempt.

The other classmates I was with, who were white, glanced at me, the only Black student in the car, in embarrassment. The rest of the car trip was filled with awkward silence. Once back at school, I tried as best I could to erase the dismay from my thoughts, and from then on I distanced myself from those particular students.

Now an adult who has been a practicing student of Christian Science for many years, I asked myself whether I was satisfied leaving that high school experience the way it ended. No, I thought. Instead, I saw that now was the perfect time and opportunity to apply the truths of Christian Science to this situation and to free myself from the picture of hatred I had witnessed.

My prayers began by affirming in earnest that God, Spirit, is the one heavenly Father-Mother of us all. God is Love, as the Bible declares, and a loving God could not and did not create His spiritual offspring to live in enmity with each other. I persistently affirmed that every child that God created is “very good” (Genesis 1:31), made in His spiritual image. Our spiritual nature is therefore free from any form of evil.

These truths lifted my thought above the notion that life is essentially a mortal experience, where both good and evil exist. It is impossible for infinite God, good, to produce evil. Mary Baker Eddy, the Discoverer and Founder of Christian Science, writes in “Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures”: “Good cannot result in evil. As God Himself is good and is Spirit, goodness and spirituality must be immortal. Their opposites, evil and matter, are mortal error, and error has no creator. If goodness and spirituality are real, evil and materiality are unreal and cannot be the outcome of an infinite God, good” (p. 277).

This radical perspective that Spirit, infinite good, is the origin and source of all existence is what I had found appealing and transformative when I was introduced to Christian Science. So as I prayed, I mentally insisted that these foundational truths were powerful and unchanging. This left no room for strife and hatred to take root or leave an indelible impression.

Knowing deeply that everyone’s spiritual nature is as loving and lovable as their divine source brought me peace. This Christly truth also brought genuine forgiveness of my former classmates. I was especially grateful to feel free and healed of consternation that had been swept under the proverbial rug for decades.

This experience, along with my study of the Bible and Science and Health, shows me that when one is criticized or condemned, the most effective response is to prayerfully appeal to the power of ever-present divine Love to heal and save.

This does not mean overlooking wrongs. But it does mean that in addition to speaking up when we see instances of prejudice, we can go further by getting beyond the false concept of man and woman as prone to evil behaviors and affirming our true, spiritual identity as the offspring of divine Love. Science and Health describes everyone’s spiritual heritage this way: “In Science man is the offspring of Spirit. The beautiful, good, and pure constitute his ancestry” (p. 63).

All of us, regardless of race or ethnicity, have the same infinite, divine source of heavenly good. Consistently seeing one another in this spiritual light – and letting spiritual truth inform how we think, act, and respond to others’ actions – is one way we can actively contribute to healing racial strife.

Adapted from an article published in the Nov. 23, 2020, issue of the Christian Science Sentinel.

A message of love

A season for kites

Ajit Solanki/AP
A man flies a kite during Uttarayan or Makar Sankranti festival in Ahmedabad, India, on Jan. 14, 2022. Kites are flown in many parts of India as part of the celebrations for Makar Sankranti, a festival that marks the transition of winter to spring. In Gujarat state, Uttarayan is a holiday when families pitch themselves on rooftops to fly kites from dawn to dusk.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte and Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thank you for joining us. Please come again Tuesday, when we look at challenges from both Russia and China, and ask: How willing is President Joe Biden to employ more than soft power in a big-power era? 

Monday is a federal holiday marking Martin Luther King Jr. Day, and there won’t be a Monitor Daily. But watch your inbox for a special email including an interview with Monitor correspondent Ken Makin and links to articles on Dr. King’s legacy.

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