2023
August
08
Tuesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

August 08, 2023
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TODAY’S INTRO

Reflections on the Extraterrestrial Highway

Sarah Matusek
Staff writer

Running in the Nevada desert, where night is black as ink, I saw a pair of eyes glow white. A mouse, I hoped, or something else small. This was the Extraterrestrial Highway, after all.

Early Sunday morning in the rural town of Rachel, I joined the Extraterrestrial Full Moon Midnight Half-Marathon – with some 400 other earthlings running 5K-to-51K races. Headlamps were required, as were reflective vests. Neon bracelets shone from wrists. People arrived at the start in silver shorts and bobbling antennas, near the roadside bar and lodging called the Little A’Le’Inn. 

When safe to do so, look up, founder Joyce Forier had told me in an email. Runners here, she wrote, “report seeing lots of shooting stars.”

We ran near Area 51 – a hush-hush military site, two hours north of Las Vegas, long linked to claims of UFO activity. Those early “sightings” seemed to coincide with secret test flights of American aircraft during the Cold War, reports Time, but that hasn’t stopped the lore. I would’ve welcomed an abduction right around Mile 9.

I’m not too interested in what Americans think about aliens, though. More so, what aliens might think about us.

What would they make of Americans’ distrust of one another? I wondered on the run. Our “cancel culture” and red/blue divide? (Notwithstanding last month’s congressional hearing on UFOs, of all things. There’s bipartisan interest in government transparency.)

Then again, what if otherworldly watchers saw us differently, as the Monitor strives to do? Americans as agents of respect and trust and hope?

Maybe, seen from above on Sunday, we looked like glow-in-the-dark invaders. Yet maybe our cheers of encouragement, shared by strangers in the dark, reached the heavens, too.

“Good job!” we called out to each other.

“Nice work!”

“You, too!”

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A deeper look

Why unions win pay hikes and new clout

Some old narratives about labor unions and blue-collar decline no longer seem to apply. It’s not clear how far the worker comeback will go, but employees are making their voices heard – and winning pay raises. 

Mario Anzuoni/Reuters
Union actors and screenwriters walk the picket line during their ongoing strike outside Netflix in Los Angeles, July 26, 2023.
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Every once in a while, events conspire to upend Americans’ views on the economy.

It happened in the 1970s, when postwar confidence in the United States’ industrial might was shattered. Energy shortages, soaring inflation, and relentless foreign competition smashed the view of the American workforce as superior and powerful. Now, such thinking may be shifting in the opposite direction. 

A labor shortage of historic proportions, coupled with longer-term trends, has allowed workers to win big pay raises this year. Even nonunion workers are making gains, so that those at the bottom of the pay scale are actually reversing some of the income inequality that has yawned since the 1980s.

“With the tight labor market, we’ve seen this extraordinary phenomena where ordinary workers have been able to get good wage increases,” says economist Dean Baker. But “they have a long way to go. I mean, we’ll have to make up 40 years of losses.”

The question is how persistent the trend may be. Workers are seeking to unionize workplaces even in the South, long known as resistant to organized labor. And UPS workers won a big pay hike recently – including for entry-level workers.

“We are an example of what happens when you are a union, what we can make happen,” says Viviana Gonzales, a UPS worker in Palmdale, California.

Why unions win pay hikes and new clout

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Every once in a while, events conspire to upend Americans’ views on the economy.

It happened in the 1970s, when postwar confidence in the United States’ industrial might was shattered. Energy shortages, soaring inflation, and relentless foreign competition smashed the view of the American workforce as superior and powerful. Now, though, such thinking may be shifting in the opposite direction. 

A labor shortage of historic proportions, coupled with longer term trends, has allowed workers to win big pay raises this year. From pilots to delivery drivers, union members are getting better contracts. Even nonunion workers are making gains, so that those at the bottom of the pay scale are actually reversing some of the income inequality that has yawned since the 1980s.

“With the tight labor market, we’ve seen this extraordinary phenomena where ordinary workers have been able to get good wage increases,” says Dean Baker, economist and co-founder of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, a research and public education nonprofit based in Washington. But “they have a long way to go. I mean, we’ll have to make up 40 years of losses.”

The question is whether this era is a rare blip in the economy or an inflection point where low-paid workers begin to make gains relative to higher-paid workers. The economics suggest it’s a blip, which will disappear once unemployment rises and jobs become scarce again. But some labor experts point to longer-term trends that could lead to a historic re-balancing of the labor market between the rich and poor.

SOURCE:

Bureau of Labor Statistics, U.S. Department of Labor,

|
Jacob Turcotte/Staff

The enthusiasm and hopes among union workers are palpable.

“I can’t believe the raises and benefits,” says Kenny Riley, president of the Charleston, South Carolina, local of the International Longshoremen’s Association. He’s referring to the 32% pay raise and bonus that his union’s West Coast counterpart, the International Longshore and Warehouse Union, reportedly negotiated in June with shippers and terminal operators in a tentative six-year contract. (The union hasn’t released details.) Mr. Riley is hoping his union, now in talks with East Coast shippers and operators, can match that increase. “The money is there in the logistical chain, and it’s our time to reap the benefits.”

Nonunion workers are also pushing for change.

One day in July, Marshawna “Shae” Parker took a deep breath, put down the coffeepot in her hand, and walked off her job at a Columbia, South Carolina, Waffle House with a raised fist. “I felt lighter than a feather,” recalls the waitress and 23-year veteran of the restaurant chain. “Walking out ... was a weight lifted.”

Outside, she was cheered by a phalanx of workers at a union so new, it’s not yet officially recognized. They are pushing for better pay, a working air conditioning unit, an end to automatic deduction of shift meals, and more security guards to keep staff safe. But she was a lonely striker. No one else at the restaurant walked off that day. Four fellow strikers weren’t at work at the time of the rally. Three days later, after receiving promises that things would change, Ms. Parker went back to work.

Courtesy of the Union of Southern Service Workers
Marshawna "Shae" Parker (center) joined other Waffle House employees at a Columbia, South Carolina, location in a three-day strike in July. Their demands included better pay and a safer workplace.

Rather than joining existing unions, workers at some of America’s best-known companies have formed their own. Apple, Amazon, Google, and Starbucks employees have all created their own organizations. Sometimes, the members are highly paid workers eager to have their voices heard by management (Google professionals). More often, it’s low-paid employees pushing for better pay and work conditions (Apple store employees, Starbucks baristas, and workers like Ms. Parker at the Union of Southern Service Workers, formed just last year with ambitions far beyond Waffle House). It’s these organizing drives that unions hope will reverse or at least stop their decadeslong decline.

One of the toughest nuts to crack is the South, where states have right-to-work laws. 

That means workers don’t have to join unions or pay union dues, even if a union has organized the workplace. Still, organizing is going on at tire plants in the Carolinas and at Amazon facilities in Georgia, including a protest in East Point, Georgia, on July 26. It came just a day after UPS and the International Brotherhood of Teamsters came to terms on a tentative contract, which workers still must approve.

The Teamsters offered an app where UPS drivers could share concerns up the chain to union bargainers – and the issues went beyond pay to what worker Viviana Gonzales calls “issues of dignity.” One high priority: getting air conditioning in vans, including in Palmdale, California, where Ms. Gonzales often sees temperatures climb into triple digits. 

Ms. Gonzales, a nine-year UPS veteran and a union shop steward, was on the front lines of preparing workers for a possible strike this month – and the self-sacrifices involved in solidarity. 

Mike Blake/Reuters/File
A UPS delivery van is driven along a city street in Garden Grove, California, March 29, 2022. Air conditioning was a priority, alongside higher pay, for union drivers at the company in recent bargaining talks.

Now the walkout won’t be necessary. 

“We are an example of what happens when you are a union, what we can make happen,” Ms. Gonzales says.

The UPS contract is eye-opening because, even though the union hasn’t officially released the terms, details that have leaked out suggest it is heavily weighted toward helping the lowest-paid drivers, the part-timers.

The tentative contract reportedly gives all workers an immediate pay boost of $2.75 an hour, hikes the minimum starting pay for part-time drivers by 30%, and moves thousands of shift workers into full-time employment. In March, Delta Air Lines pilots approved a contract locking in a 34% raise – a move that has since been matched by other major airlines.

Besides seeking better pay and job protections, union autoworkers are also negotiating to eliminate tiered wages, which allows companies to pay newer workers less than what longtime workers earn. Their contracts with major automakers expire next month.

Obviously, pilots and autoworkers don’t inhabit the bottom of the pay scale. Yet historically, their gains have spilled over into the pay scales of nonunion companies. The contract wins and the organizing pushes, along with other trends, suggest the possibility that a sea change is at hand for lower-paid workers.

Fong/AP/File
Hundreds of striking air traffic controllers, some with their family members, applaud speakers during a meeting of union members in Los Angeles, Aug. 5, 1981. The Reagan administration said it would fire illegally striking controllers who defied the president’s work-or-be-fired order.

Ever since the 1980s, globalization, automation, and anti-union administrations have put blue-collar workers on the defensive. Corporations moved factories abroad or automated them. After the Reagan administration took on striking air traffic controllers – and won – employers have taken a tougher stance against unions. The results were predictable. 

Factories closed. Jobs moved overseas. Unions dwindled in their reach and power. In 1983, 1 in 6 private sector workers belonged to a union; as of last year, the ratio was only 1 in 16. And the rich-poor income gap, which some economists attribute largely to unions’ decline, grew to levels not seen since before World War II.

Now, however, some of those trends are reversing. And the economic assumptions of the past 40 years no longer appear to apply. For example:

Assumption No. 1: Globalization is decimating the blue-collar workforce.

That’s no longer true in strategic industries such as semiconductors and green power. Worried about U.S. dependence on China, the government is subsidizing companies to bring chip production back to America. A decade ago, conservatives and trade activists would have decried such a move as protectionism. Now, the move has bipartisan support because of the growing strategic competition with China. Corporations, also anxious to diversify away from China after the pandemic disrupted their supply chains, are opening factories in other countries or bringing them back home.

The Biden White House, perhaps the most labor-friendly administration since Franklin Roosevelt’s, has pushed through legislation that is also giving alternative energy a huge boost – promising still more blue-collar jobs. 

Assumption No. 2: Technology has made white-collar workers, especially so-called creatives, the winners in this economy.

While automation displaced factory workers for decades, its latest incarnation in the form of artificial intelligence now generally poses a greater concern for white-collar workers than blue-collar ones. Even if AI begins to steal jobs away, employees involved in physical labor and consumer-facing service work appear to be somewhat insulated. 

This year’s bargaining sessions tell the story. The mere threat of a strike won longshoremen, UPS drivers, and other blue-collar workers big pay raises. The 11,000 members of the Writers Guild of America, by contrast, have been on strike since May. Last month, the actors union joined them on the picket line. It’s the first time the two have jointly struck the studios since 1960 and the most closely watched labor action of the year. Almost 3 in 4 Americans say they’re aware of the strike, according to a Los Angeles Times poll released Aug. 3. Among the issues are revenues from web streaming and the use of AI to generate actors’ likenesses.

Mario Anzuoni/Reuters
Union actors and screenwriters picket outside Walt Disney Studios in Burbank, California, July 31, 2023. Unlike the efforts of airline pilots and UPS drivers, their effort to reach a new contract has dragged on.

“This won’t be a career anymore,” says Adam Conover, a member of the Writers Guild’s negotiating committee, walking the picket line in front of Netflix studios in Los Angeles last month. “If we don’t win this now, we won’t have careers to go back to in five years because they’ll have eliminated the writers room, they’ll have scanned everybody into AI and be stealing their likenesses instead of [using] real actors. ... They’ll put comedy-variety writers like me on a day rate. We’ll go from a 13-week guarantee to a day rate.”

Assumption No. 3: The rich are getting richer while the poor fall behind.

Actually, at least since the Great Recession, workers at the bottom end of the income ladder have seen their pay rise by percentages that outpace those in the middle or even those at the top, according to data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Much of this reversal in the 2010s can be explained by state actions to raise minimum wages, according to Arindrajit Dube, an economist at the University of Massachusetts Amherst and co-author of a study on income trends released in March. Since 2014, 30 states have effectively raised their minimum-wage law, says the Economic Policy Institute.

Then the pandemic hit, which created a worker shortage, especially in low-paid service industries. Wage gains at the bottom accelerated. And they’ve accelerated for all such workers this time, not just those in states with a higher minimum wage. Even after accounting for inflation, low-paid workers have come out ahead in the past three years, while those in the middle and the top have lost ground. 

Such gains in the past three years reversed approximately a quarter of the post-1980 widening of income inequality, according to the study. 

The pandemic not only caused a worker shortage but also changed perspectives.

“What everyone always thought of as the great mass of ‘low-skilled,’ low-wage service [workers], those folks discovered during the pandemic that they’re essential workers,” says Susan Schurman, professor of labor studies at Rutgers University in New Jersey. “There is a growing demand among workers for a much stronger voice on the job and for American workers. … Really unions are the vehicles through which the average worker or group of workers can get any leverage on the job. There is not another way to do that.”

Whether all these trends amount to a revival of unions’ fortunes remains an open question. Past organizing wins and gains at the bargaining table haven’t triggered a rebound for organized labor. And today’s worker shortage – the longest string of sub-4% joblessness since the late 1960s – may not last. Yes, some demographers warn that declining birthrates could mean a future with fewer workers. But with AI, labor-saving automation could accelerate. And in the near term, as the Federal Reserve raises interest rates and slows the economy to fight inflation, the number of job openings has begun to fall. In July, the U.S. notched the slowest job growth since December 2020.

Joshua Bessex/AP/File
Starbucks employees and supporters react as votes are read during a viewing of their union election, Dec. 9, 2021, in Buffalo, New York. About 3% of Starbucks stores are currently unionized, according to the company.

The contract wins “are definitely real gains,” Ruth Milkman, a sociologist and head of the labor studies department at the City University of New York, writes in an email. But “they may reflect the tight labor market ... as much as anything else.” In the case of UPS, they also reflect the threat of losing market share in a strike, she adds.

Historically, union workers have proved to be the one labor group that can, at times, push against chill economic winds. But labor economists aren’t at all sure that they can do it now when their leverage is limited to a few highly organized sectors of the economy.

Unions are busy organizing other sectors. Last year, the number of petitions for a union at workplaces and the number of workplace elections won by unions reached a seven-year high. And public approval of unions stands at 71%, according to a Gallup Poll last year, the highest since 1965. 

Despite all this momentum, many newly organized workers have failed so far to win the most important thing: a contract. Many companies are dragging their feet when it comes to bargaining. 

“Obviously, their strategy is this: ‘We will not sign a collective bargaining contract. ... We will wait for the next turn of the economic cycle when there is a recession or something,’” says Nelson Lichtenstein, a historian and director of the Center for the Study of Work, Labor, and Democracy at the University of California, Santa Barbara. Absent a change in labor laws, which would tilt the advantage back in unions’ favor, a rebound looks unlikely, he says.

Charles Rex Arbogast/AP
Members of the Air Line Pilots Association International walk an informational picket on behalf of United Airlines pilots at O'Hare International Airport, May 12, 2023, in Chicago. Pilots at several airlines including United have won large pay raises.

“The courts and maybe the Congress and certainly the managerial mindset could shift,” he adds. “When you talk about union upheaval – or other upheavals – usually the elites make concessions because they think concessions are the lesser of two evils. So you think that communism is sweeping the country in 1937? Let’s recognize some unions because there could be a rebellion. And if you think that urban riots are going to progress even more in the ’60s, we’d better offer some civil rights laws.”

From management’s perspective, unions often represent a large – and unnecessary – interference in company-employee communication and problem-solving. “Waffle House is proud of its long record of effectively addressing concerns our Associates report to us,” the company said in a statement to the Monitor. Senior managers have met with workers at the Columbia restaurant. “We’ve already carried out work on most of the issues that were discussed, and we are working on others.”

Generally speaking, employers are not sounding conciliatory, even those who have seen unions organize small parts of their operations.

“The direct relationship we have with our partners [workers] enhances our ability to anticipate and meet our partners needs, provide opportunities for their success, and is fundamental to who we are and to the success of our business,” Starbucks said in a statement to the Monitor. “We respect the right of the 3% of stores that have opted for union representation. ... [But] as a result of the direct employment relationship preferred by nearly 97% of our partners, we continue to work to reinvent and improve the Starbucks experience.”

Ms. Parker, at Waffle House, has noticed a change since her mini-strike. “My coworkers, some of them have been very against what I did. And the atmosphere among managers is very different now, I’ll leave it at that,” she says. “But everybody is paycheck to paycheck, and the cost of living is high. ... I’m going to keep pushing.”

Staff writer Ali Martin contributed to this story from Los Angeles.

Editor’s note: The status of the International Longshore and Warehouse Union’s tentative six-year contract has been clarified.

SOURCE:

Bureau of Labor Statistics, U.S. Department of Labor,

|
Jacob Turcotte/Staff

African teams break through at Women’s World Cup

Africa’s women soccer players have shrugged off discrimination and shone at the World Cup, enjoying unexpected successes that have galvanized fans at home.

Juan Mendez/AP
Zambia's Lushomo Mweemba celebrates the first goal of the match during the Women's World Cup soccer match between Costa Rica and Zambia in Hamilton, New Zealand.
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As women’s soccer has undergone a revolution over the past 30 years, few teams have transformed themselves as dramatically as the national squads from Africa.

At this year’s Women’s World Cup, currently underway in Australia and New Zealand, four African teams have been playing – South Africa, Nigeria, Morocco, and Zambia. All have won unexpected victories against supposedly superior opponents, and all but Zambia made it as far as the knockout stage of the competition.

Their successes have engendered enthusiastic eruptions of national pride around the continent, but women’s teams are still facing discrimination. Both the South African and the Nigerian teams have been embroiled in recent pay disputes, with players complaining their bonuses are lower than the men’s even though their results have been better.

After coming within a hair’s breadth of beating European champions England on Monday, Nigerian defender Ashleigh Plumptre could have been speaking for all the African teams at this year’s Women’s World Cup.

“We made a statement here,” she said. “This will just be the foundation moving forward.”

African teams break through at Women’s World Cup

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In Lusaka, the giant chicken is iconic.

As cars spin around a major traffic circle in Zambia’s capital, they are greeted by a towering statue of a white rooster perched in its grassy center, advertising a local poultry company. So beloved is the chicken that when a Lusaka mayor announced a few years ago that it would be torn down, Zambians put up enough of a fight that he eventually backed off.

So it was a striking sign of the times last month to see the famous chicken painted wearing the uniform of Zambia’s women’s national soccer team, with the words “Go Copper Queens” painted on his portly body.

It was the first time in Zambia’s history that the national team – men or women – had qualified for the soccer World Cup final stages, and a live wire of excitement crackled through the country.

Ryan Lenora Brown
A statue of a white rooster advertising a local poultry company is painted wearing the uniform of Zambia’s women’s national soccer team, with the words "Go Copper Queens," in Lusaka, Zambia. It is the first time in Zambia’s history that the national team – men's or women's – has qualified for the soccer World Cup final stages.

Fans donned the team’s jerseys and clustered in sticky neighborhood taverns for the early morning games, broadcast from Australia and New Zealand. Commentary blared from car radios. At a fancy business hotel, the housekeepers kept the televised games on mute as they cleaned rooms so as not to alert their bosses to their transgression.

“Zambia’s name has just been written on the world map in soccer,” said Delux Sayi, a taxi driver. “It’s a tournament of giants, and it’s a great achievement just to be there.”

But this year the African teams at the Women’s World Cup are no longer content “just to be there.” Three of the continent’s four squads – Nigeria, South Africa, and Morocco – stormed their way into the elimination round, in the process toppling teams long considered better than them, and upsetting the game’s established hierarchies.

Record crowds

“Soccer is everything in South Africa, and these women have made us proud,” said Glady Malubana, a waitress at a restaurant in Soweto, the Johannesburg township that is the pulsing heart of South African soccer. She was watching as her country’s national team, known locally as Banyana Banyana, or “the girls,” battled Italy for a slot in the round of 16 last week.

Carl Recine/Reuters
South Africa fans cheer inside the stadium before the Netherlands vs. South Africa match at the Women’s World Cup in Sydney Aug. 6, 2023.

In the second minute of stoppage time in the second half, the game was still tied 2-2, a result that would knock the South Africans out of the tournament. Then Hildah Magaia threaded a short pass to Chrestinah Thembi Kgatlana, who calmly tapped the ball behind Italy’s goalkeeper. At that moment, no South African team, men’s or women’s, had ever qualified for the knockout stage of a World Cup. Thirteen minutes later, Banyana Banyana did exactly that.

It is a cliché to say women’s soccer has come a long way in the 32 years since the first Women’s World Cup was played in 1991. (In fact, although that tournament would later be known as the first Women’s World Cup, at the time FIFA refused to let it use the World Cup brand. The tournament was instead officially branded as the World Championship for Women’s Football for the M&M’s Cup.)

In those days, Women’s World Cup matches were inexplicably 10 minutes shorter than than men’s, and the eventual champions, the United States, played in hand-me-down jerseys from the country’s men’s team. 

During the 2023 tournament, in contrast, more than 1.4 million fans have already crowded into stadiums in Australia and New Zealand – a record figure.

Tertius Pickard/AP
Nigeria's players watch during a penalty shootout during the Women's World Cup round of 16 soccer match between England and Nigeria in Brisbane, Australia, Aug. 7.

Major professional leagues in Europe, the United States, and China have helped cultivate a new generation of superstars in the women’s game, including African players like Zambia’s Barbra Banda and Nigeria’s Asisat Oshoala.

Unexpected victories, and near misses ...

But women’s teams around the world still struggle to command the same respect as their male counterparts. In the lead-up to this year’s World Cup, for instance, South Africa’s national team boycotted a friendly match with Botswana over a pay dispute; the women were being paid smaller bonuses than the national men’s team, despite better results.

Nigerian players also threatened to boycott their first match after their national federation denied them bonuses.

“I have been very frustrated with the [Nigerian soccer] federation and the lack of support,” Nigerian head coach Randy Waldrum told the “Sounding Off on Soccer” podcast in June. “We have less days than a college preseason to prepare for the World Cup, and it blows my mind.” 

James Elsby/AP
Morocco's Anissa Lahmari (right) and France's Elisa De Almeida battle for the ball during the Women's World Cup soccer match between France and Morocco in Adelaide, Australia, on Tuesday.

At the World Cup itself, however, the African teams have seemed unflustered. Nigeria, South Africa, and Morocco all defeated higher-ranked teams to secure their spots in the knockout round. By chance, all three ended up facing off in round of 16 matches against a nation that had once colonized their country – South Africa against the Netherlands, Nigeria against England, and Morocco against France.

Even Zambia, the lowest-ranked team in the tournament at 77th, stormed to a 3-1 victory over 36th-ranked Costa Rica in its final group match.

There were other victories, too – such as Morocco’s Nouhaila Benzina becoming the first player in soccer history to wear a hijab during a World Cup match.

When Nigeria was finally eliminated 4-2 on penalty kicks in its round of 16 match against England on Monday, defender Ashleigh Plumptre said she hoped the team’s thunderous performance would help tell a new and different story about African women’s soccer.

“I think everybody counted us out against England,” she said in a post-match interview with The Athletic. Instead, the team came within an inch of unseating the European champions on the world’s largest stage. “We made a statement here,” she added. “We won’t be forgotten for what we’ve done, and this will just be the foundation moving forward.”

The Explainer

‘Cultured meat’ arrives on menus

“Cultured chicken” is now available for sale in some U.S. restaurants. Supporters tout its environmental benefits, yet critics raise concerns over cost and practicality.

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Consumers may soon find meat on restaurant menus that has never walked the earth – grown from cell to fillet.

The product, called “cultured” or “cultivated” meat, is reaching more plates. Cultivated chicken has been sold in a Singapore restaurant since 2020, and in June the Department of Agriculture approved the sale of cultured chicken in the United States by two companies. More than 150 businesses worldwide are working to put beef, fish, and pork on the market, too. 

Supporters hope the food will prove more environmentally friendly and protect animal rights, yet concerns linger over costs and feasibility. Some call the product, which tastes, smells, and looks like chicken, real meat, but that raises philosophical questions about what meat is. 

“This is the kind of thing that gets moral philosophers like myself excited,” says Josh May, a professor of philosophy at the University of Alabama at Birmingham. “Some people are concerned that maybe [cultured meat] is unnatural,” he says, “but it doesn’t seem any less natural than factory-farmed meat.” 

‘Cultured meat’ arrives on menus

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Terry Chea/AP/File
Chigozie Nri (left) and Nicholas Legendre work in the laboratory of "cultured meat" startup New Age Meats in San Francisco, Feb. 15, 2019.

Consumers may soon find meat on restaurant menus that has never walked the earth – grown from cell to fillet.

The product, called “cultured” or “cultivated” meat, is reaching more plates. Cultivated chicken has been sold in a Singapore restaurant since 2020, and in June the Department of Agriculture approved the sale of cultured chicken in the United States by two companies. More than 150 businesses worldwide are working to put beef, fish, and pork on the market, too. 

Supporters hope the food will prove more environmentally friendly and protect animal rights, yet concerns linger over costs and feasibility. 

What is cultured meat?

It’s not genetically modified or a plant-based alternative. Some would call this product that tastes, smells, and looks like chicken, real meat, but that raises philosophical questions about what “meat” is. 

Cultured meat begins as a cell from an egg or a piece of traditionally butchered meat. The cells are fed amino acids, vitamins, and other nutrients in a bioreactor. Two to three weeks later, the meat is processed into forms that consumers are familiar with, such as a nugget. 

“I think sometimes people have this idea in their head that the meat they’re eating is grown in a petri dish. That’s not the case,” says Josh Tetrick, CEO of Good Meat, one of the two USDA-approved cultured chicken manufacturers in the U.S. Initial research is in a lab, but the meat is made in a production facility, he says. 

Is cultured meat healthy? 

Both Good Meat and Upside Foods, the other cultured meat company with USDA approval, say that the nutritional profiles of their products are almost identical to conventional meats. 

Upside Foods has made public its own nutrient analysis, evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration, which found “somewhat higher levels” of folate and cholesterol and slightly different mineral and metal content than conventional meat. The levels were within the range of those found in other common foods, the report said. Good Meat discloses a few nutritional facts and says on its website that its product is “high in B vitamins.”

Many potential customers seem grossed out by the product, though. A study published in the Journal of Environmental Psychology last year found that 35% of meat eaters and 55% of vegetarians were “too disgusted” by cultured meat to try it. 

Shoppers won’t find cultured chicken on the shelves of grocery stores in the U.S. yet. Instead, the product will first appear in upscale restaurants in San Francisco and Washington, D.C. 

What is the impact on animals and the planet? 

By eliminating the rearing and slaughter of animals, cultured meat companies say their product helps reduce animal cruelty. 

“This is the kind of thing that gets moral philosophers like myself excited,” says Josh May, a professor of philosophy at the University of Alabama at Birmingham. “Some people are concerned that maybe [cultured meat] is unnatural,” he says, “but it doesn’t seem any less natural than factory-farmed meat.”

Large-scale meat production has become highly mechanized and profit-driven. The idyllic image of a farmer in overalls tending to humanely treated, well-grazed animals is more a myth than reality. Factory-farmed meat makes up about 99% of the U.S. meat market, according to estimates by animal rights groups.

Cultured meat companies also claim that their product will be better for the environment. Their process uses far less land because there’s no need to house animals or grow their feed. Cultured beef, especially, could reduce the number of cattle on farms – a significant source of methane emissions. 

But there is little expert consensus on cultured meat’s environmental impact. Some research has found that producing cultured meat emits fewer greenhouse gases than farmed meat, but other studies contradicted this. Cultured meat may also require greater energy usage than conventional production. Much of the environmental impact will depend on whether the energy used is renewable and on the efficiency of future production technology.

Some voices are calling for slowing down. More than 60 French scientists and learned society members signed an open letter in February cautioning against cultured meat’s sale before further scientific research is available. 

Can companies make enough meat? 

Currently, creators of cultivated meat are limited to making tens of thousands of pounds per year, due to their production capabilities. Large-scale production of hundreds of millions of pounds of meat per year is at least two years off, says Mr. Tetrick of Good Meat. 

Above sheer output, industry leaders want to reach price parity with conventional meat. Neither Good Meat nor Upside Foods has disclosed the price of its product. “Our production costs are still quite high ... and we are not making a profit on anything we sell to restaurants,” a Good Meat spokesperson said in an email. “That will change as we tackle some of the remaining technical and engineering hurdles inherent in large-scale commercial production.”

Proponents claim prices have been falling fast. In 2013, the first cultured meat burger reportedly cost $330,000. More recent estimates range from $11 per pound to just under $29 per pound. This would be before grocery stores and restaurants hike up the price, however. 

Critics are skeptical that cultured meat companies will be able to fulfill their ambitious goals. Businesses face extreme obstacles in everything from cell metabolism and ingredient costs to facility construction and bioreactor design.

Could “lab meat” succeed even if it’s expensive? 

Given a growing consumer consciousness around animal rights and climate change, supporters foresee a future meat market where consumers will choose between different kinds of conventional meat, cultured meat, and plant-based alternatives. People with the financial resources may choose to buy cultured meat or meat from humanely raised animals while lower-cost options remain.

Consumers may reevaluate their dining choices if general meat prices rise due to climate changes, says Dr. May of the University of Alabama. “We can’t keep doing what we’re doing, which is expecting that once you’re a wealthy nation, you eat meat with almost every meal. ... It’s not necessary.”  

Several conventional meat companies have invested in cultured meat. Archer-Daniels-Midland Co. invests in Good Meat, and Tyson Foods and Cargill invest in Upside Foods. No conventional meat companies responded to requests for comment.

Approved sale of cultivated chicken in the U.S. is a landmark moment, but not yet a revolution. While cultured meat’s widespread consumption and impact on the economy seem a step closer to reality, scientists, philosophers, and the product’s own manufacturers acknowledge years of work lie ahead. 

How one group is helping teachers with mental health

What’s the best way to show support and respect for educators? For one group in Colorado, the answer is to provide free mental health care that empowers teachers.

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During the pandemic, a team of psychiatry professors at the University of Colorado and their students had an idea: What if they provided their services for free to teachers?

Educators saw their skills and capacity stretched after weeks and months of online lessons – and they are still recovering. For many, access to a sympathetic ear is key. Colorado Educator Support, based out of the UC School of Medicine in Aurora, works to fill gaps in traditional mental health services and to offer tailor-made help.

The 3-year-old program serves hundreds of teachers every year through its individual sessions, group workshops, and mental health hotline. Therapy meetings are scheduled outside of teachers’ work hours, so they don’t need to take time off and find substitutes. In a 2021-2022 client survey by the group, 85% of respondents reported that they would recommend the therapy sessions to others. 

Tim Neubert, executive director of the American Association for Employment in Education, finds Colorado Educator Support “incredibly innovative.”

“I would love to see more universities, more people in the medical community, take an interest in this space,” he says.  

How one group is helping teachers with mental health

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Courtesy of Eleanor Todd
Eleanor Todd offers a therapy session over Zoom. Ms. Todd is a part of Colorado Educator Support, a group that provides free mental health services to teachers and other school staff in the state.

In March, a student at a Denver high school shot and wounded two staff members. He died by suicide later that day.

When Cary Pew arrived at the high school to teach a trauma workshop to the faculty and staff, the most common thing he heard was that they didn’t have the capacity to deal with the events. “We don’t have time to think and feel about this. We’ve got standardized tests that we need to get done. We’re just trying to get to the summer,” the teachers told him.

Mr. Pew, who is working toward clinical licensure, would offer validation – and a new perspective.

“I often make the reflection of: ‘Yes. On the one hand, you can’t feel those feelings because you need to survive,’” he says. “‘And on the other hand, you’re numbing yourself. And there may be some negative consequences to that.’”

Mr. Pew is part of Colorado Educator Support, a team of students and professors at the University of Colorado School of Medicine in Aurora providing free mental health support to teachers and school staff in the state. 

The group works to fill gaps in traditional mental health services and to offer tailor-made help. Teachers saw their skills and capacity stretched after weeks and months of online lessons during the pandemic – and they are still recovering. For many, access to a sympathetic ear is a key support.

The medical school-to-teachers approach “may not be a traditional way of providing mental health support, but it’s working and easing that burden of access for so many educators,” says Amie Baca-Oehlert, president of Colorado Education Association (CEA), one of the state’s teacher unions.

K-12 staff members, especially teachers, have the highest burnout rate of all U.S. professions. Stressors include low pay, high workload, school violence, pandemic disruptions, and the recent culture wars. A 2022 survey by the Rand Corporation found that more than a quarter of teachers had experienced symptoms of depression. Between February 2020 and May 2022, some 300,000 public school teachers and staff left the field. In Colorado, public schools are “dangerously and unsustainably understaffed,” according to a recent study by CEA. 

Katie McDonagh/Courtesy of Cary Pew
As a part of Colorado Educator Support, Cary Pew provided free therapy sessions to teachers for a year and a half, seeing about four educators a week.

Getting help can be difficult. “There’s such stigma around mental health. And especially as educators, we’re in front of students; there’s sort of this expectation that you’re a perfect person,” says Ms. Baca-Oehlert, a former school counselor who helped get funding from the state for Colorado Educator Support.

The barriers aren’t only psychological, she says. “For most teachers, the only available resource is the health care plan through their employer. Some people have to wait two to three months to get treatment. That’s not ideal. Your mental health concerns can’t wait two to three months oftentimes.”

Colorado Educator Support gets most of its clients into their first individual therapy session within a week, says Amy Lopez, the team’s director and an assistant professor of psychiatry at the University of Colorado School of Medicine. The 3-year-old program serves hundreds of teachers every year through individual sessions, group workshops, and mental health hotline, according to the program’s annual reports. It is funded through the 2023-2024 school year. 

Tim Neubert, executive director of the American Association for Employment in Education, finds Colorado Educator Support “incredibly innovative.”

“I would love to see more universities, more people in the medical community, take an interest in this space,” he says. 

“So much need”

This effort in Colorado is part of a rethinking in recent years around ways mental health support is provided. 

About 30% of U.S. employers either offered or were planning to offer on-site counseling or therapy in 2022, for example, up from 25% at the start of the pandemic.

Colorado Educator Support grew out of the lockdowns. In March 2020, the University of Colorado School of Medicine started a student-operated mental health hotline for the state’s medical workers. By June, however, “health care workers had found their rhythm a little bit, and they weren’t using our hotline in the same way,” says Dr. Lopez, who was then supervising the hotline.

She proposed that the program serve teachers instead. 

“There was just so much need,” she says. “Being the parent of a child who was trying to do remote learning, I could hear what was happening. I could hear that everyone, teachers and kids, were struggling.”

Dr. Lopez’s superior and the groups funding the hotline then – the Federal Emergency Management Agency and Colorado’s Department of Public Health – instantly embraced her idea.

“Within the first week, we had more calls than we had in the previous month,” she says. 

But it turned out that a hotline alone was not enough. Many callers said they needed longer, repeated conversations. So in 2021, the program expanded its services with new funding from the state government. The team – seven to eight graduate students guided by Dr. Lopez and other professionals – began to offer up to five therapy sessions to any teacher who needed them. The weekly, hourlong sessions are scheduled outside of teachers’ work hours, so they don’t need to take time off and find substitutes. And because Colorado Educator Support does not deal with insurance, it’s able to schedule sessions much faster than in typical scenarios, says Dr. Lopez.

Allie Lopez/Courtesy of Colorado Educator Support
Amy Lopez, director of Colorado Educator Support and an assistant professor of psychiatry, answers a teacher’s texts regarding mental health.

In a 2021-2022 client survey by Colorado Educator Support, 85% of respondents reported that they would recommend the therapy sessions to others. “The counselor I worked with was a wonderful listener,” one wrote. “Thank you for these services, they came to me at a perfect time in my life,” wrote another. 

It’s a “win-win situation” for the teachers and the psychiatry students, who need to fulfill clinical work hours to obtain licensure, says Mr. Pew, who provided support sessions for 18 months. 

While student therapists may have less experience than professionals, most teachers do not present severe issues, Dr. Lopez says. And for educators who do need prolonged treatment, the five support sessions can serve as a bridge to fill the wait time for traditional therapy. 

Not struggling alone

One benefit of a program that targets teachers specifically is that the staff gets better at validating their clients’ experiences – a key aspect of therapy, according to Mr. Pew.  

“The more I work with educators, the more certain themes develop that a lot of them are struggling with,” says Eleanor Todd, who has a master’s degree in social work and has been with Colorado Educator Support for two years. “And I think it’s really powerful to be able to validate to them that they are not alone in that struggle.”

Given the limited number of therapy sessions allotted to a teacher, the support work is often solution-focused. Instead of “handing [teachers] a tool,” the goal, says Mr. Pew, is to “have teachers search through their own toolbox and find the tools they want to use.”

One of the most common comments he gets from teachers is that they have low energy, he says. “Our first approach is to validate that: ‘Of course, it makes sense that you feel that way.’ After that, you ask the solution-focused question: ‘How are you managing to cope with that to the degree that you are?’”

“It’s really a strength-based approach,” says Ms. Todd. For her, it’s crucial to go into her work “with as much respect as possible.”

“People really have the right and the expertise to guide their lives,” she adds. 

She felt the effect she had when a teacher who struggled with anxiety thanked her. “I still see the bait that anxiety dangles for me,” Ms. Todd recalls her saying. ”But I’ve learned that I don’t have to take the bait.” 

Points of Progress

What's going right

Indigenous lands, water recycling at the office

In our progress roundup, natural resource management is being distributed in ways that expand our idea of who is responsible. Around the world, more land is now owned by the people whose long histories are attached. And in San Francisco’s largest new buildings, water recycling moves in-house.

Indigenous lands, water recycling at the office

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1. United States

San Francisco is leading the charge in extreme water recycling. In 2015, the city mandated a decentralized approach, requiring the cleaning and reusing of water on-site for all new buildings larger than 100,000 square feet. Researchers estimate that in five to 10 years, the technology, safety testing, and regulations will come together to enable water neutrality, achieved through circular systems that repeatedly reuse a set amount of water rather than pumping water in from outside sources.

“This is the future of water,” said Newsha Ajami, director of Urban Water Policy at Stanford’s Water in the West Program. “A lot of communities are going to pick this up as a way of having economic development while having water security.”

Decentralized water recycling drives down demand for potable water from centralized sites. In San Francisco, the Salesforce Tower recycles 30,000 gallons of water each day for use in irrigation and toilet flushing – a practice that saves 7.8 million gallons of water annually. In the New York borough of Brooklyn, the Domino Sugar Refinery redevelopment project will recycle 400,000 gallons of blackwater – water used in toilets, dishwashers, and kitchen sinks – each day. And a Dutch company, Hydraloop, markets a product that can recycle up to 95% of the water used in homes for nonpotable use.
Sources: Yale Environment 360, The New York Times

2. Liberia

Canadian Press/AP/File
Fishers prepare for sales on the beach at the West Point settlement in Monrovia, Liberia.

Artisanal fishers are using an app to fight fishery degradation in Liberia. Working alongside the Environmental Justice Foundation, a British nonprofit, they are now able to document cases of illegal fishing using a mobile app called DASE. The app, which is named for the Fante word meaning “evidence,” allows users to take geotagged photos of illegal fishing activity. Fishers then submit these photos to the National Fisheries and Aquaculture Authority, which is responsible for enforcing regulations in Liberia.

West African fishing stocks have long been exploited by foreign vessels seeking to profit from the region’s rich waters. Though Liberian fishers are protected by the Inshore Exclusion Zone, an area extending 6 nautical miles from shore that only local fishers are allowed to use, inadequate enforcement means much of the coastline remains vulnerable to exploitation. Liberia relies heavily on its fisheries for food and economic development.

There have been no prosecutions yet, but local fishers say the app has helped solve some of the logistical challenges of enforcing regulations, allowing community members to feel empowered to fight illegal fishing. The app is also used in Ghana and Senegal.
Sources: Mongabay

3. Iceland

Iceland’s parliament banned conversion therapy in a unanimous vote. The legislation adds Iceland to a growing list of at least 32 countries – including Canada, Brazil, Ecuador, Spain, and Germany – that prohibit attempts to change a person’s sexual orientation, gender identity, or gender expression.

A number of organizations, such as the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, condemn conversion therapy as ineffective and harmful. Under the new legislation, forcing an adult to undergo conversion therapy is a crime punishable by up to three years in prison. The maximum sentence rises to five years if the victim is a child. Those who carry out conversion therapy will also face up to two years in prison.

Steffen Trumpf/Picture-Alliance/DPA/AP
The Icelandic parliament Althing is seen in the capital city of Reykjavík in April 2023.

Iceland ranks highly on Equaldex’s global LGBT Equality Index. Writer and transgender activist Ugla Stefanía Kristjönudóttir Jónsdóttir called the vote “an important reminder that progress can still be made amidst rising anti-LGBTQIA+ rhetoric and legislations.”
Sources: GCN, Attitude

4. Bangladesh

Bangladesh eliminated lymphatic filariasis, a parasitic disease. Twenty so-called neglected tropical diseases affect over 1 billion people around the world but are generally given minimal attention in global health agendas. A decade ago, half the population of Bangladesh, around 70 million people, was considered at risk of contracting lymphatic filariasis, which can leave people with long-term disability.

Thousands of community health workers across the country were trained in treatment and prevention, with support from governmental health services and international donors. “We are elated to know the people of Bangladesh are no longer at risk of contracting lymphatic filariasis,” said Tim Gabel of the research nonprofit RTI International. “Solving this health problem is an incredible achievement in improving the human condition.” Bangladesh is the 18th country to eliminate the mosquito-borne disease.
Sources: World Health Organization, RTI International

World

Land designated to or owned by Indigenous, Afro-descendant, and local communities increased by 254 million acres from 2015 to 2020 – a step forward for those around the globe working to expand Indigenous land rights. According to a report by the Rights and Resources Initiative, roughly 11% of the world’s land is now owned by Indigenous groups.

Sub-Saharan Africa, particularly Kenya and Liberia, saw the largest increase in legal recognition of Indigenous land rights. In Ethiopia, four distinct communities gained ownership of a large tract of wildlife reserve by pushing for the creation of the 486,000-acre Tama Community Conservation Area.

While the United Nations established the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples in 2007, the measure is not legally binding in most countries. To formalize claims to traditional territory, some Indigenous groups are learning mapping technologies and using drones and camera traps. Such documentation presented to governments helps counter the pressures of development by logging and palm oil plantations from Canada to Borneo.

Studies show that land protected by Indigenous people tends to have lower rates of deforestation and forest degradation. “Indigenous Peoples’ rights and supporting Indigenous knowledge-based adaptation are critical to reducing climate change risks and effective adaptation,” said a 2022 U.N. report.
Sources: Mongabay, Rest of World, Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change

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The Monitor's View

Where voters in Guatemala put their trust

Two candidates are on the ballot in Guatemala’s presidential runoff later this month. But the contest is less a matter of who vs. who than who vs. what – in this case, the people of Central America’s most populous nation versus the corruption eroding their democracy.

The demands of Guatemalan citizens for honesty from public officials are notable for lacking a personal target. There is no incumbent in the race to rally allegiance or stir dissent. Instead, voters have gathered in the thousands – often for days at a time – to defend their right to self-governance free from interference.

“Guatemala has not experienced such diverse demonstrations to defend electoral results and respect for constitutionally guaranteed procedures since the country re-installed democracy in 1986,” Gabriela Carrera, a political science professor at Rafael Landívar University in Guatemala City, told the United States Institute of Peace last week. “These mobilizations are peaceful, nonpartisan and led by young people. Their central demand is to respect the integrity of the electoral process and the will of the citizens.”

The wisdom of the demands for change in Guatemala rests on the impersonal nature of their focus – trust in civic values rather than faith in individuals.

A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

Each weekday, the Monitor includes one clearly labeled religious article offering spiritual insight on contemporary issues, including the news. The publication – in its various forms – is produced for anyone who cares about the progress of the human endeavor around the world and seeks news reported with compassion, intelligence, and an essentially constructive lens. For many, that caring has religious roots. For many, it does not. The Monitor has always embraced both audiences. The Monitor is owned by a church – The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston – whose founder was concerned with both the state of the world and the quality of available news.

In true brotherhood, Spirit unites us

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With Jesus as our example, we can find brotherly love with those we meet, even when there has been fraught history.

In true brotherhood, Spirit unites us

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Today's Christian Science Perspective audio edition

On the United Nations website, there is this encouraging statement about cultivating brotherhood in our international community: “In 1999, The General-Assembly adopted, by resolution 53/243, the Declaration and Programme of Action on a Culture of Peace, which serves as the universal mandate for the international community, particularly the United Nations system, to promote a culture of peace and non-violence that benefits all of humanity, including future generations.”

Promoting a culture of peace and brotherhood that benefits all of present and future humanity will certainly do much to unite the world. It’s encouraging to see how, in addition to international efforts, this happens individually, thought by thought, prayer by prayer, encounter by encounter.

Once, when traveling by train in Europe, I remember talking with a man who, as a teenager, had been part of the German army, serving in the 12th SS Panzer Division “Hitlerjugend,” or “Hitler Youth.” He told me how his tank was quickly disabled, and he had become a prisoner of war.

I told him of how my German grandfather had been imprisoned by the Nazis and how my American father had served as a teenager in the United States Navy.

All during that week, I’d been traveling on trains through Europe alone, praying and reading through my copy of “Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures” – Mary Baker Eddy’s book on spiritual healing. On page 506, she says, “Through divine Science, Spirit, God, unites understanding to eternal harmony. The calm and exalted thought or spiritual apprehension is at peace.”

It’s heartfelt prayer that helps unite our understanding to the spiritual harmony that God is continuously providing. This is the kind of humble, thoughtful prayer that drops preconceptions, stereotypes, and grudges about people and countries, while making room for what Spirit would have us behold instead. Divine Spirit only knows and reveals the brotherhood of all of us, because we each are truly made to exist together gloriously as God’s spiritual image.

Such an exalted, prayerful apprehension draws upon God’s great power and inevitably brings out such goodness and brotherhood in practical ways.

Throughout this interaction with the former Hitlerjugend member, I mentally cherished our brotherhood in God, and soon was bursting with appreciation for how the sense of God’s powerful, loving presence was uniting us. I was so grateful and could tell that my new friend was, too. Christian Science teaches that, more than just personal good wishes, prayer that is inspired by God brings His power to bear on any situation or scene.

My friend told me that he’d never talked with an American about his war experiences and explained, emotionally, how very happy he was that we’d met. To the world, our meeting may seem like a little thing, but to both of us, it was a refreshing and cleansing moment of powerful, solid brotherhood that clearly came about as a result of the loving influence of God.

Jesus certainly taught the world some potent lessons about the importance of reconciliation, peace, love, and true brotherhood. He gave his followers this blessing: “My peace I give unto you” (John 14:27). The brotherly love and peace he was always feeling weren’t just human emotions; these qualities overflowed in Jesus because they are unceasing qualities of God.

The good news is that God’s qualities weren’t only for Jesus; they are here for us too, to express openly and actively. As we do so, we discover that Jesus’ many examples of brotherly love still apply well in our world today. In a time when staunch and blinding hatred and mistrust seem to be more standard behaviors, expressing God’s encompassing love is always a welcome breath of sweet and peaceful fresh air.

Here in our era and beyond, embracing the inclusive, peaceful spirit that Jesus showed us continues to melt animosity, effectively engendering, step by step, a more solid and lasting community of international brotherhood.

Viewfinder

Love and learning

Barbara Gauntt/The Clarion-Ledger/AP
Quashandra Stewart gets a big hug from her 6-year-old daughter, Chloe Franklin, before she heads to Barack H. Obama Magnet School in Jackson, Mississippi, on the first day of school, Aug. 7, 2023.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for visiting with us today. Come back tomorrow, when we report on the women clearing land mines from the world’s youngest country, South Sudan.

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