It's a really dangerous time we're living through, and I do think that when we talk about these progressive policies, a huge problem in the US is that we still have a lot of stigma left over from the Cold War that keeps us from really great ideas because they're branded as socialist or communist. And I’ve seen, in the time I've been a journalist for the past 15 years, how that stigma has slowly faded. And you see that younger people are more and more interested in these ideas, whether or not they're considered socialist.
I am constantly inspired by how people just want to do better by their peers. I was swimming with the sea turtles and with other sea creatures. And I just felt so connected to the broader natural world. it really highlighted to me the importance of policies like Costa Rica's biodiversity law that are as much about conservation as they are about seeing human communities as key parts of the ecosystems that we live in, in order to ensure that they last for generations of not just, you know, humans, but all life to come.
Natasha Hakimi Zapata is an award-winning journalist, translator, and university lecturer based in Europe. She is the author of Another World Is Possible: Lessons for America From Around the Globe. Her articles appear regularly in The Nation, In These Times, and the Los Angeles Review of Books. She is the former foreign editor of Truthdig and has received several Southern California Journalism and National Arts & Entertainment Journalism awards, most recently in 2024 for her work as a foreign correspondent.