2017
December
26
Tuesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

December 26, 2017
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Sometimes we just need a nudge to do something that’s really good. 

Early this month, an anonymous donor at Severna Park United Methodist Church in Maryland offered $100 bills to 100 congregants. Their charge was to look around them and see where they could brighten a dark hour. And as The Washington Post reported, her hunch was that the resulting gestures would enrich both recipient and giver at Christmastime.

It was really more than a hunch. Over the summer, weighed down by the death of Heather Heyer, who was killed during the white supremacist march in Charlottesville, Va., the donor spontaneously gave a coffee shop cashier a gift card, telling her to treat customers until it ran out. As she left, her spirits lifted.

So she shared that joy with fellow congregants, who spent the $100, and often more, on everything from having pizza with homeless individuals on the steps of a Baltimore church to paying off strangers’ layaway accounts. They told their pastor they took the charge particularly seriously because of its provenance. “That to me is good theology,” he said. “It’s a good way to think about your life, that you’ve been entrusted with great gifts. And how do you turn around and use them?”

My guess is more than a few will continue to ask themselves that question as the new year begins.

Now here are our five stories, showing the spirit of integrity, exploration, and conservation at work. 


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Sparring continues about how President Trump's tax cut package will affect economic growth. We thought it would be good to turn to history to see what it tells us.

The "man box" has long defined the social constraints placed on American men, with a strong bias toward macho behavior. But more men say they are breaking through its limitations to give voice to a more positive expression of masculinity.

As space race enters next lap, many new runners

If you were headed to space, what would you take with you? As SpaceX aims for a January launch of Falcon Heavy, a reusable rocket, its payload will include founder Elon Musk's Tesla roadster. And in further proof that this is not your previous generation's space program, the rocket will head skyward to the tune of David Bowie's "Space Oddity."

Jacob Turcotte and Noelle Swan/Staff
Fred Weir
Pyotr and Natasha Volkova stand by their home in this former, once bustling, Soviet state farm in Komsomolskoye, Russia. Of Russia's 115,000 Soviet-era rural communities, 13,000 have been completely abandoned and 35,000 more have shriveled to fewer than 10 inhabitants, according to the latest census.

Most Russians are only a generation or two removed from a connection to the countryside. But villages, those essential symbols of Russia's pastoral roots, are being abandoned amid economic pressures, and many wonder how that will affect the outlooks of future generations.

Kevin Lamarque/Reuters
A jogger makes his way past sprinklers in Washington in October 2017. A recent US Geological Survey report found that daily water use of Americans dropped six gallons per capita between 2010 and 2015.

Getting Americans to cut down on water usage – and to recognize water's scarcity – hasn't been easy. But the message is getting through, and changing habits at home and in communities are making a difference in conserving an ever more precious resource.


The Monitor's View

Maxim Shemetov/Reuters/File
Entertainers perform at the 2018 FIFA World Cup Draw at the State Kremlin Palace in Moscow Dec. 1. The world's top soccer event will be held in Russia during June and July.

In less than a month the world of international sports has seen two giant scandals result in sharp penalties. While such events are shocking, their exposure is providing a first necessary step in support of integrity and reform.

In early December the International Olympic Committee ruled that Russian athletes would not be able to compete in the Winter Olympics at Pyeongchang, South Korea, because of evidence that the country had allowed its athletes to use banned substances at the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia. Some individual Russian athletes, if proved to be drug-free, will be able to compete in the coming Winter Games, but they will not be allowed to wear Russian uniforms or march under the Russian flag.

Then last week a New York City court found two officials of FIFA, the international body governing soccer, guilty of racketeering, bribery, and wire fraud. They join nearly two dozen others connected to FIFA who have already pleaded guilty. Others also have been indicted and are contesting extradition orders to avoid trials.

The New York federal court had jurisdiction because illegal financial transactions allegedly went through US-based banks and some alleged illegal activities took place in New York. In addition, prosecutors in three other cities (Bern, Switzerland; Paris; and Rio de Janeiro) are pursuing cases involving global sports, including the bidding process to host several recent World Cups and the 2016 and 2020 Olympics.

About 3.6 billion people – half the world’s population – watched at least some part of the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro. 

FIFA oversees events including the quadrennial World Cup tournament that will be played in 2018 at 12 Russian venues, with the championship match in Moscow July 15. Some 3.2 billion people watched at least some part of the last World Cup tourney in Brazil in 2014.

The defendants in New York – Juan Ángel Napout, former head of the football (soccer) association in Paraguay, and José Maria Marin, former president of the football confederation in Brazil – were accused of taking millions of dollars in bribes to steer their votes on key FIFA issues.

That stands as only a fraction of what prosecutors say has been at least $150 million in bribes paid out over decades. 

Questions surrounding the integrity of international soccer are unlikely to fade anytime soon. Other investigations are under way, including a look at the process by which the tiny but wealthy Gulf country of Qatar managed to win the competition to host the 2022 World Cup. 

Both the Olympics and FIFA suffer from a lack of transparency in their operations. When combined with hundreds of million of dollars at stake in determining who will host these mega-events – and in awarding contracts to media corporations around the world to televise them – the result is a breeding ground for corruption.

But now two moves to expose these deep-seated problems are bearing fruit. They’re necessary steps toward full, radical reform.


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 someone has witnessed a crime and testifies in court, he or she may be placed in the witness protection program – provided with a new identity and moved elsewhere to start a new life. The individual thus becomes safer from any possible retribution for their testimony in court. But we don’t need to be in this program to gain an entirely new sense of our identity. As God’s creation, everyone is inherently good. Everyone has the ability to find this new, or true, spiritual sense of themselves and experience its redeeming influence. Reformation and progress are never out of reach.


A message of love

Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff
Sean Faeth (l.) and his children, Rebeka and Ryker, play Pathfinder, a fantasy role-playing game, at Knight Moves Cafe in Somerville, Mass., on family game night, Dec. 13.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us today. In keeping with the holiday spirit, we'll point you toward our story on board game cafes, where many of the titles may be new, but the spirit of competitive fun hasn't changed a bit. And if you're into Scrabble, take note of this year's world champions for the team title: the Nigerians

More issues

2017
December
26
Tuesday

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