2018
December
21
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

December 21, 2018
Loading the player...
Clayton Collins
Director of Editorial Innovation

A week of political fireworks in the US (we’re watching the government-shutdown saga) also featured the flares of some coldly ambitious tech.

Humanity might have seen the world’s first five-rocket-launch day – missions both national and private – had a bunch of them not fizzled. There was a fresh run by Uber at autonomous cars, and the temporary shutdown of London’s Gatwick Airport by drones of unknown origin.

Hands-on human innovation today extends even to the natural-sounding realm of islands. Most recently in the news because of the existential threat posed to them by rising seas, they’ve also popped up – in artificial form – as territorial markers (think China’s outposts in the South China Sea).

But it’s not all competitive human calculus.

In the Netherlands, a handful of built islets have emerged in a massive freshwater lake, part of a very Dutch effort that’s now paying environmental dividends according to a report from Agence France-Presse.

Construction involved silt, not just sand, and in only 2-1/2 years the islets have provided a foothold for nearly 130 plant types, their seeds borne in by the wind. Tens of thousands of swallows have also arrived. Most important, an “explosion” of life-sustaining plankton is reviving the once-dead lake.

 Says one ranger of the high-tech rewilding effort, “We had to intervene.”

Now to our five stories for today, including a look at the deployment of babies against bullies, and, as we enter the Northern Hemisphere’s longest night, a science writer’s celebration of cosmic darkness.


You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.

Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

J. Scott Applewhite/AP
The US Capitol is framed by an early morning sky. Congress is confronting the threat of a partial government shutdown amid a dispute with President Trump over funding for a border wall.

You might have expected a one-party-controlled Congress to have accomplished a lot. But what this one got done – including some bipartisan work – came despite deep political disruption.

Special Report

While reporting in Greece on another story, Monitor correspondent Dominique Soguel heard tales of migrants being beaten and illegally expelled from the EU by border officials. So she investigated.

For Christians in the Arab world, as for many others, the vision of life in America has long been a beacon of hope. But US refugee policy has left families in transit to the US torn in two – half in, half out.

Difference-maker

Courtesy of Will Austin
Mary Gordon founded Roots of Empathy, a program that takes babies into classrooms and encourages the students to better relate to other people’s experiences.

How best to teach empathy? It’s a question with which educators have wrestled. This piece looks at a novel way of helping young students appreciate attributes such as vulnerability and strength.

Nils Ribi Photography/AP/File
The Milky Way glimmers in the night sky in the Sawtooth National Recreation Area, Idaho. The United States' first International Dark Sky Reserve in central Idaho offers night skies so pristine that interstellar dust clouds are visible in the Milky Way.

Finally, here’s another story about appreciation. Illumination often signifies progress. As the Northern Hemisphere’s shortest day yields to its longest night, a reporter with a deep interest in science and space reflects on connecting with the still beauty of darkness.

SOURCE:

NASA Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite

|
Jacob Turcotte/Staff

The Monitor's View

Chris O'Meara/AP
Marshall quarterback Isaiah Green throws a pass against South Florida during the first half of the Gasparilla Bowl college football game Dec. 20 in Tampa, Fla.

The sponsor names attached to college football’s holiday bowl games have long been a source of amusement. This year’s batch includes the Bad Boy Mowers Gasparilla Bowl, the Famous Idaho Potato Bowl, and the Cheez-It Bowl. The Makers Wanted Bahamas Bowl may raise the most puzzled eyebrows: It promotes an industrial park in Elk Grove Village, a Chicago suburb.

For US football fans, watching college bowl games has become part of the holiday season, sweet treats to gobble at the end of the year (though the biggest bowl games that lead to crowning a national champion now linger long past New Year’s Day).

Sponsorships are one reminder of how college football in the United States has become a gigantic industry, but one with a dark underside. 

Cities can gain millions of dollars in television exposure by hosting games. Sponsors see their names and products put before captive viewers. And the universities themselves benefit: Alumni pride in the alma mater’s athletic success can generate stronger ties and more donations. Potential students may see successful schools as desirable places to enroll: Consider the so-called Flutie effect, named after Boston College quarterback Doug Flutie who in 1984 led his team to an improbable win that resulted in a bump in student enrollment at the school.

In major college football the pressure to win means money is calling the plays. In 31 states a football coach at a state university is the highest-paid public employee, often earning many times what the state governor does. University of Wisconsin football coach Paul Chryst, for example, earned $3.2 million in 2018, while Gov. Scott Walker received $147,328; University of Texas head coach Tom Herman was paid $5.5 million, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott $150,000. And so on.

On top of that, many coaches receive bonuses for winning, including for playing in or winning bowl games. But overemphasis on “performance” can lead to abuses. Earlier this year University of Maryland head coach DJ Durkin was fired after a player died during practice. An investigation by ESPN reported that players had been bullied, intimidated, humiliated, and abused by coaches and staff. 

Concussions are another source of deep concern at all levels of football, including colleges. This year the NCAA instituted new rules on kickoffs that aim to lower the numbers of these injuries, a step of progress.

But racial inequities remain. Black college football players still graduate at a much lower rate than white players. While the gap has been closing, it’s been at a glacial pace. Since fewer than 2 percent of college players ever play professionally, students on college football scholarships need to be sure they receive a good education.

This year, the graduation rate for all players on bowl-bound teams is 79 percent, up from 77 percent last year. But the gap between white and black players widened to a 90 percent rate for white players and 73 percent for black players, says Richard Lapchick, the director of the Institute for Diversity and Ethics in Sport at the University of Central Florida.  

Some of the gap results from the uneven quality of education players receive before attending the university, Mr. Lapchick allows, which speaks to educational inequalities at the grade and high school levels. 

At universities, “I like to think academics is listed ahead of athletics for emphasis,” Lapchick says, but for “coaches who value winning at all costs, the student in the student-athlete can often be shortchanged.” 

Fans who love all that’s attractive about college football – the glamour, excitement, and athletic excellence on display – need to care equally for the lives of the young men who are playing it.


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.

The healing, saving message of the Christ brings comfort and cure to yearning hearts in every corner of the globe – not only at Christmas, but every day of the year.


A message of love

Jane Barlow/Reuters
People gathered for a service at a memorial garden in Lockerbie, Scotland, Dec. 21, on the morning of the 30th anniversary of the bombing of Pan Am flight 103. The plane exploded over the town, killing 259 passengers and crew – including 35 Syracuse University students studying abroad – and 11 people on the ground. The university names 35 “remembrance scholars” each year. Libya’s Muammar Qaddafi paid compensation to victims’ families in 2003.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris and Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Have a wonderful weekend. We’ll be back Monday with a look at a festival in the Israeli port city of Haifa that honors Christmas, Hanukkah, and Muslim traditions. The big December gathering is now in its 25th year.

We’ll also deliver a special audio offering: editors’ favorite holiday readings for Christmas Eve. We hope you’ll listen in.

More issues

2018
December
21
Friday

Give us your feedback

We want to hear, did we miss an angle we should have covered? Should we come back to this topic? Or just give us a rating for this story. We want to hear from you.