2019
January
24
Thursday

Monitor Daily Podcast

January 24, 2019
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Yvonne Zipp
Features Editor

It’s January, when people’s fancies turn resolutely to thoughts of stuff.

Like most folks’ weekends, ours are full of chores. My husband spent a Saturday afternoon repairing our vacuum and showing our son how to replace a broken pane in the front door. I was reminded of that after two articles about the importance of, simply put, taking care of your stuff.

One is a Dutch-born effort to fix things rather than throw them out. Volunteers at Repair Cafes will fix anything from a chair to a jukebox, and teach others how to become handy themselves. There are about 1,700 cafes in 35 countries, including 75 in the United States.

Right now, the queen of clutter is Marie Kondo, whose Netflix show (like her bestselling book) has attracted legions of fans and detractors. That last seems aimed at her unwillingness to regard books as sacred objects. That’s because, writes Margaret Dilloway in HuffPost, she regards every object as sacred.

Ms. Kondo’s ethos doesn’t come from a desire to scold, but rather the Japanese Shinto tradition of showing gratitude for and valuing what you have.

“My mother disliked the disposable, acquisitional mentality of Western culture,” Ms. Dilloway writes of her Japanese-born mom. “She recycled long before it was popular, repurposing objects others might throw away.”

She sounds, in short, like a Yankee farmwife: Use it up, wear it out, make it do, or do without. The epitome of that New England ethos can be summed up by the attic box labeled “String Too Short to be Saved.”

We have a first-floor apartment, so there is no attic available. But I still have a sweater my parents gave me for Christmas when I was 16 – younger than my son is now. I get compliments every time I wear it.

Here are our five stories for today. 


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Carlos Garcia Rawlins/Reuters
Juan Guaidó, president of Venezuela’s National Assembly, held a copy of the Venezuelan Constitution during a rally against Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro's government in Caracas, Venezuela, Jan. 23. Mr. Guaidó swore himself in as acting president, rejecting Mr. Maduro's widely disputed reelection, and was recognized as interim president by the US.

For years, people inside and outside Venezuela have debated how to halt its spiraling crises. Will a young politician declaring himself acting president prove the answer, or a high-stakes complication?

When the goal is nuclear disarmament, it seems there should never be a bad time for summitry. Yet there are worries that a US president hungry for home-pleasing news might be tempted by a bad deal.

Julio Cortez/AP
Transportation Security Administration employees carry food from a community food bank Jan. 23. A food drive at New Jersey’s Newark Liberty International Airport was held to help government employees who are working without pay during the partial government shutdown.

Many people know what it feels like to miss a paycheck. That empathy has led to coast-to-coast casseroles, gift cards, and food drives as Americans take care of neighbors who work for the federal government.

Cake or pie? Sandals or boots? Everyone likes to have a choice. So it’s perhaps not surprising that teens who are able to pick what they’re studying on a given day learn better.

Courtesy of Andrey Shadrin/Oodi
Oodi, the Helsinki Central Library in Finland, offers community spaces for families and events. The architecturally striking social center is open seven days a week, and late into the evening.

Like a growing number of libraries, the new Helsinki Central Library doesn’t just lend out books. It hosts community spaces, a theater, toolshops, and even a restaurant, all in an effort to promote Finnish civil society.


The Monitor's View

AP
This image from Gillette's Twitter account discusses the company's new advertisement invoking the #MeToo movement.

On Feb. 3, Americans will join in one of their favorite national pastimes – judging TV commercials during the Super Bowl. This year, if one ad released early by Gillette is any indicator, the commercials may be more than simply funny. They will be “purpose driven.”

Gillette’s 30-second “We Believe” commercial calls on more men to prevent harassment of women and to challenge “toxic” stereotypes of maleness. It has stirred similar debate as a Nike ad last year featuring Colin Kaepernick, the kneeling quarterback. Yet it has yet to fall flat like a recent Pepsi ad that was seen as using images of the Black Lives Matter movement only to sell more soda.

Surveys find corporate leaders increasingly believe they must stand up for a cause. The motive is not only better branding with consumers who want to associate with companies that align with their values. It may also be necessary to attract and retain younger workers.

More companies face rebellions from employees who disagree with their actions. Last fall, 20,000 Google workers walked off the job for a day to protest the way the company had dealt with cases of sexual misconduct. The demand was clear: You must earn our trust by showing what you stand for – other than making a profit.

All of this fits into a global trend. In a new survey of 28 countries about the levels of trust around the world, the communications giant Edelman found a profound change from previous surveys: People are putting far more trust in “my employer” to do the right thing in challenging times than they do in other institutions, such as media, government, and social activist groups. And a majority of employees say their employer is a trustworthy source of information about societal issues.

“People have low confidence that societal institutions will help them navigate a turbulent world, so they are turning to a critical relationship: their employer,” says Richard Edelman, the firm’s president and CEO.

Another survey done last year of American corporate leaders, conducted by GlobeScan and 3BL Media, found that advocacy by chief executive officers is on the rise. One big reason is to meet employee expectations.

Today’s C-suite executives must offer more than perks and pay to employees. Sports equipment retailer REI, for example, wants its 12,000 workers to be so close to the environment that it has closed its door on recent Black Fridays so employees can use the day to enjoy the outdoors.

The Edelman survey hints that more people seek a purpose in life – a calling beyond survival or profit-making. Employers are beginning to heed this desire. And more Americans may see it in the commercials during the 2019 Super Bowl.


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 complications arose with a vendor agreement, today’s contributor found that there’s plenty of good to go around because God’s goodness is universal and limitless.


A message of love

Aly Song/Reuters
The roof of the Rod Laver Arena slides closed during a match between Czech Republic’s Petra Kvitova and Danielle Collins of the United States during an Australian Open Semifinal in Melbourne Jan. 24. Record-breaking heat has gripped much of the country since November.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks so much for spending time with us today. Come back tomorrow. Our Mexico correspondent, Whitney Eulich, is looking at another “caravan” wending its way north. At the Mexico-Guatemala border, information and services for migrants look different than last time.

More issues

2019
January
24
Thursday

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