2019
March
27
Wednesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

March 27, 2019
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Mark Sappenfield
Senior global correspondent

When Plaxedes Dilon set off on her 10-mile walk with a heaping sack of clothes and kitchen utensils on her head, the trip seemed to her completely ordinary. Yes, the distance was a little longer and the purpose was different: the sack was full of donations for those affected by Cyclone Idai. But long walks and heavy sacks are a routine part of life for the clothes seller.

To Zimbabwe’s richest man, however, it was an extraordinary feat of kindness. Strive Masiyiwa is offering Ms. Dilon a solar-powered house and $1,000 a month for life. Citing the biblical parable of the widow woman, he said “she gave more than us all.”

In New York, meanwhile, many gave generously to a different cause: one of the city’s young chess champions, who was homeless. After a story appeared in The New York Times about 8-year-old Tanitoluwa Adewumi, $250,000 poured in, as did offers of a free car for his Uber-driving, real-estate agent father, a new health care job for his mother, and admission to three private schools.

The family, who is from Nigeria, is not keeping the money, instead using it to set up a fund for other African immigrants. And it is accepting one of the more modest housing offers, a two bedroom apartment. “Tani” will be staying at his public school too. “This school showed confidence in Tanitoluwa,” his mother said.

Why is Tani’s father not taking a quarter million dollars? “God has already blessed me,” he told the Times. “I want to release my blessing to others.”

Now on to our five stories today. We look at how perceptions around Benjamin Netanyahu are – and aren’t – shifting in Israel, whether scholarships matter much to top college athletes, and innovation for the masses in Maine.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

A deeper look

Ann Hermes/Staff
Judge Abby Abinanti presides over child support court at the Yurok Tribal Court in Klamath, California. It is the first tribally controlled child support court in the state.

Justice – the world’s search for it made it one dictionary's word of the year for 2018. Native American tribes are increasingly taking that search down paths both new and traditional, offering a richer portrait of how justice can be found.

Native Justice

To outsiders, it may seem that Israel’s elections turn primarily on security. But Israel’s Mr. Security, Benjamin Netanyahu, may be vulnerable among swing voters worried about opportunity.

College basketball’s “March Madness” is fun, but is it fair? As college sports have become a multibillion-dollar enterprise, there are questions about whether a scholarship is an adequate exchange of value for athletes.

SOURCE:

National Collegiate Athletic Association Revenues/Expenses Division I Report 2004-2016; National Collegiate Athletic Association, Demographics Database, 2018; Shaun R. Harper, P.h.D., Black Male Student-Athletes and Racial Inequities in NCAA Division I College Sports, University of Southern California Race and Equity Center, 2018

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Noble Ingram and Karen Norris/Staff
Morena Perez Joachin /Special to The Christian Science Monitor
Florentina Con Juarez does traditional weaving at the Women’s Association for the Development of Sacatepéquez. The grassroots organization is pushing to have Mayan designs recognized as collective intellectual property.

The question of who owns culture is playing out dramatically in Guatemala. The culture of indigenous peoples is being aggressively promoted even as centuries-old condescension and discrimination continue.

A home energy experiment in Maine is testing the idea that only the wealthy can afford innovation. One particular advance might prove far more valuable for low-income residents.


The Monitor's View

AP
Gamblers place bets on the NCAA men's college basketball tournament at the Borgata casino in Atlantic City N.J. This is the first March Madness tournament since legal gambling expanded last year in the U.S.

In this year’s NCAA men’s college basketball tournament, otherwise known as March Madness, the quality of play on the court is as high as ever. But that is not stopping many more sports fans from viewing the matchups as mostly games of chance.

According to NCAA President Mark Emmert, the educational merit from such contests of skill and teamwork is facing a serious challenge from the rapid rise in legal gambling not only on the games but also on their unpaid amateur athletes.

“Sports wagering is going to have a dramatic impact on everything we do in college sports,” he says. “It’s going to threaten the integrity of college sports in many ways unless we are willing to act boldly and strongly.”

Colleges in the United States are already under suspicion after a recent admissions scandal that revealed some elite schools had disregarded academic merit in student applicants. That concern over institutional integrity, however, is largely an internal problem. College sports faces outside pressure because nearly half of state governments are rushing to legalize sports gambling.

The rush began last May after the Supreme Court ruled the federal government could not ban states from authorizing sports gambling. With eight states now allowing such betting, experts predict 39 in all will be on board by the end of 2023.

Last year, an estimated 1 in 5 adults placed bets totaling an estimated $10 billion during March Madness, most of them illegal. The number of gamblers as well the money waged is now rising as more states not only make such gambling easier and legal but also promote it to boost tax revenues.

In response, the NCAA has set up a new committee to track the effects of legalized gambling on college sports. News media have also taken notice. Both CBS’s “60 Minutes” and Showtime recently documented the potential threat. In many college athletic programs, players are being trained how not to be tempted by a bribe from organized crime to alter the course of a game.

For the NCAA chief, the real threat is to the purpose of education. “It’s pretty simple,” Mr. Emmert said. “We have to lead with our values.”

Those values, as reflected in polling of Americans, include a belief that people are rewarded – and should be – for their intelligence and skill. Notions of “luck,” as philosopher Steven Hales of Bloomsburg University in Pennsylvania points out based on new research, may be “no more than a subjective point of view taken on certain events, not a genuine property in the world that we discover.”

In past years during the three weeks of March Madness, the number of callers to the National Problem Gambling Helpline rose an average of 40 percent. Many sports gamblers acknowledge they have a problem. Now the NCAA and its larger educational community is asking for help. The answer lies in how well schools of higher education stick to values based on objective merit and on their ability to fend off pressure from those who operate by subjective hunches about luck.


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 the wake of the recently uncovered college admissions scheme in the United States, today’s contributor explores the value and spiritual power of honesty.


A message of love

Fabrizio Bensch/Reuters
Museum staff members walk over a giant illuminated aerial photograph of Berlin, including the marked course of the Berlin Wall and places related to the former East German Ministry for State Security, known as the Stasi, at the exhibition “The Stasi in Berlin” inside the former Hohenschönhausen prison in Berlin March 27. For decades the prison, where thousands of political prisoners were held, didn’t officially exist on any maps. It was closed after the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 and Germany’s reunification.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thank you for joining us today. Please come back tomorrow when columnist Ned Temko looks at what he calls “The Age of Alluringly Simple Solutions” and whether it is here to stay.

More issues

2019
March
27
Wednesday

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