2019
September
10
Tuesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

September 10, 2019
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Our five handpicked stories in today’s edition cover shrinking support for Joe Biden in New Hampshire, breaking governing taboos in Israel, a new symbol of hope in Afghanistan, and myth busting in Uganda and New England.

But first, teachers rock!

Last week, fourth grade teacher Laura Snyder found one of her boys in tears. At lunch, some girls scoffed at his homemade University of Tennessee T-shirt. 

She could have just told him it would be OK. Bullies happen. But not Ms. Snyder. She was going to buy him a real Tennessee Volunteers T-shirt and posted his story on Facebook. Within days, a box full of orange T-shirts, hats, and other U.T. swag arrived at Altamonte Elementary School in Altamonte Springs, Florida. All courtesy of U.T. That fourth grader went from zero to class hero.

Then, the university took it to the next level. The boy’s hand-drawn design was made into a new official U.T. shirt. A portion of the earnings will be donated to STOMP Out Bullying, a nonprofit. The flood of online orders crashed the university’s site Friday. 

Ms. Snyder wrote on Facebook that the new U.T. shirt design put “a big smile on his face, [he] walked taller, and I could tell his confidence grew today!

Skeptics might say it’s just a tribe (the Vols) protectively embracing their youngest member. Maybe. I’ve never been a Vols fan. But I would buy that shirt because it’s a statement about character. It says derision or hate doesn’t get the last word – especially when exposed. 

Bless you, Ms. Snyder, for caring enough to go the extra mile.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Among the Democratic candidates, Joe Biden leads in the polls. But our reporters found little enthusiasm for him in New Hampshire, suggesting a shift is underway.

Mahmoud Illean/AP
Ayman Odeh (center), leader of a coalition of Arab parties, with activists at a campaign office in Nazareth, Israel, Aug. 29, 2019. Upending decades of Israeli convention, Mr. Odeh has offered to sit in a center-left government after Sept. 17 elections.

There’s long been a tension in Israel between a Jewish and a democratic state. We look at why voters are closer to inviting Arab parties to join Israel’s ruling coalition.

Watch

Once an icon of war, Afghan palace rebuilt as symbol of peace

In the two decades our reporter has covered Afghanistan, a shell-pocked palace in Kabul has not lived up to its name: “Abode of Peace.” Today, its restoration is seen as a symbol of hope for the nation.

Palace of renewed dreams

In the first of two stories about myth busting, our reporter looks at exaggerated claims and expectations about Chinese investment in Africa. The reality on the ground is much different.

Difference-maker

Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff
Valerie Cunningham stands outside the Portsmouth headquarters for the Black Heritage Trail of New Hampshire on Sept. 5, 2019. The building was the parsonage for what is now St. John’s Episcopal Church, where the Rev. Arthur Browne enslaved two black men in the 18th century.

Valerie Cunningham tells hidden stories of African Americans in New Hampshire, helping to dispel the myth that slavery didn’t exist in the North. She’s filling gaps and changing perspectives.


The Monitor's View

Reuters
Signage for Juul vaping products is seen on a storefront in New York City.

When world leaders gather this month in New York for the United Nations General Assembly, high on the agenda will be a celebration of the 30th anniversary of the adoption of the Convention on the Rights of the Child. The pact has helped focus global attention on ways to safeguard children and their innocence, whether in war zones, sex trafficking, border crossings, or even in front of video games. In Britain, the government has a new initiative to curb youth gambling.

One of the latest efforts is the protection of youth from e-cigarette use, or vaping, which has become an “epidemic” in the United States. On Monday, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration ordered vaping giant Juul to stop making unproven claims for its products.

“Juul has ignored the law, and very concerningly, has made some of these statements in school to our nation’s youth,” said acting FDA Commissioner Ned Sharpless. In recent testimony to Congress, two students told of Juul representatives saying in a school forum that their products are totally safe.

In 2018 e-cigarette use among American high school students was 21%, an increase of 78% over 2017. This rapid increase is the fastest rate ever recorded for an addictive substance, according to a survey funded by the National Institute on Drug Abuse.

If the rise in youth vaping continues, U.S. health officials say they will take more aggressive action. The FDA has proposed regulations on e-cigarettes that would restrict their sales in most stores. Juul claimed last year that it had stopped marketing its products directly to youth. But the FDA points to subtle messaging or false claims that still draw children to take up the habit.

The agency now says any benefits that e-cigarettes might provide in reducing tobacco use among adults are outweighed by the rise of their use among teens as well as reports of recent deaths attributed to vaping. A number of cities have banned sales of e-cigarettes. This year, Michigan became the first state to ban flavored versions of the product.

This effort in the U.S. has plenty of examples of success in protecting children from harm. Worldwide, for example, the number of girls and boys doing hazardous work is down from two decades ago. Since 2014, a U.N. campaign has freed more than 100,000 child soldiers in conflict zones.

The 1989 treaty on the rights of the child marked a big step for humanity. The pact was the most rapidly ratified human rights treaty in history. This global awakening helped compel countries to act quicker when threats to children arise. The outcry over teen vaping in the U.S. and the government’s crackdown show the near-universal presumption of innocence for all children.


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.

Learning more about how God’s goodness acts as a law in our lives overruled the effects of head injuries a woman sustained in a car accident, and brought quick healing.


A message of love

Philimon Bulawayo/Reuters
A man fetches firewood in Macheke, Zimbabwe, Sept. 10, 2019. Firewood is a staple in Zimbabwe, as many residents rely on it for heating and cooking. In recent months, demand has increased amid a series of power outages.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris and Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us. Come back tomorrow: We’re working on a story about the likely shift in U.S. foreign policy with the abrupt exit of national security adviser John Bolton.

More issues

2019
September
10
Tuesday

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