2019
November
27
Wednesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

November 27, 2019
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Mark Sappenfield
Senior global correspondent

Today's five hand-picked stories examine the fairness of the rules of war, how floods affect a sense of home, how Bedouins had a change of heart about their own history, a novel view of the Sixth Commandment, and a different kind of relief effort in the Bahamas.

But first, regular viewers of Fox News’ “The Five” will know that co-host Jesse Watters and his mother do not see eye-to-eye on politics. Yet viewers will also know something else: how much Jesse Watters and his mother adore each other.

On this Thanksgiving eve in America, when so many are worried about how partisan politics might poison the family dinner table, Jesse and Anne Bailey Watters offer something to be thankful for.

Mr. Watters, a conservative, first started sharing his liberal mother’s furious texts with co-hosts behind the scenes. “Everyone just got a kick out of it,” he tells The Atlantic. So then the idea was hatched: What if he read them on the air? "Mom Texts" was born.

Some are classic mom material. When Mr. Watters wore a pink blazer, mom texted that he looked like a “ferris wheel operator.” But many are politically pointed. “Do not name call and parrot Trump’s insults. That is beneath you,” came another.

What never changes, however, is the mutual affection, even during the recent impeachment drama. “Please be assured that despite your WRETCHED political orientation I love you forever!” Mr. Watters read on air. Just maybe, the Watters family points to how Thanksgiving can be an antidote – not a casualty of partisan anger.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

At the heart of a presidential pardon for a Navy SEAL accused of war crimes is the question: Do many American war fighters believe that the current rules of war are unfair?

A deeper look

Eva Botkin-Kowacki/The Christian Science Monitor
Anderson Jones Sr. walks through the living room in his home in Fitler, Mississippi, on Oct. 3, 2019. Black mold grew on everything in the house during months of flooding this summer. A watermark from flooding in 1973 is also visible on the beams.

Of course there’s no place like home. But following a flood that upended scores of lives this year, one Mississippian asks, “Should people be able to live anywhere they want and be protected?”

SOURCE:

US Army Corps of Engineers

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Jacob Turcotte/Staff
Taylor Luck
Mohammad Domian, Wadi Rum Protective Area official and lead rock art ranger, checks on 3,000-year-old Bedouin rock art, one of 45,000 examples of ancient inscriptions in the UNESCO World Heritage Site, November 19, 2019.

Jordan's Bedouins once derided and even defaced precious stone carvings millennia old. But now, in defending them, these same people are finding a larger sense of pride and identity.

The Ten

How people use the Commandments in daily life
Ann Hermes/Staff
Puppeteer and author Marilyn Price shows her studio at her home in Evanston, Illinois, on Nov. 15, 2019. “All of my puppets tell stories about living your best life,” she says.

For Marilyn Price, “Thou shalt not kill” points inward – to the importance of making her own life a gift to the world. Part 7 in a series looking at the Ten Commandments through modern lives.

Difference-maker

In the Bahamas, one nonprofit is offering a different vision of disaster relief after Hurricane Dorian. Yes, it is cooking much-needed food, but it is also building new resilience among those it helps.


The Monitor's View

Reuters
A robot delivers burgers in Hamburg, Germany.

Tomorrow’s farmlands will look very similar to those of today. Tomorrow’s farmers, though, will look quite different.

Artificial intelligence is already reshaping agriculture with innovations like driverless tractors, robotic seed-planters, and drone crop sprayers. Such inventions are driving a competition to develop the first farm with equipment that is fully autonomous, perhaps within five years.

This shift toward automation could easily cause worry among those skeptical of technologies with little human touch and especially among those whose jobs get plowed under. AI, in fact, could radically change the current model of farm ownership. Farmers may, for example, lease their equipment because of the high cost of new machines. Manufacturers, meanwhile, will want to track the data of their equipment to both refine their inventions and keep farmers as dependent customers. This raises a question: If data-driven companies take over much of the actual agricultural work, will traditional farmers be a thing of the past? And how will today’s food consumers relate to farming by big data?

There’s reason not to despair. Technological innovation in agriculture solves numerous problems. AI farming promises fewer greenhouse gas emissions and higher efficiency – leading to more, healthier crops. Even though it will likely displace workers, there is already a notable skills gap in the agricultural equipment industry. Further development may open up more jobs and ease the load on overburdened farmers. Thus, when a team of engineers launched what they said was the world’s first autonomous tractor in Britain two years ago, many farmers applauded.

In general, misuse of data by big data firms has given the public cause to question large corporations. Agriculture is no exception. Yet the shift toward high-tech farming comes at a time of higher public awareness. Regulation may not yet be robust, but it’s catching up. Those officials responsible for oversight – in the U.S. and abroad – must require a careful, responsible approach from tech companies. AI farming is no longer the Wild West of change, but it’s not the city quite yet.

Past disruption in other industries provides examples for how to manage this change. Government, consumers, and corporations can ask what kind of agricultural world they want to live in, even before there is a clear view of tech’s consequences. Even with the introduction of bigger, more central farming methods, some farmers are moving in the other direction. A recent Monitor article documented the rise in silvopasture, an age-old farming method that manages grazing, livestock farming, and tree cultivation, which is ranked as the world’s ninth most impactful climate change solution. It represents movement toward the local, to more responsible, personal relationships with the land on which farmers rely. It also signals that, while the agricultural industry as a whole may become more corporate, what will remain are farmers who still tend the earth and reap its fruits in return.


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.

Steve Ryf

Each day we can be grateful for the presence of God that leads us forward and fills our hearts with hope and joy.


A message of love

Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff
Chefs add green peppers to a hot lunch prepared by the nonprofit World Central Kitchen for people affected by Hurricane Dorian on Great Abaco Island, Bahamas. Most people on the island lost everything – homes, cars, and belongings. The island has no electricity, no running water and no grocery store. Click the link below to see more images of their work.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thank you for joining us today. Tomorrow, on Thanksgiving Day in the United States, we’ll be sending you a special holiday edition of the Monitor Daily. Also look for a special edition of the Daily on Friday. The regular Daily will return Monday. 

More issues

2019
November
27
Wednesday

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