2020
January
21
Tuesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

January 21, 2020
Loading the player...

Today’s five selected stories cover the politics of impeachment, a court case on the separation of church and state, France’s role in African security, why this is a big year in U.S. space programs, and one young Georgia man’s path to economic independence.

Hate can fade, but tattoos are permanent. 

That’s where Zanesville, Ohio, tattoo artist Billy Joe White comes in. He started offering free cover-up tattoos after he learned the man who killed Heather Heyer at a 2017 white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, was from Ohio. 

Since then, Mr. White has covered about 100 racist tattoos, turning symbols ranging from swastikas to Klansmen into such designs as a bald eagle. And the requests keep coming. 

Some of his customers are fathers ashamed of their racist past. John LeMaster said his turning point was when he held his 18-month-old adopted son, an African American. “I just fell in love with him,” Mr. LeMaster told the Zanesville Times Recorder. He was profiled in the 2018 documentary, “Beneath the Ink,” about Mr. White’s work at the Red Rose Tattoo shop.

On Monday, Mr. White got an award from the Ohio Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Holiday Commission. “I’ve seen how it empowers the guy that gets the cover-up,” Mr. White told the Zanesville Times Recorder. “We’re not here to judge. All we’re aiming for is a better world.”

When a racist tattoo no longer reflects someone’s perspective, it becomes a source of shame. “When I finally got everything covered up, I literally had tears in my eyes because it really changed my life,” Mr. LeMaster said. “It don’t matter who you are or what type of life you live, you can change.”


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

Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Mary F. Calvert/Reuters
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer of New York speaks to reporters during a brief recess of the Senate impeachment trial of President Donald Trump in Washington, on Jan. 21, 2020. He has called trial plans by Majority Leader Mitch McConnell a "cover-up."

The Republican-controlled Senate isn’t likely to remove President Donald Trump. But the trial is important, our reporter finds, because of the political message it sends in an election year. 

Courtesy of Institute for Justice
Alan and Judy Gillis of Orrington, Maine, have sued the state on behalf of their daughter Isabella, a senior at Bangor Christian Schools, arguing that school choice dollars should not exclude religious schools.

A Supreme Court case Wednesday asks if state tax dollars can be spent to send students to religious schools. We may see a school choice ruling that recasts the separation of church and state under the First Amendment.

Alvaro Barrientos/AP
French soldiers prepare on Jan. 13, 2020, for a ceremony with President Emmanuel Macron in Pau, France, to pay tribute to French soldiers who died in a helicopter crash in Mali.

French counterterrorism operations in Africa are drawing criticism. We look at the divide between African leaders, who welcome the security help, and an anti-colonialist public.

With a return to an all-American system for human spaceflight, this may be a defining year in the frontier of space. Here’s what that might look like, and what it means for human presence in space.

Difference-maker

Yes, stigma can have a silver lining. Americans with disabilities are finding not just income, but independence, in self-employment. Consider Will Howell, a designer of ties.


The Monitor's View

AP
Health officials in Malaysia's international airport check arriving passengers for health conditions.

On Wednesday, the World Health Organization will weigh whether to declare a global health emergency over the rapid spread of a virus that originated in China. Compared with a similar outbreak in 2002-03, known as the SARS epidemic, this time WHO has far more information from China’s tight-lipped rulers to make its decision.

The reason? Beijing is slowly learning that transparency in governance can create a stable and safe society, not threaten it.

International health experts give cautious praise for China’s quick response to this latest outbreak, which began in early December in the central city of Wuhan. In China, too, an official commentary explains why transparency on health scares is so important:

“Only by making information public can [we] reduce fear,” it said. “People don’t live in a vacuum and [we] will only provide a breeding ground for rumors to grow if we keep them in the dark and strip them of their right to [know] the truth.”

During the SARS epidemic, authorities hid the victims and denied the spread of the virus for months. Nearly 800 people died in a number of countries while the international scare slowed Asia’s economy. The loss of trust in China’s ruling Communist Party led it to rethink the secrecy that pervades official information, a result of the party’s own fears for its survival.

That struggle for openness continues. Under the personality cult that has developed around President Xi Jinping since 2012, China lacks the normal tools of democracy to hold the party accountable. Changes in governance are often forced on it by the rest of the world, such as in improving the accuracy of financial data or the independence of patent-court judges.

As China becomes even more reliant on the judgment of other nations – such as in its infrastructure investments – its leaders will realize transparency in governance is its own form of power. During a health crisis, openness acts like sunshine, offering reassurance and allowing swifter solutions.

The elements of democracy are not a luxury. They also help cure what ails society.


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.

A presidential impeachment trial in the United States. A major government shake-up in Russia. Persistent anti-government protests around the world. It can seem as if the only certainty in government is uncertainty and strife. Here are some thoughts to inspire prayers to recognize a deeper, divine justice, which provides a basis for hope and harmony.


A message of love

Jerome Delay/AP
Itza steps into a new, 455-acre home at the Animal Defenders International Wildlife Sanctuary in Winburg, South Africa, Jan. 21, 2020. Itza was one of 12 tigers and five lions, many of whom had been abused, rescued from Guatemala circuses. They had spent years caged in a vehicle scrapyard in Guatemala before being flown to the sanctuary. Tuesday marked their first encounter with nature after years of confinement.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us. Come back tomorrow: We’re working on a story about multilingual African musicians who are addressing violence against women and empowering women.

More issues

2020
January
21
Tuesday

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.