2020
January
29
Wednesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

January 29, 2020
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Mark Sappenfield
Senior global correspondent

Today’s stories explore a deeper ethical question in the impeachment trial, details of President Trump’s Mideast peace plan, Brexit’s challenge in cutting global ties, the perils of a communication blackout in Kashmir, and unexpected outbursts of friendship in Iowa.

But first, let’s look forward to this weekend.

Ahead of the Super Bowl, consider this. The real game will be the mind game. Just watch the offense of the Kansas City Chiefs. It’s a symphony of misdirection, intended to befuddle and bewitch more than bludgeon.

The game is more mental than it’s ever been. This week, the Cleveland Browns hired a 32-year-old Harvard grad to run their football operations. His boss? A Harvard grad known as an analytics guru. Forget three yards and a cloud of dust, think three Ivy League grads and a cloud of spreadsheets.

Baseball started the trend, first with “Moneyball” and more recently with infield shifts, WAR, and the death of the starting pitcher. Basketball followed with its analytics-based three-point revolution, and hockey has added Corsi and zone starts to prove, once and for all, that fighting really is stupid.

If you don’t understand any of that, just know this. Last Super Bowl, Patriots coach Bill Belichick essentially beat the Los Angeles Rams by out-thinking them. His superpower has always been in unorthodox schemes and strategies. And in a league where so much is equal, teams are learning that innovative thinking is the ultimate unequalizer.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Ng Han Guan/AP/File
Vice President Joe Biden waves as he walks out of Air Force Two with his granddaughter Finnegan Biden and son Hunter Biden at the airport in Beijing Dec. 4, 2013.

The Trump impeachment trial brings high drama to an issue that has long simmered among Democrats and Republicans. Conflicts of interest are too common and need to be addressed.

The Explainer

The details of President Trump’s Middle East peace plan are now emerging. Here, we help you understand the basics and what’s at stake.

Patterns

Tracing global connections

Brexit speaks to a new desire to dissolve the bonds of global cooperation. But that’s not so easy.

Danish Ismail/Reuters/File
A Kashmiri girl rides her bicycle past Indian security force personnel standing guard in front of closed shops in a street in Srinagar, Oct. 30, 2019.

Amid an internet shutdown, many Kashmiris have felt cut off from not just the outside world, but a sense of trust and truth. As the blackout starts to lift, one writer looks back at months in the dark.

A letter from

Colorado
Story Hinckley/The Christian Science Monitor
Alex Neumann (right), a recent college graduate from California, refers to Art Tellin, an octogenarian from North Liberty, Iowa, as one of his best friends. "I hope Iowa has been good to Alex," says Mr. Tellin. "You can't help but like the kid."

For many Iowans, hospitality extends beyond ideology. So when presidential campaigns come calling every four years, many politicos get something they never bargained on: friendship.


The Monitor's View

Reuters
Grounded Boeing 737 MAX aircraft are seen parked at Boeing Field in Seattle, Washington, July 1.

In future textbooks about corporate ethics, one chapter should certainly be dedicated to how two great rivals in aviation – Boeing and Airbus – were also rivals in how they fixed their company culture after each suffered a major scandal.

So far, their stories of reform are a good read.

For Airbus, the climax of its recovery may have come this week. It announced Tuesday that it expects to pay nearly $4 billion in penalties to settle corruption cases with France, Britain, and the United States. That would be one of the largest fines for corporate corruption in recent years. The hefty penalties, if approved by the courts, as well as a possible legal admission of guilt, are just part of a long process of reform for the European plane-maker.

Four years ago – and much to its credit – Airbus self-reported to authorities that its reliance on third-party sales agents to sell jets had resulted in cases of bribery. Outside experts were brought in to clean up the company and create more transparency. The use of middlemen ended. More than 100 Airbus employees were let go. And a new chief executive, Guillaume Faury, said ethical compliance was priority No. 1. 

“To embed irreproachable behaviors in all our business undertakings sustainably, we must take a hard look at both our systems and our culture,” he said soon after taking the helm.

In Boeing’s case, the scandal revolves around two fatal crashes of its 737 Max aircraft over the past two years, one in Ethiopia and the other in Indonesia. The aircraft was grounded last March by the U.S.

Internal memos revealed that a few employees knew of flaws in the aircraft that some pilots might be able to deal with. In the rush to compete with a new Airbus jet, Boeing was lax in its design and in its communication with regulators and airlines.

The technical fix to get the 737 Max back in the air is underway. But in the meantime, Boeing has apologized to families of the crash victims and set up a fund for them. It has also set up a better way for employees to funnel complaints. In December, its chief executive was fired and a new chief, David Calhoun, now promises to restore Boeing’s reputation for engineering integrity.

“We’re just going to get back down to restoring trust with one another, trust with our customers, and trust with our regulator,” he said in mid-January.

Both companies have a strong financial interest to make rapid reforms and comply with authorities. But at a time of any self-made crisis, executives also have an interest in conducting a deep moral audit of their companies. Airbus and Boeing have long had ethical codes. What’s key to avoiding mistakes, according to Gale Andrews, Boeing’s former chief ethics officer, “is the underlying moral intent.”

On that score the companies must outdo themselves even as they try to outdo each other in building better airplanes.


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.

Sometimes it may seem we don’t have the capability or energy to do what needs to get done. But God has given all of us the strength, ability, and joy to accomplish good things each and every day.


A message of love

Yves Herman/Reuters
Members of the European Parliament marked the U.K.'s exit by singing “Auld Lang Syne” after voting in favor of the withdrawal agreement at the European Parliament in Brussels on Jan. 29, 2020. Britain is scheduled to leave the EU Friday.
( 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 our Stephen Humphries looks into the earnest and passionate debate over the novel “American Dirt” and the questions of cultural appropriation. Who gets to tell someone’s story?

More issues

2020
January
29
Wednesday

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