2020
February
28
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

February 28, 2020
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Peter Grier
Washington editor

Here’s today’s table of contents: a face-to-face conversation with the Taliban about Afghanistan’s future, Joe Biden and what’s happening with centrism in America, how Pete Buttigieg’s sexual orientation plays in the South, state bills to ban discrimination against people due to their natural hair, and uphill skiing.

Health experts say the coronavirus is a threat almost tailor-made to induce fear.

It’s new. Scientists don’t fully understand it. News coverage of each new patient adds to the sense that it’s out of control.

It’s not a risk we’ve chosen to run, as is, say, driving a car.

Rolled together these attributes can produce a “crowding-out effect,” where our emotions override our cognitive faculties, says Ann Bostrom, a professor of public health at the University of Washington, in today’s New York Times.

We overlook things that might make us feel less fearful – such as a new study’s assertion that 81% of COVID-19 cases in China are mild. We disregard that many doctors say that right now it is more important to guard ourselves against the flu.

As of Feb. 28, Johns Hopkins University health care experts continue to say that “at this time the general risk of exposure to COVID-19 is very low in the United States,” though the worldwide number of cases continues to rise.

One problem in the U.S. may be that politicians are doing a lot of the coronavirus messaging. 

When people become anxious about disease outbreaks, they become more trusting of health experts, but not of government officials per se, according to Shana Gadarian, a professor of political science at Syracuse University and co-author of “Anxious Politics.”

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention “should be out in front leading the messaging, not the White House,” Dr. Gadarian tweeted on Friday.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

If peace is to come to Afghanistan, shifting attitudes among the Taliban are key. Our reporter ventured into jihadi-held territory to speak in person with fighters. They are not of one mind on peace.

Randall Hill/Reuters
Democratic U.S. presidential candidate and former U.S. Vice President Joe Biden talks with the Rev. Isaac Holt during Sunday services at Royal Missionary Baptist Church in North Charleston, South Carolina, Feb. 23, 2020.

Individuals run for president. But Joe Biden’s candidacy is more than a test of the American public’s faith in one man. It is a test of how relevant centrism is in modern American politics.

A deeper look

Religion and LGBTQ rights both make up a big part of Pete Buttigieg’s life and historic candidacy. Is the South ready to vote for that particular combination?

Kim Hairston/The Baltimore Sun/AP
Yasmine Young finishes styling the hair of Sabrina Bullock at the Diaspora Salon in Baltimore on Jan. 3, 2020.

Discrimination based on race is illegal. So why is it still largely legal to discriminate against people because of their natural hair? Some lawmakers have started to grapple with that question.

Amanda Paulson/The Christian Science Monitor
Skiers taking a lesson climb uphill at Bluebird Backcountry, outside Kremmling, Colorado. The new ski area is designed to help skiers and snowboarders interested in ascending mountains without lifts get the equipment, instruction, and controlled environment they need.

As ski resorts expand their glamorous amenities and lift lines lengthen, some skiers are seeking a simpler, more natural experience in the snowy mountains.


The Monitor's View

Reuters
A volunteer takes a package of face masks for a resident at a distribution drive in Singapore.

To honor the sacrifice of its front-line workers battling the coronavirus, Singapore’s government decided today to give them a special bonus. From cleaners to security guards to nurses, they will all receive a one month salary bonus.

Yet that was not enough. To pay for this financial gratitude, the government decided all political office holders, from members of Parliament to the president, should take a one month pay cut. “We are all in this together,” said Deputy Prime Minister Heng Swee Keat. That sense of shared duty extended to many companies in the Asian nation-state of nearly 6 million people. In response to the effects of the virus on the economy, firms announced pay freezes or salary reductions.

Singapore has earned praise for the ways it has curbed the outbreak on its densely populated island. Harvard University says it sets the “gold standard.” Now it is setting a model by highlighting the collective need for selfless sharing in the task of ending the epidemic.

Across the dozens of countries coping with the virus, billions of people are either acting selflessly or quietly accepting burdens imposed by government, such as quarantines or travel restrictions. Japan, for example, has closed schools for a month. China told some 150 million people to stay in their homes. In many places, holiday events have been canceled. In Italy, Venice shut down its Carnival festival.

“This could be a long fight that will require shared sacrifice,” tweeted Scott Gottlieb, who was President Donald Trump’s first director of the Food and Drug Administration.

Many leaders are also praising health workers. “We must feel the duty to thank those who are operating with effort, sacrifice, abnegation to counter the danger of coronavirus,” said Italian President Sergio Mattarella.

While the focus has been on the spread of the virus and fears of it, the world is also witnessing a bursting of good deeds. Across the globe, people are sacrificing personal freedoms or daily activities for the safety of their neighbors, even for the world. Such acts are a form of love that, on their own, send a message of healing to those struck by the virus or those deathly afraid of it. We are, indeed, all in this together.


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 every season and wherever we may be, we all have an ability to feel and express our God-given joy and health.


A message of love

Alfredo Sosa/Staff
I admit that before I arrived in Tallinn this winter, my idea of the Baltic city was based on stereotypical Soviet images. I imagined a gray, cold place with aging infrastructure and limited access to consumer goods. Instead, I found a city that wore its history with pride and dignity, but also embraced its future. After 50 years of what residents call “the Soviet occupation,” Estonia declared independence in 1991 and joined the European Union in 2004. Tallinn became a thriving economic, political, and cultural center. The Soviet past has not been entirely erased. But I was moved to see how something so beautiful was created from such a dark period. – Alfredo Sosa, Staff
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Come back Monday. We'll have Part 2 of our Navigating Uncertainty series, with Ann Tyson reporting from Taiwan about China busting the rules of the world-order club.

More issues

2020
February
28
Friday

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