2020
March
12
Thursday

Monitor Daily Podcast

March 12, 2020
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Eva Botkin-Kowacki
Science, environment, and technology writer

Today’s issue includes stories probing how coronavirus is shaping how Americans think about health care access, the power of presidential messaging in a time of crisis, the future of German politicsthe role of transparency in building trust, and 10 book recommendations for March.

Tony Gonzalez doesn’t know where they all came from, but the “roving bands of volunteers toting chainsaws” were a welcome sight last week. Tornadoes had just ripped through middle Tennessee, killing at least 24 people and destroying or damaging hundreds of homes and businesses. His East Nashville home was spared, but just a block away almost everything was destroyed. 

The tornadoes came in the predawn hours of Tuesday, March 3, and before the sun had even risen, neighbors were already helping one another. While reporting for The Tennessean, Emily West watched a neighborhood come together in the dark to free an older couple that had been trapped in their home by debris.

And it just continued from there.

“The volunteer and neighbor-to-neighbor response has been totally epic,” says Mr. Gonzalez, a reporter for Nashville Public Radio.

Starting that first day, people flocked in to help clear debris from homes and roads. Stations have been set up with supplies and food. Restaurants and food trucks – including some that sustained damage – have been giving away food. Over the weekend some 22,000 volunteers showed up to help.

 “I’ve always known that Nashville is giving and wonderful, and that we’re a place where neighbors help neighbors no matter what,” Ms. West says. “[But] I’ve never believed more in the statement that ‘We Are Nashville.’”


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

J. Scott Applewhite/AP
Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi is followed by reporters as she arrives for a meeting with fellow Democrats, on Capitol Hill in Washington, March 10, 2020. President Donald Trump says his administration will ask Congress to pass payroll tax relief as he looks to calm financial markets' fears over the impact of the coronavirus.

While partisan debate over health care has become deadlocked, the coronavirus has exposed the public health challenge in testing and treating individuals, as well as the hardship of workers who lack paid sick leave. 

Tom Brenner/Reuters
President Donald Trump addresses the nation in a live television broadcast regarding coronavirus, from inside the Oval Office at the White House in Washington, March 11, 2020.

Allaying fear and rallying the nation is a critical task for any leader at a time of crisis. But downplaying the challenge or misstating fundamental facts can severely undercut the public’s confidence.

Angela Merkel has set the path of Germany and Europe for two decades. But with the chancellor’s tenure nearing its end and her one-time heir apparent now out, the vision of Germany's future is suddenly unclear.

Jacob Turcotte/Staff, Photos by Reuters and AP

Concerns about public trust in scientific expertise abound. Could increased transparency around research promote confidence in science?

Books

For those feeling overwhelmed by the news, books can offer a means of contemplative escape. Here are the Monitor reviewers’ top 10 books for March, including a story that takes the stuff of midlife misery and makes it not just relatable but downright funny, and a novel that weaves issues of contemporary American racial identity into a vivid urban fantasy.


The Monitor's View

Antara Foto/SigidKurniawan via REUTERS
The Netherland's King Willem-Alexander and Indonesia's President Joko Widodo at Bogor Palace, near Jakarta, Indonesia, March 10.

In a few nations whose ancestors once ruled empires, such as Russia and Iran, leaders can’t seem to shake historical memories of having once controlled lands that are now independent countries. Others, like Germany, have largely given up old impulses for imperial-style power. On Tuesday, the Netherlands provided an example of what a former colonizer can do to exert a different kind of influence – through humility.

During his first visit to Indonesia, the Dutch king, Willem-Alexander, apologized for the “excessive violence” used by the Dutch empire to hold on to its former colony. For 350 years the Netherlands ruled what was then the Dutch East Indies, killing thousands in the late 1940s during the Indonesian war for independence.

The apology was a first by a Dutch monarch. The king made a point of acknowledging “the pain and sorrow” of families whose loved ones were killed as independence fighters. In 2013, after a court suit, the Netherlands compensated many widows and children of those killed. But now the apology marks a new level of bilateral reconciliation.

In a highly symbolic gesture, the king laid a wreath at a cemetery for Indonesia’s fallen soldiers. And scholars from both countries have been collaborating on a history of the war for independence.

For his part, the Indonesian president, Joko Widodo, graciously accepted the apology. “We try to learn from history to strengthen our commitment to build an equal relationship that respects and benefits each other,” he said. The countries used the occasion to seal deals for $1 billion in new trade.

Despite such steps, the king and his government probably know the difficulty of shifting public opinion in the Netherlands. In a YouGov survey last year, half of Dutch people said the old empire, which included Indonesia, is something to be proud of. Only 6% said the empire was a shameful period.

The Dutch, in fact, are prouder of their former empire than people in seven other countries surveyed by YouGov: Britain, France, Italy, Spain, Belgium, Japan, and Germany. In most of the European countries, the prevailing attitude toward former colonies is one of indifference.

The world’s era of colonization largely ended by the late 20th century. Yet in recent years, Russia has retaken parts of Ukraine. Iran commands other parts of the Middle East by proxy militias. And China has taken many islands far from its coast. When a former imperial power tries to clean up its past rather than re-create it, the world makes progress. The Dutch king’s apology is an example.


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.

After contracting a contagious skin condition, a woman found that welcoming God’s perfect love into one’s heart lifts fear, protects, and heals.


A message of love

Joe Giddens/PA/AP
A worker makes her way along rows of daffodils, removing any rogue varieties, at Taylors Bulbs in Holbeach, England, March 12, 2020. The fourth-generation family company plants over 35 million bulbs every year, and has held The Royal Warrant as Bulb Growers to Her Majesty the Queen since 1985.
( 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’ll look at how educators are helping to fill the void left by schools shut down for coronavirus containment. For those interested in all of the Monitor’s coverage of the outbreak, we’re collecting all our articles on the topic in one place and they may be accessed for free.

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2020
March
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