2020
March
17
Tuesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

March 17, 2020
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Today’s selected stories cover U.S. elections in a time of uncertainty, a lack of global pandemic cooperation, a trip to obscure Russian territories, a U.S. military effort to address racial inequality, and global points of progress.

If you are among the millions of people under lockdown, you could binge on all five seasons of “Jane the Virgin.” Or watch Fiona the Hippo on Facebook Live at the Cincinnati Zoo. Or, as actor Rita Wilson did, create a Spotify playlist, “Quarantunes.” 

Creativity is irrepressible. And history suggests this kind of adversity produces fresh perspectives.

Take the bubonic plague that swept London in 1655. If a quarantine hadn’t shuttered the University of Cambridge – sending young Isaac Newton to his home in the countryside – who knows how long before a falling apple would have sparked Sir Isaac’s insights about the laws of gravity, motion, and optics?

Let’s go a little further back to 1593 when theaters were closed by the plague. William Shakespeare couldn’t perform so he wrote the renowned poem “Venus and Adonis,” a brilliant ode to love and nature. When the theaters closed again in 1606, the Bard of Avon got busy. He wrote “King Lear,” “Macbeth,” and “Antony and Cleopatra,” according to Shakespeare scholar James Shapiro.

I’m not suggesting that Shakespeare – or Charlotte Brontë – could have accomplished what they did during epidemics if they’d had children running around at the same time. But if not for England’s lockdown, would we understand love as an “eternity … in our lips and eyes”? Would we truly taste the sweet “milk of human kindness”?

As tragic and challenging as this pandemic is today, we may look back on 2020 not as defined by COVID-19, but as a year bursting with creativity – a time when playwrights, scientists, and artists found the space to see the world anew.

 


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

A presidential election amid lockdowns is uncharted territory for Americans, creating challenges for candidates and election workers. We found that uncertainty has voters looking for experienced leadership.

Patterns

Tracing global connections

International collaboration was a key factor in overcoming the 2008 financial crisis. In the early stages of the coronavirus crisis, that’s been in short supply. 

A deeper look

Courtesy of Fred Weir
Monitor correspondent Fred Weir stands atop Mount Elbrus, Europe’s highest peak, in the Caucasus of southern Russia.

Forget Islamist insurgencies. Russia wants to bring more tourists into the vast North Caucasus region. That was the pretext for our reporter’s first-person account of a wondrous place of 100 languages, the ruins of ancient cities, and some of the most stunning alpine scenery on earth.

Jacob Turcotte/Staff
Aimee Dilger/The Times Leader/AP
Raphael Santiago of the Wilkes University ROTC, holds the flag during the presentation of colors during the University's D-Day ceremony on Thursday, June 6, 2019.

The U.S. military has made significant progress in addressing racial inequality. But there’s a gap in the leadership ranks. Will officer training on black campuses help close the gap?

Points of Progress

What's going right
Staff
Places where the world saw progress, for the March 23, 2020 Monitor Weekly.

This is more than feel-good news – it’s where the world is making concrete progress. Here’s a roundup of positive stories to inspire you.

Staff

The Monitor's View

Reuters
Food donations are handed are out at the Emergency Feeding Program of Seattle and King County in Renton, Washington State.

In a pandemic, everyone is a responder, even if he or she is self-isolating. Yet for many people during the coronavirus outbreak, the response has been outward. According to the research group Candid, global giving to combat the outbreak and deal with the economic fallout has reached $1.3 billion in a matter of weeks. That’s far higher than for recent disasters such as the Australian bushfires or the 2014 Ebola outbreak.

The current tally of private charity may be low compared with what governments are spending. But it comes with a number of differences that will probably make a difference. For one, it shows the spirit of generosity remains high despite the gloom of contagion and predictions of long lockdowns. And it speaks to a confidence that the virus and its effects can be licked by the creativity and nimbleness of charities and foundations.

Givers themselves have had to be nimble during this unusual crisis. Gone are the public fundraising galas, walkathons, and people soliciting on the street or door to door. Volunteers are few. Instead, donors have had to go online, tapping sites like Venmo, GoFundMe, and Kickstarter. Twitter threads often elicit instant charity.

Giving is often targeted to specific people in need, with donors making sure their money has the intended impact. One example is a Facebook group in North Dakota called Neighbors Helping Neighbors. Within days of its launch it had more than 1,400 members donating money and goods to at-risk people in the community.

So far, the bulk of giving is from big donors, such as South Korea tech companies or the Bill and Melinda Gates foundation. The World Health Organization along with a few partners set up a COVID-19 Solidarity Response Fund.

In U.S. cities where the virus first showed up, local foundations have sped up grant giving, often to meet the needs of low-income people. In Pittsburgh, the United Way has surveyed local charities to pinpoint specific requests for help. Meanwhile, food banks in many cities are setting up drive-through distribution points for people in cars to pick up food through a window.

For such groups, hope is more than a thought. It is love in action. Giving fills many of the gaps left in government response to the virus. At a time when people think the world is going to pieces, generosity helps them feel whole again.


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.

When her daughter came home from school with symptoms of a contagious illness, a mother experienced how the idea that God holds all His children safe from harm lifted fear and opened the way for healing. 


A message of love

Tourism Ireland/Reuters
The Temple of Hercules in Amman, Jordan, bathes in green light as part of Tourism Ireland’s annual Global Greening initiative in celebration of St. Patrick’s Day. Niall Gibbons, Tourism Ireland CEO, decided to go ahead with the project despite ongoing coronavirus-related turmoil to “bring a little positivity and hope to people everywhere and remind them that ... this crisis will pass.”
( 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 tale of resiliency: why birds are the only dinosaurs to survive the mass extinction 65 million years ago.

More issues

2020
March
17
Tuesday

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