2020
March
18
Wednesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

March 18, 2020
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Mark Sappenfield
Senior global correspondent

Today’s stories examine how to handle the virus of misinformation, the challenges of one-party rule in Oregon, a shift to a more open Saudi Arabia, the scientific wonders of a prehistoric “chicken,” and a little help for your garden.

What if Tom Brady is not who we think he is?

Today, we learned that the most successful quarterback in National Football League history is leaving the New England Patriots – with whom he won a record six Super Bowls – and joining the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. The chatter has begun: Who will fare better, Brady or the legendary coach he is leaving behind, Bill Belichick?

For 20 years under Belichick, Brady was the image of his boss – businesslike, corporate, always hewing to the company line. But as a Buccaneer, he’ll be working with Bruce Arians, a coach who once sang an off-color impromptu gospel song about sacking quarterbacks for a television show. Who one former player described as having “crazy swag.” And who berates employees who stay at the office instead of attending their children’s piano recitals. Bill Belichick, he is not.

And that could mean a new Brady at age 43. Said Hall of Famer Steve Young on ESPN: “The Buccaneers are getting a guy that really wants to enjoy the last little bit of his career, and Bruce Arians is perfect for that. [Tom] loves football and you’ve seen him love it in a unique Patriot way – now I think you’ll see him love it in a unique Tom Brady way.”


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

The first pandemic of the social media era has brought a parallel set of challenges, including the rapid spread of fear and false information. Here’s how people are working to address that.

Oregon is so blue that Republican lawmakers have virtually no power. So they’ve walked out three times, throwing the legislature into turmoil. What is the role of a political superminority?

Taylor Luck
Tour guide Minza Al-Rmothi leads a group of tourists at the diwan, a Nabataean-carved meeting place, in Al Ula, Saudi Arabia, Feb. 29, 2020.

Saudi Arabia is turning to tourism to boost its economy. But the biggest change might be how opening itself to the world is beginning to reshape a long-insulated nation.

Courtesy of Daniel J. Field/University of Cambridge
Daniel J. Field of the University of Cambridge holds a three-dimensional printed version of the skull of a newly discovered fossil bird, Asteriornis. The fossil is 66.7 million years old.

Birds are the only surviving dinosaurs. How did they do it? Scientists aren’t sure, but tantalizing clues could hold lessons about natural resilience that matter just as much today.

Books

Karen Norris/Staff

Gardening nurtures the soil and the spirit. These books are full of fresh insights, from pollination to the miracle qualities of vinegar.


The Monitor's View

AP
Adnan Al-Zurfi, seen here in 2005 as governor of Najaf, and now prime minister-designate of Iraq.

With courage and elbow-bump caution, lawmakers around the world are trying to carry on their work during the pandemic. The machinery of government still needs the grease of politics. This is particularly true in Iraq where a 17-year attempt to establish a stable, secular parliamentary democracy in the heart of the Arab world shows new promise.

For six months Iraq’s politics has been in turmoil following grassroots protests. Young people, still camped out in Baghdad’s Tahrir Square, are seeking corruption-free governance and an end to a system that divvies up power by religion and ethnicity. In addition, Iraq continues to be dragged into Iran’s maneuvers for influence in the Middle East and the United States’ response to it. In January, the U.S. assassinated Iranian Gen. Qassem Soleimani on Iraqi soil in retaliation for Iran’s targeting of American soldiers.

On Tuesday, Iraq’s president named a candidate as prime minister-designate to form a government in parliament. He is Adnan al-Zurfi, a member of parliament who once lived in Detroit and is a dual U.S.-Iraqi citizen. He is also a former governor of the Shiite Muslim shrine city of Najaf. During his tenure, he earned a reputation for integrity, delivering basic services and standing up to Shiite militants.

More important, Mr. Zurfi supports the protesters’ aims of inclusive, secular rule and an end to Iranian meddling. About 60% of Iraqis are 27 or younger. They are more globally aware than their elders. They might need a leader who has lived abroad and understands such concepts as rule of law and peaceful transfers of power.

Iraq’s unstable government now faces the task of containing the coronavirus, not to mention the effects of declining oil prices on a country highly dependent on oil exports. Mr. Zurfi has until April 16 to persuade factions in parliament to accept him as prime minister. The virus crisis puts the country’s divisions in a new perspective. Politics must give way to clean and effective governance in order to, as Mr. Zurfi puts it, “achieve the aspirations of the Iraqis.”


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.

Illness can sometimes seem frightening or inevitable. But a willingness to see ourselves and others as God’s pure, flawless, beloved children lifts fear and brings God’s healing presence to light.


A message of love

Jason Redmond/Reuters
Lori Spencer and her husband, Michael Spencer, visit her mom, Judie Shape, who tested positive for coronavirus, outside her room at Care Center of Kirkland, the Seattle-area nursing home that is one of the epicenters of the coronavirus outbreak, in Kirkland, Washington, March 17, 2020.
( 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 Harry Bruinius looks at how those who live a life of service to others – such as pastors and service providers – are navigating the call for social distancing. 

Before you go, a quick editor’s note about the Christian Science Perspective column that appeared in the March 17 issue. Due to a technical error, the audio version of this article was incomplete. We apologize for the inconvenience and are working to correct the problem.

More issues

2020
March
18
Wednesday

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