2020
March
25
Wednesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

March 25, 2020
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Mark Sappenfield
Senior global correspondent

Today's issue includes a look at the qualities of leadership in crisis, how the coronavirus has changed thinking about those in prison, staff suggestions about charities in this time of need, expressions of courage against a genocide, and simple science experiments for the house-bound.

The coronavirus crisis has made one thing clear: The world needs a pause button. We are shutting down economies because it is the kind thing to do. To trundle on would be to show a lack of compassion, particularly for those who appear most vulnerable. The world of 2020 is more humane than that.

Enter Denmark, which is perhaps going furthest to try to put its economy in the freezer for three months. To do this, the government will spend the equivalent 13% of its annual gross domestic product to limit layoffs and lost revenues. For example, “the state has agreed to take on 75 percent of workers’ salaries, up to $3,288 per month,” notes an article in The Atlantic.

A proportional program in the United States would cost $2.5 trillion. That figure is sobering. Denmark has large surpluses, but its calculus is universal. “The philosophy is, if we don’t do it now, it will be more expensive to save the economy later,” a Danish economist says.

No one knows if this will work. But as we become a kinder and more interconnected world, how will our economies likewise evolve to not punish us for our higher instincts? Bold, fresh thinking – both liberal and conservative – will certainly be required.  


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Stepping Up

Profiles in Leadership
John Minchillo/AP
New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo addresses New Yorkers during a news conference at the Jacob Javits Center which will house a temporary hospital, March 24, 2020, in New York. Governor Cuomo has adopted a “buck stops here” tone with his constituents in regard to the COVID-19 outbreak.

Leadership can take many forms, as the coronavirus response is showing. But people also generally seek a few universal traits, such as reassurance and guidance.

Usually, prisons are all about walls, but the coronavirus is breaking them down as people increasingly see prisoners’ health as vital to America as a whole – and a moral imperative.

Philanthropy

Jacob Turcotte/Staff

As anxieties over the coronavirus intensify, communities across the globe are fighting fear with kindness. Our correspondents around the globe offer ways to help. 

J Paing
Htuu Lou Rae (left) and Ei Thinzar Maung (center) handed out T-shirts in Maha Bandula Park in downtown Yangon, Myanmar, Dec. 21, 2019. The activists said they wanted to show that not all people of Myanmar support the state's denial of genocide against the Rohingya.

When the risks of speaking out are high, why do it? For this small group of activists, it’s wanting to have a clear conscience – and believing that injustice against some is a problem for all.

Science at Home

At a time when many people (yes, you, parents and grandparents) are at home with kids, here’s an installment from our Science at Home series – fun, simple experiments that can be done at the kitchen table.


The Monitor's View

China Daily via Reuters
Workers in Wuhan, China, resume work on a bridge March 24 following the coronavirus outbreak.

After staying at home for two months under strict lockdown, the people of Wuhan in China are now able to return to normal life. The coronavirus threat has eased. Yet for many, the crisis has forced them to discover new norms, ones more durable than making money or seeking amusement. According to the Chinese press, this message from one resident is typical: “We should cherish every day and everyone we love.”

Wuhan was the source of the global COVID-19 health emergency and now it has begun to reveal practical lessons. One is that people experiencing what is the largest mass hardship since World War II can reorient their lives to seek what is enduring and true, what ensures harmony over fear.

That search, of course, is a universal part of daily life but has been accelerated by a natural disaster on par with the 1918 Spanish flu pandemic. The unprecedented economic and cultural shocks are bringing a stronger appreciation and respect for what is often taken for granted: the courage of a delivery person, the diligence of a grocery store clerk, or the sacrifice of health workers and other first responders to the crisis.

Governors are determining which businesses are “essential” and can stay open. More people are concerned about those most vulnerable to the virus, such as people who are homeless, older, or in prison.

This desire to embrace the eternal also plays out in the politics of government decisions. In the $2 trillion package designed to minimize job losses and bankruptcies in the United States, Washington is struggling with deep ethical challenges. Who merits a bailout or merely a loan? Can the rescue money be used to press other goals, such as forcing companies to go green or narrowing the wealth gap? Is there really a choice between saving lives and reopening the economy?

In these warlike conditions, a great sifting of values is to be expected. It often leads to practices that are more sustainable, such as a greater love for family and friends or an awareness that a range of pastimes – leisure travel, sports, gambling – can be put off or eliminated. People feel a deeper yearning for priorities that endure.

Long after the end of the worst public health crisis in a generation, what might be the most memorable image of these days? It probably won’t be videos of people fighting to buy stashes of toilet paper. Instead, if the spirit in Wuhan is any guide, it will be pictures of people in Italy singing and playing music from their balconies, reminding themselves of what is true and lovely in their neighborly connections. Such are the reminders of the higher norms of life.


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 can seem hard to find examples of leadership that’s both kind and effectual. But as a former school principal found, a willingness to let God, good, impel our thoughts and actions empowers us to lead with compassion, care, and effectiveness.


A message of love

Lindsey Wasson/Reuters
With the Woodland Park Zoo shuttered to visitors, keeper Evan Lawrence brings Buddy the pharaoh eagle-owl to watch the Humboldt penguins, in Seattle, March 24, 2020.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris and Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thank you for joining us today. Please come back tomorrow when our Whitney Eulich looks at whether preemptive quarantine is prudent or troubling. In El Salvador, the decision could make sense – or be a step toward dictatorship.  

More issues

2020
March
25
Wednesday

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