2020
March
31
Tuesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

March 31, 2020
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Our five selected stories for today’s issue cover the erosion of privacy during a health crisis, a video history lesson about racism, a day with a grocery store manager, ethics in warfare, and collaboration and lichen in Canada.

Drive-by salutes are all the rage. 

From California to Massachusetts, teachers are making signs, getting behind the wheel, and driving past their students’ homes. In the past week, 10-, 20-, and 50-car parades have been spotted honking their love. And the kids and parents are on the street curbs waving and holding signs too. 

Perhaps in America’s car culture, it should come as no surprise that a relationship would be reinforced with a motorcade. It’s also a kind of rolling rebellion. In a time of social distancing, we are resisting – not the rules as much as the sense of separation. 

These car parades are about American communities pushing back and affirming their ties. This is about finding new ways to become closer. A Zoom room isn’t enough. 

“We just want all the kids to be connected to their teachers,” Staci Scott-Stewart, a teacher at North Elementary in Noblesville, Indiana, told CNN. “We’re all in it together.”

And it’s not just convoys of teachers. In Marietta, Georgia, Amanda Overstreet Wagner organized a drive-by birthday parade for her neighbor’s 11-year-old son. 

“I feel like some of this coronavirus has been more dividing us as Americans rather than uniting,” said Ms. Wagner. “So, in my little neighborhood in the suburbs of Atlanta, I’m trying to be more of a unifying factor.”

I’ll honk for that.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

A deeper look

Jennifer Lorenzini/LaPresse/AP
Police officers test a drone to monitor citizens' movements in Grosseto, Italy, March 20, 2020. Governments are evaluating tools to track carriers of the new coronavirus and determine whom they might be infecting, raising concerns among privacy advocates.

In an emergency, picking health over privacy seems like an easy choice. But after the crisis passes, our reporter wonders: Will governments still be watching your every move?

Precedented

Lessons from history

Why disease boosts discrimination, and what that costs society

While this pandemic is unprecedented, we know that the past can inform the present. In the first episode of a new video series, “Precedented,” we turn to history to learn why the spread of disease often fuels racism – and how we might do better today.

Precedented EP01: COVID-19 revives racist stereotypes against Chinese people

A deeper look

Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff
Emma McMahon rings up purchases at a checkout counter at the Fruit Center Marketplace, an independently owned grocery store, during the coronavirus crisis, on March 25, 2020, in Hingham, Massachusetts. The store has implemented changes to ensure safety for customers and employees – like sneeze guards at checkout counters.

What’s it like on the front lines of a pandemic? Our reporter spends a day with his local grocery store manager, observing how Mark Mignosa copes with provisioning a community.

New hypersonic missiles are so fast and furtive, they shorten the time frame for a human response. Can we teach computers to make the “right” ethical choices under fire?

SOURCE:

The Economist

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Jacob Turcotte/Staff
Troy McMullin
Star-tipped reindeer lichen (Cladonia stellaris) is abundant in every province and territory in Canada and is easily recognized because of the appearance of cauliflowerlike heads.

Ready for something off the beaten news trail? Canada will soon be the first nation in the world to name a national lichen. We see what plant organisms can teach humans about collaboration and natural stability.


The Monitor's View

AP
A Chicago police officer notifies a cyclist that the trails in Promontory Park, along Lake Michigan, are closed in an effort to limit the spread of COVID-19.

As the weather warms, Americans will want to spend more time outdoors, perhaps pushing government limits on access to public spaces. Crowds jamming into parks and beaches have caused authorities to close many popular gathering spots. Outdoor team sports like soccer are being discouraged or banned.

As of last week, about a quarter of national park sites were closed, according to The Washington Post, including the Statue of Liberty, Yellowstone, and Yosemite. The Appalachian Trail Conservancy is urging people to stay off the winding path between Maine and Georgia. Wilderness hikes might seem like the perfect getaway. But campsites can get crowded. And getting into trouble on a trail and needing to be rescued could pull responders away from other important work.

Escaping self-isolation for the outdoors remains a great idea. Yet it needs to be pursued close to home with all the safeguards of personal distancing. A local park or nature trail may not bring gasps of amazement like the Grand Canyon. But exploring any sort of nature can bring delights of its own.

Joggers, lost to their headsets, or bicyclists whizzing past have their own aims and claims to open spaces, of course. But others who set aside their earbuds and slow their pace will find special joys. “In times of crisis, the natural world is a source of both joy and solace,” famed naturalist Sir David Attenborough recently told The Big Issue magazine.

For those in the Northeast, a walk through woods and wetlands – preferably on a wide trail – can yield sightings of red-bellied woodpeckers, kingfishers, blue herons, bluebirds, and red-winged blackbirds. Skunk cabbage is bursting from muddy banks. Rosy flowers are brightening the awakening red maples. A sleepy painted turtle, emerging from hibernation, might wander across the path. Human contact is left to a friendly “hello” and a brief sharing of what’s been spotted.

What if it’s a rainy day? A few quiet minutes gazing out a window onto trees or a budding garden can reveal a world of beauty and activity. Where is that bird headed with a twig? Is that a hawk overhead, forcing other wildlife to hide?

At night, the stars now shine a bit brighter with less human-caused air pollution. Venus is shining ultrabright in parts of the world. In coastal areas, if a beach is open and people obey rules against clustering, riding the waves is an ideal activity, allowing one to be enveloped by the ocean’s power. Others may like “forest bathing,” the Japanese practice of lying, sitting, or walking among trees to soak in their cleansing magnificence.

The founder of the Monitor, Mary Baker Eddy, once wrote: “Mine is an obstinate penchant for nature in all her moods and forms, a satisfaction with whatever is hers.”

Shakespeare found that “our life, exempt from public haunt, finds tongues in trees, books in the running brooks, sermons in stones, and good in everything.”

Each person locked down in wintry fear of a disease can be lifted by a close encounter with the outdoors. Even if not with each other for now.


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.

Here’s an article in which a mother shares inspiration that tangibly helped her family during a voluntary self-quarantine some years ago.


A message of love

Carl Recine/Reuters
A goat sits next to a sign in Llandudno, Wales, March 31, 2020. A group of goats has been spotted walking around the deserted streets of the seaside town during the nationwide lockdown due to the coronavirus.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us. Come back tomorrow: We’re working on a story about cartoonists in Vermont making a difference in their communities.

More issues

2020
March
31
Tuesday

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