2020
May
06
Wednesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

May 06, 2020
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Mark Sappenfield
Senior global correspondent

Today’s issue looks at the different ways Texas and California are handling reopening, how the world forgot half its workers, one place the pandemic hasn’t stopped protesters, a novel idea to get better rural internet, and baking without flour. (Yes, you can do it!)

Weeks into lockdowns that seem like lifetimes, the question is everywhere: How much longer can we wait? American states are reopening even as diagnosed cases of the coronavirus continue to grow nationwide. Both the president and the governor of Texas have argued, in different ways, that the economy needs to get moving again – even if that comes at a human cost.

Basically, the economy is seen as being in conflict with dramatically cutting cases. But as the world’s experience with the pandemic grows, it’s becoming clearer that, in the best cases, one supports the other. South Korea, Australia, New Zealand, Taiwan, Greece, South Africa, and Vietnam have all severely curtailed or virtually eradicated the disease. That’s a broad list – some isolated, some near hot spots. Some run by conservatives, some by liberals. Some rich, some struggling.

But all share a common denominator: quick, decisive, coordinated action based on the best science. In South Korea, that wisdom came from bouts with SARS and MERS. But “they learned from it,” notes an Atlantic report.

This week, South Korea’s success had a conspicuous result: opening day for its baseball league. ESPN is even broadcasting games in the United States. Beyond balls and strikes, the games offer a glimpse at something more: hard-won lessons and the hope they bring.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

A deeper look

David J. Phillip/AP
Waiter Marcos Huerta (right) serves a grill of fajitas at El Tiempo Cantina in Houston on May 1, 2020. The restaurant reopened its dining room for table service, with limited capacity. Texas Gov. Greg Abbott has eased coronavirus-related restrictions on many businesses.

Texas and California offer two different visions about how to handle the coronavirus lockdowns and end them. Here’s an up-close look at how they’re doing it – and the surprising similarities.

Patterns

Tracing global connections
Jorge Saenz/AP
Jose Alcaraz checks a list of residents who receive free meals in Asuncion, Paraguay. He belongs to an organization founded by restaurant workers who have lost their jobs because of COVID-19. They say they serve 300 meals a day, paid for by donations.

We’ve focused a lot on those who have lost formal jobs during the pandemic. But just as important are those who were working on the margins to begin with. How they recover is much more uncertain.

Bilal Hussein/AP
A police officer gestures to firefighters as they extinguish a police car set on fire by anti-government protesters in the northern Lebanese city of Tripoli, April 28, 2020. Hundreds took part in the funeral that day of a young man killed in Tripoli in riots the night before.

In the Middle East, just protesting is brave. But protesting in a time of the coronavirus points to something more dire. As patience with regional despots wears thin, Lebanon is being pushed to the brink.

Amid the wide open spaces of the Great Plains, some communities got tired of waiting for others to connect them to the modern economy. Instead, residents are getting more bandwidth by banding together. 

Those who like to bake are often confounded by a lack of flour and even yeast in stores these days. But Americans have a long tradition of figuring out what to do when ingredients aren’t readily available, explains a Monitor editor and foodie.


The Monitor's View

AP
The moon sets behind the Taunus Mountains near Frankfurt, Germany, May 6.

Just when the world is feeling down, stargazing is looking up. It’s a simple activity for those stuck at home with a view of the heavens. All it takes is an inexpensive telescope, a pair of binoculars, or just the naked eye.

“The moon is still there. The stars are still there,” a British stargazer told CBS News.

Centuries ago, humans paid more attention to the night sky, especially to the moon as it shrank each month to a sliver of itself and then regrew to its glowing roundness. Stars moved in reliable patterns, providing seasonal and travel guides. Planets were a mystery unto themselves.

Today, many people are taking comfort in searching the celestial scene. A few months of sheltering in place, after all, is nothing compared with the timelessness and immensity of the universe. Looking up, people see that.

Yet there may be another reason for the increase in backyard astronomy. In April, the Hubble Space Telescope marked 30 years of sending back images from the far reaches of the universe. It has made numerous discoveries, such as revealing that the universe is roughly 13.8 billion years old.

In a patch of space where the human eye sees nothing, Hubble has found thousands of galaxies, just part of 1.4 million such observations so far.

Hubble’s success serves as another guiding star for those in pandemic lockdown. Problems can be overcome. When it first began transmitting images in 1990, scientists discovered Hubble had a flaw in its large mirror. Its distorted photos were nearly useless. But scientists and technicians didn’t give up. In 1993 astronauts spent five days in spacesuits making crucial repairs. The result: spectacularly clear views ever since.

More progress in space is scheduled for late May, when American astronauts Robert Behnken and Douglas Hurley travel to the International Space Station. They’ll be the first astronauts sent into space from American soil since 2011. After the end of the space shuttle program, the United States was forced to buy seats for its astronauts on Soyuz launches from Russia.

Domestic rockets are a vital step if the U.S. wants to return to the moon by 2024, the government’s stated goal. And beyond that, Mars awaits.

But the May launch has taken on greater meaning.

“It’s important that this agency do this now, because our country – and in fact the whole world – has been shaken by this coronavirus pandemic,” NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine said at a recent news conference. “We need to give people hope.”

The astronauts will be test-driving a new type of spacecraft, the fifth one in a line of U.S. spacecraft – Mercury, Gemini, Apollo, and then the space shuttle.

More than six decades of space exploration has produced practical progress. Where would the world be without wireless communication and weather satellites? Imagine driving in unfamiliar areas without a GPS signal. Yet these feats have not diminished the deep need to explore. Thought marvels at the universe’s beauty and its mysteries. Curiosity demands to unlock them.

On Earth, it might seem like a time to hunker down inside. But many are choosing to look up – and be renewed.


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 parental frustrations about distance learning came to a head, a teacher felt affronted. But she soon found that the most productive, healing approach to the situation was to let God, rather than self-justification and ego, inspire her response.


A message of love

Alessandra Tarantino/AP
Valentina Bacchin looks at Wilfy, a young Westie dog needing a haircut, in the Bottega di Zula pet grooming shop in Rome, May 6, 2020. Bacchin reopened her shop on Monday when Italy began stirring again after a two-month coronavirus shutdown. Some 4.4 million Italians were able to return to work in the first European country to lock down in a bid to stem COVID-19 infections.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte and Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Rampant unemployment and shortages? It might feel new to the West, but Russia lived through it as recently as the 1990s. Our Fred Weir looks at the lessons and the impact in tomorrow’s issue. Thanks for joining us today. 

More issues

2020
May
06
Wednesday

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