2020
June
08
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

June 08, 2020
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Clayton Collins
Director of Editorial Innovation

In the two weeks since the killing of George Floyd, a yearning for social justice has overpowered calls for social distancing. 

Some marchers stress that the pandemic’s toll has been just another indicator of inequity. Most have applied nonviolent tactics, including in places far from liberal enclaves.

The betterment of policing is a halting process. Some see small acts of police outreach as performative, and counter with new video evidence of brutality. Some view police unions as blind protectors of officers who overstep. 

Still, Minneapolis police have banned chokeholds (and the city council seeks to restructure the department). Seattle has temporarily halted the use of tear gas. Talk of ending “qualified immunity,” which makes it nearly impossible to successfully sue law enforcement officers, has revived. So has talk of training standards for the nation’s 18,000-plus police forces. 

The head of the NFL, which censured a star for kneeling in protest in 2016, apologized for having ignored the concerns of black players and now supports players’ right to peaceful protest. The energy of persistent protest may be lifting voter registration

Now, calls are rising for service worthy of gratitude.

“We need police ... in our communities,” Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms told CNN Friday. “We all call upon them at one time or another.” A day before she had thanked protesters for honoring Mr. Floyd and others. “There’s something better on the other side of this for us,” she said, “and there’s something better on the other side for our children’s children.”


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Courtesy of JOE BIDEN FOR PRESIDENT/Reuters
Former Vice President Joe Biden visits a protest site in Wilmington, Delaware, one of many that have erupted around the nation in recent weeks in response to the death of George Floyd at the hands of Minneapolis police.

Joe Biden, who has clinched his party’s nomination, may find his campaign’s “unity” message appropriate to underscore at George Floyd’s funeral. But unity on racial justice will take compromise, and that remains in short supply.

Navigating uncertainty

The search for global bearings
Kham/Reuters
A man uses a smartphone as he walks past a poster warning against spreading 'fake news' on the coronavirus in Hanoi, Vietnam, on April 14, 2020.

Social media can spread positive vibes or dangerous lies. But who should be trusted to judge which is which? Governments? Mark Zuckerberg? The work mostly lies with individual news consumers. Our global series “Navigating Uncertainty” continues.

SOURCE:

Pew Research Center

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Jacob Turcotte/Staff

Global solidarity around protests for equal treatment has underscored our common humanity. Perspectives can vary. This report from South Africa finds a society reflecting on its own complicated, continuing history of police violence.

Essay

Here’s another perspective piece: For the Monitor’s Chicago-born Arab world correspondent, the view homeward of roiling strife and demands for justice has been both disorienting and familiar. His experience has taught him to hope.

Comic Debrief

Why coronavirus modeling is so hard to pin down

Finally, however you feel about math, you might enjoy this. To look at how scientists use mathematical equations to offer some paths forward on the coronavirus, we reached for a storytelling tool with which we’ve been experimenting: illustrated panels.

Eoin O'Carroll and Jacob Turcotte/Staff

The Monitor's View

AP
Saint Wilkins stands outside a closed youth center on Chicago's Southside in mid-May.

Since March, when the United States and other countries went into lockdown, youth sports have been in a big timeout. The pandemic forced organized leagues to shut down. While some are resuming, in much of the U.S. they’re not likely to reappear until late summer, if then.

Can any good come from this lost spring and summer for team sports? It could.

It starts with recognizing what happened in their absence: Children have played catch with their parents or created informal soccer fields in their backyards. Families rode bikes together.

Such less-organized activities, it turns out, can be just as good for kids beyond the sheer fun. But that is no surprise: Children always have the ability to play – and find outlets for it.

The hiatus for team sports also provides an opportunity to ask a question: How could they better serve children and teens? And how can their benefits reach more children?

So-called youth travel teams, which offer competition at an elite level and prepare youths to excel in a particular sport, such as baseball, are expected to be among the last to return. They involve transporting youths long distances, sometimes to other states, where they come into contact with a whole new group of other youths and related adults.

These teams can be great for young athletes who want to push themselves to the limit. But they also are expensive, in some cases costing families thousands of dollars in fees, equipment, and travel expenses each year. These high costs often limit who is able to participate.

In general, families spent an average of $693 annually per child for each organized sport they play, according to Utah State University’s Families in Sport Lab. And in many families, each child may play two or more sports each year.

More troubling is the income gap between families whose children play organized sports and those who don’t. It keeps widening.

In 2012, about 24% of families with incomes of less than $25,000 per year reported their children engaged in no sports activity at all, according to the Aspen Institute, which studies youth sports. By 2018, that percentage had risen to 33.4%.

In contrast, in 2012 only 14.4% of families with incomes over $100,000 reported their children engaged in no sports activity. By 2018, that figure had shrunk to 9.9%, further widening the gap.

The Aspen Institute’s Project Play suggests a number of ways organized sports could be extended to more youths. They include creating more local in-town leagues that place fewer demands on families than travel teams.

In Tacoma, Washington, for example, enrollment in the city’s youth soccer league rose from 256 children in 2015 to 1,400 this year, a 450% increase. The secret: The programs now take place at the 36 local elementary schools, most within walking distance for children. That means parents aren’t needed to drive kids to every game or practice.

The most important consideration, perhaps, is remembering that sports should be a source of joy.

“Children will be life-long lovers of sport if they are allowed to have fun,” says one parent in a recent Aspen Institute report on the state of youth sports.

Through sports children and teens break barriers of limitation. They gain self-confidence as they master new physical skills. They make new friends and learn the value of working as a team.

The rewards of youth sports are too great to not seize this opportunity to improve them.


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.

Each year The First Church of Christ, Scientist, has an Annual Meeting attended by members from around the world (this year’s was entirely virtual). Here’s a woman’s account of a meaningful healing she experienced during Annual Meeting activities some years ago.


A message of love

Patrick Lantrip/Daily Memphian/AP
Shelby County chief of staff Danielle Inez sings "Lean on Me" with her five-year-old son Joseph during a memorial service held for George Floyd at the Civic Center Plaza in downtown Memphis Monday. Mr. Floyd died while being detained by police in Minneapolis on May 25.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Come back tomorrow. We’ll have a reflection on protests and riots from a man who was a college student during the Rodney King unrest and has intimate knowledge of what it’s like to face off with police. 

Also, a reminder: You can now find some of the fast-moving stories that we’re watching right here

More issues

2020
June
08
Monday

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