2020
July
17
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

July 17, 2020
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Peter Grier
Washington editor

“‘Hope’ is the thing with feathers.”

That’s the title of one of Emily Dickinson’s most famous poems. It might also apply to Chi Chi, a pet cockatiel lost, and then found.

Bright yellow with peach cheeks and a mohawk of head feathers, Chi Chi looks like a banana. Her name is short for Chiquita.

Earlier this month she was riding on owner Alan Zimberg’s shoulder as he walked around his house in Potomac, Maryland. He forgot she was there and went outside. She flew away.

Mr. Zimberg and wife, Lisa Morton, were distraught, according to an account in The Washington Post. The next day, Ms. Morton went to an optometrist appointment at a nearby shopping center and talked all about it. Optometrist Andrew Plaxen did his best to comfort her.

You know what happens next. Later that day Mr. Plaxen walked out to the parking lot and saw two crows attacking a yellow bird. It plummeted to the ground. He ran over and reached out. Chi Chi got up and walked onto his arm.

What were the odds?

Found pet stories are always a balm for the soul. But in these troubled times the tale of Chi Chi might be that and a metaphor as well, a reminder of the persistence of light in the darkest days.

Which is maybe what Emily Dickinson was talking about:

“Hope” is the thing with feathers –
That perches in the soul –
And sings the tune without the words –
And never stops – at all – 


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

A deeper look

Dan Koeck/Reuters
Family and friends of Myron Wagner visit him from outside Bethany Retirement Living as they practice social distancing during the COVID-19 pandemic, in Fargo, North Dakota, July 15, 2020.

COVID-19 would have been devastating under any president. But ineffective leadership and a lack of centralized action has made the crisis worse, and created a more difficult road ahead.

A deeper look

Jim Mone/AP
A pedestrian passes a colorful painted tribute to George Floyd on a boarded-up business June 18, 2020 in the Longfellow neighborhood of Minneapolis.

Minneapolis’ small businesses were already having a precarious 2020 because of the pandemic. Then 1,500 were burned or looted during outrage over George Floyd’s killing. Instead of anger or self-pity, many say their life’s work can’t compare to a lost life.

Good governance and balancing sectarian interests have challenged successive Iraqi leaders. The assassination of a key security analyst paints a revealing portrait of Baghdad’s struggles with Iran-backed militias.

Essay

Michael Shroyer/USA Today
Wake Forest Demon Deacons guard Sharone Wright Jr. (No. 2) drives to the basket in a game against the Virginia Tech Hokies in Blacksburg, Virginia, Jan. 19, 2019. Mr. Wright has decided that he would rather play for an HBCU and announced this month that he will transfer to Morgan State University.

Audiences can’t get enough of athletes on the field and the court but they are often sidelined when it comes to public discourse. Columnist Ken Makin explores the role of conscience and activism in sports, from Muhammad Ali to Sharone Wright Jr.


The Monitor's View

Reuters
People collect fish on a beach in Da Nang, Vietnam, in May.

Reconciliation among peoples is hard work. Just ask officials of Vietnam and the U.S. On July 11, the two countries celebrated the 25th anniversary of the normalization of diplomatic ties. Working through the bitter legacy of their long war has taken that many years. Yet even though much mending is still to be done, Vietnam is now regarded as America’s closest ally in Southeast Asia and a major business partner.

The two have built up valuable trust by helping each other locate their missing soldiers and by jointly reducing the everyday damage from unexploded war ordnance and the American military’s use of Agent Orange. Further progress in their friendship, says Vietnam’s Communist Party chief Nguyen Phu Trong, depends on “a mentality to let go of the past.”

One bonus of all this hard work is the people ties. Nearly 30,000 Vietnamese attend U.S. schools while more than 1,200 Americans study in Vietnam. For the first time, Hanoi has agreed to allow the Peace Corps to operate in the country. And the U.S. ambassador recently visited Vietnam’s cemeteries for its “war martyrs.”

This steady healing of the war’s aftermath is not the only reason for the closeness. The two are slowly forming a strategic partnership to counter China’s growing use of naval force against Vietnam, Malaysia, Indonesia, and the Philippines over disputed islets, fisheries, and oil deposits in the South China Sea.

Vietnam is allowing more U.S. warships to visit its ports. And for the first time, the United States has taken the position that China’s claims to the South China Sea are “completely unlawful.” Washington may further help Vietnam beef up its maritime forces. Hanoi, meanwhile, is reportedly weighing whether to take Beijing to an international court over its persistent bullying tactics in Vietnamese waters.

Hanoi remains wary of being a close ally of any major power. And the U.S. hardly embraces the Communist Party’s suppression of dissent. Yet the two have squarely faced the pain of their history and are replacing it with lasting bonds. The U.S., for example, is now Vietnam’s biggest export market. The Trump administration has lauded Hanoi’s leadership in the region and its remarkable success in preventing COVID-19 deaths.

As the two keep working on the physical and moral legacies of the war, they are opening a future that few people imagined a few decades ago.


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 the demands of everyday life, which for many have been heightened by the pandemic, can feel overwhelming. But as this poem highlights, divine Love, God, is here to inspire us with peace, stillness, and inspiration.


A message of love

Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff
Every writer I’ve worked with knows I love animals – whether furry, scaly, or feathered. They’re my favorite subjects. I never miss an opportunity to include them in portraits, or to find stories to tell about them. One reason why? You never know what they’ll do. Imagine my surprise when, while photographing a cranberry harvest near my home, the farm manager’s dog jumped into the bog and started swimming – apparently chasing frogs. A black dog against red berries? Beautiful. I took one of my funniest animal shots while working on a story about a little capuchin monkey named Minnie, who was a service animal. Besides being a delightful companion, she was capable of turning on lights, opening the refrigerator, and picking things up for her human. During the shoot, I left my soda on the kitchen counter. When I turned around again, I saw Minnie taking a big sip of my drink through a straw with an impish look on her face. Perhaps my most touching animal photo is of Tarra and Bella – an elephant and a dog who were best friends. They lived at an elephant sanctuary where they followed each other, ate together, and slept side by side. (They were even the subject of a children’s book.) The photo captured the look on Bella’s face as she gazed up at her humongous sidekick. Can it be anything other than love? Click the link below to see more of my favorite images. – Melanie Stetson Freeman
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us and have a great weekend. On Monday, we’ll look at how the U.S. Air Force hopes to lead the way in making sure military justice is fairly applied.

More issues

2020
July
17
Friday

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