2020
August
07
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

August 07, 2020
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Linda Feldmann
Washington Bureau Chief

I will never forget my first political convention: the Republican confab in sunny San Diego, August 1996. Hopes were high for GOP nominee Bob Dole, though everyone knew unseating President Bill Clinton would be tough. Senator Dole famously didn’t read the party platform, but at least folks had fun – especially those decked out in red, white, and blue, as I wrote.

This year the conventions are effectively canceled. The Democrats (Aug. 17-20) are going all-virtual, and the Republicans (Aug. 24-27), for now, will be mostly virtual. President Donald Trump says he may accept the GOP nomination from the White House.

For years, it has been fashionable to dismiss the conventions as “infomercials,” all packaging and glitz, with nothing left to chance. Reporters’ quadrennial hopes for a brokered convention are predictably dashed. This year, some are even celebrating the gatherings’ demise. “Covid killed the conventions. Maybe that’s a good thing,” wrote Politico. 

Indeed, this year’s busted play is an opportunity to rethink, well, the convention of conventions. As with many aspects of life, the pandemic has forced us to consider new ways of doing things – sometimes for the better. Maybe hybrid conventions, a combination of virtual and in-person events, are the future. 

But for people who love politics, nothing beats a real, live gathering. Connections are made, wisdom passes from old to young, political stars are born. The expressions of free speech – including protesters, as long as they’re peaceful – are an important part of the tradition. And who can argue with all the fabulous red-white-and-blue outfits? 


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

The history of national security policy is famous for unintended consequences (e.g., the Iraq War and ISIS). Now add to the list the heavy U.S. pressure on Iran and a Chinese foothold in the Middle East.

Renee Daley/Special to The Christian Science Monitor
Landlord Tina Brown is temporarily staying with family in the Bronx borough of New York, Aug. 5, 2020. She is one of about 10 million to 11 million private landlords in the United States.

Many landlords understand tenants’ needs during this time. But if they can’t meet their own financial obligations, it could have “a cascading effect ... the likes of which this country has never seen,” says one landlord advocate.

Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff/File
Leigh Honeywell (2nd from right) and five other women in cybersecurity speak on a panel at an alternate cyber security conference in April 2018 in San Francisco. The panel was organized as part of a day-long event featuring female and minority speakers, whose voices had been left off the speaker lineup at a prominent industry conference that week. 

For U.S. women, having the right to vote hasn’t automatically translated to power. Changed perceptions of women’s capacities are another key step. Part of our special 100th anniversary edition on women winning the right to vote.

SOURCE:

Gallup

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Jacob Turcotte and Mark Trumbull/Staff
Darryl Hammond/Sowetan
Nwabisa Makunga is editor of the Sowetan, one of South Africa’s most circulated daily newspapers. She first became interested in journalism at age 11.

How can you tell the world’s story, if only half the world is telling it? For decades, women were scarce in top newsroom roles. But that’s changing, particularly in South Africa – where Black, Asian, and multiracial women’s gains were especially hard-won. Part of our special 100th anniversary edition on women winning the right to vote.

Watch

10 inspiring Olympic moments (video)

The Olympic Games display athletic prowess and the resiliency of the human spirit. There may be no Summer Games this year, but great Olympic moments are worth revisiting – especially those that broke physical, cultural, and racial barriers.


The Monitor's View

Reuters
A man stands next to a campaign poster for Svetlana Tikhanouskaya, a candidate in the Aug. 9 election against President Alexander Lukashenko.

One early sign of a dictator’s eventual demise is the moment when people cast off fear of his retribution against opponents. For Belarus, a small ex-Soviet nation next to Russia, that moment may come Aug. 9 in an election that could be largely rigged to favor its longtime ruler.

For some reason, President Alexander Lukashenko has allowed a candidate that he dismisses as “just a housewife” to run against him. Perhaps he needs a sheen of democracy. Or he actually believes his statement that Belarus “has not matured enough for a woman” to become president.

Little did he anticipate that Svetlana Tikhanovskaya, a former English teacher and translator, would draw big crowds with this campaign pitch: “Now is the time when everyone must overcome their fear.”

Ms. Tikhanovskaya certainly has plenty to fear herself. In May, her activist husband was jailed after he announced his candidacy. Two other candidates were jailed or went into exile. At that point she decided to run. Even then, threats were made against her two children. She has sent them out of the country.

After hitting the campaign trail, however, the once-shy Ms. Tikhanovskaya realized she could pop a bubble of fear among Belarus’ 9.5 million people, especially the urban, tech-savvy youth.

“Do you think I’m not scared? I’m scared every day,” she told a crowd. “But I muster my courage, get over my fear and go to you, and go for victory.”

She also realized that the president’s dismissive attitude toward the coronavirus pandemic has awakened people. “They began to feel that they were protected by other people and not by the state,” she says.

Her popularity has been measured in the size of her crowds – the largest since independence in 1991. No political polls are allowed. In a rare TV appearance, she bravely talked about political prisoners.

She knows the election might be rigged against her. Mr. Lukashenko has been in power since 1994. She asks people to show solidarity by wearing something white when they go to vote. She also asks them to take pictures of their ballot and record their vote on an opposition website.

Under authoritarian regimes, such tactics are the tools of the powerless. Yet real power lies first in setting aside fear and embodying the qualities of democracy, such as equality and freedom.

If she somehow wins, Ms. Tikhanovskaya says her goal would be to quickly hold a legitimate election within six months, one in which freed political prisoners could run and people do not succumb to fear of retribution. She’s already set an example of that.


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.

If our joy, harmony, or sense of home feels constricted, it’s worth considering the limitless, unconfined nature of God and God’s creation.


A message of love

Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff
“I reckon I got to light out for the Territory ahead of the rest,” says the titular Huck at the end of Mark Twain’s “Adventures of Huckleberry Finn.” While our present times are not authoring the end of anything (we hope), one might be forgiven for wishing to do some lighting out of one’s own – for feeling an irresistible urge to get away, to go somewhere, to get a glimpse of something different than what one has been glimpsing for, oh, the past four months of lockdown and social distance and involuntary homesteading. Funny thing: After so long stuck in park, things look different when you drive. Things look ... nostalgic. So a wander through the Rocky Mountains in the American West offers all the usual scenes – the high passes, the glacial rivers, the countless hectares of butte and sage. These days, though, what often draws the eye is not how things are; it’s how things were. Signs (sometimes literally signs) of life, the way it was in the days long before we’d heard of pandemics or their countermeasures. Life on horseback, in chaps, at a ranch, on a road. Our reasons may be different, but we understand all too well what Huck was after when he lit out. He wanted to escape (again). Who among us doesn’t? It works. Click on the link below to see more photos. – Michael S. Hopkins
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thank you for joining us. Please come back Monday, when Monitor reporter Laurent Belsie explains how political brinkmanship over pandemic relief threatens the economy.

More issues

2020
August
07
Friday

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