2020
October
02
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

October 02, 2020
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Yvonne Zipp
Features Editor

With news that the president and first lady have tested positive for COVID-19, our politics team is working hard to keep you abreast of the unfolding story. First up is our top story today: Washington bureau chief Linda Feldmann offers insights on the most important considerations for the country in the coming days. 

Before we get to that, some good news to brighten the end of your week:

”It has to be Doris Miller.” That was the reaction when the Navy asked whose name should go on a new supercarrier. When Japanese fighters bombed Pearl Harbor, sinking his ship, Naval messman Miller jumped behind an antiaircraft gun and returned fire. His heroism continued after he ran out of bullets. He was one of the last to leave his ship, pulling wounded sailors out of burning, oil-covered water. At the time he faced two enemies: The Japanese and a racist system that made it illegal for a Black sailor to fire a gun, NPR reports. The USS Doris Miller will be the first supercarrier named after an African American and an enlisted sailor.

In Afghanistan, a coal miner’s daughter has placed No. 1 out of 200,000 students on the university entrance exam. At 15, Shamsea Alizada survived a Taliban suicide bombing in Kabul at a tutoring center that killed dozens of her fellow students, The New York Times reports. When she called her father to tell him the good news about the test, “he was so happy he was in tears,” she said.

Finally, from Cambodia, the tale of an unlikely hero. Over the past four years, Magawa, an African giant pouched rat, has cleared more than 1.5 million square feet of land mines, finding dozens and saving lives, the BBC reports. He has become the first rat to receive the gold medal ”for animal gallantry or devotion to duty” from the British charity PDSA.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Analysis

Joshua Roberts/Reuters
White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany speaks to the media after U.S. President Donald Trump announced that he and first lady Melania Trump have both tested positive for the coronavirus disease in Washington, Oct. 2, 2020.

As the nation confronts perhaps the most jarring October surprise in history, it could raise new questions about the U.S. electoral system’s ability to navigate and absorb shocks.

A deeper look

JONATHAN ERNST/REUTERS/FILE
Mr. Trump and China’s leader Xi Jinping stroll through the Forbidden City after an opera performance during a trip to China in November 2017.

By now, U.S.-China relations being in a tailspin seems like old news. But not that long ago, officials in Beijing and Washington were singing a sweeter tune. Years of misplaced expectations have led to today’s shrill face-off.

This is something many may have missed amid a tumultuous news season: Protests of police brutality and racial inequality in the past four months have yielded remarkable progress on law enforcement reforms. Now what bears watching is their staying power.

SOURCE:

NJ Advance Media Force Report; FBI Uniform Crime Reports; Robert E. Worden, Sarah J. McLean, Robin S. Engel, Hannah Cochran, Nicholas Corsaro, Danielle Reynolds, Cynthia J. Najdowski and Gabrielle T. Isaza, 2020. "The Impacts of Implicit Bias Awareness Training in the NYPD." IACP/UC Center for Police Research and Policy & John F. Finn Institute for Public Safety. Volusia Sheriff's Office.

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Karen Norris/Staff
Jorel Cuomo/National Park Service/Reuters
A grizzly bear known to researchers as "Bear 775 Lefty" looks for migrating salmon to help fatten up for the winter hibernation, in Alaska's Katmai National Par, September 21, 2019. Each year, the park holds Fat Bear Week, a bracket-style voting contest and a celebration of the park's healthy ecosystem.

With wildfires, climate change, and the extinction crisis dominating science headlines, you would be forgiven for thinking that every ecosystem in the world is collapsing. But as one lighthearted contest shows, some places are thriving.

Television

Mark Bourdillon/Love Productions/Netflix
Contestant Dave Friday chats with judges (from left) Paul Hollywood and Prue Leith, and co-host Noel Fielding. The latest season of "The Great British Baking Show" debuted in the U.S. on Netflix in late September.

Entertaining fare from across the pond has long captured the fancy of Americans. This fall, culinary, political, and detective offerings aim to match the appeal of “Downton Abbey.” 


The Monitor's View

Reuters
Clouds pass over the White House after President Donald Trump announced that he and first lady Melania Trump have both tested positive for the coronavirus disease.

Just two weeks ago, after the death of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, the Trump White House issued a warm statement that the liberal jurist had “demonstrated that one can disagree without being disagreeable toward one’s colleagues.” That spirit of humanity toward a political opponent is once again on display in Washington, a town too often prone to uncivil discourse.

Just hours after the president and first lady tested positive for COVID-19, many of Donald Trump’s fiercest opponents wished them a speedy recovery. Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden said he “will continue to pray for the health and safety of the president and his family.” Words of condolence also flowed from foreign leaders who have differed sharply with Mr. Trump’s policies, such as German Chancellor Angela Merkel.

Mr. Trump is not the first world leader to be diagnosed with the coronavirus. Britain’s Boris Johnson and Brazil’s Jair Bolsonaro have defeated the virus, as we pray Mr. Trump will. In all three countries, the usual acrimony of mudslinging politics was silenced when the head of state became ill. It gave way to a principle long honored in both military battlefields and sometimes political ones: Anyone injured during a conflict deserves health care.

That principle has been around only about 150 years, starting with the founding of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), a nonprofit group that has challenged the old take-no-prisoners approach in warfare. The organization’s neutral workers have steadily persuaded combatants on all sides to allow medical treatment of the fallen. Once injured, a soldier is considered worthy of life-saving help.

Under humanitarian law enshrined in the 1949 Geneva Conventions, a person has inherent innocence. “The task is first and foremost to recognize the humanity in each one of us, as remote and different as we may be, and most importantly to refuse to remain a spectator when this humanity is denied or violated,” writes Vincent Bernard, an ICRC editor. In politics, too, a sickened opponent must be immune from the swords of hate. 

The pandemic has upended many of the world’s conflicts. In Afghanistan, for example, the Taliban have allowed the Red Cross and other aid groups into areas it controls in order to help deal with the virus. Some observers say the Taliban’s acceptance of neutral care for civilians helped soften the group’s recent stance to start negotiations with the Afghan government.

A similar response might be in store for Washington. The many consoling words for the president as he struggles with COVID-19 serve as a reminder that enmity in politics should not translate to enmity toward a person. An idea may be unworthy of respect but not its proponent. In either sickness or in health, civility – even a loving word – can move politics in new directions.


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 sense of purpose and worth seems adrift, it’s worth considering our nature and purpose as God’s children – as a mother has experienced firsthand as her children grow older.


A message of love

Heidi Levine
The sun was starting to set over the Mediterranean, offering relief from August’s heat, as I walked to the shore near where I live in Jaffa, a part of Tel Aviv that is home to Jews, Christians, and Muslims. It was the Muslim holiday of Eid al-Adha. Many people were strolling along the promenade or bathing in the warm sea. As I paused to talk with four women, I didn’t realize one of them was deaf until I saw another communicating my words to her. Duha Shashtri, a nursing student, explained in English that they were family members from the West Bank city of Nablus, excited because they were visiting the sea for the first time. They were among thousands of Palestinians embracing a rare opportunity. Despite pandemic restrictions, during the holiday people crossed through a hole in the electrified fence that divides Israel and the West Bank. Israeli soldiers stood there, ignoring Palestinians pushing baby carriages and carrying picnic coolers. The crossings, which ended after a few days as the barrier was sealed, offered a glimpse of what life could look like one day if Israelis and Palestinians achieve peace, and even swim side by side as they did during Eid al-Adha. – Story and photos by Heidi Levine / Correspondent
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us today. We look forward to seeing you again on Monday, when we’ll look at strains on American democracy, opening day of the Supreme Court term, and 100 years of Agatha Christie mysteries.

More issues

2020
October
02
Friday

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