2020
October
26
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

October 26, 2020
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Clayton Collins
Director of Editorial Innovation

Music has those “charms to soothe.” What a welcome attribute in times like these

Performers of live music, suppressed by the pandemic, are finding responsible new ways to connect and uplift even with venues shuttered..

A Brooklyn sidewalk ensemble plays Brahms for enchanted passersby. The Avett Brothers sing for a drive-in-distanced audience at the Charlotte Motor Speedway – also taking a lap, to cheers, in an old Plymouth Roadrunner. The Flaming Lips, performance pioneers, try extending their long-running plastic-bubble motif by encasing some audience members

Interplay is the driver, and it’s a two-way kick. Many bands – not just jam bands – use crowd input to shape each show. 

Stephen Humphries, the Monitor’s chief culture writer, calls this a “communion.” Stephen’s a concert devotee. (He and I have tickets for a David Crosby show that got bumped from last June to this coming one.) 

“There's a whole different dynamic when a band is playing live,” he says. He recalls a pre-pandemic concert at which Canadian indie-pop singer Feist began exchanging bird calls with his wife as Feist teased an avian-themed song. 

It was one of several points, Stephen says, at which “the sheer beauty of the music made me feel as if I was levitating.

“That kind of feeling – which, in normal times, people around the world experience every night at live shows – can't be replaced.” 

We wave our virtual lighters and embrace its cautious return.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Bing Guan/Reuters
Duane Marxen, a U.S. Army veteran, is seen next to his homemade sign and official signs supporting Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden and his running mate, Sen. Kamala Harris, at a Biden campaign yard sign distribution site in Madison, Wisconsin, Oct. 17, 2020.

It’s common to see assumptions being made about political party affiliations based on individuals’ occupational identities. We drill into a particularly outdated and stubborn case in point.

Here’s another story about how mindset matters. In this case, too, an emerging shift in thought could ease a situation some judge to be dangerous.

A letter from

Colorado
Evan Vucci/AP
President Donald Trump boards Air Force One for a trip to Gastonia, N.C., to attend a campaign rally, Oct. 21, 2020, at Andrews Air Force Base, Maryland.

In the first of two writers’ perspective pieces today, our Washington bureau chief takes us aboard Air Force One as a fraught election season makes its final approach.

Essay

AP
A girl hugs her grandmother as they take refuge in a bomb shelter in Stepanakert, the separatist region of Nagorno-Karabakh. Heavy fighting between Armenia and Azerbaijan continued this week as another ceasefire collapsed.

You may still be catching up about the region over which Armenia and Azerbaijan are fighting. A veteran reporter’s then-and-now take provides essential context.

Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff
Formerly homeless, Rosa Febo and her daughter, Melanie Bergos, pose in the hallway of the building where they recently got a subsidized apartment, Oct. 5, 2020, in the New York City neighborhood of Harlem. Melanie is learning remotely, but Ms. Febo worries about the internet being shut off due to unpaid bills.

For students experiencing homelessness, school represents structure, continuity of care, and security. We look at how that informs new policy in America’s largest school district.

Points of Progress

What's going right

Our half-dozen progress points this week show gains for some of the planet’s farmers, fathers, finned creatures, and more. Click through and feel a little better about the world.


The Monitor's View

Reuters
People queue to vote early at a polling station in New York City, Oct. 25.

When asked by California to help it prevent Russian interference in the Nov. 3 elections, the Rand think tank didn’t focus too much on ways to block Russia’s attempts to use online falsehoods to divide Americans and push them to extremes.

Rather, in a study released in October, Rand’s national security experts gave this advice: Convince Americans “they have more in common with those who are different from them than they may believe at first glance.”

The best antidote to anyone trying to manufacture conflict between people (which includes far more than Russia) is to help people “reach a consensus – a bedrock of American democracy,” the Rand report stated.

California need not look too far for nonpartisan initiatives already helping people find common ground through “principles that bring us together,” as one group puts it. They include Braver Angels, the Hidden Common Ground 2020 initiative, America Amplified, the Bridge Alliance, and the National Issues Forums.

Such groups share a belief that a divided society is not inevitable. They already have much going for them. More than two-thirds of Americans believe people in the United States “have more in common with each other than many people think,” according to a 2020 survey by Harvard University’s Carr Center for Human Rights Policy.

The latest example of this trend is One Small Step, a project of public radio’s StoryCorps. It is bringing together strangers on opposite sides of the political spectrum and recording the conversation. The purpose is to help them past the dehumanization – or the “culture of contempt” – in American discourse and equip people to better deal with authentic disagreements.

A leading group in this emerging activism is More in Common, a nonprofit research group that conducts polls and offers tips on how to talk with people who disagree with you. It finds about 80% of Americans say that being pitted against each other is a threat to democracy. Perhaps that explains why the share of Americans who feel they live in a divided society has fallen from 87% to 48%, according to More in Common. The key to this political resiliency lies in local communities: Sixty-eight percent of Americans say they trust their local officials to do what is right while 57% say people in their community with different views treat each other with respect.

“With Americans feeling so divided at the national level, it is the local level, in communities and neighborhoods, where there is the greatest opportunity to build confidence in the integrity of our election,” concludes More in Common.

As political temperatures rise before the election – along with fears of foreign interference and postelection violence – these groups are showing that U.S. society is stronger and more unified than many headlines depict. Americans enjoy their shared experiment in self-government. When reminded, they want to keep it.


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.

There’s a groundswell of voices speaking out about humanity’s need to overcome racism. Realizing that everyone has innate value as God’s child empowers us to fearlessly love others in a way that can turn a menacing situation around – as a young mother experienced when the Ku Klux Klan showed up at her door.


A message of love

Rodrigo Garrido/Reuters
Supporters of the “I Approve” option react after hearing the results of the referendum on a new Chilean Constitution in Valparaiso, Chile, Oct. 25, 2020. More than three-quarters of the country voted to rewrite the country’s constitution, which dates to the military rule of Gen. Augusto Pinochet.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris and Staff. )

A look ahead

Workers with disabilities have sought accommodations for home-based work for years. Our video report reveals how the pandemic has driven others to consider issues that one group has long confronted. 

As always, find today’s faster-moving stories – including on Judge Amy Coney Barrett – over on our First Look page.

More issues

2020
October
26
Monday

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