2020
October
28
Wednesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

October 28, 2020
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The Los Angeles Dodgers deserve kudos for winning their first World Series in 32 years. But for a moment, let’s look at what the underdog Tampa Bay Rays taught us – and the Dodgers.

The Rays had the third lowest budget in baseball. The Dodgers had the second highest payroll. In fact, two players on the Dodgers, Clayton Kershaw and Mookie Betts, made more money this year than the entire Rays’ team.

How did the Rays even get to the World Series? Sabermetrics (aka Moneyball). It’s the school of analysis made famous by the 2002 Oakland Athletics. It uses on-field statistics to find undervalued players. Another part of this winning formula is developing young (inexpensive) players. 

But there’s more. The Rays are innovators in a sport often yoked by tradition. For example, the Rays pioneered “bullpen days.” That’s using a parade of relievers from the start of the game – instead of relying on a starting pitcher for five to six innings. It worked so well the Dodgers used the formula Tuesday night. 

“We don’t let ourselves be limited by [our financial challenges],” then Rays vice president Chaim Bloom said last year. “We use them to inspire us, to spur us to work harder and be more creative.”

Here’s the kicker: The Dodgers and the Rays are basically using the same playbook. The architect of the Rays Moneyball approach, Andrew Friedman, now works for the Dodgers. So, one lesson might be that success – for both teams – emerged from a blend of creativity and science.


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Today’s stories

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A deeper look

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Mechelle Brown gives a tour of the Greenwood Cultural Center, where she serves as program director, on Tuesday, Sept. 29, 2020, in Tulsa, Okla. The center's main exhibit commemorates the race massacre, which took place on May 31 and June 1, 1921, when a white mob attacked the Black community of Greenwood in north Tulsa.

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Republican U.S. Senate candidate John James drops his ballot with his family at City Hall in Farmington Hills, Michigan, Oct. 26, 2020. Mr. James, who is challenging Democratic incumbent Sen. Gary Peters, is a West Point graduate, Army veteran, and Detroit-area businessman.

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The Monitor's View

AP
Voters wait to cast early ballots in Cary, N.C., Oct. 15.

Soon after the hanging chad debacle of its presidential election in 2000, the United States humbly decided it was perhaps not the greatest democracy on earth. It needed foreign help to ensure the integrity of its voting process. Ever since, an unsung 57-nation body that sets the gold standard for observing foreign elections has been invited to track U.S. elections for their transparency and accountability. Now in the days before the Nov. 3 vote, the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) is back.

In contrast to the malicious foreign actors of the 2016 elections, the Vienna-based OSCE is offering an example of benevolent foreign interference. Its 100-plus observers are already in place and stand ready to be impartial judges in case American institutions, from town governments to the Supreme Court, fail at the task of determining a fair and free election.

In an election as contentious as this one, “it is all the more important to have a neutral, nonpartisan group of international observers who are taking account of the entire process,” says Urszula Gacek, a former Polish politician who leads the OSCE delegation.

The intergovernmental watchdog is being joined for the first time by the Atlanta-based Carter Center, which has monitored more than 110 elections in 39 countries over three decades. The center, founded by former President Jimmy Carter, has lately designated the U.S. as a “backsliding” democracy.

Healthy democracies elsewhere are closely watching the highly polarized contest between former Vice President Joe Biden and President Donald Trump. Those countries will need to offer “measured clarity,” writes Oxford University professor Timothy Garton Ash in the Financial Times, to “contribute, at the margin, to a more civilized US process.”

By their mere presence, foreign election observers can help build up trust in domestic institutions, especially in the complex task of mail-in voting. They serve as a reminder of international norms about democracy, from equality in voting to fairness in ballot counting. Americans are not alone in their battle over the 2020 election. They have the support of nations wanting the U.S. to again reflect the universal values of democratic government.


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 we’re feeling cynical about politics of whatever kind, we can pray to more clearly see God’s harmonious and good government in action. In this short podcast, a woman shares how this kind of prayer freed her from cynicism about office politics – and also healed her of plantar warts.


A message of love

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Priests wearing face masks as a precaution against the coronavirus leave the main shrine after Japan's Emperor Naruhito and Empress Masako paid tribute during a ceremony celebrating 100 years since the enshrinement of Emperor Meiji at Meiji Shrine in Tokyo Oct. 28, 2020.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us. Come back tomorrow for Part 2 of our podcast series on the politics of confronting racism in Tulsa, Oklahoma. 

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2020
October
28
Wednesday

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