2020
November
17
Tuesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

November 17, 2020
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In America it seems to be a season of exhaustion. There’s public weariness with social distancing rules as social holidays approach. There’s political fatigue after a divisive election. And many health care workers feel near the end of their physical and emotional strength as COVID-19 caseloads rise.

For some it may be tempting to capitulate to the weariness. Headlines tell us that coronavirus vaccines are coming, as is a new president. Can we just wait things out?

Whether or not one is hopeful for positive changes in 2021, there’s a case for meeting fatigue right now with compassion and the steadiness of persistence. And many Americans are doing just that. 

Last week, Airbnb CEO Brian Chesky pledged a gift of $10 million to support pandemic front-line workers. “As we go into the holiday season, many of them will continue to work almost impossibly long hours to serve others and save lives,” Mr. Chesky said. 

Linda Feldmann’s lead story in today’s Daily explores what President-elect Joe Biden can do during these next few transitional months. 

Congress has its own fatigue test after months of failed negotiations. Key pandemic assistance is set to expire in December, including unemployment benefits for self-employed and gig workers.

Jason Furman, a former top economist in the Obama administration, urges both sides to get busy now. For Democrats in Congress, he says, “The idea that we can get a better deal if we delay until February is both wishful thinking and ignores the suffering now.”


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

As cases spike to new highs across the United States, what role could national leadership play in helping overwhelmed states battle back against the pandemic?

Wason Wanichakorn/AP
King Maha Vajiralongkorn and Queen Suthida greet supporters in Bangkok, Nov. 1, 2020. Amid pressure from protesters demanding reforms to the monarchy, Thailand's king and queen met with thousands of supporters after attending a religious ceremony inside the Grand Palace.

Criticizing the monarchy is outlawed in Thailand. But protesters demanding royal reforms run up against another hurdle, too: Adoration for the king is a pillar of many citizens’ understanding of their country.

A deeper look

Courtesy of Megan Todd
Wes Todd works from his “office” outside his RV on the Outer Banks of North Carolina in October. After the pandemic closed his office in San Jose, California, Mr. Todd and his wife decided to trade their apartment for a mobile home.

People often live where they do because of their jobs. But with the pandemic forcing so much remote work, many have moved to places they’d like to live rather than have to live. It’s a glimpse of how work and home may change in the future. 

Carlos Garcia Rawlins/Reuters
A man rides past an advertisement for “Mulan” at a bus stop in Beijing on Sept. 9, 2020. Disney was criticized for including shots filmed on location in the Xinjiang region of China, where Uyghurs and Kazakhs are being held in “reeducation camps.”

How much do ethics matter to moviegoers? When Hollywood glosses over or ignores China’s record on human rights to gain access to its vast market, filmmakers test what consumers will tolerate to be entertained.

Watch

Every stitch tells a story: A Black quilter confronts injustice

For generations of Black women, quilting has been a way to tell stories and protest injustice. In this video, we profile a world-renowned quilter whose work has taken a new turn as the country wrestles with racism. 

Every stitch tells a story: a Black quilter confronts injustice


The Monitor's View

AP
Leaders of 15 countries pose Nov. 15 for a virtual group photo after signing on to a trade bloc called the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP).

On Sunday, 15 Asian nations signed one of the largest free-trade deals in history, covering about 30% of the world’s population. On Jan. 1, more than 30 African countries will start to implement a free-trade zone from Cairo to Cape Town. And this year, a number of Arab countries have set up economic ties with tech-savvy Israel and also decided, in response to COVID-19, to establish a food supply network.

In an era of populist backlash to globalization, these sorts of agreements aren’t suppose to happen. And with the pandemic, the disruption to the movement of people and goods has chilled the world economy. All this contributes to what The Economist calls “slowbalisation,” or less interest by nations in a dependency on global supply chains.

In the United States, hostility to the impact of globalization on workers could cause the incoming Biden administration to be as wary of trade deals as President Donald Trump. “As president, I will not enter into any new trade agreements until we have invested in Americans and equipped them to succeed in the global economy,” wrote now President-elect Joe Biden in a Foreign Affairs article last spring. He also promised a “buy American” approach to trade.

Even with the headwinds against interdependence, nations still search for trade deals. Why? A big reason is they realize domestic growth depends heavily on the flow of ideas across borders. Closing off imports of physical goods can hinder the import of intangible goods, such as the latest research in digital technologies.

“Ideas are different from all other goods in that they can be used simultaneously by any number of people,” writes a group of Stanford University scholars in the American Economic Review. “Economic growth arises from people creating ideas.”

Despite a pandemic and populist sentiments against globalization, countries need each other to build an “innovation economy.” From 2004 to 2014, the flow of knowledge accounted for about 40% of the growth in global productivity, finds the International Monetary Fund. That flow is needed now more than ever. “The unstoppable advance of digital technologies might provide a new tailwind to ensure the continuing growth in [global value chains] activity worldwide,” said economist Pol Antràs of Harvard University in a speech at the European Central Bank last week.

The new Asia trade pact is just the latest signal of a desire for progress through shared ideas rather than protectionism. The European Union is also aggressively seeking trade deals while shoring up its own success in breaking down trade barriers among its member states. The capacity to tap ideas yet underutilized or undiscovered knows no boundaries.


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.

When he and his colleagues were unexpectedly targeted by a volatile crowd, a law enforcement officer turned to God – and experienced God’s healing power protecting both the police and crowds from violence. This idea can inspire our prayers to support peaceful progress and solutions in Thailand, Belarus, and beyond.


A message of love

Aaron Favila/AP
People push strollers full of belongings they retrieved from their homes after Typhoon Vamco damaged their village in Rodriguez, Rizal province, Philippines, on Nov. 17, 2020. The storm left dozens of people dead as it swelled rivers and flooded low-lying areas.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for being with us today. See you again tomorrow, with stories including a Colorado ballot measure on wolves and whether it could create a model for state-level conservation efforts.

More issues

2020
November
17
Tuesday

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