2020
December
07
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

December 07, 2020
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Clayton Collins
Director of Editorial Innovation

Never mind if you’re unsure whether it’s pronounced “giff” or “jiff,” or if you’ve never pushed one into a social media feed and never plan to. 

The Graphics Interchange Format, or GIF, has long been a standard cultural currency, a premade animation for conveying how users want others to know they feel, or how good they are at finding clever clips. (Its cousin, the pop-culture-savvy meme, isn’t necessarily animated.)

Now we’ve arrived at year’s end, when the best-ofs and other compilations roll out to help define the zeitgeist of the past dozen months.

There is, of course, a list of most-viewed GIFs.

Consider what you know about the internet. How snark has become its lingua franca. How it can be an accelerant of hateful side-taking in a time of dug-in sides. You might think GIF traffic would reflect that mood.

It doesn’t, according to Giphy, which calls itself the “first and largest” GIF search engine. 

“Amid all of the craziness this year, love and thoughtfulness dominated the Top 25 Most-Viewed GIFs of 2020,” the site found in its audit. No. 1, with more than 1 billion views: a tail-wagging cartoon dog expressing gratitude for “all the selfless humans” leading the pandemic fight. After that? A grateful-hands GIF, an “I love you,” and a virtual hug. 

You have to get to No. 8, below Elmo’s happy dance, to find a chippy one – a dumpster fire. Below that sits a raised fist with a mask. Its message: “We will get through this.”


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Pandemic management is one big part of the coming U.S. political handoff. So is changing tack around the economy. We looked at where shared interests may offer cross-aisle promise. 

Richard Mertens
Nancy Dumpke (right) is owner of The Cobbler's Cabinet, a shoe store in Shawano, Wisconsin, that has required masks for many months. Her employee Cathy Sengstock (left), a Republican voter, says she wears a mask most of the time to protect a disabled brother.

The news tells us that communal behavior can’t be brought about by pleas alone. We take a county-level look at whether bleaker conditions, and a new top-down ask, might bring change.

A deeper look

Andrew Vaughan/The Canadian Press/AP
Members of the Sipekne’katik First Nation head out from the wharf in Saulnierville, Nova Scotia, after the launch of a self-regulated fishery in September 2020.

This next story, too, is about social recalibration: Canada’s handling of a dispute in a maritime province is really about addressing old divides that are both cultural and economic.

Sunday Alamba/AP
Women wearing face masks sell food stuffs at a market in Lagos Nigeria, May 4, 2020.

Doing well by doing good is a pro-social business formula. We explore how bringing more gender equality to the funding of new enterprises across Africa can bring profits, too.

Points of Progress

What's going right
Staff

Norway broadens its hate-speech ban, women flex their digital skills in the Middle East, marine life gains protection in the South Atlantic, and more. A spirit of equality and opportunity colors this week’s global progress roundup.


The Monitor's View

Reuters
U.S. Senators' Lisa Murkowski (R), Jeane Shaheen (D), and Mitt Romney (R) listen as Bill Cassidy (R) speaks about a framework for coronavirus relief legislation Dec. 1.

US President-elect Joe Biden, who has promised to “bind the wounds of division” among Americans, must be pleased with a change of tone in Congress a month after the election. Top leaders in both parties are not only talking to each other about a new coronavirus relief package, but also nearing a compromise that would give close to $1 trillion to individuals, businesses, and states.

Perhaps by ending their long divide over a second aid package, lawmakers will help the next president achieve even greater feats of bipartisan consensus.

Mr. Biden also says he “doesn’t see red states and blue states.” That befits his 36 years in the Senate cutting deals with rivals he warmly embraced as family. “I love you,” he told Republican Sen. Jesse Helms in 1999 after the two passed a measure to restore funding for the State Department. Genuine affection between opponents, built on honesty and respect, is a proven lubricant for successful legislation.

As a lawmaker, Mr. Biden had a knack for focusing on realities that neither side on Capitol Hill could ignore. COVID-19, like the Cold War during his time in Congress, has helped force Congress to overcome some “wounds of division.” The proposed relief package won’t satisfy everybody, Mr. Biden says, “but the option is, if you insist on everything, we’re likely to get nothing on both sides.”

Some call that pragmatism. Mr. Biden suggests such bipartisanship is national healing. While the former vice president won the election decisively, he recognizes many voters split their tickets, giving victories to Republicans in state races and gains in the House. Both parties also saw voters giving a thumbs-down to many extreme candidates.

“Americans are inherently optimistic,” concludes Time magazine’s wrap-up of the year 2020. “It’s why our allies like us, even if they secretly mock us behind our backs – but we don’t care!” Mr. Biden’s own optimism will probably lead him to focus on many bipartisan opportunities, such as infrastructure. His tenure in the Oval Office could be remembered like that of Ronald Reagan, Bill Clinton, and George W. Bush, all of whom passed major bills with the opposing party.

Being “a president for all Americans,” as Mr. Biden promises, might already be off to a good start in the lame-duck Congress.


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.

Sometimes humanity’s problems can feel overwhelming, and we may struggle to see the light at the end of the tunnel. But letting God, divine Love, steer our thoughts and actions opens the door to unity, healing, and progress.


A message of love

Ashlee Benc/Kangaroo Island Land for Wildlife/Reuters
A pygmy possum is held as conservation efforts continue following last summer's bushfire on Kangaroo Island, Australia, Dec. 2, 2020. The world’s smallest possum hadn’t been spotted since the wildfires and was one of several small animals, including Bibron’s toadlet, found at 20 fauna sites on the island.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for starting another week with us. Come back tomorrow. We’ll be looking at what vaccine prioritization says about the value that society places on different community segments.

As always, click over to our First Look page to see the faster-moving stories we’re watching. 

More issues

2020
December
07
Monday

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