2021
January
05
Tuesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

January 05, 2021
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Mark Sappenfield
Senior global correspondent

For the National Football League, the end of the regular season Monday marked the beginning of something else. Can the league finally begin to make headway on hiring coaches of color?

Three coaches were fired Monday, and of all the major American sports leagues that have significant racial diversity, the NFL has the worst record in hiring coaches of color. This season, 13% of NFL coaches were minorities, compared with 74% of players. That declined further Monday; one of the three fired coaches is Black.

Yet elsewhere Monday, diversity made gains. The Boston Red Sox announced that it has hired Bianca Smith as a minor league coach, making her the first Black woman to coach in professional baseball. And in November, the Miami Marlins went further, making Kim Ng the first female general manager in any of the major men’s pro leagues. Last week, assistant coach Becky Hammon became the first woman to take charge of a National Basketball Association team during a game when the head coach of the San Antonio Spurs was ejected.

Barriers are falling, and many Black coaches in the NFL are distinguishing themselves, whether coach of the year candidate Brian Flores or offensive mastermind Eric Bienemy. The coming month is not just the road to the Super Bowl, but a chance to take a step forward.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

The decision to contest the results of the presidential election is forcing some Republicans into a choice many dread: whether to oppose President Trump.

Patterns

Tracing global connections

Some precautions have not changed since the 1918 Spanish flu pandemic. But the need for global cooperation to combat COVID-19 is clearer in our newly connected world.

Megan Janetsky
Isabel Navarro at the front of her empty store near a pedestrian border crossing in Nogales, Arizona, on Dec. 19, 2020. Cross-border traffic by shoppers has evaporated due to pandemic restrictions, and she has had to close two of four shops she owns.

The economy on the U.S.-Mexico border has long been a little bit different. But this past year has been unlike any other.

#TeamUp

Courtesy of Emily Kikta Peter Walker/Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater
Members of the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater perform Jamar Roberts’ “A Jam Session for Troubling Times.”

2020 wasn’t all bad. Our columnist found enrichment and uplift through two of the industries most upended by the pandemic: the arts and education.

Taylor Luck
A resident carrying vegetables passes through an archway proudly claiming "Capital of Edom," in the town of Busayra, southern Jordan, Oct. 11, 2020.

Residents of the town built on the ruins of a biblical empire’s capital don’t know if they are descended from the Edomites. But the history, they insist, is their inheritance.


The Monitor's View

AP
Activists light candles spelling 'Fight For 1 Point 5' in front of the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin Dec. 11, 2020. The number refers to hopes for limiting global warming.

Buried in the $900 billion, 5,593-page economic stimulus bill recently passed by Congress – by far the longest bill ever passed by that body – lies a significant boost to efforts to address global warming: some $35 billion that will fund solar, wind, geothermal, and other clean energy programs. 

Is it a big deal? “This is perhaps the most significant climate legislation Congress has ever passed,” Grant Carlisle, a senior policy adviser at the Natural Resources Defense Council, told The Washington Post.

During his campaign President-elect Joe Biden vowed to make climate change one of his top priorities, along with defeating the pandemic and repairing its economic damage. These new funds give his efforts a kick-start.

So will some $40 billion in loans available to the Department of Energy, funds allotted to the agency but not used under the previous administration. 

Together they still represent a tiny fraction of the spending that will be needed to curb global warming in coming years. The Biden plan offsets some of that cost through programs that promote a robust clean energy economy, generating many new jobs. 

To what extent Congress will go along remains to be seen. Which party controls the Senate, to be determined by today’s election of two senators in Georgia, will be a factor. But regardless of that outcome bipartisan cooperation will be important.

Dec. 12, 2020, marked five years since the adoption of the Paris Agreement, signed by nearly 200 countries, that called for vigorous efforts to cut climate-warming emissions. It seeks to halt global warming before it reaches an additional 1.5 degrees Celsius (or, at worst, 2 degrees C). Research and current models predict that exceeding these levels could have disastrous effects on global weather. While some progress has been made, the 2 C threshold may be exceeded as early as 2034, the World Economic Forum says.

Mr. Biden has pledged that the United States will rejoin the Paris Agreement, which the U.S. left under President Donald Trump.

While the pandemic did cut world greenhouse gas emissions by an estimated 7% to 8% in 2020, emissions are expected to soar again as world economies recover. 

2020 also saw vast wildfires tear through forests from Australia to the U.S. West. Arctic sea ice shrank to an extent exceeded only once before. The Mojave Desert in the U.S. hit the highest temperature ever recorded, 54.4 degrees C (130 degrees Fahrenheit). And 2020 may be one of the two hottest years on record. 

Plenty of evidence can be cited raising concerns that global warming is already underway.

But new hope has emerged too. Earlier climate models assumed that global warming is baked into Earth’s future for decades, if not centuries, to come, regardless of what is done now. 

That no longer looks to be true. If greenhouse gas emissions can be brought down to net zero, the warming will level off, says climate scientist Joeri Rogelj at the Imperial College London, and “the climate will stabilize within a decade or two. There will be very little to no additional warming. Our best estimate is zero.”

That encouraging news should help dispel a sense of despair or hopelessness about climate change. The world is capable of making changes that will head off a disaster and assure a livable world in coming decades. 

2021 now becomes a crucial year to step up international efforts to bring about that brighter climate future.


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.

“Crowned with goodness” may seem an unlikely descriptor of 2020 and the start of 2021. But the recognition that God imparts goodness to His children at every moment empowers us to feel and share God’s love, care, and peace more fully.


A message of love

Chinatopix/AP
Visitors tour the annual Harbin Ice and Snow World in Harbin in northeast China's Heilongjiang province on Jan. 5, 2021. In recent years the event has become known as the largest ice and snow festival in the world.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris and Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thank you for joining us today. Please come back tomorrow when we look at President-elect Joe Biden’s relationships in the Senate and how they could shape his administration.

More issues

2021
January
05
Tuesday

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