2021
March
04
Thursday

Monitor Daily Podcast

March 04, 2021
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Laurent Belsie
Senior Economics Writer

Here’s a head-scratcher: Thieves don’t want to steal your car. They just want to saw off your tailpipe and grab the catalytic converter.

The phenomenon is common in Britain, and thousands of reports of catalytic converter heists are popping up in the United States, The Washington Post reports. The reason? Rhodium, a silver-white metal that serves as a cautionary tale about how economics and technology can make commodity prices suddenly soar – and plunge.

Rhodium, it turns out, is highly effective at filtering out a nasty pollutant from car emissions. And it’s in short supply.

In the past three years, prices have skyrocketed from $1,700 to $27,000 an ounce, more than 15 times pricier than gold. And we won’t see a surge in supply anytime soon because rhodium is a byproduct of platinum production, and there’s such a glut of platinum that even high rhodium prices won’t kick-start new production.

But don’t push the rhodium panic button just yet. A decade ago, Western nations fretted about China’s limited bans on exports of rare earth minerals. The doomsayers turned out to be wrong, in part because companies found substitutes. So this time car companies may find a way to retool catalytic converters – or they’ll just start selling more electric vehicles.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Mike Segar/Reuters
An electronic billboard displays a message that reads "Resign Now" in reference to New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, in the wake of allegations that he sexually harassed young women, in Albany, New York, on March 3, 2021.

Where is the right place to draw the line when it comes to personal behavior for public officials? Allegations against Gov. Andrew Cuomo, a prominent Democrat, have renewed soul-searching within his party.

Denis Farrell/AP
A pedestrian wearing a mask to protect against COVID-19 passes a wall mural on a sidewalk in Johannesburg on Feb. 24, 2021.

Vaccine hesitancy in Africa is often rooted in distrust, shaped by a long history of inequality. An effective pandemic response includes addressing those doubts.

Repeated failures in the U.S. to mitigate the downsides of gentrification may indicate that a different approach is needed – one that depends on a common understanding of what it means to be a neighborhood.

Books

Courtesy of Panam.org
A service member takes a photo of a group of Pan Am flight attendants in Saigon, Vietnam, in the 1960s. The flights ferried soldiers in and out of Vietnam.

American society in the mid-20th century placed strictures on women’s ambition. But some were able to gain independence in ways that helped change attitudes and laid the groundwork for greater numbers of women pursuing fulfilling careers.

On Film

Michael Dweck and Gregory Kershaw/Sony Pictures Classics
Aurelio and Birba, with her renowned nose for subterranean fungi, star in the documentary “The Truffle Hunters.”

Tony foods and dogs don’t usually mix. But as this Oscar-shortlisted documentary endearingly depicts, you sometimes can’t have one without the other.


The Monitor's View

AP
Two woman shop at the Belleville market in Paris, Feb. 9.

In a new book about Black Christianity in America, Harvard professor Henry Louis Gates Jr. offers a lively portrait of an institution that has done as much to shape the character of the United States as it has for Black people themselves. The Black Church, he writes, is a story in three parts: “of a people defining themselves in the presence of a higher power”; “of their journey to freedom and equality in a land where power itself – and even humanity – for so long was (and still is) denied them”; and of the secular contributions to American culture, justice, and knowledge that were forged in its pews.

“It’s the place where we made a way out of no way,” Dr. Gates writes in “The Black Church: This is Our Story, This is Our Song.”

That history holds lessons not only for the U.S. of today but for Europe as well, especially in its relationship with Muslim minority communities. Most of those Muslims have roots in former European colonies, both Arab and African, and are struggling to find their place in societies that are dominantly Christian or secular – and that are often less than welcoming.

While the U.S. has seen progress for its minorities over decades, France, which is host to Europe’s largest Muslim population, has only begun to deal with its challenging issues with that minority group. Later this month the French Senate is expected to put the finishing touches on a bill that, while not explicitly mentioning Islam, is clearly designed to regulate its structure and practice in France. It includes a ban on online hate speech, restrictions on foreign funding for mosques, added regulations for home schooling, and a certification program for Islamic imams in France.

The bill emerged after attacks by Islamist extremists last October, including the beheading of a teacher for using cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad during a lesson on free speech. Critics see the bill as political pandering and deeply discriminatory. Islamophobia is already shaping debates ahead of regional elections in June and next year’s presidential election. A poll in January showed right-wing populist Marine Le Pen, a persistent opponent of Islam, trailing President Emmanuel Macron by just a few points.

Mr. Macron argues that the purpose of the bill is to reinforce his country’s unique tradition of secularism. He appears to have an unlikely ally. In France, freedom of religion means freedom from another person’s public practice of their faith. That ideal enjoys broad support among Muslims.

An Ipsos survey last year found that 81% of French Muslims had a positive view of secularism, 82% said they were proud to be French, and 77% said they had no trouble practicing Islam.

Moderate Muslim leaders argue the bill’s ban on foreign financing and influence will help French Muslims practice Islam in ways that are consistent with France’s secular principles. The important point, they argue, is to support change from within the mosque.

“Islam must be reformed, no longer political. It has to assume that the laws of the 7th century sharia are not valid in the 21st century,” argues Razika Adnani, a member of the Foundation for Islam of France. “The state cannot enter religious affairs, but it demands that Muslims reform their religion.”

Islam’s steady growth in Europe is forcing the Continent to adjust to the changing composition of its societies. Economic discrimination and racism against Muslims – one of the drivers of radicalization – require urgent remedies. As refuges for those who are marginalized, Europe’s mosques, like America’s Black churches, can be rich incubators for good – partners in the pursuit of a mutual accommodation and recognition of the dignity in everyone.


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.

As we learn more of our nature as God’s children, it becomes easier to let go of unhelpful ways of thinking and acting – as a woman experienced after pride and self-righteousness led her down an undesirable path.


A message of love

Courtesy of Viktor Lyagushkin/Reuters
A diver uses a light to explore artworks under the ice of the White Sea off the coast of the Republic of Karelia, Russia, on Feb. 26, 2021. Paintings and sculptures by artist Denis Lotarev and works by photographer Viktor Lyagushkin were placed under the water and accessible to divers until the ice melts.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

That’s all for today. Join us tomorrow when we look at the world’s leverage to counter Myanmar’s coup.

More issues

2021
March
04
Thursday

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