2021
August
18
Wednesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

August 18, 2021
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Sometimes, lately, we are not ourselves.   

Angry Americans, we reported last week, are taking out their frustrations on servers, flight attendants, hotel clerks, and all kinds of frontline workers. 

Tammy Stirk Ramsey saw the face of rage on July 5 at the Union Bluff Hotel in York, Maine. After waiting more than an hour to be seated for dinner, a man blew up, swore at the host, and stomped out. 

But what he did next is noteworthy: He sent a letter of apology and included a $100 bill.

“I feel bad. This coming from a guy who tells people to be kind to service staff and tip big post-pandemic – how hypocritical,” he wrote, in part. “You never want to be ‘that guy’ and that day I was ‘that guy’ – sincerely sorry.”  Signed: “An embarrassed customer.”

Kudos to him for saying I had a bad day,” Ms. Ramsey told News Center Maine. 

She’s worked at the hotel for 25 years. She’s got a thick skin, she says. But this has been a difficult period. “I really just want people to know that we’re working our hardest, we’re working long hours, we’re understaffed,” Ms. Ramsey told WBZ-TV in Boston. For the first time during the busy summer months, the restaurant is closed Wednesday and Thursday nights this week to “give staff a break,” says manager Tracy Knowles.

Ms. Ramsey asks patrons: “Just be patient, be kind, be understanding, and smile.”

It doesn’t hurt to also be generous. Ms. Ramsey split the $100 with the servers at the hotel.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

U.S NAVY/Central Command Public Affairs/Sgt. Isaiah Campbell/Reuters
A Marine assigned to the 24th Marine Expeditionary Unit escorts a State Department employee to be processed for evacuation at Hamid Karzai International Airport, in Kabul, Afghanistan, in this photo taken Aug. 15, 2021, and released by the U.S. Navy Aug. 18.

We look at what the fall of Afghanistan says about America’s efforts to credibly partner with allies and spread democratic values – and what lessons might be learned.

If you talk to those who fought in Afghanistan, as our reporter did, the Afghan army’s defeat was less about guns and ammo, or even strategy, and more about the lack of honest leadership and accountability by U.S. and Afghan officials.

Doug Struck
These cloud seeders fly their planes close to thunderstorms to try to prompt precipitation. They're spending the summer near the airport in Bowman, North Dakota, ready to go aloft on short notice. Pilots Tyler Couch (left) and Alex Bestul (second from left) are training pilot interns Izzy Adams and Hanna Anderson (right).

If you need rain, does cloud seeding help? Sometimes. Our reporter talks to the pilots, farmers, and scientists about the controversy surrounding this solution. 

Increasingly, playing youth sports is a serious, big business. We look at how some parents and educators are finding ways to make the games inclusive, affordable, and fun again. 

Essay

Has Alexandra
In Los Angeles, "Immersive Van Gogh," a high-tech, multimedia celebration of the work of renowned post-impressionist painter Vincent van Gogh, takes place in the former home of the iconic Amoeba Music store on Sunset Boulevard.

Multimedia immersive art shows aren’t displaying the real thing. But our reviewer suggests that’s not the point. These exhibits can still be authentically inspiring.


The Monitor's View

Pajhwok Afghan News/Handout via REUTERS
People in Jalalabad, Afghanistan, carry Afghan flags as they take part in an anti-Taliban protest Aug.18, 2021.

Is this a new Taliban?

On Tuesday, the Islamist group that now controls Afghanistan announced that women need not wear burqas (full body covering) but must wear hijabs (headscarves). Women and girls could receive an education and be allowed to attend university. Women would be welcomed to serve in government.

These few details, if actually implemented, would suggest the Taliban might have changed from their previous rule between 1996 and 2001, when they relied on harsh violence to impose their vision of a social Utopia.

What has not changed, according to Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid, is that women’s rights would be respected only “within Islamic law.” In other words, the Taliban, by force of their weapons and self-defined authority, would remain the interpreter of Islamic scripture and would define the moral behavior for Afghans.

These initial pronouncements, even if merely an insincere move to prevent a strong backlash, show the Taliban are aware of shifts among the world’s Muslims, as well as Afghans, since they last ruled. Here are just a few examples of those shifts:

In 2018, Saudi Arabia allowed women to drive. Also in that year, Iraqis united in helping to overthrow the Islamic State’s ruthless caliphate. In 2020, Sudan’s leaders agreed to enshrine the principle of “separation of religion and state” in the constitution.

In 2016, Tunisia’s largest Islamic party, Ennahda, took a remarkable step and separated its religious and political work. During pro-democracy protests in Iraq and Sudan in 2019, women were in the forefront demanding basic rights. In Egypt, women are using Islamic law (sharia) to expand their rights to divorce. And in a few Middle Eastern countries, democracy is being tried for the first time at the local level, including the right of women to vote or hold office. In Afghanistan itself, about 40% of girls have been in school and 27% of the seats in the nation’s parliament were held by women.

The issue of how the Taliban treat women is important beyond itself. The group’s apparent concessions toward women are a window into how Muslims in general are gaining new political freedoms to participate in governance and live under rule of law in which citizens are equal in determining the law.

For almost every society with religious communities, the debate is rarely easy in deciding the source of sovereignty – the basis of governing – especially societies with diverse views and practices. Does sovereignty lie with God or with religious authorities? Or do individuals have the agency to understand religious texts and express their political views through a pluralistic democracy?

In recent years, the Muslim world has accepted more individual agency and consensus politics rather than ruler-centered governance.

For a quarter century, Taliban leaders have had to operate outside Afghanistan. They once banned television; now they rely on it. They once shunned women in governance, but have learned to sit down with Afghan women during recent peace negotiations. They, like the rest of us, are being served up constant reminders of where sovereignty lies. It’s a tough lesson for any society. But a necessary one.


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.

Recognizing that all of God’s children, female and male, are forever capable, whole, and worthy is a powerful basis for our prayers in support of women’s rights in Afghanistan and elsewhere.


A message of love

Virginia Mayo/AP
Belgian British teenager Zara Rutherford speaks on the tarmac in front of her Shark Ultralight airplane prior to takeoff at the Kortrijk-Wevelgem airfield in Wevelgem, Belgium, Aug. 18, 2021. She hopes to become the youngest woman to fly around the world solo by breaking the record set in 2017 by American aviator Shaesta Waiz at the age 30.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte and Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us. Come back tomorrow: We’re working on a story about a Louisiana pastor’s determination to hold a community together after a devastating storm.

More issues

2021
August
18
Wednesday

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