2021
September
30
Thursday

Monitor Daily Podcast

September 30, 2021
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Mark Sappenfield
Senior global correspondent

When Monitor reader and friend Duncan Newcomer went to explore an “emotional value auction” recently, he didn’t know quite what to expect. They’re happening in town fairs across Maine, and they look like an indoor yard sale. But there’s a twist.

All the items had personal notes. The owner of a 100-year-old cast aluminum teakettle had stolen it as a teenager. “Never have forgiven myself for that transgression and I kept the kettle all these years to remind me lest I forget,” the note read. A chicken creamer always made its owner’s husband gag at the sight of cream pouring out of the chicken’s mouth – a happy memory from a hard marriage.

So how were things exchanged? With a note of one’s own. The owner would decide who got it based on the response. “I was not prepared to see something that I wanted so much,” Duncan says. The 2019 red-and-gold Chinese appointment calendar was useless. But it was exquisite, and it awakened his fascination with all things Chinese. To the owner, a Chinese college student, it was a link to home, brought to Maine to fight loneliness.

When Duncan wrote his bid, he was not even thinking about how he would also find a friend when he received the book, hand-delivered by the student and her artist mentor. “Breaking out of COVID isolation never felt so good or valuable,” he says. “Something different, not consumerist capitalism, some spiritual economy was suggested.”       


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Elizabeth Frantz/Reuters
Democratic Rep. Ilhan Omar and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi walk down the steps before taking a photo with a bipartisan group of lawmakers to honor National Recovery Month at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, Sept. 27, 2021. Representative Omar is the whip of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, which has been gaining in influence.

Amid deepening polarization, both parties have had to contend with increasingly feisty wings. The infrastructure bill shows how Democrats are managing theirs.

When an authoritarian leader runs roughshod over the law, where can judges turn? In El Salvador, some judges are turning to the international community for help.

The Explainer

Doug Murray/AP
Softball player Riley Ennis, like all NCAA female athletes at Florida Atlantic University, was invited earlier this month to sign endorsement deals with the NHL’s Florida Panthers.

The NCAA’s new policy permitting college athletes to profit on their name, image, and likeness rights is a sea change in college sports – and should empower student-athletes.

Commentary

Are talking and listening the best ways to connect with others? Our correspondent was deeply moved by a different approach.

Film

Mario Anzuoni/Reuters
A guest holds a real Oscar statuette inside “The Oscars Experience” during a media preview of the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures in Los Angeles, Sept. 21.

What role should a new museum about movies play? As Monitor film critic Peter Rainer sees it, beyond reveling in ruby slippers, the goal should be to inspire visitors to literally think big.


The Monitor's View

AP
Members of a band celebrate during a ribbon cutting ceremony to open the new Frederick Douglass Memorial Bridge in Washington, D.C., Sept. 7.

It has been difficult to find much coolheaded bipartisanship during Washington’s hothouse debate over two spending bills on infrastructure. Yet one aspect has drawn many Democratic and Republican lawmakers together. They want honest accounting for such massive spending, which could top $4 trillion. Fraud and waste of taxpayers’ money serve neither party.

One example is a set of bipartisan bills in the Senate to update the False Claims Act. That statute, called the “Lincoln Law” after being enacted during the Civil War, penalizes anyone who files false claims to the government. “In light of the trillions of dollars that Congress has appropriated recently for COVID relief, these bills are needed, more than ever, to fight the significant amounts of fraud that we are already seeing,” says Republican Sen. Charles Grassley of Iowa.

After the 2008 financial crisis, Congress pumped more than $800 billion into the economy, but with enough transparency and oversight provisions to be called a relative success in preventing fraud and waste. The package included $416 million to increase the number of inspectors general. Investigators were able to recover $11 billion from corrupt diversions of the money.

Similar provisions were put into last year’s CARES Act (the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act) and other related pandemic relief legislation that hav spent some $5 trillion. Critics wanted even tougher measures, especially in protecting whistleblowers. But the Justice Department has been able to recover at least $2 billion from fraudulent claims.

In addition, the CARES Act set up a special group of federal inspectors general called the Pandemic Response Accountability Committee. It is now seen as a model in overseeing massive federal programs.

The lesser of the two infrastructure bills in the House does have measures to prevent corruption, such as awarding grants on a competitive basis and allocating money for transparent oversight of spending. Much more can surely be added. But with the recent history of both large and emergency spending since 2008, Washington does have an active and largely bipartisan debate on fraud prevention. Such honest governance may provide a baseline for bipartisanship in passing at least one infrastructure bill.


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.

Healing in Christian Science not only includes cures for our ills, but also transforms the way we see the world around us and opens the door to even greater good.


A message of love

Susan Walsh/AP
President Joe Biden visits the Republican dugout during the congressional baseball game at Nationals Park, Sept. 29, 2021, in Washington. He is pictured with Republican Rep. Bill Huizenga of Michigan on his right in the foreground and two other players. The annual baseball game between congressional Republicans and Democrats raises money for charity.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte and Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thank you for joining us today. Please come back tomorrow when our Erika Page looks at a book club where formerly incarcerated people help each other – and themselves – to find healing.

More issues

2021
September
30
Thursday

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