2021
November
19
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

November 19, 2021
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Peter Grier
Washington editor

How would you like to host a furry guest this holiday season?

All across America overcrowded animal shelters are looking for fosters to provide temporary shelter for homeless dogs and cats. Many are running “Foster for Thanksgiving” or “Foster Through Christmas” promotions to lessen their load during one of their busiest times of year.

From Florida to California, Ohio to Oklahoma, shelters have been stressed by the pandemic. Staff have dwindled due to COVID-19 concerns. Donations have dropped off. A vet shortage has delayed rescue pet spay and neuter operations, causing a backlog in preparing animals for permanent homes.

Even short-term fostering is good for stressed animals. It gets young ones used to people – and gives people experience in handling pets.

The benefits can spread outward. Lori Irby, a Southern California woman, has fostered about 60 pets in recent years. She takes in three or four kittens at a time, cats so young they need to be bottle-fed.

She began bringing them to her work at a retirement home in Anaheim. Residents started dropping by to see them.

Long story short, the weekly “Kitten Therapy Day” at the residence has become a huge hit. A dozen or so residents attend to play with the kittens, which are put up for adoption at about the age of 8 weeks.

“For many, it’s the highlight of the week. ... There’s just something really warm and comforting about holding a purring kitten,” Ms. Kirby told The Washington Post.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Al Drago/Reuters
Speaker Nancy Pelosi holds the final tally as the U.S. House of Representatives voted along party lines to pass President Joe Biden's $1.7 trillion Build Back Better Act on Nov. 19, 2021.

The stark partisan divide over the bill reflects fundamentally different views about the role of government in Americans’ lives, particularly amid a pandemic. 

Carlos Garcia Rawlins/Reuters
Visitors walk past images of Chinese leader Xi Jinping displayed at the Museum of the Communist Party of China in Beijing, Nov. 11, 2021. Mr. Xi, nicknamed "the chairman of everything," has achieved unassailable dominance over Chinese politics.

Xi Jinping has sealed his dominance and secured an unchallenged future as China’s top leader. But doubts cloud his eventual succession.

Legal sports betting has become accepted by many in the U.S. But the public also has ethical concerns – especially about effects on young people.

As weather extremes swing from flood to drought, sometimes in the same place, a 4,000-year-old system of rainwater storage holds promise – and a way for one person, one school, and one city to have a global impact.

Listen

Michele Haddon/Bucks County Courier Times/AP
Megan Cohen, founder of The Grace Project, stands on the corner of Kensington and East Indiana avenues during her group’s weekly food and clothing distribution in Philadelphia on Oct. 8, 2020.

A stranger’s act of kindness restored hope, and changed a life

After nearly a decade of struggling with drug addiction, Megan Cohen turned her life around. At 28, she leads The Grace Project, helping those who are unhoused and needing help in Philadelphia. Episode 2 of our “People Making a Difference” podcast. 

The Grace Project

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The Monitor's View

NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center/Pat Izzo
A full-scale model of the James Webb Space Telescope, built by the prime contractor, Northrop Grumman, stands at the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland.

The space-based Hubble Space Telescope has looked farther into the cosmos than anything before it and has made great discoveries. Now it is about to be eclipsed by a telescope that will look even farther out – much farther. The long-awaited, $10 billion James Webb Space Telescope is scheduled for launch Dec. 18. In a series of hold-your-breath steps, it must travel to a stable position where Earth and the sun hold equal gravitational pull on it – about four times farther away from Earth than the moon. Then it must gingerly unfold its giant reflective mirror, much larger than Hubble’s and 100 times more powerful.

After it is fully operational next year, “the amazing science that will be shared [from the JWST] with the global community will be audacious and profound,” says Thomas Zurbuchen, associate administrator for the Science Mission Directorate at NASA.

Gazing deeper into space will mean peering farther into the past, observing galaxies that existed early in the formation of the universe. The result could be a revolutionary new understanding of how the universe evolved over the last 13.8 billion years.

“It will simply open gigantic new windows,” says Günther Hasinger, director of science at the European Space Agency. The ESA and the Canadian Space Agency are partnering with NASA on the JWST project.

In another landmark step for space exploration, a new report that is issued only once every 10 years lays out ambitious plans for using astronomy – both space-based and ground-based telescopes – to try for quantum leaps in understanding the universe. The so-called decadal survey, the result of three years of research, and based on hundreds of scientific papers and proposals, will go far toward setting the agenda for U.S. astronomy long into the future.

“The coming decades will set humanity down a path to determine whether we are alone,” the report concludes. “Life on Earth may be the result of a common process, or it may require such an unusual set of circumstances that we are the only living beings within our part of the galaxy, or even in the universe. Either answer is profound.”

More than four centuries ago, pioneering astronomers such as Johannes Kepler and Galileo Galilei used primitive telescopes to uncover thought-expanding new views of the moon’s surface, and reveal other nearby celestial objects, such as Jupiter’s moons, that were invisible to the naked eye. Now their high-tech successor, the JWST, will look out from space itself, into the deepest reaches of the universe. Once again humans are on the cusp of expanding their ability to view and comprehend what has so far surrounded them unseen.


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.

Wherever we may be, God’s angels of hope and healing are here to inspire and guide, as conveyed in this poem of prayer for migrants and refugees across the globe.


A message of love

Sean Krajacic/The Kenosha News/AP
Judge Bruce Schroeder (right) listens as the verdicts are read by Judicial Assistant Tami Mielcarek in Kyle Rittenhouse's trial at the Kenosha County Courthouse in Kenosha, Wisconsin, on Nov. 19, 2021. Mr. Rittenhouse was found not guilty on all charges related to the killing of two men and wounding of a third during protests following the August 2020 police shooting of Jacob Blake.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Come back Monday, when we’ll have an on-scene report about how Kenosha, Wisconsin, including the Black community, is reacting to the Kyle Rittenhouse verdict. And for more coverage of breaking news, see our First Look page

More issues

2021
November
19
Friday

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