2022
August
04
Thursday

Monitor Daily Podcast

August 04, 2022
Loading the player...

Six games. That’s the suspension given to Deshaun Watson, one of the highest paid quarterbacks in the NFL. The punishment announced Monday by a retired federal judge was for violating the NFL’s personal conduct policy.

Sue Robinson was hired as an independent arbiter to deliver consistency and fairness to NFL punishments. But thanks to outcry over the six-game wrist slap, the NFL now wants a do-over.

Mr. Watson was accused by 25 massage therapists of unwanted sexual contact. Mr. Watson has settled 23 of 24 civil lawsuits. Two Texas grand juries declined to charge him. But Ms. Robinson described his behavior as “egregious” and “predatory.” The NFL’s investigation, she wrote in her 16-page decision, proved, “by a preponderance of the evidence, that Mr. Watson engaged in sexual assault (as defined by the NFL).” 

Her findings made the six-game suspension (in a 17-game season) “mystifying and disheartening,” wrote NFL.com columnist Judy Battista.

Ms. Robinson’s justification: “I am bound by standards of fairness and consistency,” she wrote. To date in the NFL, “the most commonly-imposed discipline for domestic or gendered violence and sexual acts is a 6-game suspension.”

But by relying on past erratic and arguably inadequate NFL punishments, by leaning on a standard of giving fair notice to players of any penalty change, and by ignoring the societal context of the #MeToo movement, Ms. Robinson appeared to prize consistency and fairness for players over a broader sense of fairness and justice for women. In the future, if an NFL player sexually assaults a woman – or 25 women – will six games always be the maximum penalty? What would justify a longer suspension?

The NFL is an entertainment enterprise and nearly half of its fans are women. On Wednesday, the NFL commissioner, who wanted a full-season suspension, took steps to toughen Mr. Watson’s punishment. The NFL players union is likely to object, and all sides will end up in court. Still, the NFL’s move to challenge the arbiter’s decision, despite more legal costs and prolonging its PR problem, adds some credibility to the league’s claims to care about the well-being of women.


You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.

Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

AP/File
The U.S. Supreme Court in Washington, May 16, 1935. The court has now emerged as the ultimate “decider” on a host of important issues.

An effective democracy includes checks and balances between the judicial, executive, and legislative branches. Our reporter looks at why the U.S. is no longer a global model of balance – and who does it better. 

Denis Kaminev/AP/File
Journalists work in a newsroom of the Dozhd (Rain) TV channel in Moscow, Aug. 20, 2021. Russian authorities designated the channel as a "foreign agent," ultimately forcing it to leave its Moscow studios and find a new base of operations in Riga, Latvia.

The Russian news landscape looks a lot like it did during the Soviet era – mostly state-run media and few independent voices in the country. But our reporter finds some resourceful ways news outlets are countering Kremlin propaganda. 

Amr Nabil/AP
A man buys food at a popular restaurant in Cairo, March 22, 2022. The app Tekeya is working to counter food waste.

Egypt throws out more food than almost any nation in the world. One food waste solution: an app that connects restaurants with an organization that distributes leftovers to charities serving needy people.

Essay

Karen Norris/Staff

In this delightful essay, we learn that neighborliness in Italy has less to do with a shared language and more to do with shared fruits and nuts. 


The Monitor's View

A turbulent Middle East needs centers of calm to curtail its conflicts, and one showed up – again – this week. It came, rather tellingly, just before Iran and the United States restarted talks over the revival of their defunct nuclear agreement. In fact, a two-month extension of a truce in war-ravaged Yemen on Tuesday was due in large part to Oman, a small, poor country on the edge of the Arabian Peninsula whose even-tempered and tranquil mediation helped cement the original 2015 nuclear deal.

Leaders in Oman were able to renew a 4-month-old truce in neighboring Yemen by once again acting as a trustworthy facilitator through back-channel diplomacy. The Middle East needs “an environment of calm,” Omani Foreign Minister Sayyid Badr Albusaidi told the Al-Monitor news website, and the best approach is through “avenues for dialogue” with everyone.

Omani diplomats were crucial go-betweens in persuading Iran-aligned Houthi rebels to renew the truce, which began April 2, with a Saudi-backed Yemeni coalition. The cessation of hostilities has kept a seven-year war on hold, saving lives and allowing humanitarian aid to flow to more than two-thirds of Yemen’s 30 million people in dire need.

The truce also opens a door for a permanent solution to the political divide inside Yemen, a country that saw a brief period of democracy after the 2011 Arab Spring. And the latest agreement may be a bellwether that Iran is ready to compromise with the U.S. in the nuclear talks.

Inclusiveness, stated Oman’s foreign minister, is the country’s core value. “For the future there is no other avenue but to have an understanding to talk with each other directly, not at each other, to reach that ultimate goal of understanding and cooperation,” he said.

Oman’s diplomats are well practiced at being serene and equable listeners. “We will continue to believe in the power of dialogue,” said the foreign minister. Such calm trust is a necessary antidote to the guns and swagger of the Middle East.


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.

Even in difficult economic times, solutions are always within reach when we start from the premise of God’s law of abundant goodness.


A message of love

Evgenia Novozhenina/AP
WNBA star and two-time Olympic gold medalist Brittney Griner, in a cage at a courtroom hearing in Khimki, Russia, Aug. 4, 2022, was sentenced to nine years in prison. The White House has offered Russia a prisoner swap to bring home both Ms. Griner and American businessman Paul Whelan. Press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said Thursday they would make “every effort to bring our people home.”

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us. Come back tomorrow: We’ve got a story about Americans rediscovering the joy of riding the rails.

More issues

2022
August
04
Thursday

Give us your feedback

We want to hear, did we miss an angle we should have covered? Should we come back to this topic? Or just give us a rating for this story. We want to hear from you.