2019
March
05
Tuesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

March 05, 2019
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The United States is slowly rebuilding its stairway to the heavens.

This week, there’s a buzz around a space capsule carrying a crash-test dummy named Ripley (after the character played by Sigourney Weaver in the movie “Aliens”). The SpaceX capsule became the first privately built and operated American spacecraft, designed for humans, to dock at the International Space Station. For eight years now, the US has paid Russia to hitch a ride to the ISS.

The SpaceX capsule still needs to safely return to Earth Friday (we’re working on a story about the revival of launching astronauts from US soil). If all goes to plan, Ripley will give up her seat to live astronauts as soon as this summer. The next destinations: the moon and Mars. 

The SpaceX achievement is praiseworthy progress. But amid protests over police injustice in Sacramento, Calif., the politics of US border security, and a power struggle in Venezuela, NASA astronaut Anne McClain gave me pause by putting a larger frame of hope around this week’s events.

"Spaceflight gives us a chance to reflect on the context of our existence. We are reminded that we are human before any of our differences, before all of the lines are drawn that divide us," she said Sunday. "These events remind us that we are more alike than different, that we can be united by a cause that is not based on fear, threat, or a common enemy, but rather on a bold endeavor…."

Now to our five selected stories, including the tension between justice and loyalty in Israel, new incentives for teachers, and why Netflix wants to make films in Africa. 


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Dan Balilty/AP/File
A 2015 campaign poster with the image of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu sat among ballot papers at his party's election headquarters, in Tel Aviv, in March of that year. New elections are less than 40 days away.

D.C. Decoder

As ‘sandwich generation’ rises, corporate culture is slow to adapt

SOURCE:

"The Caring Company," a report by Joseph B. Fuller and Manjari Raman of Harvard Business School.

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Jacob Turcotte and Mark Trumbull/Staff
Marcio Jose Sanchez/AP/File
Kindergarten teacher Katy Howser looks out from her apartment balcony in Santa Clara, Calif., in December 2015. Providing and subsidizing housing for teachers is one way school districts in rural and high cost-of-living areas are addressing teacher shortages.
Ilze Kitshoff/Netflix
Chiwetel Ejiofor and Maxwell Simba perform in 'The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind,' a Netflix-carried film directed by Mr. Ejiofor that is set in rural Malawi and acted mostly in a local language, Chichewa.

The Monitor's View

Reuters
South Korean President Moon Jae-in and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un shake hands at the demilitarized zone separating the two Koreas on April 27, 2018.

A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

A message of love

Fabian Bimmer/Reuters
A steelworker prepares a steel cylinder at the German firm Salzgitter AG in Salzgitter, Germany, March 5.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us. Come back tomorrow to learn why our reporter was met with hostility in Turkey when he showed up at a tent selling cut-rate vegetables.

More issues

2019
March
05
Tuesday
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