2019
March
18
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

March 18, 2019
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Clayton Collins
Director of Editorial Innovation

One weekend was not enough time to absorb the events of Friday, even as we watch the situation today in the Dutch city of Utrecht.

The New Zealand attacks were reviled as an act of intolerance and hatred, triggering pushback and a healing introspection

On Friday a global demonstration of youthful unity was underway around slowing climate change. 

And in both cases the deeper story was one of connection and common values – the core components of community.

Real community is of course not the same as our current crush, hyper-connectivity, as Jenny Anderson wrote recently in Quartz. “[C]ommunity is about a series of small choices and everyday actions,” she writes, “how to spend a Saturday, what to do when a neighbor falls ill…. Knowing others and being known.”

What it’s not about, she wrote: a frantic exercise in the optimization of “self,” or about seeking individual competitive advantage. The college-admissions scandal has others lamenting the phenomenon of “snowplow parenting” – the brazen advancement of offspring by shoving aside anything in their path.

A lot has been written – including by the Monitor – about instead fostering empathy in the young. There are strategies for encouraging mindfulness in teenagers. Those are inputs.

Next, more observers are saying, a genuine reboot of social priorities from climate to guns can come from listening to the output of the community of the young – direct, dogged, and increasingly aware.  

“It is perhaps the honesty and sincerity of children’s questions and actions,” writes Karen Leggett in The Washington Post, “that resonate most strongly.”

Now to our five stories for your Monday, including a push to find political common ground in Britain and to find peace through remembrance in Afghanistan. 


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Jessica Mendoza/The Christian Science Monitor
Nuala O’Doherty (l.), Honor Mosher, and Radha Vatsal discuss community events at a coffee shop in the Jackson Heights neighborhood of Queens on March 13. All three women enthusiastically support Democratic Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who represents the New York district, and say that the congresswoman has inspired them to become more active in their neighborhood.

An appreciation

AP/File
Lyn Chase, president of the Academy of American Poets, presented W.S. Merwin with the first Tanning Prize during a ceremony in Washington in 1994.

The Monitor's View

Reuters
The cockpit of a Boeing 737 MAX 8 aircraft.

A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

A message of love

Peter Nicholls/Reuters
'Messenger,' a 10-ton, 23-foot-tall bronze sculpture called Britain’s largest, arrives by barge in Plymouth Sound March 18 before being taken by road to the Theatre Royal in Plymouth. It depicts a figure in a crouching position, her pose inspired by the movement of an actor rehearsing.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris and Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Come back tomorrow. We’ll have a report on a challenge facing Venezuela: Even if a post-Maduro day arrives, how will the country start rebuilding without the waves of professionals who have fled the country?

More issues

2019
March
18
Monday
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