2020
December
04
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

December 04, 2020
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Next time you think about who might become an innovator, think perhaps of Lewis Latimer. The child of an enslaved couple who escaped and made it from Virginia to Boston, Latimer went on to develop a new way of heat-treating carbon filaments to make them last longer. It was one of many steps that helped bring electric lighting to the masses.

And according to new research, Latimer was part of a larger phenomenon. Black Americans – when they lived in Northern states that offered them greater opportunity – were inventing and obtaining patents at the same rates as white Americans.

“During this era, the United States was arguably the most inventive place on Earth at what was arguably the most inventive era in world history. This puts northern Black people in the global vanguard of invention in the late 19th and early 20th century,” write authors Jonathan Rothwell and Andre Perry of the Brookings Institution, and Mike Andrews of the University of Maryland.

The tally of 50,000 patents by Black Americans in that era is more than an interesting revision of the history books. It’s a reminder of the flourishing that occurs when human talents are given rein – and the harm to individuals and society when artificial barriers stand in the way.

“The point is that it isn’t markets generating extreme inequality, it is political institutions,” Mr. Rothwell tweeted recently as the new research was released. “Black people – and, I would say, any group of people – possess the natural ability to acquire advanced technical skills & apply them ... and have done so when given the chance.”


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Today’s stories

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John Bazemore/AP/File
A female U.S. Army recruit practices tactics for clearing a building with male recruits at Fort Benning, Georgia, on Oct. 4, 2017.
Todd Pitman/AP/File
Heritage tourism draws visitors to sites in Ghana like the one where Venture Smith was sold into slavery. Here, U.S. resident Cheryl Hardin, from Houston, poses outside Cape Coast Castle, Britain's West Africa headquarters for the transatlantic slave trade, in Cape Coast, Ghana, July 7, 2009.

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Jacky Lai (left) and Tony Giroux star in "A Sugar & Spice Holiday" on Lifetime. The film is the first seasonal offering from the network to feature an Asian American family.

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Reuters
Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif meets the European Union's top envoy, Josep Borrell, in Tehran, Feb. 23.

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A message of love

Bhat Burhan
Kashmiri women work on a hanging loom in their house (above). They are part of a large community of textile artisans in Kashmir, where the production of colorful and finely woven kani shawls has a long history. It’s believed that Zain-ul-Abidin, a sultan who controlled the region in the 15th century, introduced the craft from Central Asia. Shawls begin as raw wool from the coats of pashmina goats, which are raised in the Himalayas. The wool is spun into yarn and dyed. Then craftspeople use tuji – small needlelike sticks – on looms to weave the patterns envisioned by naqash, or designers. It’s painstaking work. Most shawls take half a year to complete and cost between $500 and $2,500. Kashmir-based artisan Mushtaq Ahmad Wani has been creating kani shawls since childhood. He and his apprentices are part of an industry that, by official estimates, supports more than 100,000 artisan families. – BHAT BURHAN / CORRESPONDENT
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

That’s all for today. We’ll see you Monday with stories including a view from rural Wisconsin on whether Americans are ready to heed Joe Biden’s call for face mask vigilance. Have a good weekend!

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2020
December
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