2021
February
18
Thursday

Monitor Daily Podcast

February 18, 2021
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For millions of Texans, it’s been a week of unusual cold and darkness. It has also called forth the unquenchable warmth and enduring light of kindness and compassion.

As snow and freezing temperatures swept the state, neighbors checked on neighbors, opening their homes and sharing supplies or assisting with errands. Out on the slippery streets, people used shovels and shoulder power to keep cars from getting stranded.

Rescue efforts extended to the shoreline, where sea turtles were stunned by the frigid temperatures. Ed Caum, executive director of the South Padre Island Convention and Visitors Bureau, found himself the unexpected caretaker of thousands of turtles, brought by the truckload or one at a time. “We’ve collected a lot, now we’ll try to save ’em,” he said.

“People do care. It makes you happy inside that there is good out there,” Margie Taylor, a Houston area resident who lost power and heat, told the Houston Chronicle.

Chris Lake, a Lutheran pastor, came to her rescue with an extra generator that could power a space heater. While assisting homeless people and others in the area, Mr. Lake and his teenage son needed aid themselves. Their truck got stuck, but strangers paused to pry it loose.

Such acts, multiplied across the state, were what enabled many people to get through an often harrowing week. (Henry Gass, our snowbound reporter in Austin, will be writing about the electric grid challenges in tomorrow’s Daily.) The gratitude encompassed the givers as well as the receivers. 

The opportunity to help was “deeply meaningful,” Mr. Lake said. “To have my son be with me to see some of this stuff was pretty amazing.”


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

NASA/JPL-Caltech/AP
This illustration provided by NASA shows the Perseverance rover, bottom, landing on Mars. In the actual landing, hundreds of critical events were executed on time for a safe arrival on Feb. 18, 2021. As the rover seeks signs of past life, the mission will also test the first helicopter to fly on a planet beyond Earth.

A deeper look

Mark Schiefelbein/AP/File
Balloons float by a Chinese flag in Tiananmen Square in Beijing during a commemoration of the founding of Communist China held on Oct. 1, 2019.

Patterns

Tracing global connections

The Explainer

On Film

Searchlight Pictures/AP
Frances McDormand’s character, Fern, who tells people she’s “houseless” not “homeless,” is not based on any one individual, although “Nomadland” is derived from a 2017 nonfiction book.

The Monitor's View

AP
Brett Archibad entertains his family as they attempt to stay warm in their home in Pflugerville, Texas, Feb 16.

A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

A message of love

Mahmoud Hassano/Reuters
An internally displaced Syrian girl looks out of a tent as she poses for a picture in northern Aleppo, Syria, Feb. 17, 2021.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte and Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us today! Come back tomorrow: Taylor Luck is working on a story about how resource-poor Jordan is vaccinating refugees alongside citizens, out of a belief that until all of the most vulnerable are protected from the virus, no one is.

More issues

2021
February
18
Thursday
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