2018
September
04
Tuesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

September 04, 2018
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Two years ago this week, Nate Boyer posted a photo to Twitter. In it, the former Army Green Beret stands side by side with then-San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick. Mr. Kaepernick had just caused a firestorm by sitting during the national anthem to protest police violence and racial inequality, and Mr. Boyer had wanted to talk to him about it.

After their conversation, Boyer wrote: “Thanks for the invite brother.... Good talk. Let’s just keep moving forward. This is what America should be all about.”

Today, as the Twitterverse explodes over Nike’s decision to have Kaepernick lead its newest advertising campaign, that 2016 photo offers valuable perspective. Kaepernick is the most polarizing figure in American sports. Polls show that black Americans and white Americans, Republicans and Democrats have had wildly different views of his protests. Nike might be making a social statement, a political statement, or just trying to sell more shoes. Regardless, the shoemaker has given us all fresh prompting to choose a side.

When Boyer and Kaepernick talked, they agreed to disagree about the protests, yet each listened honestly to the other and changed. Kaepernick went from sitting to taking a knee at Boyer’s prompting, and Boyer agreed to stand beside a kneeling Kaepernick before one game. In the end, each saw the other as a brother and vowed to keep moving forward. That remains an option for all of us.

Now, here are our five stories for today, including a look at the vision behind NAFTA, an effort to harvest something more from the sea, and a moment of freshness on the French calendar. 


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Today's stories

And why we wrote them

Andrew Harnik/AP
Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh appeared before the Senate Judiciary Committee on Capitol Hill in Washington Sept. 4 to begin his confirmation to replace retired Justice Anthony Kennedy.

The question of how much power a president should have has roiled American politics in recent years. The nominee for the Supreme Court comes to the issue from a unique vantage point. 

President Trump has so far taken a transactional approach to NAFTA. That raises the question of whether the underlying vision of the trade pact had a value – and whether it should be saved.

Patterns

Tracing global connections

Breakthrough events often promise fresh solutions to entrenched problems. But it’s usually the hard work behind the scenes that determines their success. 

New industries have a way of edging out old ones. As a fledgling offshore wind industry surges to life off New England's coast, fishermen and developers are searching for ways to share the sea.

SOURCE:

US Bureau of Ocean Energy Management

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Jacob Turcotte/Staff
Ludovic Marin/Reuters
French President Emmanuel Macron visits a secondary school in Laval, France, at the start of the school year on Sept. 3. Mr. Macron and his education minister were on hand to welcome students and their (voting) parents back to school.

The French will tell you their year does not really begin Jan. 1. It starts with the rentrée – “the return.” The end of the summer holidays brings a reset button for the whole nation.


The Monitor's View

The trend lines in higher education seem clear: 

1. As costs soar college is becoming less and less affordable. 

2. And since college is so expensive, today’s students feel impelled to emerge with a degree that leads to an immediate – preferably high-paying – job.

That means old-fashioned degrees in the humanities – English, philosophy, foreign languages, history, etc. – are out. Areas of study that lead to jobs in booming industries such as health care (nursing is a perennial safe choice), and STEM fields (science, technology, engineering, and mathematics), are seen as the ticket to financial stability and success.

Students can’t be blamed for wanting to make sure they’ll be able to pay off the tens of thousands of dollars in student loan debt that many of them will carry off campus with them. And they have every right to pursue a passion to work in health care, STEM, or any other vocation that calls to them.

But college students may have learned the lessons of the Great Recession of 2008 too well. 

Interest in majoring in the humanities fell dramatically. History majors, for example, became a rare species of scholar: After all, who’d want to look at the dusty past when the sciences are all about the future? By 2017 only a little more than 1 percent of college students listed history as their major, according to a Department of Education survey. The historical norm had been about 2 percent.

In response, history departments took to writing apologias for their field. For one thing, they point out, those with history degrees don’t do all that badly in finding work at wages competitive with those with other degrees – and often in quite interesting positions beyond academia, such as in law, journalism, and public service, for example.

While occupational and technical job skills are likely to be overtaken quickly in the future, the “thinking skills” learned when studying the humanities can last a lifetime, they say.

“Historians are trained to treat what they read critically. This means not just reading, looking at or listening to a source – whether a newspaper report [or] a medieval charter ... but questioning it,” writes Alice Taylor, who teaches medieval history at King’s College London. “A history degree trains you to ask questions of your material: Where does it come from? Who wrote it, designed it, wanted it? Who paid for it and why? ... In a world where fake news can influence elections, the methods of the historian – what history degrees train their students to acquire – are needed more than ever before.”

A nascent upturn in interest in studying history shows students may be buying her argument. At Yale University the top major declared by members of the class of 2019 is history; that hasn’t happened for a generation.

Why the sudden change? No one knows, but theories abound. With American culture in an uproar and political divisiveness rampant, students may be seeking a way to view events from a broader perspective. How did we get here? Have similar situations happened in the past? How did society deal with them then?

“History doesn’t repeat itself, but it often rhymes,” the saying goes. Knowing what has happened before doesn’t provide all the answers, but it’s a start.

Or as Winston Churchill, a historian who made so much history himself, put it: “The farther backward you can look, the farther forward you are likely to see.”

This long-range view is not just a valuable skill greatly needed by the upcoming generation, but by all citizens in all times.


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.

Instead of writing off as irredeemable those who have done wrong, today’s contributor explores how acknowledging God’s grace and love for all empowers efforts to correct and heal.


A message of love

Ricardo Moraes/Reuters
A Sept. 3 aerial view shows fire damage to the National Museum of Brazil in Rio de Janeiro. The status of some 20 million items across a range of collections – from fossils and Egyptian and Greco-Roman artifacts to a large meteorite and a 200-year-old collection of Brazilian birds – remains unknown.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thank you for joining us today. Please come back tomorrow when we take on a subject to warm your third-grade-gym-class heart – dodgeball. In South Sudan, a traditional variant on the game is actually giving young women new opportunities and confidence. 

More issues

2018
September
04
Tuesday

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