2019
December
04
Wednesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

December 04, 2019
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Today’s stories look at the just-released House impeachment report, the end of Sen. Kamala Harris’ campaign, the potential impact of more women in EU leadership, the choices individuals make around confronting climate change, and efforts to make Canada’s youth hockey more inclusive. But first, some thoughts about reimagining gifts in the holiday season.

Maybe the headline caught my eye because we’re in the year’s most prominent season of giving: “Stuff nobody wants is costing us more. Just ask Milton.” The Massachusetts town just held an emergency meeting because its trash bill came in $820,000 over budget – evidence of the waning options for cheap overseas disposal of all that rejected … stuff.

And I thought: Do some of the ways we give exacerbate the problem?

As The Atlantic put it in May: “There is Too Much Stuff.” Tally up Amazon’s options for pretty much any item, as it did, and you’ll get the idea. Or ponder the consumption arms race driven by big outlets. Add the pressure many people feel to buy more or spend more at the holidays, and more towns are likely to join Milton.

Yet many people raise their voices annually in support of reimagining the meaningful gift. That kind of gift is on display more readily this time of year, probably because the holidays-inspired extension of the helping hand, the friendly conversation, or simply the benefit of the doubt has a knock-on effect. There’s even new academic attention to the phenomenon. At the just-established UCLA Bedari Kindness Institute, which is tasked with “world class research,” the director has focused on “exploring how witnessing acts of remarkable kindness can cause an uplifting emotional experience that in turn motivates the observer to be kind.”


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Today's stories

And why we wrote them

The Explainer

Embedded in the House impeachment report are call logs – concrete records that shed light on connections between people and events before and after conversations.  

Amid uncertainty and contentious politics, voters crave clarity about a candidate’s values and policy ideals. When those aren’t fully articulated, doubts creep in.

Kenzo Tribouillard/AP
New European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen (left) and her predecessor, Jean-Claude Juncker, participate in an official handover ceremony in Brussels on Dec. 3, 2019.

Effective leaders often seek out diverse perspectives to shape better outcomes. The presence of more women on the European Commission is likely to influence what goes on the agenda – and how it’s addressed.

The Chat

Global problems such as climate change often seem too big to solve, especially as an individual. We asked two Monitor reporters how they manage their daily moral choices.

Riley Robinson/The Christian Science Monitor
The Brampton Hockey Flyers, in orange, claimed victory against the Hawks, another Brampton Hockey youth team, on Nov. 23, 2019. Brampton Hockey is working to ensure its league teams reflect the Brampton, Ontario, community – and to keep enrollment up.

When a sport is trying to expand beyond its traditional demographics to reach new audiences, perhaps the best place to gauge its progress is at the youth level.


The Monitor's View

Ever since losing its original purpose in 1991 – the collective defense of the West against Soviet aggression – NATO has somehow survived as a military alliance. At a 70th anniversary summit this week, this club of democracies showed why.

Despite serious squabbles and huffy encounters, its renewal of purpose and its workable compromises proved that NATO is more than a guardian of territory. It also serves as a reminder that the best binding agent among countries is a guiding set of principles that help them rise above base national self-interests.

To the 29 states in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, those principles seem obvious: free elections, civilian control of the military, individual rights, rule of law, and so on. Yet to Russia and China, dictators, or Islamic terrorists, such universal principles are seen as threats to their exercise of raw power or their intolerant ideology. NATO’s beacon of ideals is also the reason for its continuing collective defense. Threats may change but core purpose does not.

Other regional bodies, such as those in Latin America, Africa, and Southeast Asia, still have far to go to emulate NATO’s success.

The summit’s biggest concern was whether the United States, starting with the Obama administration, has been drifting away from NATO. President Donald Trump, despite his former skepticism about the bloc and his upsets during the gathering in England, seemed to allay much of that concern. He helped resolve a NATO dispute with Turkey. He expressed gratitude for increased defense spending by European allies to relieve the burden on the U.S. And much to the delight of Washington, the transatlantic alliance acknowledged for the first time the “challenge” posed by China’s security encroachments in various parts of the world.

In a statement, NATO leaders said: “To stay secure we must look to the future together.” Much of that future relies on NATO’s ability to reach a democratic consensus on new threats and then be agile enough to devote resources to them. The bloc, for example, decided to shore up its military presence in the Baltic States and Poland after Moscow’s aggression in Ukraine.

NATO’s European members need not worry about U.S. support for the alliance. In a 2019 survey of Americans by the Chicago Council on Global Affairs, the largest majority yet (73%) said that NATO is essential to U.S. security. Such sentiments seem long-lasting. The bloc is built on self-reinforcing ideals. They inspire a solidarity across borders.


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.

No matter where we find ourselves or whom we meet, when we let divine Love motivate our thoughts, words, and actions, they go farther and do more good than we could ever perceive.


A message of love

Hadi Mizban/AP
An Iraqi artist draws on a wall during a sit-in at Tahrir Square in Baghdad, Dec. 4, 2019. Monitor Middle East bureau chief Scott Peterson is en route to Iraq, where parliament on Sunday accepted the resignation of Prime Minister Adil Abdul-Mahdi following months of turbulent protests.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us today. Come back tomorrow when chief culture writer Stephen Humphries looks at hologram music tours. Are they really live music?

More issues

2019
December
04
Wednesday

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