2020
January
06
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

January 06, 2020
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Today we look at cyberwarfare and the conflict with Iran, a pushback to anti-Semitism, why TikTok matters, women’s rights and religious sensibilities in Israel, and stewardship of the Amazon. But first: How do you open the door to better communication?

Americans sometimes joke that the only thing they agree on is that they’re too polarized to agree on anything. Or they’ll say they like their neighbor – but oh, those Democrats/Republicans/fill-in-the-blank!

It’s a broad-brush dynamic that leads groups of all sorts to conclude that efforts to negotiate are a waste of time. And it’s one that Jeffrey Lees, a Harvard Business School doctoral candidate, and Mina Cikara, an associate professor at the school, wanted to see if they could disrupt.

Americans are not as divided as portrayals indicate. But reducing intergroup conflict, which is often based on emotional, inaccurate beliefs rather than specific positions, appears daunting. As the academics wrote, group stereotypes in a series of experiments they conducted were “pretty much as negative as possible.” But people overcame their mistrust once they saw others as individuals rather than blocs. And when cooperative scenarios replaced the assumption of conflict, “reconciliatory behavior” surfaced. “There’s a lot written about how people are totally insensitive to the truth when told that their beliefs are wrong,” Mr. Lees writes. “This suggests that’s not the case.”

As a popular 2019 entry on the Farnam Street blog put it: “Hold the door open for others, and they will open doors for you. ... By connecting in this way they trust you understand them and are actually looking out for their interests.”  


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Office of the Iranian Supreme Leader/AP
In this aerial photo released by an official website of the office of the Iranian supreme leader, mourners attend a funeral ceremony in Tehran on Jan. 6, 2020, for Iranian Gen. Qassem Soleimani and his comrades, who were killed in Iraq in a U.S. drone strike.
Eduardo Munoz Alvarez/AP
People march across the Brooklyn Bridge on Jan. 5, 2020, in solidarity with the Jewish community after a recent string of anti-Semitic attacks in the New York area.

Difference-maker

Melissa Gaskill
The Tucano transports ecotourists through the igap, or flooded forest, on the Rio Negro for a few days in April 2019.

The Monitor's View

Jabin Botsford/Pool via Reuters/File
Supreme Court Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. stands at a 2018 ceremony at the U.S. Capitol Rotunda on Capitol Hill in Washington.

A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

A message of love

Tracey Nearmy/Reuters
Matthew Harrington and his daughter Uma play at the Cobargo evacuation center after their home was destroyed in the New Year's Eve bushfire in Cobargo, Australia, Jan. 6, 2020.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte and Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for starting your week with us. Come back tomorrow, when Middle East bureau chief Scott Peterson looks at what the U.S. stands to lose if its troops are forced out of Iraq, and how Iraq might reorient itself.

More issues

2020
January
06
Monday
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