2020
April
07
Tuesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

April 07, 2020
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Today’s five selected stories include bridging the U.S. gap between digital haves and have-nots, leadership models in a pandemic, India’s quest for community in a lockdown, new ways to measure high school success, and our global points of progress report.

In American space lore, the Apollo 13 lunar mission has become synonymous with near-disaster – and innovation in a crisis. 

After their spacecraft malfunctioned, the three astronauts jumped into their "lifeboat," the lunar module. You’ll recall there was enough air for only two of the three NASA astronauts to survive the journey home. But engineers on Earth helped the astronauts build a jury-rigged CO2 filter system with paper covers from manuals, duct tape, and a few other items on board. 

I bring this up because Saturday is the 50th anniversary of that mission, and we are today collectively living through an Apollo 13 moment. 

To paraphrase astronaut Jack Swigert, “Humanity, we have a problem.” And around the world, people are responding to the pandemic with all the verve and creativity of NASA engineers. Government bureaucracies are displaying uncharacteristic flexibility and responsiveness to save lives and economies. Rivals are working side by side. Parents are devising ingenious ways to work with children at home. Businesses are experimenting with new ways to deliver goods and services while social distancing. 

But will all this duct tape hold?

Perhaps you’ll also recall one of the best lines from the 1995 film “Apollo 13.” Flight Director Gene Kranz (played by Ed Harris) overhears a NASA director say, “This could be the worst disaster NASA has ever experienced.” 

“With all due respect, sir,” Mr. Kranz interjects, “I believe this is going to be our finest hour.”


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Today's stories

And why we wrote them

David J. Phillip/AP
Trey Evans logs into an online yoga class on his computer outside at Eleanor Tinsley Park near downtown Houston, March 24, 2020. For many Americans, the barrier separating the haves and have-nots hinges on access to high-speed internet.

Internet access is a basic need, even more so during a lockdown. We look at the link between digital access and economic prosperity at a time when 42 million Americans are still without broadband.

Patterns

Tracing global connections

The answer to one of the most basic citizen concerns seems to be changing dramatically – and putting new pressures on both democratic and more autocratic governments. 

Rafiq Maqbool/AP
A girl dressed in traditional attire to celebrate Gudi Padwa festival holds a placard with an acronym for the novel coronavirus that reads, "Nobody should come out on the roads," in Mumbai, March 25, 2020, amid a lockdown to stop the pandemic's spread.

On a normal morning in Delhi, “I start hearing the vegetable vendor, the fruit seller ... shouting out their wares,” our reporter says. “It’s the background noise to life in India.” No more. We look at how Indians are developing new ways to connect with each other. 

Boosting high school graduation rates is one measure of success. But a few states are also tracking how well schools are doing to prepare their students for success in college and in their careers.

SOURCE:

Mathematica

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Karen Norris/Staff

Points of Progress

What's going right

This is more than feel-good news – it’s where the world is making concrete progress. A roundup of positive stories to inspire you.


The Monitor's View

When a public crisis strikes, people often rally around a catchphrase to lift their thought. During the coronavirus outbreak, the favorite tag has been “We’re in this together.” That spirit of unity has been on display from health workers to grocery clerks to neighbors who rarely talked to each other. Anyone need a mask? Contact a local sewing circle. Run out of food? Community volunteers will arrange a delivery.

What of elected leaders? They normally operate under a system of adversarial politics, even to the point of dismissing opponents or their ideas as not even necessary. Are they now mirroring the rest of society with a similar spirit of interdependence and equality?

By and large, democracies across the world have seen political parties get behind the new rules on public safety, additional support for first responders, and rescue packages for slumped economies. Last month, for example, the U.S. Congress quickly passed an unprecedented $2.2 trillion package with near-unanimous backing. A follow-up package is in the works. In addition, the Trump administration and state governors are coordinating closely.

On Monday, President Donald Trump and former Vice President Joe Biden, the presumed Democratic presidential nominee, felt under enough pressure to set aside partisanship and talk. Their 15-minute phone call was described as warm and constructive in the sharing of ideas on dealing with COVID-19. Even if their cooperation turns out to be fleeting, it reflected a Lincolnesque moment of a “team of rivals” listening to each other for the greater good during a national crisis.

In Britain, Prime Minister Boris Johnson – before he was hospitalized – was under pressure within his Conservative party to form a “national unity government” with opposition parties and independents. He had already consulted with unions and civil society groups on action steps. The most famous case of the United Kingdom suspending politics was the unity government under Winston Churchill during World War II.

In Israel, the virus crisis has pushed Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Benny Gantz, the main opposition leader, to start arranging a unity government. In Ireland, the crisis is putting pressure on political parties to form a coalition government following an inconclusive election in February.

Examples like these of pride-swallowing humility may help tone down the divisiveness of politics after the COVID-19 emergency. During her speech to the British people on Sunday, Queen Elizabeth II repeatedly used words like “together,” “united” and “fellow feeling.” She also suggested that working now as one people to end the crisis will create a societywide triumph for all.

“Using the great advances of science and our instinctive compassion to heal, we will succeed, and that success will belong to every one of us,” she said. The hidden message: Politicians should work together on solving the crisis, not compete to get credit afterward. But then again, most people are already acting that way.


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.

Especially these days, when millions of people around the world have been asked to stay at home as much as possible, it can seem all too easy to be consumed by digital distractions. But as a man who once felt irresistibly, habitually pulled to digital distractions found out, praying to better know God as divine Mind lifts the impulse to indulge in such behavior


A message of love

Nick Pfosi/Reuters
Cherie Link, a candidate for Wisconsin State Senate and a poll worker at Somerset Village Hall disinfects a work station during primaries held amid the coronavirus outbreak April 7. The Supreme Court blocked a lower court’s six-day extension of mailed-in ballots. Democrats say thousands of voters will be disenfranchised because of pandemic disruptions.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us. Come back tomorrow: We’re working on a story about Passover, and one family’s plans for a Zoom Seder, linking three generations from Tel Aviv to California.

More issues

2020
April
07
Tuesday

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