2021
February
25
Thursday

Monitor Daily Podcast

February 25, 2021
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Last year, North Carolina native Michelle Fishburne packed her belongings into an RV for a 10,000-mile cross-country trip. Her mission: to research a book about how the pandemic has changed ordinary Americans. (Read more about Michelle’s Who We Are Now project in today’s story about third acts.) 

“If I had to sum up what I’ve seen in the 250 to 300 interviews I’ve done, it’s pluck,” says Ms. Fishburne, who’s met homeless people, medical workers, teachers, judges, hairdressers, and even a performing clown on her journey. “Pluck is defined as ‘spirited and determined courage.’ That is what I’ve been seeing in person after person.”

During a stop in Columbia, Missouri, Ms. Fishburne met a 21-year-old student who exemplifies that quality. Ine’a Gregory recounted how she decided to do something impactful during lockdown. So she launched an e-commerce retailing business. The motto for her company, The Repertoire, is “Embrace the uncomfortable and walk with purpose.”

The majority of Ms. Fishburne’s new acquaintances feel more connected to other people than before the pandemic. “They have lifted their heads up from their previously busy lives and they are thinking about, and seeing, and caring about other people,” says the self-employed storyteller. That extends beyond family and friends. Americans are concerned about the well-being of others they’ve never met – including those across party lines. 

“I have heard those five little words – ‘I think about those people’ – over and over again,” she says.


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Today's stories

And why we wrote them

When can we drop our masks and swap smiles with strangers in public again? As cases and deaths plummet, some see signs for cautious optimism amid continuing vigilance. 

The Explainer

Andrew Kelly/Reuters/File
A worker mops the floor as the MTA Subway closes overnight for cleaning and disinfecting during the outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in the Brooklyn borough of New York on May 7, 2020.

Like many Americans, I haven't used a subway in almost a year. The anticipated post-pandemic rise of public transportation is encouraging new thinking about how to invest in sustainable urban commuting.

“Alexa, turn the lights back on and restore power ... Hello? Alexa?” As the Internet of Things controls more household devices, some say it’s time to shift away from centralized hubs. 

Essay

Caroline Brehman/AP
Michael Regan, nominee for administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency, gets a hug from his son, Matthew, after his confirmation hearing before the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee on Capitol Hill in Washington on Feb. 3, 2021. Mr. Regan would be the first Black man to head the EPA.

No one can single-handedly solve the nation’s environmental challenges. Listening to citizens, our commentator argues, will be critical to success.

Deja View Photography/Courtesy of the Marshalls
Victoria and David Marshall founded 3rd Act Magazine in 2016, hoping to offer another vision for older adults. Ms. Marshall says the people featured in the publication “don’t just live lives of leisure. They’re really focused on lifelong learning, growing, expanding."

In this story, my co-author and I talked with Americans who've embarked upon new activities and occupations in their golden years. For example, 91-year-old Sylvia Anthony runs a homeless shelter. They're shrugging off societal limitations and finding joyful purpose.


The Monitor's View

In the digital universe, the young netizens in India and Pakistan have no problem sharing across a tense and often violent border between the two rival states. The latest example is an Instagram video of a Pakistani teenage influencer suggesting people need to party (“pawri”). It went viral in India, sparking joyous spinoffs. Young people also revel in each country’s movies and cricket teams. This neighborly culture is just one of many backdrops that help explain why India and Pakistan have restored a 2003 truce in disputed Kashmir. More importantly, they agreed to address each other’s “core issues.”

Perhaps the biggest backdrop to the agreement is that the two countries, both nuclear-armed, can no longer afford military conflict. They have fought three wars and had frequent flare-ups since they each gained independence from Britain in 1947. Pakistan’s economy is now on the ropes, requiring massive foreign loans, while India has its hands full with a dangerous dispute with China over Himalayan territory and a domestic revolt by farmers.

The very old turf war in Kashmir, long exploited by extremists on both sides, seems minor in light of modern concerns and opportunities. “Dialogue is the only way forward if both countries want to stop the unending cycle of violence & bloodshed across the borders,” tweeted a prominent Kashmiri politician, Mehbooba Mufti.

For his part, Pakistan’s prime minister, former famed cricketer Imran Khan, agrees that talks are the best path. As for a reason, he said, “The only way the subcontinent can tackle poverty is by improving trade relations.” Few goods travel between India and Pakistan compared with trade between other countries.

His chief national security aide, Moeed Yusuf, claims the agreement is a “very solid and positive” development that will allow “more roads to open.” The two countries, one largely Muslim and the other largely Hindu, have many ways to overcome their deep suspicions of each other. A long-lasting truce in the 460-mile-long unofficial frontier in Kashmir would be just a start. Any reconciliation would need to extend into military and trade areas. They would also have to deal with their diverging narratives of their shared past, something that drives nationalists in each country.

A peace dialogue needs to show quickly that diplomacy can produce results faster than continued violence around Kashmir. Many young people on both sides are already digitally linked. They see more what’s in common than what is not. That would be worth celebrating.


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 what the world throws at us, God’s unlimited goodness and love are here to quell anxiety and inspire healing and solutions – as a woman and her husband experienced when faced with overwhelming financial difficulties.


A message of love

AP
A child standing among anti-coup protesters flashes the three-fingered salute of solidarity and resistance in Yangon, Myanmar, on Feb. 25, 2021. Protesters challenging the military’s seizure of power in Myanmar were back on the streets of cities and towns. On the child’s face: thanaka, a paste made from ground bark that is often used for decorative purposes and sometimes as a balm.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for spending time with our stories today. Tomorrow’s package of stories includes a look at what’s motivating calls for the U.S. to boycott the 2022 Winter Olympics in China.

More issues

2021
February
25
Thursday

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