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Explore values journalism About usPerseverance and ingenuity were the values chosen for the names of two critical exploration tools of the current Mars mission: a rover and a rotorcraft, respectively.
Respect and equality have surfaced around this mission too, in ways that feel like inspiring extensions of the “Hidden Figures” saga that uncloaked the important early roles of women in supporting space exploration.
On Friday, NASA informally named the Perseverance landing site for the late Octavia Butler, the first Black woman to win the Hugo and Nebula awards and the first science fiction writer to win a MacArthur Fellowship.
“[Her] pioneering work explores themes of race, gender equality in humanity, centering on the experiences of Black women at a time when such voices were largely absent from science fiction,” said Katie Stack Morgan, a deputy project scientist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California. At a press conference, she called Ms. Butler “a perfect fit for the Perseverance rover mission and its theme of overcoming challenges.”
When Perseverance touched down last month, the feat was described in real-time by JPL aerospace engineer Diana Trujillo, a member of the team that created the robotic arm that will gather rock samples. The Spanish-language broadcast was a NASA first for a planetary landing.
Ms. Trujillo came to the United States as a teenager with $300 to her name. She worked as a housekeeper and studied. She made it to NASA in 2007, another tenacious pioneer.
“The abuelas, the moms or dads, the uncles ... everyone has to see this,” she says in a video, “[so] that they can turn around to the younger generation and say, ‘She can do it, you can do it.’”
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On International Women’s Day, we let the work of a few dozen women in El Salvador show how, even with pandemic setbacks, entrepreneurship brings more than subsistence; it also bolsters self-worth and security.
Increasingly, agencies like the World Food Program that assist women in developing income-producing activities are shifting to programs they call “food-plus” that help put women in the driver’s seat of their lives.
Thus in several Middle East countries women receive training in how to expand beyond family cooking to make food for sale. In African countries, women are trained to move beyond subsistence farming to production for local markets.
Elsewhere, the idea is often to take traditional “women’s work” and give it added value – thereby transforming it from a symbol of women’s second-class status to a means of building stable and prospering families.
Such is the case in eastern El Salvador with a hammock-making cooperative called “Mujeres con Esperanza” – Women with Hope. It’s proving to be a source of resilience amid a pandemic that has adversely affected so many aspects of their lives.
“We’re making a better future for ourselves with our earnings and the new skills we are developing,” says Maritza Dinora Martínez, a single mother who has been weaving hammocks since she was 5 years old. “But we are also developing a resistance and ways to overcome our problems. That helps everybody,” she adds, “because we build a stronger community.”
Since she was 5 years old, Maritza Dinora Martínez has been weaving hammocks, a tradition among the women in her isolated village in eastern El Salvador.
Life in her Cacaopera municipality, located in Central America’s Dry Corridor, is tough, marked by low precipitation for the area’s annual corn and bean crops and high immigration – to San Salvador, the capital an eight-hour drive away; and to the United States.
And for all of her 26 years, Ms. Martínez has lived with a two-pole hammock-weaving frame as a constant companion – first in her parents’ home, where her mother taught her the art, now in her own.
But what was once viewed as “just women’s work” has transformed into a symbol of the determination of the women of Cacaopera to build more stable and prosperous lives: not just for themselves and their families, but for their community.
Two years ago, the women of Cacaopera formed a hammock-making cooperative that they proudly named “Mujeres con Esperanza” – Women with Hope.
The cooperative is a small but vital piece of a global trend of women banding together both to feed their families and develop new means of moving beyond subsistence in the face of worsening food insecurity. And it is a source of resilience amid a pandemic that has adversely affected so many aspects of their lives.
In short order Mujeres con Esperanza has allowed the women to turn the weaving frames in their homes into tools for building higher incomes. Hammocks that went for $5 before the cooperative now fetch $20 or more.
Moreover, the cooperative, organized with the assistance of the United Nations World Food Program (WFP), has encouraged expansive thinking on ways beyond hammock-making to improve community life.
For Ms. Martínez, the frames represent the resilience the women are building to face both long-existing challenges and new ones such as climate change and the pandemic – both of which have fueled a rise in food insecurity in El Salvador and neighboring Central American countries, and a recent spike in immigration to the U.S.
To get the word out about their cooperative and to develop new markets for their hammocks despite a national lockdown, the single mother of two small children learned how to build a Facebook page and to use WhatsApp as a sales tool – earning her the role of the cooperative’s social networks administrator.
“We’re making a better future for ourselves with our earnings and the new skills we are developing,” she says, “but we are also developing a resistance and ways to overcome our problems. That helps everybody,” she adds, “because we build a stronger community.”
Mujeres con Esperanza may seem small, involving fewer than three dozen women in a remote region of El Salvador.
But such modest initiatives by women in thousands of communities across the developing world have played a critical role in a number of positive trends over recent years, from poverty reduction to falling maternal and infant mortality and rising levels of education for girls.
“There is plenty of evidence from Africa, Latin America, and Southeast Asia that the emphasis on empowering women and girls has produced a wide array of positive effects. It’s undeniable,” says Sylvia Maier, a clinical associate professor and specialist in gender issues at New York University’s Center for Global Affairs. “When women are at the table of decision-making, families are healthier, incomes are higher, we even see reductions in domestic violence.”
But this year on International Women’s Day, experts in the role of women in development are sounding an alarm: The global pandemic has only added to other factors that were already slowing recent gains in food security and other measures of progress for women and girls in particular.
Nearly 700 million people across the globe now live with the uncertainty of food insecurity, according to the WFP, while nearly 90 million women and girls are hungry.
“To explain why global food insecurity is up, we speak of the three C’s: conflict, climate change, and COVID,” say Kawinzi Muiu, director of WFP’s gender office in Rome. “All of these factors have affected women’s ability to pursue the income activities they have developed,” she adds, “and as a result they absolutely have affected women and girls more.”
Moreover, evidence is emerging suggesting that as difficult as the pandemic has been for women, it may be posing the biggest setback to girls in the developing world by exacerbating the conditions leading to child marriage. In a new report released Monday, the U.N.’s child welfare agency UNICEF estimates that over the next decade an additional 10 million girls under 18 are at risk of becoming child brides – a reversal of recent progress in reducing such unions.
The ripple effect of the pandemic’s curtailment of women’s income-producing activities is stark. Studies show that when a woman starts earning an income, no matter how modest, she pours 90% of her earnings back into her family and community. For men, it’s more like 50%.
This is one reason why international agencies like WFP and development nongovernmental organizations have shifted increasingly from basic food aid to assisting women in developing income-producing activities – often tied to food production – that help put them in the driver’s seat of their lives.
“We call it food-plus,” says Ms. Muiu, “because while it often starts with food, we then equip women with the ‘plus’ so that they don’t have to depend later on WFP” and other food-assistance organizations.
Thus in several Middle East countries women receive training in how to expand beyond family cooking to making food for sale, she says. In African countries, female farmers are trained to move beyond subsistence farming to production for local markets.
As with the Mujeres con Esperanza hammock-making cooperative, the idea is often to take traditional “women’s work” and give it added value – thereby transforming it from a symbol of women’s second-class status to a means of building stable and prospering families.
Not to mention “giving women and their daughters a strong sense of worth,” Ms. Muiu adds. Pointing to an initiative in Libya that helped women turn their sewing skills into mask-making, and one in Ivory Coast that trains women in tailoring, she says such activities “go beyond food to building livelihoods and self-reliance.”
In many cases, women who have built new skills and confidence have used them to confront the new challenges posed by the pandemic.
Members of Mujeres con Esperanza didn’t just give up when the pandemic reduced hammock sales, for example. Instead, the women turned their attention to the small community grocery store they had recently started. With a national lockdown limiting trips to distant towns, the modest wood-frame market quickly became a lifeline for local families running out of essentials.
“The store provided a little income to our group, but we really understood its value to the community once the pandemic shut down access to other markets that are hours away,” says Elba Santos, the cooperative’s treasurer. “We’re providing a service to our neighbors,” she adds, “but [the store project] has given us new strengths we didn’t know we could have.”
For example, program officers with the regional WFP office cite the case of one member of the Mujeres cooperative who had difficulty overcoming depression after being deported from the U.S., where she left behind her American-born son to live with relatives. But participating in the store project has given this woman and others a new sense of purpose, the officers say.
The Cacaopera area has been hit with the same challenges affecting the rest of Central America and women in many parts of the globe – from crop failure due to climate change, rising food insecurity, and lost income as a result of the pandemic, to a pernicious, pandemic-abetted explosion of domestic violence, dubbed a “silent second pandemic” by some experts.
Still, members of the cooperative stick by their decision to call themselves “Women with Hope.” Despite the hardships, they say their activities have shown them they can confront the challenges and build better futures.
“Hope is the right word,” says María Santos Cortez Martínez, another hammock maker who works one day a week at the cooperative’s store. “Working together as a group we’ve learned we can improve our lives and keep moving forward.”
What happens when division is ignored and left to fester? Some residents of a city that ignited in 2017 view Jan. 6, 2021, as an outcome that will be repeated, without vigilance.
At the time it occurred, many residents of Charlottesville, Virginia, saw the Unite the Right white supremacist rally of Aug. 12, 2017, in their city as an aberrant display of America’s worst tendencies. But in the years since, as the country’s culture wars have grown more confrontational, the violence of that day looks less like an exception and more like a seed.
For some in Charlottesville watching the Capitol riot of Jan. 6 was like seeing their own experience echo in history. Both events were openly organized online and based on a foundation of falsehoods. Both attracted far-right extremists resisting the democratic process. Both ended in the loss of life due to violence.
Susan Bro, for instance, looked at a mob storming the heart of America’s democracy and saw a coalition reminiscent of the one in Charlottesville that tragically killed her daughter, Heather Heyer, a counterprotester.
Recovering from such days as Jan. 6, and preventing further such riots, requires ordinary citizens to come together, stay vigilant, and heal, Ms. Bro says.
In 2017, “I wasn’t taking white supremacists seriously,” she says. Now “I definitely pay more attention than I used to.”
Susan Bro watched live footage as right-wing extremists marched into her home of Charlottesville, Virginia, on Aug. 12, 2017. To her, attendees at that day’s Unite the Right rally were little more than a small pocket of radicals – offensive but not a serious threat.
Then came the afternoon, when Ms. Bro learned that her daughter, Heather Heyer, had been killed by a white supremacist while counterprotesting. The groups she once dismissed had suddenly caused ineffable pain.
That’s why, when a coalition of rioters reminiscent of the one that took her daughter sacked the Capitol this January, Ms. Bro watched with different eyes.
In 2017, “I wasn’t taking white supremacists seriously,” she says. Now “I definitely pay more attention than I used to.”
Four years after Unite the Right, Charlottesville’s “summer of hate” is still adding historical layers. To many at the time the rally was a hideous but aberrant display of America’s worst tendencies. But as the country’s culture wars grow more confrontational and more deadly – taking lives in cities like Kenosha, Wisconsin, and Washington – the events of that August look less like an exception and more like a seed.
As the country investigates the Capitol riot, Charlottesville residents say their experience is what happens when the country ignores its barest divisions. Recovering from days as painful as Aug. 12 in Charlottesville or Jan. 6 in Washington requires addressing the circumstances that made them possible. To Ms. Bro, that involves regular citizens choosing to stay vigilant, and to heal, before more tragedies occur.
“Either someone dies or someone has their rights taken away, and then [regular people] begin to notice” the dangers of extremism, says Ms. Bro. “And I would prefer that we pay attention before either one of those happens.”
For many Charlottesville residents, watching the Capitol riot was like watching August 2017 echo in history.
Both were brazenly organized online, founded on a narrative of falsehood, and intensified by a sense of loss among the instigators. Both attracted a cacophony of far-right extremists resisting the democratic process – even featuring some of the same participants. Both ended in the loss of life due to violence.
“Watching the storming of the Capitol on January the 6th ... definitely brought back memories of the scene in Charlottesville during the summer of hate,” says Claudrena Harold, chair of history at the University of Virginia and co-editor of “Charlottesville 2017: The Legacy of Race and Inequity.”
Perhaps most disconcerting in each event, though, were such abject failures of listening.
The Unite the Right rally crescendoed the long “summer of hate” in Charlottesville, preceded that summer by a Ku Klux Klan rally and tiki torch march led by Richard Spencer, a neo-Nazi and graduate of the University of Virginia. In addition to these public red flags, intelligence identified online warning signs ahead of time, says Timothy Heaphy, lead author of a report investigating the events in 2017, and university counsel for UVA since 2018.
“In Charlottesville, there was a lot of evidence available to law enforcement that there were going to be large numbers of people present at that event who were preparing for violence, and despite that, the plan didn’t prevent that,” says Mr. Heaphy. “I think we saw the same thing on January 6th.”
Virginia Democratic Sen. Mark Warner, chair of the Senate Intelligence Committee, noticed similar telltales ahead of the Capitol riot, saying he contacted the FBI and received assurances the situation was under control. He didn’t feel that way when listening to windows break while lying on the Senate floor.
In 2017, Senator Warner sponsored a resolution condemning the violence and calling for an investigative review. The same, he thinks, is necessary in response to Jan. 6.
“We’re just at the beginning of trying to really sort this through,” he says.
White supremacy and violence driven by racial and ethnic animosity have a long history in America, of course. Slavery’s legacy has reverberated for more than a century and a half after it was ended by the Civil War.
In the South, white people seized back political and social control of their defeated homeland with organized terror, ending the period of Reconstruction. Jim Crow laws enforced that status quo. In 1898, a vengeful posse of white supremacists in Wilmington, North Carolina, ousted the city’s biracial leadership in the only successful coup on American soil. Fifty-six years ago Sunday, Alabama state troopers clubbed and tear-gassed marchers demonstrating for voting rights at the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma.
The perpetrators of the deadly 1995 bombing of the federal building in Oklahoma City were radicalized by white supremacist and anti-government propaganda. White supremacist Dylann Roof killed nine in the Charleston church shooting in 2015.
But in the current era it’s perhaps been easy to see incidents as individual tragedies, instead of parts of a larger pattern. Both Charlottesville and the Capitol riot are evidence of a spreading white supremacist terrorism problem, some experts say.
Making sure history doesn’t repeat itself again involves analyzing these events in tandem, says Emily Blout, a historian and adjunct professor of communications at Georgetown University.
In early January, Professor Blout published a study on the 2017 violence in Charlottesville, proposing a framework called “immersive terrorism.” Two days later she saw the same phenomenon in action at the Capitol, and took it as a sign that the warnings of 2017 had not been heeded.
“There’s a tendency and desire to move beyond this and just kind of forget,” says Professor Blout. “But we can’t.”
Anti-terrorism work, she says, rests on understanding the kind of extremism security wants to deter. In an era of resurgent white nationalism, it can be difficult to pick which dots to connect, says Michael Signer, mayor of Charlottesville from 2016 to 2018 and Professor Blout’s husband.
“Charlottesville was really the first perfect storm of all of this. But we have seen many other instances propagate since then,” he says, pointing to the recent confrontations in Berkeley, California; Portland, Oregon; Kenosha; and Washington.
Though the circumstances varied in each, they all featured a confluence of armed citizens, national grievances, and cultural warfare. Charlottesville may be the archetype, but its legacy is still changing.
“Charlottesville … has become one of those touchstones in modern American history, like Selma or like Hurricane Katrina or like 9/11, where it’s gathering dimensions as history grows,” says Mr. Signer.
In four years, Charlottesville’s shadow has grown longer and darker. That’s all the more reason to act now, says Susan Corke, Intelligence Project director at the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC).
Former President Donald Trump showed how emboldening political approval can be for extremists, she says. But hate groups have been on the rise since Barack Obama’s presidency, according to the SPLC’s research. In a time so polarized that partisans increasingly endorse violence, the potential for conflict is out there.
“Charlottesville was really a turning point” for the far-right, says Ms. Corke. But, she says, neither it nor the Capitol riot is an “end of anything.”
Ms. Bro, who has spent the last four years mourning her daughter, can attest to that.
By 2017, Ms. Bro had been slowly learning about issues of white supremacy for years, largely thanks to her daughter’s patient teaching. Having seen where hate leads, she now finds herself teaching others in an effort to embolden well-intentioned but unaware Americans, who could calm the country’s politics.
Even if her daughter was terrified of public speaking, Ms. Bro sees her work as a way to honor Heather’s legacy. She wants to remind people that division is a choice, just like unity. That’s why, when white supremacists hector her on social media, Ms. Bro responds calmly. Everyone, like her, can still choose.
“It’s because of what I learned from [Heather],” says Ms. Bro. “I saw a dropped torch and picked it up and I ran with it.”
How to address America’s shortage of affordable housing? Increasingly, cities see the removal of exclusionary zoning as a key step – one that could also combat racial segregation.
Now famous as a bastion of liberal politics, the Northern California enclave of Berkeley established a first-of-its-kind policy in 1916 that prohibited multifamily housing on residential land. City planners at the time cast the regulation as a preemptive move to protect neighborhoods from “the intrusion of the less desirable and floating renter class.”
The restrictions served to segregate minority tenants from white homeowners. And as cities and suburbs followed this pattern nationwide, single-family zoning contributed to an affordable housing shortage.
Last month Berkeley officials set in motion a plan to redress the lasting effects of its century-old rule and alleviate the city’s housing crunch, vowing to eliminate single-family zoning by the end of next year. The proposed policy could enable the building of duplexes, triplexes, and fourplexes in neighborhoods across the city. Other California cities are considering similar overhauls.
Beyond practical considerations, supporters emphasize the symbolism of rooting out a policy planted in the poisoned soil of discrimination. Berkeley City Councilmember Ben Bartlett recently gave voice to that centurylong grievance, saying, “We cannot ignore that from the onset, zoning’s sole purpose was to segregate by race, to the detriment of people of color.”
The history of single-family zoning in America stretches back more than a century to what today ranks as one of the bluest cities in one of the country’s bluest states.
Now famous as a bastion of liberal politics, the Northern California enclave of Berkeley established a first-of-its-kind policy in 1916 that prohibited multifamily housing on residential land. City planners at the time cast the regulation as a preemptive move to protect neighborhoods from “the intrusion of the less desirable and floating renter class.”
The restrictions served to segregate minority tenants from white homeowners, and in the ensuing decades, as cities and suburbs coast to coast followed Berkeley’s example, single-family zoning contributed to California’s and the country’s affordable housing shortage and a rise in homelessness. In the San Francisco Bay Area – a constellation of 101 municipalities that includes Berkeley and is beset by some of the country’s highest housing prices and rents – a meager 18% of residential land allows for multifamily development.
Last month Berkeley officials set in motion a plan to redress the lasting effects of its century-old rule and alleviate the city’s housing crunch, vowing to eliminate single-family zoning by the end of next year.
The proposed policy could enable the building of duplexes, triplexes, and fourplexes in neighborhoods across the city, where half the residential land remains under single-family zoning and median rent for a one-bedroom apartment tops $2,000. Advocates suggest that the change would increase housing density and, by spreading the additional units throughout the city, create more living options for lower- and middle-income residents.
The Berkeley proposal arrived a month after the Sacramento City Council voted to start the process of abolishing single-family zoning in California’s capital, which has confined multifamily dwellings to 30% of the city’s residential land. Officials in San Diego, San Jose, and South San Francisco are exploring similar alternatives as the state attempts to address a housing deficit estimated at 3.5 million units.
The push to revitalize the so-called missing middle of housing – and unwind the legacy of exclusionary zoning and other discriminatory housing policies – has gained momentum since Minneapolis became the nation’s first city to jettison single-family zoning in 2018. Oregon lawmakers banned the policy in much of the state in 2019, and last year Portland officials approved a comparable measure to nurture multifamily housing.
University of California, Berkeley Othering & Belonging Institute; New York Times; Sightline Institute
America’s major metro areas proscribe anything other than single-family housing on about three-fourths of residential property. Reform advocates fault the constraints on multifamily dwellings, in part, for the country’s affordable housing gap of 7 million units, including 1.3 million in California, where recent legislative proposals to revamp zoning laws statewide have faltered.
Opponents of efforts to remove or loosen single-family zoning rules claim the changes would alter the character of neighborhoods, hurt property values, and accelerate gentrification. A coalition of groups in Minneapolis, citing environmental concerns, has sued the city over its plans to increase housing density.
Officials in Berkeley view such criticisms as misplaced, pointing out that ending exclusionary zoning would neither prevent the building nor authorize the demolition of single-family homes – a pair of common misperceptions. They further assert that the reforms would foster incremental change – much of the new housing would involve converting existing homes into duplexes and the like – and help the Bay Area meet a state mandate to add 441,000 housing units by 2031.
Beyond practical considerations, supporters emphasize the symbolism of rooting out a policy planted in the poisoned soil of discrimination. During a recent public discussion on Berkeley’s proposal, City Councilmember Ben Bartlett gave voice to that centurylong grievance.
“We cannot ignore that from the onset, zoning’s sole purpose was to segregate by race, to the detriment of people of color,” he said.
University of California, Berkeley Othering & Belonging Institute; New York Times; Sightline Institute
In the newest Disney princess movie, our reviewer sees an exploration of finding faith in others, and some welcomely complex characters that ought to become the norm.
Female warrior story “Raya and the Last Dragon” features incredible combat scenes and stunning weapon design, but saving the world ultimately comes down to a leap of faith and an olive branch.
The new movie, available for a $30 fee on Disney+, offers a timely message about the power of trust, while inspiring hope for the future of the Disney princess franchise. Played endearingly by Vietnamese American actress Kelly Marie Tran (“The Last Jedi”), Raya is considered Disney’s first Southeast Asian princess, and it’s clear from the start that vivid world-building is one of the film’s strengths.
The story is set in Kumandra, a make-believe land inspired by various Southeast Asian nations, where humans and dragons lived in harmony until the latter sacrificed themselves to protect the world from malicious spirits known as the Drunn. The kingdom then fractured into five warring societies – Raya’s homeland “Heart,” along with “Fang,” “Spine,” “Talon,” and “Tail.” The magical gem the dragons used to quell the Drunn resides in Heart, a point of mounting political tension.
Fast-forward 500 years, and we meet Raya, defender-in-training of the dragon stone, and her father, the open-hearted chief who dreams of reuniting Kumandra through diplomacy. The film really kicks off when Raya’s counterpart from Fang, Namaari (Gemma Chan), exploits her trust and imperils the dragon stone. The tragic events that follow cement Raya’s newfound hatred of Fang and all the other tribes.
At this point, “Raya” seems more cynical than your average Disney movie – humans are dying, and they have no one but themselves to blame. That foundation makes the hero’s epic journey to restore not just the dragon stone, but also her faith in other people, all the more rewarding.
“Raya” is often predictable, but always entertaining. Awkwafina is perfect as the ultra-expressive Sisu, the last living dragon, reawakened to help Raya on her quest. Their charming band of war-torn misfits (including a crime boss baby and her cartel of thieving con-monkeys), the lush animation, and nods to different Southeast Asian cultures are all reasons to watch this movie. Of course, there’s also an argument that the hodgepodge universe promotes a homogenous view of Southeast Asia, rather than honoring the region’s unique cultures – and the movie caught flak for casting East Asian actors in several main roles. Nevertheless, as I watched Raya, Namaari, and Sisu grapple with anger, fear, and self-doubt, I realized “Raya” had done something few films even try – it allowed three well-developed female characters to drive the story.
Still, many have noted the similarities between Raya and other Disney princesses. Like Mulan, who broke ground as the first Asian princess, Raya is a warrior driven by love for her father. Like Elsa in “Frozen,” she carries a significant part of the blame for creating the movie’s main crisis. The movie “Moana” also follows a chieftain’s daughter on a mythology-based quest, and like both Moana and Elsa, Raya has no romantic interest. Although the film’s main takeaway – that the bravest thing you can do is trust others – is prescient and uniquely “Raya,” these thematic similarities have fueled one of the film’s most prominent criticisms: “Raya” is formulaic, unoriginal.
But rather than rip-offs, I see a series of positive trends changing the Disney princess pipeline: more flawed heroes, more female friendships, more complicated villains, more diversity, and more courage. What we see now is the culmination of movies like “Mulan,” “Frozen,” and “Moana.” Raya isn’t groundbreaking; she’s even better. Raya is the new norm.
If “time flies” or “time’s just a human construct!” are phrases you’ve thrown around without much thought, then get set to go deeper. Way deeper. Two Monitor storytellers describe a perspective-shifting audio series that launches tomorrow.
Everything that happens in your life – every experience, every interaction, even every thought – is mediated by one thing: time. That’s why the word “time” is the most frequently used noun in the English language.
We talk about time all the time – how quickly or slowly it seems to pass, how much or little of it we have, and how our past and future compare to our present. But we rarely talk about what time actually is, how our perceptions of it shape our behavior, and how changing these perceptions might improve our lives.
Our new podcast series hopes to change that. Over the course of six episodes, hosts Rebecca Asoulin and Eoin O’Carroll speak with experts in physics, psychology, philosophy, culture, history, science fiction, and many other topics to help unravel time’s mysteries. You’ll learn why time sometimes seems to slow down, how Albert Einstein’s theories open the possibility for time travel, and how time enforces social hierarchies. We’ll also hear from people who are fighting to help us get our time back.
We hope you’ll tune in. Because understanding time more deeply can help us make the most of the time we have.
This story was designed to be heard. We strongly encourage you to experience it with your ears (audio player below), but we understand that is not an option for everybody. A transcript is available here.
For many Americans the trial of the white police officer implicated in the death of a Black man named George Floyd in Minneapolis last May is the most important test of racial justice in a generation. While the trial is essential, measuring racial justice on the basis of one verdict risks disappointment. To convict Derek Chauvin, prosecutors will need to prove he knowingly and intentionally acted in a manner forbidden by law. At the time of the incident, the methods of restraint used by Mr. Chauvin were approved practice in Minneapolis.
Perhaps more importantly, equating punishment with justice obscures the extent to which public thought has shifted on racial injustice. Nearly 60% of Americans agree that racial discrimination among police and law enforcement is a “serious problem” in their community. Lawmakers in 15 states – red and blue – have introduced more than 330 bills this year addressing police reforms.
Regardless of how the trial unfolds, the American conversation about race has already shifted toward a better understanding of equality, one not based on skin color but on a principle that all people have a shared nature and an individual dignity worth preserving.
For many Americans the trial of the white police officer implicated in the death of a Black man named George Floyd in Minneapolis last May is the most important test of racial justice in a generation. Officer Derek Chauvin faces charges of second-degree murder, second-degree manslaughter, and possibly third-degree murder.
The trial carries heavy expectations. It comes at a time when Americans are increasingly aware that race can influence police tactics. A series of fatal encounters between police officers and Black men over the past decade, captured on cellphones and spread by social media, has exposed the disproportionate burden of excessive force borne too long by African Americans.
A desire for punishment in such cases is understandable. By proportion of population, Black people are killed by police at more than twice the rate of white people. Few officers have faced consequences in killings that were not justified as defensive. Video footage of the fatal encounter for Mr. Floyd shows Mr. Chauvin kneeling on his back and neck for more than eight minutes – well beyond the point when other officers nearby were able to detect the restrained man’s pulse. The incident sparked protests that swept across the country and throughout the world last summer.
While the trial is essential, measuring racial justice in the United States on the basis of one verdict and a long sentence risks disappointment. To convict Mr. Chauvin, prosecutors will need to prove he knowingly and intentionally acted in a manner forbidden by law. At the time of the incident, the methods of restraint used by Mr. Chauvin and his fellow officers were standard and approved practice in Minneapolis.
Perhaps more importantly, equating punishment with justice obscures the extent to which public thought has shifted on racial injustice since last summer. To be sure, a Gallup Poll released Friday found that 64% of Black Americans saw Mr. Floyd’s death as murder. Only 28% of white respondents agreed. Yet when questions of racial injustice are separated from the immediate legal issues of the trial, polls show Americans share more common ground. A range of surveys since Mr. Floyd’s death have confirmed that majorities of Black and white Americans support banning dangerous police tactics and support reforms that make police more accountable to the communities they serve. Polls compiled by the New York-based organization Public Agenda found last summer that nearly 60% of Americans agree that racial bias against African Americans among police and law enforcement is a “serious problem” in their community.
That public consensus is fueling a dramatic shift in government policy. Lawmakers in 15 states – red and blue – and the District of Columbia have introduced more than 330 bills this year addressing police reforms, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. That follows a frenzy of activity last year following Mr. Floyd’s death: more than 700 bills in 36 state legislatures. Nearly 100 were enacted. At the federal level, the U.S. House sent a bill last week to the Senate that would ban life-threatening restraint tactics and make police more accountable for their actions on patrol.
Steps toward racial justice may be small or come in waves, but they must never be ignored during a time of crisis. “We’re talking about systemic racism in the context of policing but haven’t been able to eradicate that from our broader society in 400 years,” says Charles Ramsey, a retired Philadelphia police commissioner. “So it’s not practical to think we’re going to be able to eliminate it from policing overnight. That doesn’t mean there aren’t steps that can be taken to really minimize the opportunity for people to engage in that kind of behavior.”
The trial in Minneapolis provides another venue to build a common understanding of racial justice. Regardless of how the trial unfolds, the American conversation about race has already shifted toward a better understanding of equality, one not based on skin color or neighborhood but on a core principle that all people have a shared nature and an individual dignity worth preserving.
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.
In light of #IWD2021 (International Women’s Day), whose theme is #ChooseToChallenge, here’s an article about a woman who was enrolled in a competitive doctoral program while also raising her young daughter. She shares how a growing realization that God has given each of us strength and peace empowered her to challenge the feeling that she was in over her head and turned her experience around.
I was sobbing. I had just run out of gas while taking my toddler to preschool. Trudging to the filling station with a gas can, I realized I wasn’t really crying about a gasless car, but that my tears were the result of feeling completely overwhelmed in general. I had just begun a doctoral program at a very competitive university and felt in over my head.
After getting gas and dropping my daughter off at her school, I called a friend for prayerful support. She encouraged me to “demonstrate my strength.”
That seemed like a tall order, but I knew she was right: I could do this. I’d been seeing myself as a limited mortal, dependent on what seemed to be limited resources. But this concept of my identity wasn’t my true selfhood. Each of us is God’s strong, intelligent, capable, spiritual offspring, sustained by God’s unlimited resources.
Mary Baker Eddy, a follower of Jesus and the discoverer of Christian Science, writes, “God gives you His spiritual ideas, and in turn, they give you daily supplies” (“Miscellaneous Writings 1883-1896,” p. 307). Turning to God brings the inspiration we need to overcome challenges of any kind. For instance, prayer can help us realize that God is always present, even if fear would try to paralyze us and keep us from moving forward. God’s love and goodness enable us to conquer fear and demonstrate the strength that is ours as the reflection of God’s strength.
The Bible counsels, “Be still, and know that I am God” (Psalms 46:10). When we pause to listen, we hear God’s loving messages of comfort, encouragement, and guidance – the still, small voice of God (see I Kings 19:12) that quiets the clamoring of fear and doubt.
That’s what happened to me. Through prayer, I began to really feel that God is the source of my intelligence and ability, and that I could trust God to reveal the answers I needed in any challenging situation. As my confidence in my ability to turn to God increased, so did my strength to fulfill my roles as a mother and student.
For instance, in a very competitive academic setting, I learned that I could turn to God to find and follow my own God-ordained path, rather than comparing myself to other students and their accomplishments. My goal was to glorify God, who loves and nurtures each of us. Loving my fellow students eliminated my fear of measuring up and freed me to move forward.
The culminating experience came during the oral defense of my doctoral dissertation. The week before the exam, I prayed deeply to overcome fear, based on the understanding that fear does not have its source in God, and so it wasn’t truly a part of me as God’s offspring, or expression. This led me to feel a deep peace as I considered and prepared for the questions that might come up. Entering the exam room and answering the questions posed by the examiners, I felt confident and poised. Several people commented on the calm I expressed during the exam, which I passed.
We each have what it takes to demonstrate the strength God expresses in each of us. As Mrs. Eddy writes, “Step by step will those who trust Him find that ‘God is our refuge and strength, a very present help in trouble’” (“Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures,” p. 444).
Some more great ideas! To hear a podcast discussion about the enduring value and relevance of Mary Baker Eddy’s discovery of Christian Science, please click through to the latest edition of Sentinel Watch on www.JSH-Online.com titled “Mary Baker Eddy’s ideas – empowering women and men, in business and life.” There is no paywall for this podcast.
Thanks for starting your week with us. Come back tomorrow. Besides that audio-series kickoff, we’ll have a look at the new pandemic relief bill, which some view as an effective anti-poverty play and others call a path to a form of universal basic income that the country can’t afford.