2021
March
19
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

March 19, 2021
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Peter Grier
Washington editor

Bow ties are whimsical. They’re colorful. They’re unusual. Put on a bow tie, and you’re saying, in essence, “Look at me!”

Maybe that’s why lots of celebrities have worn them. Charlie Chaplin, for instance. Winston Churchill. Donald Duck.

Bottom line: They get attention. And who needs attention? Who might be able to better their position in life if they can attract a second look?

Homeless dogs and cats, that’s who.

Enter Sir Darius Brown, a teenager who lives in Newark, New Jersey. When he was 8, his big sister taught him to sew bow ties, in part to help him learn to surmount some physical challenges. A few years later he heard that hundreds of pets had been left homeless in Florida and Puerto Rico in the wake of Hurricane Irma. He realized that bow ties could help these animals stand out in shelters, give them a bit of personality, and help them get adopted.

So he donated a batch of dog-sized bow ties to a New York City animal shelter. They worked great and he’s never looked back.

Over the years he’s donated about 600 handmade bow ties to shelters in eight states. His mom helped him set up a Facebook page where people can order bow ties for their own pets or make donations toward his charity work. It’s got lots of photos of snappily bow-tied pets – mostly canines – getting adopted into forever homes.

“A well-dressed dog. That will make people smile,” he told The Washington Post.


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Today's stories

And why we wrote them

A deeper look

Rachel Wisniewski/Reuters
Melissa Min attends a vigil in Philadelphia with her son James on March 17, 2021, in solidarity with the Asian American community after increased attacks on the community since the onset of the pandemic a year ago.

America’s Asian communities had already been facing a pandemic-related spike in prejudice and hate. Killings in Atlanta this week have sparked a more concerted effort for solutions.

Andre Penner/AP
Former Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva speaks at the Metalworkers Union headquarters in Sao Bernardo do Campo, Brazil, March 10, 2021, after a judge threw out both of his corruption convictions.

The pandemic will influence politics for years to come. Some voters are looking to replace leaders they blame for mismanagement, but new candidates also need a vision for post-pandemic life. Brazil is an especially dramatic example. 

Cybercrimes often entail a violation of trust. But the hack of a private psychotherapy center – including patient session notes – has struck the Finnish culture of privacy particularly hard.

Listen

Photo illustration by Ann Hermes/Staff

Alan Lightman, time, and ‘the most exciting part of being alive’

Einstein revolutionized physics with the idea that time is relative. Physicist and writer Alan Lightman finds joy in stepping out of time entirely.

Bonus: Alan Lightman Talks Creativity, Time, and Einstein

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Essay

Perseverance may be misinterpreted by others as selfishness. But perseverance breeds mastery – and ultimately respect and affection. When our essayist set himself to learn folk dancing, he also found grace and friendship.


The Monitor's View

In a symbolic gesture of meeting each other halfway, the top foreign policy officials of China and the United States met in Alaska on March 18 and 19. Less symbolically, the meeting’s main purpose was to agree on issues where the two countries can cooperate – as a way to ease tensions in so many other points of conflict.

Which issue might turn out to hold the most immediate promise of an American-Chinese partnership? Climate change? North Korea’s nuclear program? COVID-19 vaccinations?

One opportunity could be the newest issue: whether Myanmar returns to its democratic path after a Feb. 1 military coup and a violent crackdown on mass protests.

“Myanmar may present a unique opportunity for the two powers – at odds on so much – to address in unison the growing international crisis radiating out of Myanmar,” states Jason Tower, country director for Burma at the U.S. Institute of Peace.

Hints that the authoritarian regime in Beijing might not ultimately back the authoritarian generals in Myanmar have been growing stronger. Soon after the coup, China supported the release of Aung San Suu Kyi, leader of the National League for Democracy that won parliamentary elections last year. She was arrested and charged of dubious crimes. China’s ambassador in the country said the coup was “absolutely not what China wants to see.” And on March 8, China emphasized the importance of its ties to the NLD and suggested a willingness to play a “constructive role.”

China has major economic and strategic interests in a stable Myanmar. It needs peace along the long shared border and access to the ports in the Southeast Asian nation. The big question is whether it also wants a democracy next door or a regime like its own.

For its part, the U.S. could hope that any Chinese support of democracy in Myanmar is “a chance to evaluate China’s willingness to act as a responsible member of the international community,” stated Mr. Tower. The people of Myanmar have already experienced semi-democratic rule, said an editorial in the Beijing-friendly South China Morning Post in Hong Kong. “Rolling back the clock will be near impossible,” it concluded.

A convergence of trust on Myanmar may be what China and the U.S. could use right now. Their tensions over China’s island claims in East Asia have put their navies on high alert. And the U.S. under President Joe Biden is poised to counter China’s cyberattacks, industrial theft, and human rights abuses.

To cool their passions and prevent conflict, China and the U.S. can find common purpose in Myanmar. They can focus on a shared problem without engaging in a contest of who is right – or whether “might is right.” If they build up goodwill on something of mutual interest, it could begin to establish a virtuous circle of trust and help the two nations reduce their fears of each other.


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.

Finding herself in an uncomfortable situation at a secluded airport parking lot, a woman found inspiration in the biblical message of God’s power and goodness. And she discovered that everything she needed to remain safe was already at hand, because God was there, too.


A message of love

Anders Wiklund/TT News Agency/Reuters
Hanna Oberg of Sweden (center) races in the women's 7.5 km sprint at the Biathlon World Cup in Ostersund, Sweden, March 19, 2021. Biathletes compete in cross-country skiing and marksmanship. Carrying a rifle on their back, they stop along the course to shoot at targets from both standing and prone positions.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

That’s it for the news today. Come back Monday, when we’ll have a look at an election reform bill in Kentucky that’s drawing support from both parties. 

More issues

2021
March
19
Friday

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