2021
September
09
Thursday

Monitor Daily Podcast

September 09, 2021
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Mark Sappenfield
Senior global correspondent

For a culture writer who has dived fearlessly into the tough issues of race, the idea seemed harmless. Wouldn’t it be fun to rate Beyoncé’s 10 best and 10 worst songs?

Little did Candace McDuffie know. Monitor readers will know Candace. She’s graced our pages many times, writing about music festivals for people of faith and remarkable books by Black authors. But when she wrote her Beyoncé list for Glamour magazine, something odd happened. Twitter went crazy.

How dare she criticize Beyoncé? Who did she think she was? The hate rolled in, topped by the oddest accusation of all: She must be anti-Black. It was a sobering moment. “It was hard to swallow,” she tells me. “All these stories that I’d done about race and Blackness and white supremacy, and it’s a piece about Beyoncé that goes viral.”

Truth be told, writing about race had brought her much worse comments in the past. But it was a reminder of how too often America’s race conversation turns to using identity as a weapon – in this case, a narrow sense of Blackness that sought to punish an opinion outside the collective thinking.

For Candace, it’s all the more reason to keep writing the deeper stories that perhaps don’t go viral, but help America wrestle with the complexity of race. “I’m going to keep doing the work that I do,” she says. “I am a Black person in America, and I want to uphold my people.” 


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Julio Cortez/AP/File
A crowd gathers at George Floyd Square after a guilty verdict was announced at the trial of former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin for the 2020 death of Mr. Floyd in April 20, 2021.

Patterns

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Difference-maker

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Q&A

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The Monitor's View

Reuters
Leaders of the 15-nation Economic Community of West African States hold a video summit Sept. 8 to talk about a coup in Guinea.

A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

A message of love

WANA/Reuters
The first international flight since the withdrawal of U.S. troops from Afghanistan takes off from the international airport in Kabul, Afghanistan, on Sept. 9, 2021. Americans were among the foreign passengers on board the flight to Doha, Qatar. A dayslong standoff over charter planes at another airport has left hundreds of mostly Afghan people stranded, waiting for Taliban permission to leave.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris and Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thank you for joining us today. Please come back tomorrow when Scott Peterson and Ann Scott Tyson explore the advancements in Afghanistan that might endure despite the Taliban. 

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2021
September
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Thursday
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