2023
February
09
Thursday

Monitor Daily Podcast

February 09, 2023
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Ken Makin
Cultural commentator

Late Tuesday evening, as LeBron James dribbled toward the free-throw line and fired off a mid-range jump shot, his most important accomplishments were already in front of him.

His children.

Mr. James’ jumper during the Los Angeles Lakers’ contest against the Oklahoma City Thunder vaulted him to the top of the National Basketball Association’s all-time scoring list, ahead of luminary Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. The feat isn’t remarkable just because of the sheer number of points, but because of Mr. James’ approach to the game.

“I’ve been telling myself ever since I was a little kid that if I ever got to this point in my life and this career, that I would never be defined by just being a scorer,” Mr. James said in 2019 after he passed Michael Jordan for fourth on the all-time list. “If you take scoring away from me, I told myself I would still be able to make an impact on the game.”

Mr. James’ impact on the game, both on and off the court, is undeniable. If his brand could be described in a single term, it would be “fatherly.”

His jovial postgame interaction with his oldest son, Bronny, was in lockstep with a Beats by Dre commercial aptly named “Fatherhood,” where the elder LeBron shared a powerful testimony.

“I always knew I could be a great ball player, and [then] I had you. And I had no idea how I was going to be as a father,” LeBron expressed in a voiceover. “Patience, commitment, joy. The things I learned from basketball, but really, I understood from you.”

The spot was more paternal than promotion, and underscored Mr. James’ team-building ethos – “family.” His school in Akron, Ohio, is under the name of the LeBron James Family Foundation. For years, Mr. James’ approach to basketball was seen as “passive-aggressive,” largely because of how the hyper-competitive Mr. Jordan had been marketed to us. What Mr. James has done to redefine that notion gives the idea of “making your teammates better” a fresh look, because it speaks not only to the success of Mr. James’ teammates, but also to his prowess as a father and community partner.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Mahmoud Illean/AP
Israeli soldiers stand guard in Jerusalem's Old City, Jan. 30, 2023, amid beefed-up security in Jerusalem and the West Bank following the latest round of deadly violence with Palestinians.

Israel’s leaders promised to improve citizens’ safety. Yet amid recent deadly violence, security policies haven’t changed, and inflammatory rhetoric threatening even harsher measures keeps the peril of an even worse explosion in plain sight.

The announced return of U.S. military forces to the Philippines comes at a time of rising U.S.-China tensions. A key question is whether this will escalate the rivalry or send signals that reduce the chances of a Chinese invasion of Taiwan.

Patterns

Tracing global connections

The world gets transfixed by the issue of the moment, like earthquakes in Turkey and Syria, and then moves on. True commitment shows itself over months or more. Myanmar is an example of failure, Ukraine a model for success.

A court case to determine the rightful leader of the Dawoodi Bohra community is highlighting the oft-ignored issue of female genital mutilation in India. For many Bohra women, issues of freedom and safety are on the line.

Nate Lemuel/Pitch Perfect PR
Katherine Paul, who records as Black Belt Eagle Scout, is releasing a new album on Feb. 10 called "The Land, the Water, the Sky." The music is inspired by the natural world, which the artist immersed herself in during the pandemic lockdowns.

The pandemic offered more time to reflect on the spaces we inhabit. With her latest album, Black Belt Eagle Scout celebrates how her own perspective on a familiar place changed. 


The Monitor's View

More than two weeks after a New York-based financial research firm accused one of India’s largest business conglomerates of “a brazen stock manipulation and accounting fraud scheme over the course of decades,” the country’s major stock exchanges are still seeking balance. 

Markets, like horses, scare easily. They need distance to assess what made them bolt. India’s financial regulators have opened at least one new probe into the allegations against the Adani Group, a large-scale infrastructure developer with close ties to Prime Minister Narendra Modi. The group shed roughly $120 billion – half its value – after the report went public on Jan. 24.

But what is already apparent is that the claims against Adani have sent a fresh impulse of integrity through India’s public institutions and civil society. “The lesson for everyone is that we should believe in top class governance and we should open our books and records to everyone in the world,” Amitabh Kant, Mr. Modi’s chief representative to the G-20 group of nations, told Bloomberg.

The two-year forensic study of Adani’s practices by Hindenburg Research comes at a time when international investors regard India, now the world’s most populous country, as a promising alternative to China for its business environment. The report’s conclusions raise new concerns about Mr. Modi’s economic model, which has consolidated lucrative public contracts in a small group of wealthy developers at the expense of local competition and foreign investment.

Those practices may be one reason why public perceptions of corruption are so high in India. The latest Transparency International index, released last month, shows that 89% of Indians say government corruption is a big problem.

The Adani Group and Mr. Modi vehemently deny the claims, and Mr. Modi’s party adjourned Parliament three days in a row amid opposition demands to debate the report. But India’s most important financial institutions have been less dismissive. The heads of the Securities and Exchange Board of India and the Reserve Bank of India have reiterated their commitment to public integrity. Two local stock exchanges have put three Adani Group companies under trading surveillance. The Supreme Court is expected to hear two “public interest litigations” on the report.

The ripples have spread offshore. Norway’s sovereign fund announced it was disinvesting from the Adani Group. The global stock index MSCI, meanwhile, said today it was reevaluating the proportion of Adani Group stocks open to international investors in public markets.

In its most recent assessment of India as a destination for foreign investment, the U.S. State Department noted that “Indian-specific standards not aligned with international standards [have] effectively ... restricted the expansion in bilateral trade and investment.” The scrutiny of the Adani Group casts uncertainty over a broad range of critical infrastructure projects in India.

Yet by casting a light on public integrity, it already had a salutary effect. As Mr. Kant noted in an opinion essay on Feb. 5, “Good governance ... is about empowering people with the tools that will enable them to grow individually and as a community. This requires a capacious and humane public administration.”


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.

Whatever we may be facing, God’s angels are constantly imparting inspiration that heals.


A message of love

Jose Luis Gonzalez/Reuters
Migrants, most of them Venezuelans, move north in a caravan along the banks of the Rio Bravo in Ciudad Juárez, Mexico, on Feb. 8, 2023. Their intent is to turn themselves in to U.S. Border Patrol agents.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte and Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thank you for spending time with us. We hope you come back tomorrow for a fascinating audio conversation with our Story Hinckley, where she talks about the lengths she goes to for fair, thorough, thoughtful journalism.   

More issues

2023
February
09
Thursday

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