2024
August
02
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

August 02, 2024
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Mark Sappenfield
Senior global correspondent

As someone from Philadelphia, the Monitor’s Ira Porter knows firsthand about passionate fans – perhaps a bit too passionate sometimes. So now at the end of his first week covering the Olympics for us, what stands out are the fans. 

“This gets to be everyone’s Super Bowl all at the same time,” he wrote me during a break in the action. And that means a Super Bowl’s worth of emotions everywhere Ira turns in Paris.

“I love the fans’ excitement at these games,” he says. They drape themselves in their nation’s flag, they fill the stadiums with the chants and cheers of countless languages. And, of course, they shed tears with their heroes. 

And it’s not just in the stadiums. The atmosphere around Paris is unforgettable. (See today’s Daily for more.) “Fans are loving it,” he says. “They are stopping celebrities in arenas and on the street to snap quick pictures. They are screaming at the top of their lungs in arenas. I imagine every Olympics is like this, but seeing it up close warms my spirit.” 

As an American, he has a soft spot for Team USA. But “I can’t help but be happy for fans from other places,” he adds. “There are enough medals for everyone to get some … hopefully.”


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

For the next 100 days, a sensitive issue for the Harris campaign and the White House is, Where and when should Joe Biden be seen? It matters not just for the election, but also for his own legacy.

Today’s news briefs

• Stocks fall: Stocks tumble on worries the United States economy could be cracking under the weight of high interest rates meant to whip inflation.
• Venezuela election: Brazil, Mexico, and Colombia call for Venezuela to release detailed voting tallies, while the United States says it considers the opposition candidate Edmundo González the winner, amid disputed July 28 presidential election results.
• LGBTQ+ rule: A new federal rule to protect LGBTQ+ students from discrimination in schools and colleges based on gender identity takes effect this month, though 26 states are blocking it.
• Amazon fires: Fires in Brazil’s Amazon rainforest region surge to a two-decade high in July, according to new data.

Read these news briefs.

Noah Berger/AP
Sherry Alpers, who is staying in her car outside the evacuation center, checks on her dogs at a center for Park Fire evacuees in Chico, California, July 26, 2024. “As long as I have the dogs and they’re safe, I don’t care about many material things,” she said.

Wildfires teach important lessons in safety and adaptation. In the recent Park Fire, more Californians are now heeding evacuation orders and leaving danger zones swiftly. 

There was a lot of kvetching in Paris in the run-up to the Olympic Games. But now they’re here. And for the most part, Parisians are enjoying the experience.

Podcast

Finding the local storytellers who help bring humanity to light

Good partnerships yield greater perspective. We spoke with Monitor journalists who cover countries in Latin America and Africa about how they find their regions’ truest voices, build trust, and then collaborate as co-writers and editors to produce some of their best work. 

How To Listen to the World

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AP/File
American writer James Baldwin stands outside at his Saint Paul de Vence house on the French Riviera, March 15, 1983. The late author was born on Aug. 2, 1924.

On James Baldwin’s 100th birthday, his works, which accompanied the rise of the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s, continue to influence writers and activists to this day.

In Pictures

Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff
A pig lies on a yoga mat in the middle of class. The animals’ antics elicit many smiles from the students.

Pigs are highly social creatures. In this yoga class, they’re also the perfect companions to help students combat stress. 


The Monitor's View

Last month, a group of Palestinian musicians who fled into Egypt from the war in Gaza met for an evening in Cairo to perform their songs. The event was a celebration of their resilience and Palestinian heritage, as well as a way to affirm “that Palestine is not just about war,” as one organizer put it.

Just weeks before, thousands of Israeli Jews gathered at a park in Tel Aviv for a “healing concert.” Many were survivors or the families of victims of the Oct. 7 Hamas attack on a Jewish music festival near the Gaza border. The Tel Aviv concert, said one organizer, was to show that “music is the best therapy for our community.” The motto of the event: “We will dance again.”

In June, a similar festival in New Jersey brought together some 1,300 American Jews. The purpose, said one organizer, was to “pick up the pieces through the spiritually replenishing magic of a live music festival.” One attendee told The Jerusalem Post, “As a proud Jew, I will counter evil, blind hatred, and darkness with friendship ... and great music.”

By its very nature, music creates a receptivity in a listener, offering universal tones that can forge bonds with others and inspire an alternative way of living. Or, as a 2015 report by the United States Institute of Peace stated, the performing arts can “embody a kind of power that rests not on injury or domination, but rather on reciprocity, connectivity, and generativity.”

A good example in the U.S. is an instrumental group in Milwaukee called the Black String Triage Ensemble. Founded in 2019, the all-volunteer Black and Latino musicians rush to scenes of shootings and other tragedies to perform a concert on the streets as an act of healing, offering comfort through music.

“Wherever we show up and we play together is a place of prayer… and asking for peace,” Dayvin Hallmon, founder of the group, said in a PBS documentary. “We love out loud through our music.”

The goal of the ensemble is to prevent violence from happening to anyone in the community, a thought similar with what many Israeli and Palestinian musicians – now divided by war – may be trying to do. They seek to rescue their humanity through song.


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.

When we’re receptive to the messages that God is giving us, we’re comforted, alerted to our permanent safety, and sure of our steps.


Viewfinder

Dylan Martinez/Reuters
Leo Neugebauer of Germany competes in the long jump portion of the men’s decathlon at the 2024 Paris Olympics on Aug. 2. Known as “Leo the German” even in Germany, he holds the national decathlon record and is one of the German faces of this Olympics. As a student at the University of Texas at Austin, he also holds the NCAA decathlon record.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thank you for coming along with us this week. Please keep an eye out for our coverage of Kamala Harris’ choice for vice president, which is expected to come soon. We’re also working on stories about how fresh American support is influencing the war in Ukraine and what happens now after Venezuela’s disputed election.

More issues

2024
August
02
Friday

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