2024
September
13
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

September 13, 2024
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Former Monitor Editor Marshall Ingwerson had a radical idea. Inside the newsroom and out, he would often ask: What works? The idea is that looking at successful solutions circumvents so much needless politics and rhetoric. He’s since gone on to found The What Works Initiative

Today, Troy Aidan Sambajon does Marshall proud. Education is full of challenges. But Troy finds that new efforts to make community colleges affordable, even free, are making a difference. It’s a reminder of Marshall’s main point: There is a different way to look at today’s problems. 


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Today's stories

And why we wrote them

Alfredo Sosa/Staff
The Algoma Discovery, carrying 25,000 tons of iron ore, goes through the MacArthur Lock June 11, 2024, in Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan. A new third lock is under construction with funds from infrastructure legislation signed by President Joe Biden.

Michigan is a top beneficiary of federal infrastructure funding, but there’s little sign it’s providing a political boost. Part of a series on the issues that may tip key swing states: ArizonaGeorgia, Nevada, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin.  

Today’s news briefs

• Georgia Trump case: The judge overseeing the Georgia election interference trial against Donald Trump and others tosses out three counts saying they are beyond the state’s jurisdiction.
• China fine on U.S. firm: Chinese authorities ban accounting firm PricewaterhouseCoopers for six months and fine it more than $56 million due to its involvement in the audit of collapsed local property developer Evergrande. The punishment is the heaviest yet for an international accounting firm operating in China.
• Unauthorized migration to Europe: Despite a summer of heated anti-immigration debates across the European Union, unauthorized migration to EU countries dropped significantly overall in the first eight months of this year.
• Boeing workers on strike: Aircraft assembly workers have walked off the job at Boeing factories near Seattle and elsewhere after union members voted overwhelmingly to reject a tentative contract that would have increased wages by 25% over four years.

Read these news briefs. 

Dominique Soguel
Raisa Savchenko leaves her apartment with the help of two volunteers who came to evacuate her, as Russian forces approached the town.

The war in eastern Ukraine is creeping ever closer to Pokrovsk, a key logistics hub, forcing the city’s last civilian holdouts to make the hard choice to evacuate before Russian forces bring the fighting to their doorsteps.

Staff

While the story of higher education has been one of ever-climbing costs, a sea change has been spreading at U.S. community colleges. When Massachusetts went tuition-free this fall, it wasn’t the first, or fifth, or even 15th state to do so.

In politics, money really does talk. Campaign donations are a form of protected free speech, with the current election on track for record spending. And small donors are a rising force.

Courtesy of Simon Mein/Thin Man Films Ltd
Marianne Jean-Baptiste plays a London woman seemingly at war with the world in “Hard Truths.” The movie reunites her with director Mike Leigh for the first time since her Oscar nomination for 1996’s “Secrets and Lies.”

At the Toronto International Film Festival, our critic detected an overarching mood that coming together is better than breaking apart. “If I’m right in believing that filmmakers these days are looking more to unite audiences than to divide them,” he writes, “who is a greater uniter than The Boss?”


The Monitor's View

It’s football season in America, and the girls are taking the field.

They’re playing flag football, that is, a version of the game played without pads or helmets, and with far less physical contact. It is now one of the fastest-growing sports for girls, sweeping into school athletics programs across the country. It may soon become a Division 1 college sport.

One stat tells it all: The number of girls ages 6 to 17 playing the game doubled during just the last school year, according to the National Federation of State High School Associations.

That growth represents a dramatic turn toward inclusivity in a game that traditionally left girls on the bleachers or on the cheerleading squad. And it brings another benefit: Roughly half of the girls who now play “flag,” as it is known, were not previously involved in school athletics.

While flag football doesn’t come with the same physical strength as the contact version, it does add to the range of sports for girls that can boost their confidence and demonstrate the sport ability to nurture character.

“The football field becomes a classroom for empowerment,” wrote Illiett Ojeda in a blog post for an organization called Miami Mom Collective. “Let’s pause for a moment and imagine our girls weaving through defenders, strategizing, and scoring those winning points. They’re ... breaking barriers, shattering stereotypes, and showcasing their capacity to excel in any arena.”

The game is spreading globally, too. More than 100 countries have organized leagues, according to the International Federation of American Football. Many of them are coed. In 2028, it will make its debut in the Summer Olympics in Los Angeles.

In this version of football, players wear belts with a strip – or flag – on each hip. The one with the ball is “tackled” when an opposing player pulls off one of the ball carrier’s flags. The game has given fathers new ways to connect with their daughters, especially if they are a coach in the sport – as Drew Brees, a former New Orleans Saints quarterback, is for his daughter’s team.

At a time when female athletes like gymnast Simone Biles and professional basketball player Caitlin Clark are drawing historic crowds in women’s sports, flag football is teaching young players new lessons about equality. That’s because this style of play relies less on physical strength and more on mental agility, selfless teamwork, and communication.

“This is the only sport they can truly compete against the boys,” Dallas Sartz, a girls flag football coach in California, told Gold Country Media. Last year, his team of 10-year-old girls stepped “out of their comfort zone” and beat a squad of boys. The result, he said, was a new sense of camaraderie among the players on both teams.

Sports in general are a “joyful means of awakening,” wrote author Therese Miller in a 2008 Sports Journal article. It also enlightens the “imagination to robust possibilities and convincing realities.” Across a growing number of athletic fields, an artful version of a rough-and-tumble game is widening views for girls as well as for boys.


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.

As we accept, with childlike trust, the loving ideas God gives us moment by moment, we can overcome feelings of anger.


Viewfinder

Mohammad Ponir Hossain/Reuters
A woman and her son enjoy Kashful flowers during an afternoon stroll in the Sarighat area near Dhaka, Bangladesh, Sept. 13, 2024. The flowers, also known as Kans grass, are native to the Indian subcontinent and signal that the fall season is underway.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

We’re so glad you visited us this week. On Monday, we’ll have a powerful cover story from our Weekly magazine, which examines the rising climate migration crisis. When do changing weather patterns force people to leave their homes? The answer is more complicated than it is often portrayed, and crucial to understand correctly if the world wants to find solutions.

More issues

2024
September
13
Friday

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