This week's chaotic events have elevated calls for clear guidelines for what to do the next time a nominee is accused of sexual assault or harassment. This piece looks at where some early ideas are pointing.聽
Fred Rogers (that鈥檚 Mr. Rogers to most of us) famously used to say 鈥渓ook for the helpers鈥 when news got scary. (Check out the marking 51 years since his empathy-centered children鈥檚 show premiered.)
Stories of altruism floated like life rings across this week鈥檚 news.
If you sifted social media this week, then you probably saw the one about the Tennessee trucker who responded to a plea for help transporting shelter dogs from the North Carolina flood zone. He bought an old school bus and the work.
That鈥檚 a low-profile rescuer deservedly getting noticed amid a high-profile event. What happens when the news energy ebbs?
Sometimes end up . But sometimes assistance quietly keeps coming. This week a high-profile helper stepped up in Britain. A year-old tragedy there already feels distant: the Grenfell tower fire in West London that killed more than 70 people, displaced hundreds, and underscored deep social inequity.
There鈥檚 nothing unusual about celebrities backing a cause. But the Duchess of Sussex (Meghan Markle to most of us) to a community kitchen near the Grenfell site way back in January. (Its name, Hubb, means .) Her fundraising book of family recipes written by 鈥 and sold to benefit 鈥 that community comes out next week.聽
Now to our five stories for your Friday, including one on a nudge from Florence about rethinking an agricultural practice, and one on a nudge from high-schoolers about what true integration could look like.聽