海角大神

2019
June
25
Tuesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

June 25, 2019
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David Clark Scott
Cover Story Editor

In today鈥檚 edition, we鈥檒l look at continuity in U.S. Supreme Court decisionmaking, address conflict with Iran, break down quantum jumps with a cartoon strip 鈥 and learn how California oyster farmers are coping with climate change and why one South African reads while he runs.

But first, here鈥檚 a question: What do ducklings and neo-Nazis have in common? Not much. But check out the creative solutions found for two civic problems on opposite sides of the world.

First, let鈥檚 go to Germany, where white supremacists descended on the town of Ostritz this past weekend for a 鈥淪hield and Sword鈥 music festival. To prevent violence from breaking out (and frankly, discourage attendance), locals got a court order to reports Deutsche Welle. Police confiscated 4,200 liters of beer. But just in case concertgoers tried to replenish in town, residents bought out all the beer in the local supermarket. 鈥淲e wanted to dry the Nazis out,鈥 Georg Salditt . Did it work? About 600 people attended this year鈥檚 festival, half as many as last year.

Meanwhile, in Littleton, Colorado, authorities faced a completely different challenge. Last Thursday, eight ducklings were swept into a storm drain. Half were easily rescued. But four were still out of reach in a pipe. That鈥檚 when a member of the South Metro Fire Rescue team pulled out his phone.

He found a YouTube video of a duck quacking, and held his phone near the pipe. The frightened baby birds stopped chirping long enough to listen. Perhaps they heard the sound of safety. Or a stern rebuke. In any case, they responded by . 聽

Whatever the challenge, lost ducklings or neo-Nazis, there just might be a lesson for all of us in pausing to listen for an inspired solution.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Our reporter looks at the shrinking value of legal precedent to this conservative-majority U.S. Supreme Court.

Comic Debrief

How physicists moved beyond Schr枚dinger鈥檚 cat

Ready for a little manga journalism? Our reporters walk us through an explanation of quantum jumps with a cartoon strip.

Jacob Turcotte and Eoin O'Carroll/Staff

Patterns

Tracing global connections

As global leaders gather for the G-20 summit, they鈥檙e likely to discuss ways to peacefully reduce tensions between the U.S. and Iran. How might they do that? 聽

Amanda Paulson/海角大神
Volunteers from Hog Island Oyster Co. in Marshall, California, help scientists from the University of California, Davis monitor native oyster populations in Tomales Bay on June 6. Hog Island Oyster Co. has been collaborating with researchers to better understand the effects of ocean acidification on oysters and other shellfish and how the company can adapt and stay resilient.

A California oyster farm offers a digestible primer on the adaptation and resiliency needed to cope with ocean acidification.

Difference-maker

Ryan Lenora Brown/海角大神
Marukgwane Moremogolo reads the novel 鈥楳oletlo Wa Manong鈥 (Feast of the Vultures) as he runs the 2019 Comrades Marathon, an annual 90 kilometer race between Durban and Pietermaritzburg, South Africa. Mr. Moremogolo reads during races as part of his project to collect books for underserved schools.

What do you pack for an ultramarathon? Our reporter spoke to a South African who brings a book. Running and reading opened up his world 鈥 and he鈥檚 combined those passions to help broaden the next generation鈥檚 literary horizon.


The Monitor's View

AP
A woman visits the Teer art fair in Tehran, Iran, June 25.

If the U.S. and Iran can avoid violent conflict in the weeks ahead, it will mean the voices of peace have become stronger than the voices for confrontation. In the U.S., such voices are obvious. They start with President Donald Trump鈥檚 political base. It wants a focus on domestic issues, not foreign wars.

But in Iran, where open debate and political freedom are highly restricted, where are the voices for peace?

One clue lies in a government decision this month to set up special courts to fast-track the trials of women who have publicly defied the Islamic dress code by not wearing a hijab. Starting nearly two years ago, countless women have taken off the veil in purposeful displays of defiance. Their message: Telling women what to wear on their heads is like telling them what to think in their heads. The crackdown on this latest type of protest hints at a regime more worried about its survival at home than its survival in a war with the U.S.

Since 2017, as Iran鈥檚 economy has nose-dived from drought, mismanagement, and U.S. sanctions, its people have agitated for a greater focus on internal reforms and less spending on Iran鈥檚 military proxies in Arab countries. Teacher strikes have risen. Workers and merchants have taken to the streets to protest economic hardship. An estimated 1 in 3 young Iranians is unemployed.

But it may be the Islamic Republic鈥檚 bans on social freedoms that are driving the most intense discontent, especially among young people who are tied to the world through the internet. In a recent anti-hijab protest at Tehran University, one popular video on Instagram showed demonstrators chanting 鈥淪tudents will die, but never accept humiliation.鈥

Iran needs peace with its people, not only with the U.S. Last month, Mr. Trump鈥檚 special representative for Iran, Brian Hook, told Congress, 鈥淢uch of the energy that you see in聽Iran聽today is through the women鈥檚 movement and聽protesting聽the mandatory compulsory wearing of the hijab.鈥

Under Iran鈥檚 hybrid democracy, in which candidates are vetted by Islamic clerics, young people have become frustrated with the regime鈥檚 priorities. 鈥淔or the first time in our society, a large percentage of the people have come to the conclusion that nothing will change whether they vote or not,鈥 says activist Mostafa Tajzadeh, a former deputy interior minister. 鈥淲hen the people realized that the ballot boxes were ineffective, they decided that the only way to speak to the ruling establishment was from the streets.鈥

Protests still can drive changes in Iran. In 2015, Iran agreed to suspend the country鈥檚 nuclear program, in large part to appease a restless population. He called his decision 鈥渉eroic flexibility.鈥 Now women are on the frontlines of protests. They may be the voices of peace that help prevent a war with the U.S.


A 海角大神 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 鈥 in its various forms 鈥 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 鈥 The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston 鈥 whose founder was concerned with both the state of the world and the quality of available news.

Consumer DNA tests have become more popular than ever as people seek greater knowledge about their roots. Here鈥檚 an article exploring a radically different take on one鈥檚 origin and the impact an understanding of God, Spirit, as our creator can have on our day-to-day lives.


A message of love

Alexander Nemenov/Reuters
The Soyuz MS-11 capsule carrying the International Space Station crew of NASA astronaut Anne McClain, Russian cosmonaut Oleg Kononenko, and David Saint-Jacques of the Canadian Space Agency lands in a remote area outside Zhezkazgan, Kazakhstan, June 25. Over the course of their seven-month stay aboard the ISS, the three traveled 86.4 million miles and orbited Earth 3,264 times.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris and Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us. Come back tomorrow: We鈥檙e working on a story about how polling may muddy the waters of 鈥渆lectability鈥 ahead of the first TV debate among Democratic candidates.

More issues

2019
June
25
Tuesday

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