海角大神

2019
July
08
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

July 08, 2019
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Clayton Collins
Director of Editorial Innovation

Welcome to your Daily. Today we look at the EU鈥檚 reach for global sway, why聽populism may wane, black chefs reclaiming their culinary heritage, keeping pillow talk nonpartisan, and a famous library鈥檚 centennial rose.

First, two quick profiles in values-clad professionalism.聽

Amid a new round of temblors near the second-largest U.S. city stands the stabilizing force that is

Lucy Jones, an unshakable CalTech seismologist, has long been a rock star among Angelenos, who hang on her every word about 鈥渇oreshocks鈥 and 鈥減reshocks鈥 and openly appreciate her calm explanations of which fault lines connect to which. A rolling motion? That means the event is 鈥減retty far away.鈥澛

The catchphrases that have emerged in L.A. 鈥 鈥淚 trust Lucy,鈥 鈥淟ucy is my co-pilot鈥 鈥 say a lot about how greatly Dr. Jones exceeds the expectations of a subject-matter authority. She deploys smarts against fear.聽

And the integrity that makes her the dominant analyst isn鈥檛 limited to cold physics. Speaking about how Southern Californians might best respond to a large-scale quake, she counsels empathy: 鈥淭he most important thing you can do,鈥 she said at a press conference, 鈥渋s help yourself and help your neighbor.鈥 Connected communities recover fastest.

Empathy and connection have also shown up lately at sea. On Saturday, forced its way into the Italian port of Lampedusa, putting ashore 40 imperiled people despite a ban on doing so. (A third ship was redirected .)

The docking may have been inspired by a similar act of mercy in late June by German ship captain Carola Rackete, arrested after landing her 40 African migrants, bumping a police boat in the process.

Captain Rackete weighed lifesaving against legality and declared the migrants鈥 lives 鈥渕ore important than any political game.鈥 July 2 by an Italian judge. His ruling: She had been fulfilling 鈥渉er duty to protect life.鈥


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

With the U.S. on an 鈥淎merica First鈥 path, Europe is realizing that it needs to compete globally in a more independent way. But does it have the tools 鈥 and the mindset 鈥 to make that change?

Patterns

Tracing global connections

Our London-based foreign affairs columnist tackles a question prompted by events in Greece: When it comes to populist leaders, what motivates voters more: specific promises, or the expectation that they鈥檒l shake up the political system?

A deeper look

Quentin Bacon
Chef Mashama Bailey returned to the South from New York as half-owner of the Grey in Savannah, Georgia, in 2015. Ms. Bailey practices 鈥渞eclamation cuisine,鈥 connecting modern Southern cuisine with its African roots. Besides appearing on at least one 鈥淎merica鈥檚 best鈥 list, the restaurant was featured in the Netflix series 鈥淐hef鈥檚 Table.鈥

鈥淔arm to table鈥 is on everyone鈥檚 lips today. It was also the founding spirit of a particular (wonderful) strain of cuisine from the American South 鈥 and a heritage that鈥檚 only now being reclaimed.

Q&A

This one鈥檚 a talker. Learning to respect loved ones for who they are, not trying to remake them in your likeness, is something most people have to learn. As in love, one author told the Monitor, so too in politics.

A letter from

Colorado
Mark Sheehan
The lemon-fragranced 'Huntington's 100th' rose, 10 years in the making, is sampled by the Monitor's Francine Kiefer.

Finally, a Monitor reporter who recently moved out to the Los Angeles area shares how she was inspired to, well, stop and smell the roses聽at a 鈥渢emple to the humanities鈥 near her new home base.


The Monitor's View

AP
Greece's newly-elected prime minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis, background, looks on as outgoing prime minister Alexis Tsipras, leaves the Maximos Mansion in Athens, July 8.

With a humility rarely heard in Europe, the new Greek prime minister, Kyriakos Mitsotakis, told voters after his election victory on Sunday, 鈥淲e are too few to stay divided.鈥 In just a few words, he summed up what Greece has learned after years of possibly leaving the single-currency zone of the European Union.

The message: Instead of going it alone as a small country, Greece must unite to find a better role within the EU.

Greeks, Mr. Mitsotakis said, should now work across their political divides to not 鈥渂e a beggar or a poor relative鈥 within the EU. Indeed, Greece is only 2% of the EU population. By the end of this century, Europe itself will be 4% of the world population. At the start of the 20th century, it was 20%.

In a world drawing ever closer, humility about not making it on one鈥檚 own has become a virtue. This is a lesson for Europe鈥檚 populists of the left and right who assert the need for national self-reliance in both economics and identity.

As Europe learned the hard way from its 20th-century conflicts, the effort to go it alone leads to totalitarianism. Dictators flourish by claiming the need for a nation to be self-focused. The best example today: North Korea, whose official ideology is juche, or self-reliance.

Greece toyed with leaving the eurozone after its 2009 financial crash, which was caused by official lying about its debt. Yet after being rescued with three bailouts from creditors and enduring difficult reforms under the left-wing Syriza party, voters in Sunday鈥檚 election chose the center-right New Democracy party of Mr. Mitsotakis. Despite the swing toward conservatism, he told voters, 鈥淚鈥檒l work to convince you that I鈥檓 everyone鈥檚 prime minister.鈥

In a visit to Greece earlier this year, German Chancellor Angela Merkel said leaders of different political stripes have a 鈥渃ommon foundation鈥 within the EU. 鈥淭hat includes the deep conviction that cooperation with each other is in any case better than nationalism, which has so often led us in Europe to catastrophe,鈥 she emphasized.

The EU has shown how to integrate sovereign and equal states yet allow each to keep much of its social identity. Out of hubris, Greeks came close to divorcing the EU. Now, in humility, they cannot imagine themselves outside it.


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.

Sometimes even a break from day-to-day obligations isn鈥檛 enough to leave us feeling truly reinvigorated. But wherever we may be, taking the time to pray and listen for inspiration from God can bring rest, refreshment, and even healing.


A message of love

Thibault Camus/AP
The pack with Netherlands鈥 Mike Teunissen wearing the overall leader's yellow jersey, right, rides during the third stage of the Tour de France cycling race start in Binche and finish in Epernay, July 8. The Tour, which covers 2,100 miles, began July 6 and will conclude at the Champs-脡lys茅es in Paris on July 28.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Come back tomorrow. We鈥檙e kicking off a three-part series with a look at some programs that pair younger farmers with older ones,聽solving a financial hurdle by giving the newest players access to land.聽

Before you go, a question: When do you read the Daily? As soon as we go live (U.S. East Coast evening)? When it鈥檚 daybreak where you are? We鈥檙e experimenting with the idea of serving you something new in the morning. Here鈥檚 one sample. I鈥檇 welcome your thoughts at collinsc@csmonitor.com. Please mention your time zone!

More issues

2019
July
08
Monday

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