Texas is changing, with liberal voters gaining more clout. But it鈥檚 worth looking deeper at the narrative of why the state is changing and how fast.
Today鈥檚 stories examine a different view of a changing Texas, a problem of perception for female presidential candidates, the unexpected way scientific integrity went viral, how colleges think about your kid, and the country music history you didn鈥檛 know.
But first, why you might want to say hello to someone you don鈥檛 know today.
Fear of the stranger is educated into us from the time we are kids. And there can be common sense in it. 鈥淒on鈥檛 get into a stranger鈥檚 car鈥 is wise advice, on the whole. But readers of the Monitor will be well acquainted with the kindness of strangers.
Dave Scott wrote Tuesday about how strangers gave a young Florida boy a beautiful sense of self-worth. Patrik Jonsson wrote Monday about how strangers鈥 extraordinary generosity is changing the dynamics of disaster relief. In Wednesday, I read about strangers who lined up more than 100 yellow cars outside a young cancer survivor鈥檚 window on his birthday because he loved Bumblebee from the 鈥淭ransformers鈥 films.
It鈥檚 too easy to cast these off as isolated incidents. But a recent talks about the uplifting effect strangers can have on our lives. 鈥淧eople feel more connected when they talk to strangers, like they are part of something bigger,鈥 says one psychologist.
At a time when news is so often filled with the fear of the stranger 鈥 from members of a different religion to people from another country 鈥 it is a reminder that the most remarkable blessings often come from those we know least.