海角大神

2019
December
09
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

December 09, 2019
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Clayton Collins
Director of Editorial Innovation

Today鈥檚 five selected offerings look at what鈥檚 new about聽impeachment sparring, a push to change definitions of Mexican cartels, social justice in Malta,聽perceived political injustice in Morocco, and the sweet seasonal relief of children鈥檚 books. First, a look at how one community eased for its residents the sting of societal stressors.

A fundamental shift in thought around health care is well underway. Simplicity is a theme.聽

There鈥檚 the promotion of simple food (including by prescription). There鈥檚 the rising advocacy of unstructured play (including, if the American Academy of Pediatrics has its way, ) as an essential enhancer of child development.聽There鈥檚 art (by prescription) as聽therapy.聽

Now, with isolation and depression being cast as leading societal ills, can a sense of community be prescribed too 鈥 and can doing so boost well-being?聽

One small town鈥檚 experience says yes. About five years ago, caregivers in Frome, in southwestern England, began feeling besieged by cases they saw as being related to social stresses.聽

They turned to an optimistic problem-solver in their midst. Health worker Jenny Hartnoll began comprehensively cataloging community resources 鈥 choirs, places where hobbyists could hang out and tinker, support groups. Then work turned to actively matching some patients to those resources, where appropriate.聽

What happened was pretty remarkable. 鈥淓mergency hospital admissions in Frome fell by 14% over three years,鈥 , even though they rose by twice that rate over the same period in the surrounding county.聽

When Britain鈥檚 National Health Service released its long-term plan this year it hailed the town鈥檚 win. The gains were more than medical.

鈥淚t provides a positive shift in power and decision-making,鈥 the report read, 鈥渢hat enables people to feel informed, have a voice, be heard and be connected, to each other and their communities.鈥


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Precedented

Lessons from history

Impeachment proceedings are obviously fertile ground for partisan discord. You don鈥檛 need more explanation of that. Our writers focus on what鈥檚 new 鈥 and not new 鈥 about the divide.

Eduardo Verdugo/AP
A former policeman walks through an abandoned home, torched by the Zetas cartel eight years ago, in Allende, Coahuila state, Mexico, on Dec. 3, 2019. Residents of the small town of Villa Union, 12 miles from Allende, said Tuesday that they fear a return to the days of 2010-13, when the old Zetas cartel killed, burned, and abducted Coahuila citizens.聽

The way a threat is categorized goes a long way toward developing a response to it. We look at a case study in evolving threat perception south of the U.S. border.

The Explainer

Rene Rossignaud/AP
Mandy Mallia (right), sister of Daphne Caruana Galizia, protests outside the office of Prime Minister Joseph Muscat in Valletta, Malta, Dec. 3, 2019, as a delegation of European Union lawmakers visited the country after an investigation into Ms. Caruana Galizia's murder.

Justice deferred can bring unity of purpose, new resistance, or both. This short story from the EU鈥檚 smallest country gets at how an approach to corruption could become a model for the bloc.

Here鈥檚 an exploration of another nation鈥檚 political future. What happens when political consensus doesn鈥檛 result in reforms? Our writer鈥檚 remarkable run of stories from North Africa continues.

Books

Illustration by Sarah Jacoby courtesy of Chronicle Books
An illustration from "Rabbit and the Motorbike" by Kate Hoefler and Sarah Jacoby

Finally, here鈥檚 your refreshing sorbet. Friendship, culture, and travel enliven the best children鈥檚 books of 2019. And tweens will be pulled into our entertaining middle-grade picks. Enjoy.


The Monitor's View

Reuters
People buy seafood at the Athens' main fish market.

Take it from a country that knows 鈥 it is possible to restore lost trust.

On Dec. 9, a day designated as International Anti-Corruption Day, a new Greek prime minister, Kyriakos Mitsotakis, hailed his country鈥檚 latest step in battling corruption. For the first time, Greece will have a single, independent body to probe government wrongdoing. The so-called Transparency Authority, Mr. Mitsotakis said, will also help restore the qualities needed in public life to regain Greece鈥檚 credibility.

The new graft-busting agency is one more milestone in Greece鈥檚 odyssey to redeem its reputation. A decade ago, the government admitted it had been lying about the size of the national debt. Instead of being 3.7% of gross domestic product, it was more than 15%. The falsification of official data shook financial markets and almost broke up the European Union鈥檚 single-currency zone.

Europe鈥檚 economy spiraled into recession. Its leaders then worked hard to instill a culture of integrity in Greece along with providing it with massive bailouts 鈥 the largest ever to a country on the brink of bankruptcy.

That work is steadily paying off. Almost every political party now supports open and rational economic policies, such as creation of the new anti-corruption agency. The government is running a budget surplus that is verifiable. This year, the Athens stock exchange could be the world鈥檚 best performer. Greece is again borrowing from financial markets on very favorable terms. And its economic growth could reach 3% next year.

To be sure, unemployment, tax evasion, and the Greek debt remain high. The policies of forced austerity were necessary but they took a heavy toll in increased poverty. Nearly 40% of bank loans are considered 鈥渘onperforming.鈥 And about a quarter of Greeks say corruption is still the most significant issue.

Yet Greece鈥檚 democracy has proved resilient. 鈥淭he real efforts and the real courage were shown by the people of Greece,鈥 said former European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker last June. 鈥淕reece is in its rightful place at the beating heart of Europe and of the euro.鈥

Greece also taught the EU something about integrity. For years, said Mr. Juncker, its member states had resisted tighter rules on verifying their official financial statistics. 鈥淭hat was a major mistake,鈥 he said. 鈥淲ould we have done the right thing, we would never have experienced the Greek crisis as we did.鈥

As it is, the EU is celebrating the 鈥淕reek miracle鈥 of recovery 鈥 in both its economy and its credibility. As Europe鈥檚 lost sheep, Greece is now found and flourishing in a new spirit of accountability and transparency.


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.

When worries and sorrows get too big for us to bear, God鈥檚 light is here to comfort and guide us. One woman experienced this in a meaningful way one Christmas after a tough time of family loss.


A message of love

Mark Lennihan/AP/File
Big Bird, played by puppeteer Caroll Spinney, gets ready to read to Connor Scott during a taping of 鈥淪esame Street鈥 in New York, April 10, 2008. Mr. Spinney, who died Sunday, gave life to both the sweet-natured giant canary and trash-collector Oscar the Grouch, teaching children to be kind and that it was OK to like things other people didn鈥檛. 鈥淚 always thought, 鈥楬ow fortunate for me that I got to play the two best Muppets,鈥欌 Mr. Spinney told The New York Times when he retired last year after half a century. 鈥淧laying Big Bird is one of the most joyous things of my life.鈥
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte and Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Here鈥檚 a quick bonus read for today: Ann Scott Tyson with some observations on the Hong Kong pro-democracy protests that she wanted us to share with you as she leaves the island.聽

As always, watch CSMonitor.com for news as it moves. In tomorrow鈥檚 Daily we鈥檒l look at why college students are flocking to happiness classes that help them design their lives.

More issues

2019
December
09
Monday

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