海角大神

2020
January
02
Thursday

Monitor Daily Podcast

January 02, 2020
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Eva Botkin-Kowacki
Science, environment, and technology writer

Today鈥檚 stories examine optimism in the world鈥檚 economy, a unique strain of environmentalism in Alabama, an effort to break down barriers around Swiss dinner tables, how religious women in Israel are pushing back against gender segregation, and the exclusive society of hat-masters in Tunisia.

New Year鈥檚 conversations invariably turn to resolutions. For years, I鈥檝e tried to scoot out of the room, embarrassed to say that I don鈥檛 set New Year鈥檚 resolutions, largely because I know I鈥檒l beat myself up when I inevitably don鈥檛 attain them fully.

My glass-half-empty view isn鈥檛 unfounded 鈥撀爎esearchers estimate that of resolvers stick with their goals until February. But recently I realized that I may have been missing the point. New Year鈥檚 resolutions aren鈥檛 entirely about making literal goals. They can be a vehicle for reflection and regrouping, a chance to check in with oneself.

That epiphany came from two directions. Last year, a friend shared that one of his resolutions was to pet more dogs. The idea was to bring a little extra joy to each day. It was a simple, attainable, and energizing goal.聽

At the Monitor, we also have a sort of New Year鈥檚 resolution tradition. Each team, from the science desk to the Middle East desk, is asked to think about a particular idea to be something of a touchstone for the year. The exercise gives us a chance to give sustained attention to consequential issues.聽

Rather than being strict goals bound to frustrate, these resolutions are more intentions that empower. So in this new year 鈥撀燼nd new decade 鈥撀爌erhaps I鈥檒l actually set personal resolutions.聽And maybe I鈥檒l pet more dogs, too.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Between the U.S.-China trade war and the uncertainties of Brexit, 2019 was marked by economic anxiety. The turn of 2020 may come as a sigh of relief.

A deeper look

It鈥檚 easy to paint Trump supporters as indifferent to the environment. But a trip to聽Alabama鈥檚 Baldwin County reveals a more nuanced portrait.聽This story is part of an occasional series on 鈥Climate Realities.鈥

Karen Norris/Staff
Dominique Soguel
Filmon Heileab, an Eritrean refugee living in Switzerland, shares videos of his children and music from his home country with Clara Belke (left, holding baby Malou), Simon Gottwalt, Julia Buhmann, and Philipp Kerler (right). The two Zurich couples invited Mr. Heileab for dinner on Sept. 23, 2019.

Sometimes a warm welcome smells like homemade pasta. Some Europeans are welcoming refugees not just to their countries, but to their kitchen tables. These meals are meant to break down barriers.

Ronen Zvulun/Reuters/File
A girl peers through a curtain separating men and women at the gravesite of Rabbi Yisrael Abuhatzeira, a Moroccan-born sage known as the Baba Sali, during an annual pilgrimage held on the anniversary of his death in the southern Israeli town of Netivot, Jan. 13, 2016.

Gender segregation among devout Jews has been expanding into Israeli society. In this first of two stories, we look at how religious women are combating what they see as their marginalization.

Taylor Luck
Tunisian hat-master Abdullatif Zurdazi prepares a "chachiya" for packaging at his shop in the centuries-old Souk Chaouachine in Tunis, Tunisia, Oct. 25, 2019.

What value is in a hat? Warmth? Fashion? A better question might be: What values? In a Tunis souk, an exclusive society of hat-masters ruled by honor and tradition manufacture the iconic聽chachiya.


The Monitor's View

Julio Cortez/AP
The U.S. Capitol in Washington is seen to the right of the bottom part of the Washington Monument before sunrise in December 2019.

A bit of the spirit of Dolley Madison may be quietly at work within the U.S. Congress.

The wife of James Madison, a Founding Father and later the fourth president of the United States, she is often remembered as a gracious hostess. But the 鈥減residentress,鈥 as she was known, accomplished much more.聽

Her popular social gatherings, called 鈥渟queezes鈥 (for the crowds they drew), brought together the members of Congress in the early 19th century from both sides of the aisle. The deeper purpose: helping politicians get to know each other as individuals, not as anonymous enemies.

Today the House Select Committee on the Modernization of Congress has taken up that task. Its wide range of interests has included recommending money-saving measures like bulk buying of office supplies, mandatory cybersecurity training for members, and even an overhaul of the budgeting process itself.聽

But one of its most important functions may be as a low-key effort to reduce hostility between the parties.

Rather than having more members from the majority party, the committee鈥檚 membership is evenly split: six Democrats and six Republicans. And when it meets members don鈥檛 sit as two opposing camps but interspersed, as individuals.

Tom Graves of Georgia, the group鈥檚 top Republican, has called the committee 鈥渁 little place of refuge鈥 where members can offer 鈥渋deas of how to make this place work better.鈥 Rather than operating as a typical committee, where Republicans put on their red jerseys and Democrats put on their blue jerseys to battle it out, 鈥渨e kind of made a decision not to do that,鈥 says committee Chairman Derek Kilmer, a Democrat from Washington state. 鈥淓verybody鈥檚 wearing 鈥榝ix Congress鈥 jerseys.鈥

Other than at the House gym or on the floor of Congress itself, members of the two parties have few opportunities to actually meet each other, Mr. Graves notes. The committee recommends that at the start of each new term a bipartisan retreat be held for all members and their families. And it says a bipartisan, members-only space should be created on Capitol Hill as well.聽

As part of an effort to reach out, Mr. Kilmer has visited the Republican Study Committee, an influential caucus of conservative members. And Mr. Graves paid a similar call on the New Democrat Coalition, a group of center-leaning congressional Democrats.

The select committee鈥檚 proponents include some 40 House freshmen, who are eager to see a change in the highly partisan climate of the chamber, and the Association of Former Members of Congress, which includes members from both parties.

The committee is" a bright spot in all of this [partisan] noise right now,鈥澛燤r. Graves has said.聽

Last November, the House extended the panel鈥檚 tenure through the end of 2020, which promises to be a politically acrimonious year that will include presidential impeachment hearings in the Senate and the November elections.

At the same time the select committee will be trying to bring sensible reforms to the way the House operates. That could pay an even bigger dividend: the realization that Republicans and Democrats can work together for the common good.聽


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.

The start of a new year is often seen as an opportunity to commit to new initiatives, fresh starts, and improvements in character. But we don鈥檛 need to let the calendar define our potential for progress. At every moment we can welcome inspiration from God that brings reformation and healing.


A message of love

Muhammad Iqbal/Antara Foto/Reuters
A baby is evacuated by a rescue team using an inflatable boat after floods hit a residential area in Tangerang, near Jakarta, Indonesia, Jan. 1, 2020. Torrential rains and severe flooding in the Jakarta region have killed some 30 people and displaced more than 60,000. Heavy rains are expected to continue through Jan. 10.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us. Come back tomorrow. In the wake of the attack on the U.S. embassy compound in Baghdad, we鈥檒l probe the disconnect between Washington and the reality in Iraq.

More issues

2020
January
02
Thursday

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