In an emergency, picking health over privacy seems like an easy choice. But after the crisis passes, our reporter wonders: Will governments still be watching your every move?
Our five selected stories for today鈥檚 issue cover the erosion of privacy during a health crisis, a video history lesson about racism, a day with a grocery store manager, ethics in warfare, and collaboration and lichen in Canada.
Drive-by salutes are all the rage.聽
From California to Massachusetts, teachers are making signs, getting behind the wheel, and driving past their students鈥 homes. In the past week, 10-, 20-, and 50-car parades have been . And the kids and parents are on the street curbs waving and holding signs too.聽
Perhaps in America鈥檚 car culture, it should come as no surprise that a relationship would be reinforced with a motorcade. It鈥檚 also a kind of rolling rebellion. In a time of social distancing, we are resisting 鈥 not the rules as much as the sense of separation.聽
These car parades are about American communities pushing back and affirming their ties. This is about finding new ways to become closer. A Zoom room isn鈥檛 enough.聽
鈥淲e just want all the kids to their teachers,鈥 Staci Scott-Stewart, a teacher at North Elementary in Noblesville, Indiana, told CNN. 鈥淲e鈥檙e all in it together.鈥
And it鈥檚 not just convoys of teachers. In Marietta, Georgia, Amanda Overstreet Wagner organized a drive-by birthday parade for her neighbor鈥檚 11-year-old son.聽
鈥淚 feel like some of this coronavirus has been more dividing us as Americans rather than uniting,鈥 said Ms. Wagner. 鈥淪o, in my little neighborhood in the suburbs of Atlanta, I鈥檓 trying .鈥
I鈥檒l honk for that.