海角大神

2020
April
02
Thursday

Monitor Daily Podcast

April 02, 2020
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Yvonne Zipp
Features Editor

Today鈥檚 stories explore presidential messaging, efforts to shelter California鈥檚 homeless residents, a bold climate proposal, a movement in limbo, and a Monitor film critic鈥檚 picks for escapist flicks. But first, a tale of a new connection made in isolation.

When Billy Collins read the Monitor鈥檚 story about New York shut-in Carmella Parry and Poems on Wheels, he says he was stirred by her joy-filled enthusiasm for the poems she received with her delivered meals.

The former U.S. poet laureate sent Ms. Parry a copy of his book 鈥淭he Rain in Portugal.鈥 鈥淚 just thought a book of poems might be a nice surprise for Carmella,鈥 Mr. Collins told the Monitor鈥檚 Harry Bruinius, who wrote about Ms. Parry.聽鈥淚 mean, the entire city is locked down.聽That image that we have of the elderly living in apartments in New York, and just the kind of loneliness of so many of them 鈥 she鈥檚 kind of had her own locked down, shelter-in-place life, a shelter within this larger viral shelter now.鈥澛

Ms. Parry, at 94, has lived in the same fourth-floor walk-up for 70 years. Her sisters live nearby but are also homebound. They talk every day by phone, and Ms. Parry sends them cards with lines she composes.

Mr. Collins聽included a note wishing her the best. 鈥淪he鈥檚 become kind of a paradigm of what鈥檚 happening to a lot of us that are confined now.鈥

He notes how Wordsworth once hoped personal lives would be marked by 鈥渓ittle, nameless, unremembered acts of kindness and of love.鈥澛

鈥淭he 鈥榰nremembered鈥 ingredient is the key,鈥 says the author of 鈥.鈥 鈥淭he idea is to forget your good deeds, and that is done when your kind acts come so naturally you don鈥檛 remember them.鈥

A quick note before moving onto today鈥檚 stories: Be sure to check out Laurent Belsie鈥檚 story from yesterday on the newly unemployed. The story has been updated to reflect the latest unemployment figures released today.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

How does one best convey information during a public health crisis? That鈥檚 a question media outlets are grappling with as they cover the president鈥檚 daily briefings, which tend to mix聽valuable information with inaccurate assertions.

Housing the most vulnerable of California鈥檚 homeless people is a humane response to a public health crisis. It could also uncork solutions to a chronic housing shortage after the pandemic is over.聽

Climate realities

An occasional series
Michael Bonfigli/Special to 海角大神
A house in Takoma Park, Maryland, sports solar panels on March 30, 2020. The suburb was one of the first places in the country to declare itself 鈥渘uclear-free," and now aims to go fossil fuel-free by 2045.

In the fight against global warming, how far should governments go in forcing residents to change? One Maryland suburb is testing the limits. This story is part of an occasional series on 鈥Climate Realities.鈥

Patrik Jonsson/海角大神
Even as his tables groan with plenty, Adam Mentzer has watched his customers dwindle from multiple restaurants and markets to basically fewer than a handful, including at the Forsyth Farmers' Market in Savannah, Georgia. He talks to his employees right before the market opens on March 29, 2020.

With farm-to-table restaurants takeout-only and many farmers markets closed, locavores are concerned that the pandemic could undo the progress of their movement. Others believe the crisis only highlights how vital local supply chains are.

Diversions

World History Archive/Newscom
鈥淣orth by Northwest鈥 is a 1959 spy thriller starring Cary Grant and directed by Alfred Hitchcock.

One way to focus your movie watching while shut-in is to adopt one genre or director. Film critic Peter Rainer argues Hitchcock films should be at the top of your playlist: 鈥淗as any other director made a greater number of peerlessly entertaining movies?鈥澛


The Monitor's View

AP
Police officers talk to a man on his bicycle in Bekescsaba, Hungary, March 31.

To deal with the coronavirus, governments across the world have either taken emergency powers by fiat or been granted them democratically. Either way, the curbs on liberty have generally been accepted 鈥 if seen as both temporary and effective in ending the pandemic. But what if they are not seen that way?

A good example occurred this week in Hungary when a leader went too far in making an opportunistic power grab at a time of heightened fear.

On Monday, Prime Minister Viktor Orb谩n persuaded Hungary鈥檚 parliament to give him the right to rule by decree for an indefinite period. Parliament suspended itself with no sunset clause to reverse it. A new law virtually ended rule of law at the national level. The move was a major step in a decade-long erosion of civil rights and freedoms under Mr. Orb谩n, who has openly said he does not believe in liberal democracy.

But on Tuesday he went further and introduced a measure to strip the country鈥檚 mayors of political autonomy. Municipalities would have to answer to local 鈥渄efense committees鈥 largely controlled by Mr. Orb谩n. The outcry was instant. Hungarians knew that the tough steps needed to gain public compliance in combating the virus required the electoral legitimacy of local leaders.

鈥淭his proposal is dangerous not only for our democracy, but it also makes the fight against coronavirus very difficult,鈥 said Budapest鈥檚 mayor, Gergely Kar谩csony.

Within 24 hours, the ruling party was forced to withdraw the measure. In order to maintain cooperation from the people, mayors across Hungary have set a roadblock on Mr. Orb谩n鈥檚 march toward autocracy.

The prime minister鈥檚 extraordinary power to rule by decree still stands, a step that the European Union has rebuked. The EU may find a way to force Hungary to revise the power grab. 鈥淲e will take action as necessary,鈥 said European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen.

Yet for now, democracy at the local level remains alive and well in a country at the heart of Europe. The public鈥檚 embrace of the principles that hold society together was greater than its fear of the coronavirus.


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.

After receiving a pneumonia diagnosis, a woman turned to God for help 鈥 and experienced firsthand the biblical promise that 鈥渨ith God all things are possible.鈥


A message of love

Steve Helber/AP
George DeCola places "drive thru prayer" signs at a shopping center, April 2, 2020, in Richmond, Virginia. Mr. DeCola, who is a worship leader at a Lutheran church, offers prayers for those wanting spiritual guidance.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte and Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us today. Come back tomorrow when we鈥檒l have a story about a family portrait phenomenon that鈥檚聽helping Canadian families make the most of their time together in isolation.

More issues

2020
April
02
Thursday

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