Messaging is a difficult balancing act, particularly around the pandemic. Leaders must project authority, while being transparent and admitting unknowns. How do you build credibility and trust?
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Mark Sappenfield
I have never been mistaken for a foodie. The seven Olympic Games I covered involved more meals at McDonald鈥檚 than I would care to admit. So Tyler Bey鈥檚 story in today鈥檚 issue on a television show about food was not likely to spark my interest.
And yet it did.
Why? Because in his story, Tyler remarked how the Black American cuisine featured in 鈥淗igh on the Hog鈥 has a unique ability to connect 鈥 how it can connect the fractured and fractious history of the United States or two people across a dinner table. 鈥淲e need a lot of connection in the world today,鈥 one of his sources told him.
Today鈥檚 Daily is all about connection, in a way. We look at how the U.S. can find connection in talking about the pandemic, building credibility, transparency, and trust. We ask how the world can find connection to people in places like Lebanon and Myanmar, remembering the need for progress even when the media spotlight turns away. And we tell the story of refugees finding a sense of connection and home at the Olympics.
All these stories are a thread about the power of connection. Says one refugee Olympian: 鈥淭hat鈥檚 why we really feel like we are a family.鈥
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And why we wrote them
( 5 min. read )
Messaging is a difficult balancing act, particularly around the pandemic. Leaders must project authority, while being transparent and admitting unknowns. How do you build credibility and trust?
( 4 min. read )
Lebanon and Myanmar reveal an old truth: Dictators and corrupt governments flourish when the world is not paying attention. The question is how we sustain our attention.
( 6 min. read )
A pipeline to deliver Russian gas to Germany is a geopolitical kaleidoscope, showing how the relationships among the U.S., Russia, Ukraine, and Western Europe are shifting in new ways.
( 4 min. read )
Being a refugee means 鈥渟omeone who鈥檚 not home,鈥 one athlete says. But the Olympics have helped refugees find a temporary home back on the playing field, and in each other.
( 5 min. read )
The summer cooking series 鈥淗igh on the Hog鈥 takes a fresh look at American history through Black cuisine. Along the way, it corrects some long-held misconceptions with new narratives.
( 3 min. read )
It鈥檚 hard to imagine a more joyful and fearless pro-democracy activist in the world than Maria Kalesnikava. On Wednesday, this brave woman entered a closed courtroom in Belarus, a country at the center of Europe and the focus of its struggle against autocracy, and did a short dance with a smile before the start of her trial. From inside a prisoner cage, she also made a heart with her fingers for reporters.
And this happy display came after she had spent 11 months in near-solitary confinement for helping organize mass protests last year against a ruthless dictator, Alexander Lukashenko, in a former Soviet state the size of Kansas.
Her dance helped show to the world where the real fear in Belarus lies.
鈥淭he authorities are terrified of an open trial, where everyone will see that, in fact, the authorities themselves are the main danger,鈥 she told Russian outlet TV Rain.
When she speaks to her jailers and other authorities, she said, one of her rules is to laugh a lot. 鈥淔reedom is worth fighting for. Do not be afraid to be free,鈥 she wrote in a message to her fellow citizens from jail last year.
Last September, she had an opportunity to be physically free when security officers took her to the border and tried to exile her. Instead, she ripped up her passport and ran back into Belarus, only to be arrested on bogus charges.
Her leadership, along with that of two other women who led the protests in 2020, has altered the thinking of Belarusians in ways that have not only shaken the regime in Minsk but also the autocrat next door, Vladimir Putin. He fears yet another democratic revolution in the states along Russia鈥檚 border.
鈥淲e have already won now,鈥 Ms. Kalesnikava told the German newspaper Die Welt am Sonntag (The World on Sunday). 鈥淲e have conquered our fear and our indifference. This is most important. It is very difficult to squeeze out the bondage, drop by drop 鈥 but it is necessary for us and for our future.鈥
鈥淔reedom doesn鈥檛 just fall into your lap,鈥 she said.
鈥淎ll those who are prepared to fight for the right of people to determine their own future give us strength and are our allies. Belarus is not the only country that has not yet been able to build a democratic system. This is a global challenge. What does the future of humanity look like? That depends on all of us.鈥
During her time in jail, Ms. Kalesnikava takes joy in each day. 鈥淚 know that life is beautiful,鈥 said the trained flutist and music manager.
This theme of conquering fear is common among many Belarusians who have run up against the regime and made the mental leap from quiescence to quiet activism. (The protests have ended as result of some 35,000 people being arrested.)
鈥淓very Belorusian is overcoming their fears right now,鈥 says Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya, the female presidential candidate who probably beat Mr. Lukashenko in a rigged election last August.
鈥淒emocracy has to be inside every person,鈥 she told The New Yorker in December. 鈥淚magine how difficult it is to make the transition from a state of obedience to thinking, 鈥業鈥檓 responsible for my country.鈥欌
The latest public figure to remind her people of the need for courage is Olympic runner Krystsina Tsimanouskaya. On Wednesday, she arrived in Poland after leaving Tokyo in a hurry to escape her government鈥檚 handlers. She had objected to a request by Belarusian sports officials to have her run in a race she had not trained for.
鈥淚 want to tell all Belarusians not to be afraid and, if they鈥檙e under pressure, speak out,鈥 said the runner at a press conference. She didn鈥檛 do a dance. But she captured the spirit of the one by another dissident in a Minsk courtroom.
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.
( 3 min. read )
Recognizing our nature as God鈥檚 children opens the door to greater joy and freedom in our activities.
Thank you for joining us today. Please come back tomorrow when we look at how wildfire prevention has remained a bipartisan issue even amid political polarization. If there鈥檚 a silver lining to this year鈥檚 catastrophic fires, it might be that Republicans and Democrats in western states are showing willingness to work together to pass wildfire-related legislation.