海角大神

2023
July
21
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

July 21, 2023
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Ken Makin
Cultural commentator

All the world鈥檚 a stage, Shakespeare wrote, and all the men and women merely players. There鈥檚 the delivery person, in a shade of brown, leaving packages on the front porch. There are various airport personnel, making sure everyone gets from here to there. Then there are the actors and writers, making a compelling argument out of whether art imitates life, or vice versa.

Right now, they鈥檙e all thinking about a strike.

Even as the number of unions has dropped over decades, recent labor activity with high-profile entities such as Amazon and Starbucks has shined a light on workers鈥 discontent. The National Labor Relations Board has reported an uptick in unfair labor practice charge filings and union representation petitions, the latter at .听听

Labor unions are as American as apple pie. While elements of America鈥檚 strongly capitalistic society have bristled at them, a Gallup poll from last August states that support of labor unions (71%) is at its highest point since 1965.

Unionizing can be seen as an inconvenience 鈥 disruptive to commerce and to many Americans鈥 daily lives. But it can also be a crucial part of a restoration of community. Putting down tools gives us time to reflect, to reassess what really matters to a society.聽

The 鈥渂ottom line鈥 speaks to profits and margins, but the bottom line is that a business isn鈥檛 successful without a value system that prioritizes people.

鈥淲orkers of the world, unite!鈥 isn鈥檛 just the bookend to a communist鈥檚 manifesto. It is a call for empathy 鈥 an identification of this generation鈥檚 needs for housing, health care, and basic rights. While America has coined the phrase 鈥渓ife, liberty and the pursuit of happiness,鈥 it is an aspiration for everyone in the world.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

The Texas power grid 鈥 famous for failing when it is most needed 鈥 has come through weeks of record 100-degree days like a champ. Its performance could provide a model for the rest of the United States on what energy transformation can look like.

SOURCE:

ERCOT, U.S. Department of Energy, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory Energy Technologies Area

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Jacob Turcotte/Staff
Howard LaFranchi/海角大神
Inga Kordynovska, an Odesa lawyer and founder of the Sandbox Kids summer day camp, at the camp for kids affected by the war, in Odesa, Ukraine, June 15, 2023.

Children are remarkably resilient. They are also vulnerable. However hard a society may try to shelter its children, the reality of a war such as Ukraine鈥檚 invades lives. For kids who have experienced loss, these summer camps are a corrective.

Sarah Matusek/海角大神
Hikers traverse a trail in Gunnison National Forest as part of Colorado's Crested Butte Wildflower Festival, July 15, 2023.

After a two-decade megadrought in the American West, an especially wet water year has produced a stunning wildflower show on the Western Slope of Colorado鈥檚 Rocky Mountains.

Podcast

鈥楾he silent, good work鈥: Finding the roots of Mideast progress

In a region where cycles of setbacks are often seen as business as usual, reporting on heartfelt efforts to bring about change can seem quixotic. Our Middle East correspondent tells why experience has shown him that it鈥檚 still worth doing.

Mideast鈥檚 Makers of Change

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Film

Melinda Sue Gordon/Universal Pictures
鈥淥ppenheimer鈥 cast members (left to right) Cillian Murphy, Olli Haaskivi, Matt Damon, and Dane DeHaan help tell the story of the physicist known as 鈥渢he father of the atomic bomb.鈥

What can a film about the origins of the atomic bomb and its 鈥渇ather鈥 bring to modern discussions about nuclear warfare?聽


The Monitor's View

AP
A fan waits for the start of a Women's World Cup soccer match between the Philippines and Switzerland in Dunedin, New Zealand, July 21.

As a benchmark of social progress, the FIFA Women鈥檚 World Cup that got underway yesterday in New Zealand and Australia has much to applaud. For the first time, six countries will pay their female soccer players the same wages they paid their male counterparts in last year鈥檚 men鈥檚 World Cup.

That represents a hard-won gain. Yet economics is only one measure of value. This year鈥檚 tournament includes some surprising newcomers from countries or regions where women struggle for equality. Their ascendance to the highest level of international competition is evidence of the unique power of sports to uplift cultural attitudes about the worth and dignity of girls.

Take Vietnam, one of eight new teams making a debut this year. When the country鈥檚 Football Federation was established in 1989, girls were an afterthought. On Saturday afternoon New Zealand time (Friday night Eastern time), the women鈥檚 team will take the field against the United States, marking the first time the two countries have ever met in a sports match. The team鈥檚 rise charts a gradual societal shift marked by increased investment in education and opportunities for girls. The players are now national heroes.

鈥淭hey have demonstrated the talents, intelligence, qualities, will and bravery of the Vietnamese people,鈥 Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh said.

Nearly 190 countries now have national women鈥檚 soccer teams. China now invests more in women鈥檚 soccer than in its men鈥檚 program. In Morocco, a focus on the women鈥檚 game in recent years by the Royal Moroccan Football Federation has helped transform attitudes across the Arab region. Last year, the country hosted the women鈥檚 Africa Cup of Nations. This year, it sent the first Arab women鈥檚 team to the World Cup.

鈥淪ports don鈥檛 differentiate between genders,鈥 said Idriss Benazzouza, a Moroccan fan who recently聽 took his daughter to see the national women鈥檚 professional team square off against the national armed forces women鈥檚 team. 鈥淚 teach [my daughters] confidence, not fear,鈥 he told Voice of America.

鈥淥nce every four years, we get a chance to celebrate the millions of women and girls who play soccer around the world,鈥 Human Rights Watch wrote during the 2019 Women鈥檚 World Cup. It is 鈥渁 chance to reflect on the fact that in many countries, women and girls have to fight to even get onto the playing field.鈥 Yet once they do, they are capturing hearts and changing minds.

Editor's note:聽The original misstated the time of the match between the United States and Vietnam.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.

Angels, God鈥檚 thoughts, are always with us, revealing goodness in any situation, ensuring our safety, and leading us to practical solutions.


Viewfinder

Francisco Seco/AP
Tourists and locals visit the Hagia Sophia mosque in Istanbul, July 21, 2023. A UNESCO World Heritage Site, Hagia Sophia was built as a church in the sixth century by the Byzantine emperor, was turned into a mosque when the Ottomans conquered Constantinople in 1453, and in 1935 became a secular museum under Turkish President Kemal Atat眉rk. It remained a museum until 2020, when the current Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdo臒an, stirred controversy by turning it once again into a mosque. It is one of Turkey's most popular tourist destinations.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

You鈥檝e come to the end of today鈥檚 Monitor. We hope you鈥檒l come back on Monday when staff writer Ira Porter looks at the fallout from the U.S. Supreme Court striking down affirmative action. New lawsuits are targeting a different aspect of fairness 鈥 the practice of giving preference to legacy and donor students, which plaintiffs say disproportionately benefits white students.

More issues

2023
July
21
Friday

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