2021年8月20日 星期五

The Daily: Leaving a Life in Kabul

Meet the woman you heard on Monday's show.

By Lauren Jackson

It was a full week of international news on The Daily, where we covered two stories of crisis and abandonment. First, with the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan, we heard the desperate, devastating chaos that ensued through the voices of those left behind. Then, we reported on the isolation of Haitians fending for themselves in the wake of a presidential assassination and another major earthquake.

In this newsletter, we want to share how our Afghanistan coverage came together — and introduce you to the woman you heard on Monday's episode. Then, we share a playlist for your weekend to get you caught up on other international news you might have missed.

Introducing Rada

On Monday, you heard the voice of R., an Afghan woman searching for safety as her country fell under Taliban rule. Not sure whether R. would make it out of Afghanistan, we identified her by only her first initial to protect her from retaliation. We're happy to share that she has now made it safely to France on an emergency visa.

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As a result, she allowed us to share her full name, Rada Akbar, and images of her. Rada is an Afghan photographer and artist who, alongside recording voice memos for us, chose to visually document her journey.

"I did a photo shoot the day before packing up stuff, trying to record and document the situation I'm going through, with photos and writings," Rada wrote in a text message. Below, we share Rada's representation of how it felt to shrink her entire life into suitcases — giving up a vibrant art career in Kabul to evacuate to France.

"I took self-portraits to say farewell to my house," Rada said of these images taken in Kabul on August 6. "The text on my dress is written, 'Only Voice Remains' and was designed by myself."Rada Akbar
Rada Akbar

Rada is one of the few who have made it out of the country. Thousands of Afghans are still stranded at Kabul's airport, a site of such danger and chaos that even those with proper paperwork and tickets are unable to reach their planes.

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"It's been such a long and tough journey," Rada said. "But at the end of the day, I'm still very happy and feel lucky and privileged that I had this chance and I was protected, I was respected and I was cared for by the French people."

Below, Lynsea Garrison, The Daily's senior international producer, explains how we found Rada.

Listening to the voices of Afghanistan

By Lynsea Garrison

For several weeks, a team of producers had been looking for voices of people trying to leave Afghanistan: former military interpreters, people rushing to apply for a priority visa, others who aren't eligible for those visas.

One stood out to me. A few weeks back, I had asked Fatima Faizi, one of our reporters in Kabul, if she knew anyone. She mentioned Rada, whom I talked to on the phone to learn more about her background. We were supposed to talk again, but then the situation there really started to deteriorate. I realized that she would have zero time for a recorded interview, so I sent her a voice memo suggesting it as a way for us to document her experience.

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It was a pretty spontaneous idea, and she agreed by sending me a voice memo back. We then continued the conversation, with her documenting what she was experiencing in a very fast-moving situation. When Rada messaged me about Mazar-i-Sharif and Jalalabad falling, I was at a loss for words — at her pain, desperation and anger at feeling betrayed by the world. I knew after those memos that she had given us something special.

Because of these impassioned voice memos, we decided to lean into her as our main voice in Monday's episode about the Taliban takeover. We put all her memos together, but we needed to show the passage of time, so we used ambient newsreel to communicate how fast things were happening — and to time stamp the moment each voice memo was sent. What listeners heard is virtually what Rada sent me. There were only a couple of voice memos we didn't use, mostly for security reasons, but we did very little editing. The rawness of those memos was something we really felt we wanted to preserve.

As we finished the episode in the early hours of Monday morning, after the Taliban had taken Kabul, the capital, Rada was still sending me voice memos. So we added her most recent updates at the end to keep her experience as fresh as possible.

There were many others who also shared their updates with me over the weekend. All were powerful voices of people who were desperate and fearful for their own reasons. I hoped that in leaning into one voice we could convey a sense of the dire situation. But I'm grateful for all of the Afghans who talked to us, and who are continuing to talk to us. They are vital witnesses of history whose voices Americans need to hear.

Here's what else you need to know this week

While out fishing with some other women one day, Onitsha Joseph saw oil bubbling to a river's surface in the Niger Delta region of Nigeria — and knew she had found the source of an oil spill.Yagazie Emezi

By Desiree Ibekwe and John Woo

If you want to learn more about the situation in Afghanistan, and get up to speed on other news events from across the world, we have put together some recommendations for your weekend listening from our narrated articles team:

In this article, three reporters detail how American spy agencies grew more pessimistic over the summer about the situation in Afghanistan, and the ability of its military to mount resistance to a takeover by the Taliban.

The pessimism grew concurrently with the Biden administration's assurances that the collapse of the nation was unlikely to happen quickly.

In the two decades since the invasion of Afghanistan, tens of thousands of Afghans have settled in the United States. Now, many of them worry for the safety of their families, fearing retaliation for their own involvement with U.S. agencies.

"This is kind of a movie drama for the United States," said Mohammad Sahil, a former employee at the United States Agency for International Development in Afghanistan, in the article. "When you watch the movie, maybe you're scared, but then you walk out of the movie theater." He added: "But this is real for us."

For more than two years, English soccer has been pressing Facebook and other social media companies to rein in online hate speech against its players. Yet as the Premier League, England's top division, opens its season, players are again steeling themselves for online hate.

For decades, oil companies like Chevron, Shell and Eni have made billions in profits in the vast Niger Delta region of Nigeria. Now, some of them are pulling out, and, according to government monitors and environmental and human rights organizations, they are leaving ruin in their wake. With its delicate ecosystem, the delta, once teeming with life, is now one of the most polluted places on the planet.

A group of fisherwomen who say that a leak in a Chevron pipe imperiled their livelihoods have decided to call the oil companies to account and bring the fight to their doors. "You want to kill us with your oil," one of the women said. "We'll come to you so you can kill us yourselves."

On The Daily this week

Monday: Our conversations with R, a Kabul resident, as Afghanistan's government collapsed.

Tuesday: How misjudgments by the U.S. led to the Taliban's takeover of Afghanistan.

Wednesday: We speak to Maria Abi-Habib, who was on the ground in Haiti, about the devastating impact of last week's 7.2 magnitude earthquake.

Thursday: An exploration of the fear and frustrations felt by former Afghan interpreters who have been left behind in the U.S. evacuations.

Friday: The concerns over Apple's new tools to take action against child sexual abuse imagery.

That's it for The Daily newsletter. See you next week.

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Honey, who shrunk the world?

Globalization and the power of ideas.

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Paul Krugman

August 20, 2021

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By Paul Krugman

Opinion Columnist

When I was in my 30s, my parents gave me a sweatshirt bearing the words "Global shmobal." At the time, I was going to many economics conferences; when my parents would ask me what the latest conference was about, I apparently always replied, "Global shmobal."

What I didn't know at the time was that the global was about to get even shmobaler. In the mid-1980s, world trade had recovered from the disruptions and protectionism of the interwar period, but exports as a share of world G.D.P. were still back only to around their level in 1913. Starting around 1988, however, there was a huge surge in trade — sometimes referred to as hyperglobalization — that leveled off around 2008 but left the world's economies much more integrated than ever before:

Exports as percentage of world G.D.P.World Bank

This tight integration has played an important background role in pandemic economics. Vaccine production is very much an international enterprise, with production of each major vaccine relying on inputs from multiple nations. On the downside, our reliance on global supply chains has introduced forms of economic risk: One factor in recent inflation has been a worldwide shortage of shipping containers.

But how did we get so globalized? There are, it seems to me, two main narratives out there.

One narrative stresses the role of technology, especially the rise of containerized shipping (which is why the box shortage is a big deal). As the work of David Hummels, maybe the leading expert on this subject, points out, there has also been a large decline in the cost of air transport, which is a surprisingly big factor: Only a tiny fraction of the tonnage that crosses borders goes by air, but air-shipped goods are, of course, much higher value per pound than those sent by water, so airplanes carry around 30 percent of the value of world trade.

By the way, pharmaceuticals, presumably including Covid-19 vaccine ingredients, are mainly shipped by air:

This is what it looks like when drugs fly.Brookings

An alternative narrative, however, places less weight on technology than on policy. That's the narrative one often sees associated with Trumpists (although they're not the only ones with something like this view): Globalists pushed to open our borders to imports, and that's why foreign goods have flooded into our economy.

And the truth is that from the 1930s up to Donald Trump, the U.S. government did, in fact, pursue a strategy of negotiating reductions in tariffs and other barriers to trade, in the belief that more trade would both foster economic growth and, by creating productive interdependence among nations, promote world peace.

But the long-run push toward more open trade on the part of the United States and other advanced economies mostly took place before hyperglobalization; tariffs were already very low by the 1980s:

Tariffs over time.USITC

While there weren't big changes in the policies of advanced economies, however, there was a trade policy revolution in emerging markets, which had high rates of protection in the early 1980s, then drastically liberalized. Here's the World Bank estimate of average tariffs in low and middle-income countries:

Average tariffs in low- and middle-income nations.World Bank

You might ask why a reduction in emerging-market tariffs — taxes on imports — should lead to a surge in emerging-market exports. So let's talk about the Lerner symmetry theorem — or, actually, let's not and just say that tariffs eventually reduce exports as well as imports, typically by leading to an overvalued currency that makes exporters less competitive. And conversely, slashing tariffs leads to more exports. Basically, nations can choose to be inward-looking, trying to develop by producing for the domestic market, or outward-looking, trying to develop by selling to the rest of the world.

What happened in much of the developing world during the era of hyperglobalization was a drastic turn toward outward-looking policies. What caused that trade policy revolution and hence helped cause hyperglobalization itself?

The immediate answer, which may surprise you, is that it was basically driven by ideas.

For more than a generation after World War II, it was widely accepted, even among mainstream economists and at organizations like the World Bank, that nations in the early stages of development should pursue import-substituting industrialization: building up manufacturing behind tariff barriers until it was mature enough to compete on world markets.

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By the 1970s, however, there was broad disillusionment with this strategy, as observers noted the disappointing results of I.S.I. (yes, it was so common that economists routinely used the abbreviation) and as people began to notice export-oriented success stories like South Korea and Taiwan.

So orthodoxy shifted to a much more free-trade set of ideas, the famous Washington Consensus. (Catherine Rampell suggests that should be the new name for D.C.'s football team. Nerds of the world, unite!) The new orthodoxy also delivered its share of disappointments, but that's a story for another time. The important point, for now, is that the change in economic ideology led to a radical change in policy, which played an important role in surging world trade: We wouldn't be importing all those goods from low-wage countries if those countries were still, like India and Mexico in the 1970s, inward-looking economies living behind high tariff walls.

There are, I think, two morals from this story.

First, ideas matter. Maybe not as much as John Maynard Keynes suggested when he asserted that "it is ideas, not vested interests, which are dangerous for good or evil," but they can have huge effects.

Second, it's a corrective against American hubris. We still tend, far too often, to imagine that we can shape the world as we like. But those days are long gone, if they ever existed. Hyperglobalization was made in Beijing, New Delhi and Mexico City, not in D.C.

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2021年8月19日 星期四

On Tech: Wildfires force a store online

An outdoor gear store is a test of what it's like to start an e-commerce site in 2021.

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Technology

August 19, 2021

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Wildfires force a store online

An outdoor gear store is a test of what it's like to start an e-commerce site in 2021.

Asya Demidova

Winthrop Mountain Sports went 40 years without needing to sell its outdoor gear online. Even the coronavirus pandemic didn't change the owners' plans. But the wildfires did.

Tourists flock to Winthrop, a few hours' drive east of Seattle, to ski, hike or drive through a beautiful stretch of the Cascade Mountains. Like many outdoor recreation stores, sales at Winthrop Mountain Sports were solid during most of the pandemic.

Marine Bjornsen, one of the store's owners and a former elite biathlete and skier, told me that there hadn't been plans to sell products online now. "It is something that we wanted to do, but we didn't think that we were going to do it this year," she said. "Then the fires came."

During the past month, two large wildfires have isolated Winthrop from the world and choked the valley with smoke. The store stayed open but didn't sell much beyond discounted boots and shirts to firefighters. Sales dropped by about 80 percent in July compared with the same month in past years, Bjornsen said.

Less than two weeks ago, Winthrop Mountain Sports began selling products on its website to reach customers who couldn't or wouldn't come to the store — slowly at first with a few types of items to see how it went. That makes Winthrop Mountain Sports a test of what it's like to start an e-commerce site in 2021, in the twin crises of a pandemic and wildfires.

One of the themes that I keep coming back to are the nuanced ways that technology makes things both better and worse for business owners, a teacher, a rabbi and the rest of us. Selling online gives Bjornsen new opportunities to boost her business, but it also imposes fresh burdens and puts her store in direct competition with everyone else selling outdoor gear on the internet — including giants like Amazon and REI.

The good news is that starting an e-commerce site has never been easier. Stuck inside because of the unhealthy air, Bjornsen said that she devoted her time to adding product photos and descriptions to the Winthrop Mountain Sports website.

It helped that the store was already using software from a company called Lightspeed to track inventory. If Bjornsen sold 10 pairs of hiking boots in the store, she wouldn't mistakenly try to sell them online, too. This isn't fancy, no, but a lot of small-business owners don't have the time, money or expertise to nail the tech basics.

Bjornsen said she and her employees were still learning how to manage a store and an online business at the same time. For each online order, they must enter the weight and dimensions manually, affix a shipping label and get the package out with UPS or another service. Bjornsen said that she has been dropping off some orders herself at a delivery depot on her way home. She and her employees talk through questions with people who want to order online, too.

Bjornsen said that it's too soon to know how the store's finances might be affected if more of its sales shift from in person to the web. "It's a lot of work," she said. "The margin will be less, but it's better than not selling."

Selling online allows the store to reach customers in new ways and many people expect to be able to buy online, she said, but Winthrop Mountain Sports wouldn't survive as an online-only store. "We have a shop and a community around us," she said.

Marine and Erik Bjornsen retired from skiing and relocated from Alaska in December, after they and others bought Winthrop Mountain Sports from its longtime owner. To put it mildly, it's been an unpredictable period to run a retail store for the first time.

"If we had the business for 10 years, then one summer doesn't seem like a big deal," she said. "You can be a little more level headed. But because we don't have that it's a little stressful." Bjornsen said that she hopes "we will have a good winter and forget about this."

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TIP OF THE WEEK

Storing your digital vaccination record

With more businesses mandating proof of vaccination against Covid-19, our consumer tech columnist Brian X. Chen walks through the steps of saving a digital vaccination record within easy reach on your phone:

Here in California, I recently requested my digital vaccination record from the California Department of Public Health. (The way to request one varies from state to state — look up your health department's website for instructions.)

After entering my information, I received a text message with a link to a QR code, a type of digital bar code, that contained the information about my vaccination record. From here, I had to figure out the best way to store the bar code on my phone.

The quickest method, I concluded, was to take a screenshot of the record and attach the image to a note. This way, I could find my vaccination record with a keyword search or by scrolling through my notes app.

Here's how to do that:

On iPhones:

  • When the image editing toolbar appears, tap the button in the upper-right corner that looks like a square with an arrow pointing upward. In the row of apps, swipe to the Notes app and select it. Here, save the image to a new note.
  • Now open the Notes app and select the note you just created. Rename the note "Vaccination Record."

On Android phones:

  • After taking a screenshot of the vaccination record, download and open the Google Keep note-taking app.
  • In Keep, at the bottom tap "add image." Then select "choose image" and pick the screenshot of your vaccination record.
  • Label the note and hit the back button.

(My colleague J.D. Biersdorfer has more tips on carrying vaccine proof on a phone, and The Washington Post has another helpful guide.)

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Before we go …

  • Are you eager to participate in a work meeting in virtual reality? Mark Zuckerberg says you are. My colleague Mike Isaac gave it a try and explained Facebook's belief in VR and other "technology that gives you this sense of presence."
  • Helping inform Afghans, at a risk to themselves: Rest of World writes about a company called Ehtesab in Kabul that generates smartphone alerts to inform people about bomb blasts, roadblocks, electricity shortages and other problems. The founder, Sara Wahedi, is worried that the nature of the service makes Ehtesab staff a target for a Taliban crackdown.
  • How do you prove an illegal monopoly? A judge in June told the U.S. government that it needed to show evidence that Facebook had a commanding share of social networking. The Federal Trade Commission reworked its antitrust lawsuit on Thursday, and my colleague Cecilia Kang notes that it may be difficult to apply U.S. laws to areas of tech where dominance is not necessarily easy to define.

Hugs to this

Puppies in a cart! Puppies! In a cart!

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We want to hear from you. Tell us what you think of this newsletter and what else you'd like us to explore. You can reach us at ontech@nytimes.com.

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