2017
June
16
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

June 16, 2017
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Clayton Collins
Director of Editorial Innovation

We tend to think of “otherness” – the discriminatory root cause of so much current global rancor – as something that’s imposed on, well, others.

Wagon-circling may feel like a defense from that. But isn’t that just becoming an “other” yourself?

There seems already to be some pulling back from Thursday’s ballpark bipartisanship. You’d need to go back to the Civil War, one political scientist told The New York Times, to find more animus in this country than we see today. A lot of it is finger-jabbing. But some of it is just smugly “knowing better” and turning away. Retreating into our micro-collectives.

Recent weeks have brought all kinds of group statements of separateness. The reasons often seem defensible. But should subgroups (of any makeup) hold walled-off graduation ceremonies? Should subgroups (of any makeup) pursue exclusive screenings of films?

Globally, it’s not just about the obvious – and often violent – kind of cultural exclusion. It can be quieter. In Egypt, for example, parliamentarians are preparing to discuss a law that would prohibit parents from giving newborns Western names. 

What are the costs, to us all, of any group turning inward?

Now, let’s go to our five stories for today.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Robert Mueller’s investigation appears to be widening. Linda Feldmann, our Washington bureau chief, explores recent political history to provide some insight into how the administration might still continue to get its work done. 

A regional giant with a role that keeps growing – consider the mass of Venezuelan asylum-seekers at its door – Brazil has struggled with scandals. Whitney Eulich unpacks those amid questions over whether Brazil’s institutions are strong enough to be a bulwark.

Overlooked

Stories you may have missed
Doug Struck
Kat Humlicek, an AmeriCorps volunteer, wields a chainsaw to help clear fallen trees on the property of Dean Cato in Gatlinburg, Tenn.

Each day brings some creative new measure of America’s divisions – a 100-degree ‘thermometer’ scale now rates how voters from opposite sides feel toward each other (it just hit zero). In this lean-back story, Doug Struck found people’s actions to be a more uplifting metric. 

Actual drama tends to trump drama of the manufactured kind, however well done. In this piece, Story Hinckley explores the nexus of the two kinds of political programming between which Americans now can choose. (Popcorn’s an option either way.) 

Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff/File
Reclusive – if not necessarily alone – a hermit crab scrambles across coral pieces washed up on a beach.

This last piece, by Eoin O’Carroll, is a quick-but-intricate look at social isolation – remarkably common in a “connected” age. It’s also not a downer, but rather a balm. “[L]oneliness is everyone’s business,” one of his sources explains. “Loneliness is not inevitable.”


The Monitor's View

AP Photo
Seyran Ates, right, founder of a new mosque in Berlin, Germany, preaches June 16. The liberal mosque, call Ibn-Rushd-Goethe, is the first one in Germany where men and women can pray together, homosexuals are welcome, and Muslims of all sects can leave their inner-religious conflicts behind.

Several Muslim groups in Germany hope to rally tens of thousands on June 17 in a march with a simple message: Acts of terror carried out in the name of Islam are not Islamic. This very public support for peace represents a new step for Muslims in the West beyond statements that denounce terrorism. And it is also a necessary one. The Islamic State has called for more attacks in Europe as well as the United States – with the goal of driving a wedge between Muslims and non-Muslims.

Organizers of the march say they want to show that Muslims have “no spiritual proximity” to terrorist groups. They also hope a protest against violent extremism will help them protect their faith in God and affirm their belief in peaceful coexistence with others. 

The march has another purpose, says organizer Lamya Kaddor, a teacher born in Germany to Syrian parents. It is to lessen the fear of Islam by nonMuslims. After the recent terrorists attacks in Europe, and with Germany trying to absorb nearly 1 million refugees from the Middle East, democracy is under threat from the rise of anti-Islamic political parties.

Britain, too, faces a rising fear of Islam. After the attacks on London Bridge and in Manchester, England, Prime Minister Theresa May said there is “far too much tolerance” of extremism in Britain. She asked the whole of society to come together to take on extremism, adding, “we need to live our lives not in a series of separated, segregated communities but as one truly United Kingdom.”

Like those of any faith, Muslims are diverse in their practices and beliefs. Yet with the rising threat from Islamic State and other groups, they are becoming more united in making clear to the world the purpose of Islam. Many Muslims hold prayer vigils with other faiths after an attack. Or they issue statements of condemnation. But a public march like the one in Germany is a new way to enlist Islam as a force for peace.


A Christian 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 – in its various forms – 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 – The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston – whose founder was concerned with both the state of the world and the quality of available news.

In view of this week’s shooting in Washington, D.C., of politicians, one former government worker gives us something healing to consider. Allison Rose-Sonnesyn points out that people in many positions in government and of varying backgrounds and political leanings have a sincere desire to end suffering, to find solutions to national and international problems, to bring about peace and eliminate corruption. This global community of service is a strength to humanity. When frustrated by politics, Allison finds that messages from the Bible, particularly the idea that God is Truth, have helped her stay true to herself without getting carried away by political divisiveness. She’s found prayer can bring practical solutions to problems and a way to move past polarized politics and fear.


A message of love

Reuters
A bicycle taxi stands ready in Havana. In a speech today in Miami, President Trump placed restrictions on travel and business with Cuba, saying that he was “canceling" President Obama’s policy. Some observers called Mr. Trump’s moves more of a "shift" from Mr. Obama’s policy. In the final two years of his presidency, Obama sought to warm relations with the island nation. He visited in 2016.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks so much for reading today. We’ll be back next week with the stories that we’re wringing now for angles – including one on Amazon’s purchase of Whole Foods Market and the broader changes that could bring to a major realm of retail.

Before we leave you for the weekend – Father’s Day weekend in the US – a recommendation: This delightful essay by the Monitor’s books editor delivers a remarkable tribute to her empowering dad. 

More issues

2017
June
16
Friday

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