2017
June
21
Wednesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

June 21, 2017
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Why are we so fascinated by Uber?

A poster child for disruptive change, the ride-hailing service has been taking its lumps in recent months – most dramatically Tuesday night, when chief executive Travis Kalanick resigned under pressure from key shareholders.

Uber’s impact is undeniable. Its name is now a verb that conveys how you’re getting from Point A to Point B. The company has fed America’s love affair with entrepreneurial efforts that surge onto the stage, breaking long-established rules as they go.

But it has also become something of a microcosm of issues the United States faces more broadly: low-cost service versus proper compensation for rank-and-file employees. A corporate culture that aggressively pushes for dominance – but also generates charges of sexism and sexual harassment. A business that offers people convenience – but makes more than a few of them ask if their patronage supports abusive practices.

That last point matters. Many people identify strongly with the brands they support. When those brands let them down, they share vocally on social media. That has a dark side. But it can also mean that when corporations misstep, they hear about it in a way that is hard to ignore – and may help drive reform.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

David Goldman/AP
Matthew Levy comforts his wife, Sheila Levy, after the Democratic candidate for the 6th Congressional district, Jon Ossoff, conceded to Republican Karen Handel at his election night party in Atlanta on June 20.

For Democrats, the message of their Sixth District loss may be to adjust the narrative. That may also be the message for Republicans – though for different reasons.

Georges Clemenceau, the French prime minister during World War I, famously said that war was too important to be left to the generals. A democracy's generals would not disagree.

We sometimes think of progress as coming in dramatic bursts. But it often is the result of an individual's quiet and dogged determination to uncover wrongdoing, no matter the obstacles.

A museum is as much an institution of learning as a university. For governments aiming to control their citizens' views, both are fair targets. 

Courtesy of Jason Martin
Students tinker outside the STE(A)M Truck, an Atlanta-based mobile makerspace that visits underserved schools.

Sometimes breakthroughs can happen by just helping others glimpse possibility – and see that it includes them. 


The Monitor's View

Reuters
French President Emmanuel Macron attends a ceremony marking the 77th anniversary of late French General Charles de Gaulle's resistance call of June 18, 1940, at the Mont Valerien memorial in Suresnes, near Paris.

Fresh off big election victories for himself and his young party, France’s new president, Emmanuel Macron, plans to further rock his country’s politics this week. His first legislative priority is to pass new rules on ethics for elected leaders. These are aimed at curbing the kind of corrupt practices that eroded public trust in France’s two traditional parties – which are now in the political wilderness after the recent elections.

Mr. Macron’s reforms include creating a public bank to finance political parties and a requirement that lawmakers report their expenses. In addition, any lawmaker convicted of fraud or corruption would be barred from holding office for 10 years. He also seeks to ban lawmakers from hiring family members. In the previous legislature, about a sixth of the members had family on the public payroll.

He says these rules will “moralize” political life, which is needed in a country where former prime ministers and many other leaders have been convicted of corruption or shown disdain for public opinion. Several other countries, such as Brazil and India, are in the midst of anti-corruption drives, but Macron’s efforts in France are worth watching for three reasons:

One, despite his image of honesty and promise of clean governance, the new president has already stumbled. Four of his cabinet ministers, all from another party, had to resign this week after news broke that they were under investigation for allegations of unethical behavior. Having won the election in large part because of the public’s high intolerance of corruption, Macron was forced to let them go. France’s old system of a privileged political class is now up against the rising demands of equality before the law.

Two, creating an ethical culture in politics is essential for Macron to pass his proposed economic reforms, such as an easing of rules on firing workers. If the public can trust that his government is not corrupt, it may more easily accept the changes needed to boost innovation and reduce high unemployment.

Three, while Macron offers practical reasons for the new ethical rules, his personal background suggests his underlying motives. For two years, he worked for one of France’s famous philosophers, the late Paul Ricoeur, helping him in writing books. Ricoeur, who died in 2005, was known for defining an “ethics of responsibility” based on modern ideas and Christian theology. He suggested that a system of ethical rules can help individuals honor the golden rule (“only do to others what you would want them to do to you”). But it is a “love command,” or the commandment to love one’s enemies, that supersedes ethics and interprets the golden rule. Love is a “gift” that helps bring an awareness of others and creates a responsibility to them.

Macron’s reforms on ethics are expected to be approved. His party holds a large majority in the lower house of Parliament and more than half of those new members have never been in politics before. At a time when both British and American politics are experiencing uncertainty, France can set an example of how to challenge an established order and also bring in a high level of integrity.


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.

When a London building housing some of the area’s poorest residents went up in flames so quickly that many lost their lives, contributor Robin Harragin Hussey, who belongs to a nearby church, struggled to find peace. Seeking comfort and healing for the community, she opened her Bible and found this passage: “The Lord also shall roar out of Zion ... the Lord will be the hope of his people, and the strength of the children of Israel” (Joel 3:16). Above the image of roaring flames, Robin thought of the “roaring” message of hope and comfort always coming from our Father-Mother, God, who loves and cares for each of us. Every one of us can open our hearts to divine Love and embrace those around us in prayer, trusting that all have the ability to see and feel God’s healing and reforming power.


A message of love

Neil Hall/Reuters
People watch the sun rise at Stonehenge on the summer solstice on June 21 near Amesbury, England.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Please come back tomorrow, when we look at why Medicaid – a key sticking point in the proposed GOP health-care bill – has grown fivefold over the past 30 years.

But before you leave, a summer reading recommendation: It would be hard to do better than the new biography “Be Free or Die,” by Cate Lineberry. From his daring escape by night with his whole family to being elected five times to Congress, the life of slave-turned-statesman Robert Smalls raises one question: How is this not already a movie?

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2017
June
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