2017
July
10
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

July 10, 2017
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Three years after Islamic State (ISIS) took over, the city of Mosul is back under Iraqi control.

That’s real progress. A coalition of dozens of nations pushed the Islamic militants out. Mosul has been devastated, left in ruins, but some 400,000 residents are trickling back to rebuild.

It’s an important milestone: ISIS no longer has a haven in Iraq. This year alone, ISIS has lost 60 percent of its territory and 80 percent of its revenue, according to one analysis. The dream of an Islamic caliphate is shattered.

But the cheering over Mosul is somewhat subdued. ISIS isn’t defeated yet. And military victories are only addressing symptoms, not root causes. It can be argued that the real war is over the division between Sunnis and Shiites. The real fight is with the inequality and injustice felt by Iraqis of different faiths, tribes, or ethnicities.

Yes, this is progress against a violent terrorist group. But real peace in Iraq and Syria won’t come until thought truly shifts from fear to understanding one another.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

As the United States weighs the carrot and the stick, a key issue will be a deeper understanding of how China calculates its own security interests in relation to Kim Jong-un. 

Integrity or intimidation? How an election is administered can have an outsize impact on who decides to vote.

Points of Progress

What's going right
Ann Hermes/Staff
Renee Jones stands in front of the empowerment center she set up in downtown Cleveland to help victims of human trafficking, domestic violence, and drug abuse.

It’s easy to think that a major social problem isn't present in our neighborhood – or that we can’t do much about it. But willingness to discern a need – and then have the courage to take small steps to address it – can have a powerful effect. 

For new parents, workplace gains – with persisting gaps

Many American companies now have written rules and guidelines to support working parents. But there's still a gap between what employers preach and what managers practice. Even new moms in the executive ranks still have to fight for what should be basic norms, such as a private place at work where they can pump breastmilk. In this video report, the Monitor's Schuyler Velasco talks to mothers about efforts to promote real change in the workplace.

Beyond paid leave: what companies get wrong about new parents

Our next story is about the power of collaboration. Computers and the internet have spawned a new era of citizen scientists, and you don't need a PhD to help make groundbreaking discoveries, reports Eva Botkin-Kowacki. 


The Monitor's View

Daniel Bockwoldt/AP
A man looks through the broken window of a shop in Hamburg, Germany, Saturday, after antiglobalization activists rioted during the G20 meetings.

For Germans, in particular, last weekend was eye-opening. 

For some time, the country has been concerned about its far-right political fringe. Recent years have seen rallies by Pegida, an anti-Islamic group, gain momentum, as well as those by the far-right Alternative for Germany party. Germany, it seemed, was in the midst of its own turn to the populist right.

But at the Group of 20 summit last weekend, something entirely different came to the fore: left-wing extremism. Germans were shocked by what they saw in the streets of Hamburg: protesters turning the event into a gallery of water cannons and broken glass. 

We’ve seen this before, at the 1999 Seattle World Trade Organization protests, at President Trump's inauguration, and elsewhere: a class of hardened left-wing protesters turning free expression into something darker. The German Ministry recently concluded: “In the past few years the acceptance and intensity of violence in the far-left scene has noticeably increased. This is especially true of violence against police and political enemies (particularly real or imagined right-wing extremists.),” according to the German news agency Deutsche Welle.

The point is not to chart right-wing and left-wing violence in order to assign blame and decide which is worse. The point is to recognize that extremism in whatever form is a red flag – a signal that sections of society are feeling so impotent and adrift that they see no choice but to resort to violence and extremist ideologies. 

One expert has long seen more similarities than differences among extremists. Daniel Koehler of the German Institute on Radicalization and De-radicalization Studies has worked with neo-Nazis and Islamic State recruits. 

“They talk a lot about justice. They talk a lot about freedom. They want to change the society into a positive direction. They believe that they're doing something good for humanity,” he told NPR.

Indeed, for many radicals, violence is a desperate, though misguided, step to do good, he said. “Positive aspects like quest for significance, justice, help [for the] poor, [defense of] women and children, Syria, delivering humanitarian aid,” he said. 

What kindles violence is the mix with the negative: “they have not felt that they are part of a society,” Mr. Koehler said. 

Koehler’s answer: Flip the equation. Take away the bad influences and turn up the volume on the good, like finding role models for extremists to look up to, he told the Monitor’s Warren Richey for his ISIS in America series.  

“The only thing we can do is build up the family or the social environment as a counterforce,” he said. “That is the only way we can succeed.”

It might sound like Parenting 101. In many ways, it is. And that puts the battle against extremism of all stripes in a different light.


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.

A while ago, a woman in Africa asked me to pray because a relative of hers had been kidnapped and hadn’t been released. I took a deep breath and opened up my thought to God. This wasn’t an emotional, dramatic thing. It was more of a confident trust in God’s goodness and a desire to more fully understand God as entirely good. I thought of this verse in the Bible: “Be not overcome of evil, but overcome evil with good” (Romans 12:21). Simply to acknowledge that God’s goodness operates unchallenged is powerful prayer. More than just holding a good thought for everyone, it’s drawing unreservedly on God’s care for all. Divine Love can overcome even the worst motives and lift us out of the deepest fear, no matter what corner of the world we’re in. Early the next morning, I learned the police had found and arrested the kidnappers, and the woman’s relative had been freed. I’ve found it is so worthwhile to gratefully recognize God’s goodness. The more we do this, the more equipped we feel to embrace the world in prayer and see God’s loving allness in tangible ways.


A message of love

Pablo Martinez Monsivais/AP
Members of a Tunisian delegation stopped to take selfies with members of the US Army Military Band as they waited at a security checkpoint today at the Pentagon. Tunisian Prime Minister Youssef Chahed was being hosted by Defense Secretary James Mattis.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us today. Come back tomorrow. We’ll introduce you to members of the foreign media who feed the world’s interest in the Trump presidency and America, and who have cultivated some views of their own. 

More issues

2017
July
10
Monday

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