2017
August
14
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

August 14, 2017
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Mark Sappenfield
Senior global correspondent

What a president says matters. On Monday, President Trump denounced the Ku Klux Klan and white supremacists as “repugnant to everything we hold dear as Americans.” It was a belated but important response to last weekend's violence in Charlottesville, Va. 

When leaders show moral courage, it gives vital momentum to the humane and uplifting. And as Patrik Jonsson adds in our first story today, America is at a delicate point in its racial conversation. The times are demanding citizens and politicians to bring out each other's best selves.

Yet it is also vital that we not make any president a king. The Founders would likely have been appalled at how much we obsess over our presidents today. True power and self-government, they realized, lie with the people. The Washington the Founders built merely reflects that.

We saw the power of grace, patience, and faith in good – expressed by the people – move empires during the US civil rights movement and the “truth-struggle” of Mohandas Gandhi. But it was also present in Charlottesville this weekend. “There has to be a spirit which allows you to see past what your eyes see in front of you and what your ears hear, and to understand how hope forms in your heart,” an African-American pastor, whose church held nonviolence training sessions this weekend, told the BBC Saturday night. “As our people used to say, trouble don’t last always.”

That sentiment and the conviction behind it is far more potent than any single person. 


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

David Goldman/AP
A photo of Heather Heyer sits beneath a statue of a Confederate soldier in Atlanta's Piedmont Park Aug. 14. It was vandalized with spray paint by protesters who marched through the city last night to protest the weekend violence in Charlottesville, Va. Ms. Heyer was killed when a man drove his car into a group of people who were protesting the presence of white supremacists who had gathered in Charlottesville for a rally.

At what point do we look hatred in the face and say, 'enough is enough'? And then, just as important, what is our response? Reaction to the events in Charlottesville could offer an important test of where America goes next on race. 

The legacy of racial hatred in Europe literally transformed the Continent. Which is why President Trump's reaction to the events in Charlottesville brought not just dismay but also shocked introspection. 

Is social media ruining our kids? To be sure, there are new threats and concerns. But, unseen to many adults, there is also a world of innovation and camaraderie, too. It turns out, what's most needed is just good, old-fashioned parenting.  

People like to know where they stand in society. Indeed, how we think about hierarchy pays a big role in our political beliefs, some researchers say. Taken to its extreme, however, the desire for order can tip into racism, sexism, and hateful ideologies.   

Michael Noble Jr./AP
Librarygoers work in the Rose Main Reading Room at the New York Public Library in July. Millennials are fueling library use today, according to a recent study from Pew Research.

Who knew? Libraries are hip again, apparently. Free stuff? Check. Personal interaction? Check. A mission for public good? Check. What's not to love, Millennials say.  


The Monitor's View

AP Photo
Mourners listen to speakers in Savannah, Ga., at an Aug. 13 candlelight vigil for the victims in Charlottesville, Va.

Whether through peaceful rallies, prayer vigils, or family discussions, many Americans gave a strong reproof to the claims of racial superiority that were behind the Aug. 12 violence in Charlottesville, Va. Their president may have failed to quickly join the widespread condemnation. Yet the strong reaction to President Trump’s initial silence on the role of white supremacists helps illustrate a deeper national trend: Fewer people than ever accept that skin color is a measure of character or a reason for special treatment.

The popular rebuke of racial hatred after Charlottesville, however, seems hardly enough after so many high-profile cases of racially charged violence in the United States. Actions must speak louder than words. Each of the recent tragedies driven by false views about race requires even more potent examples of racial equality and the common good.

What binds Americans is more important than their joint condemnation of fictitious beliefs about race. First, they must acknowledge the progress already made on race relations to counter the illusions espoused by fringe right-wing groups. “Remember how far we’ve come,” said President Obama in one of his many speeches on race. This collective gratitude would then allow further dialogue on ways to keep racist radicalism in check and solve issues of social and economic inequality.

Such progress would be the best antidote to the mistaken views of the angry few who join white supremacist groups. The US has indeed made great strides related to race, so much so that Mr. Trump felt pressured two days after the Charlottesville tragedy to proclaim that any group that causes violence in the name of racism is “repugnant to everything we hold dear as Americans.” Now perhaps he, like many others, can work on those commonalities that are “dear.”


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 Bénie Mabela Ntelo was diagnosed with an incurable illness that rendered her infertile, she thought of the many times she’d seen the goodness of God in her life and the lives of her family and friends. It felt natural for her to turn to God for healing in this situation, too. The promise of the Bible’s 23rd Psalm and the realization that God created us spiritual and complete brought Bénie a sense of peace and conviction. She felt that divine Love was with her. To the doctors’ amazement, she not only became pregnant, but had a harmonious birth, and has since had a second child. As Bénie puts it, “God’s love is infinite and operates all the time.... God can do everything for us.”


A message of love

TT News Agency/Tommy Pedersen/Reuters
A rare white moose crosses a road in Gunnarskog, Sweden. A BBC report set the number of such moose at about 100. 'The moose aren’t albino,' it reported, 'but grow white fur from a genetic mutation.' Explorer Hans Nilsson caught the moose in a one-minute video that quickly drew 1 million views once it was posted online.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for reading today. Come back tomorrow. Simon Montlake will be digging into this question: Is a more leftist approach on economic redistribution taking hold in Britain, regardless of how Labour leaders are faring? 

More issues

2017
August
14
Monday

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