2017
December
08
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

December 08, 2017
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Clayton Collins
Director of Editorial Innovation

This was a week of more reckoning, and small signs of paths forward.

On Thursday Rep. Trent Franks (R) of Arizona became the third congressman to step down within days amid charges of sexual impropriety. Gender relations could not be more fraught as male power projectors are serially held to account.

Will public attitudes support a climate that favors more such justice? A new Pew poll on perceptions around masculinity and femininity shows that while opinions break in perhaps expected ways by gender and political leanings, a majority of Americans say more should be done “to encourage girls to be leaders and to stand up for themselves.”

Justice and hope also flashed through a realm that has mostly dropped from the news cycle: race. In South Carolina, the white former police officer who shot and killed Walter Scott, a 50-year-old black man, during a traffic stop in 2015, drew a prison sentence Thursday for second-degree murder and obstruction of justice.

According to a report from the courtroom, the ex-officer, Michael Slager, turned to Mr. Scott’s mother and mouthed, “I’m sorry.” She replied: “I know.”

Will healing attitudes on race broaden, too? There’s hope in the popularity of an uplifting New York Times feature on a black 22-year-old Harlem rapper who befriended a white 81-year-old woman from Florida by way of the online game Words with Friends. Their online conversation had become about life. 

The two recently met in person and embraced. Said the young man, Spencer Sleyon: “A lot of people I saw online said, ‘I needed a story like this.’ ”  

Check CSMonitor.com for early takes on the "Brexit" story and other news. Now, here are our five stories for your Friday, chosen to highlight adjustment, compassion, and creativity in action.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

When the snowflakes of ash stop falling in tinder-dry southern California, the work will turn to recovery – and then, if experts are heeded, to smart adaptation.

Mohammed Al-Sayaghi/Reuters
Members of the Shiite Houthi militia attend a funeral in Sanaa, Yemen, Dec. 7, for fellow fighters who were killed in recent clashes.

Yemen is about as complicated as crises get. Mideast editor Ken Kaplan spent some quality time with this story. “Lots of ‘buts,’ ‘yets,’ and ‘howevers,’ ” Ken says. “But that’s Yemen.” Sometimes obscured by the granularity of the power game there: It’s also the site of the world’s largest food-security emergency.  

Points of Progress

What's going right

Behind a global rise in literacy

So many of the United Nations reports we’re sifting through these days outline the plight of different populations. A release on the eye-catching reading achievement among fourth-grade-age children in more than 60 educational systems – and everything that such success signals – was a welcome read.

SOURCE:

IEA's Progress in International Reading Literacy Study – PIRLS 2016, UNESCO Institute for Statistics, July 2017

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Karen Norris/Staff
Tatiana Flowers/AP
T.C. Bell sits with his daughters – Dagny, age 8 and Emma, 4 – before they dress for school at their home in Denver. Mr. Bell's daughters are recipients of the Children's Health Insurance Program or CHIP, a program that provides low-cost coverage to families who earn too much to qualify for Medicaid. Arizona, California, Colorado, Minnesota, Ohio, Oregon, and the District of Columbia are among the first states expected to exhaust their CHIP allotments.

The prioritization of federal funding is anything but an abstract exercise to citizens who manage their own money tightly. “People work hard,” says a mother whose access to a critical health-care program was ended, to tragic effect, “but you never know what situation you’re going to fall into.”

Remo Casilli/Reuters
Humanoid robot YuMi goes to work during a rehearsal at the Verdi Theatre in Pisa, Italy, Sept. 12. YuMi will conduct the Lucca Philharmonic Orchestra, performing alongside Italian tenor Andrea Bocelli (not pictured).

Here’s a talker for your weekend. Ultimately, intelligence can no more be contained by a circuit board than it can by a prefrontal cortex. What happens when its high-flying, flourish-making cousin, creativity, is attempted by robots?


The Monitor's View

AP Photo
Taiwan's President Tsai Ing-wen delivers a speech during the National Day celebrations in Taipei Oct. 10. Tsai says the independence-leaning government will defend the self-governing island's freedoms and democratic system amid heightened tensions with rival China.

On Dec. 6, lawmakers in Taiwan voted to rid the island of a prominent symbol of the country’s past. They approved a law requiring the removal of public statues honoring Chiang Kai-shek, a dictator who governed from the late 1940s until his death in 1975. In addition, Chiang’s name will be replaced on many schools and roads.

The law, coming 30 years after Taiwan moved toward democracy, shows how far a people will go to free themselves from a cultural legacy that may hinder progress in individual rights and equality before the law. The measure said that authoritarian rule should be “stripped of legitimacy.”

Chiang’s harsh rule of Taiwan was based on Confucian-style autocracy, or a belief that only a natural social hierarchy with a strong ruler can bring stability. That ancient tradition saw rights as granted only by the state and not inherent in everyone.

Today, Taiwan is a thriving democracy noted for its media freedom and lively politics. And unlike a previous generation that identified as Chinese, most of its 23 million people now see themselves as Taiwanese, defined in large part by their embrace of the values of democracy and freedom.

Chiang and his Nationalist Party fled to the island after losing China’s civil war to Mao Zedong’s Communists. He brought with him some 600,000 troops and more than 1 million loyalists from the mainland, hoping someday to retake China. Today most Taiwanese, including many descendants of the mainlanders, now happily proclaim the island’s independence – and not only as a separate country.

By contrast, in China, the ruling Communist Party has become more explicit in justifying its one-party rule as rooted in Confucian doctrines and the notion that the people are not sufficiently advanced in their thinking to pick their leaders. The party’s leading political theorist, Wang Huning, has said that Chinese political culture is pervaded by a reverence for authority. In October, he was elevated into the powerful Politburo Standing Committee and often travels with President Xi Jinping.

Taiwan’s very public act of removing landmarks commemorating Chiang is not only a symbolic shift for its people but a statement to the world that outdated ways of thinking can be let go. The move also sends a strong signal across the Taiwan Strait to China that real stability lies in honoring individual rights, not the presumed right of a few to rule.


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.

Many countries and regions around the world are experiencing a need for greater unity. But it’s not inevitable that neighbor be divided against neighbor or group against group. Today’s contributor discusses the unifying power of a spiritual understanding of God as the one infinite and supreme Mind, whose active knowing is expressed through all creation and is entirely harmonious. On these grounds, divisive thinking can be seen as unnatural, lacking a true claim to power, because it is opposed to the infinite Love that is fundamental reality. Whatever our race, religion, or nationality, the desire to see and express harmony and unity is native to what we are as children of God. That desire helps us repel divisive thinking ourselves and replace it with thoughts and actions that are loving, peaceful, and brotherly.


A message of love

Steve McCurry
These Afghan girls juggling drew the eye and camera lens of photographer Steve McCurry. At the end of each year, the Monitor’s staff photographers and photo editors select a handful of that year’s photo books that they think Monitor readers will enjoy. In 2017 the picks include an in-depth look at Afghanistan, a colorful collection of early street photography, a history of food photography, and a poignantly optimistic look at the young Iraqi republic. To read the staff reviews and to see images from each book, click on the blue button below.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks, as always, for being here. For Monday we’re digging into the nuances of the Palestinian reaction, both among leadership and on the street, to the US administration’s formal recognition this week of Jerusalem as Israel’s capital. 

More issues

2017
December
08
Friday

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