2018
February
28
Wednesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

February 28, 2018
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After the Parkland, Fla., school shooting, Dick’s Sporting Goods checked its sales records and found that Nikolas Cruz had purchased a gun from one of its stores in November. It wasn’t the gun he used in the attack. But that connection was enough.

“It came to us that we could have been part of this story,” said CEO Edward Stack, a gun owner himself. “It got to us.”

And it drove the announcement today that Dick’s, one of the largest sports retailers in the United States, will no longer sell assault-style rifles or high-capacity magazines. Nor will it sell firearms to customers under age 21.

The connection came differently for Dennis Magnasco, who belongs to #VetsForGunReform and served in Afghanistan. When he heard audio of the Las Vegas attack last October, he said, “it shook me to my core because it sounded like combat.” He doesn’t want that sound in high schools.

Then there’s Rep. Brian Mast (R) of Florida, a gun rights supporter and an Afghanistan veteran who lost his legs to a roadside bomb. He wrote in a recent op-ed, “I cannot support the primary weapon I used to defend our people being used to kill children I swore to defend.”

Their prescriptions for action differ. But the three are modeling a shift in thinking: a recognition that staying in our corners, unwilling to connect with those with whom we disagree, will not yield the conversations – the openness of thought – that will drive progress.

Here are our five stories today, which connect you more deeply to stories making headlines around the world.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Bassam Khabieh/Reuters
A man walked through the besieged and decimated town of Douma, in eastern Ghouta, near Damascus, Syria, Feb. 25.

The relentlessly dire news out of Syria has prompted many to tune out, whether because of compassion fatigue or a sense of helplessness. The Monitor talked to residents of the embattled district of eastern Ghouta, who are raising their voices to implore the world: "Don't forget us."

Many news outlets have reported on Xi Jinping's authoritarian tack as he solidifies his one-man rule. But less scrutinized has been China's decision to turn its back on political reforms that were instituted in response to an earlier era of strongman rule.

So-called fake news can do a lot of damage by making fiction appear to be fact. But even real news can be harmful when it’s rendered without the cultural context that fosters understanding.

Reaching for equity

A global series on gender and power
Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff
Students in an all-female class at Laufásborg preschool in Reykjavik, Iceland, are encouraged to be messy and have fun with paint.

In many countries, schools are where children can freely ask the question, "Why?" That's the reason many see the classroom as a powerful forum in which to challenge entrenched behaviors and assumptions.

This Icelandic pre-school is helping kids unlearn gender stereotypes

Difference-maker

In Minnesota, another educational effort with potentially profound outcomes is all about starting small – with one school and young children. That may be the key to restoring an important cultural touchstone: a long-stifled Native American language. 


The Monitor's View

Reuters
Boys play carom on a hilltop in Kabul, Afghanistan.

Afghan President Ashraf Ghani put out an interesting peace feeler to the Taliban on Feb. 28. The offer might seem hopeless in a country that has endured armed conflict for 40 years. For Americans, too, the prospects of peace in Afghanistan can seem slim after their longest war; it’s been 16 years since the post-9/11 invasion to oust Al Qaeda.

Yet details of the offer provide a glimpse into possible shifts among Taliban fighters that hint they may want to achieve their aims by means other than violence.

Mr. Ghani, as expected, offered direct negotiations with no conditions as well as a cease-fire and an exchange of prisoners. The unusual part was an offer to change the Constitution to allow the Taliban to operate as a legitimate political group within Afghanistan’s fledgling democracy.

The notion of normalizing the reviled militants as everyday politicians requires not only a position of strength by the Afghan government but a great deal of magnanimity.

The president explained his motives this way: “What should be our reply to the opponents who kill us? Peace or war? A verse in the Holy Quran says that an evil move should be responded to with a good act. Peace has got priority over war.”

The Taliban are still far from relying on ballots rather than bullets to reestablish their strict Islamic “emirate.” They control about a third of the population that lives in rural areas and are supported by Pakistan as well as tax revenues from the opium trade. Their suicide bombers still wreak havoc in Afghan cities.

Yet they also show a heightened sensitivity to what they call the “social issue of civilian casualties.” In a new report, the United Nations blames the Taliban for 42 percent of the war’s civilian casualties last year – much higher than the amount attributed to other militant groups or the government’s 16 percent. The Taliban objected to the report, which suggests it may be on a campaign to win hearts and minds.

The group already fares very low in opinion polls because of its brutal tactics and radical ideology, especially toward women. (Girls now account for about 40 percent of students in public schools.) In his peace offer, Ghani said he wants to find out if the Taliban “understand people’s feelings [about the ongoing conflict] or not.”

And in anticipation of peace, the International Criminal Court has set up shop in Afghanistan and begun taking complaints on behalf of 1.17 million victims of the war for future prosecution. The ICC’s presence shows that Afghans seek rule of law over law of the gun.

The Taliban also face a new military offensive by the United States and Afghan forces that began last year. The militant group’s drug labs, training grounds, and commanders are now better targeted by the US-Afghan forces than in the past, perhaps pushing the group to accept the possibility of a stalemate in the war rather than a victory.

Ghani’s offer is an echo of the beginning of the peace process in Colombia that ended that country’s half-century of war in 2016.

After a strong military offensive by the government, Colombia’s Marxist rebels agreed to talks and an offer to lay down their arms and run for political office. The talks began in 2012 with an admission by the rebel commander, Timoleon Jimenez, that a continuation of the conflict “will involve more death and destruction, more grief and tears” for civilians. To achieve peace, both sides in Colombia had to admit the suffering that each had caused.

Is Afghanistan now at a similar moment, with both sides sharing a common desire to spare innocent lives? Ghani’s offer of a “good act” – letting the Taliban run for office – might be the first step to ending the “evil” of a long war.


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.

Today’s contributor takes a hard look at the value of persistence and prayer in the search for answers and progress when it comes to the safety of students.


A message of love

Matias J. Ocner/Miami Herald/AP
Students were greeted by supporters, signs, and flowers as they returned to class at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., Feb. 28. With a heavy police presence, classes resumed for the first time since the deadly Feb. 14 attack on students and teachers there by a former student.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris and Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for spending time with us today. Tomorrow, we'll pivot to India. That's where the Monitor's Howard LaFranchi traveled recently, and where he found many students who are reconsidering plans to study in the United States. Some of that has to do with dynamics in the US. But it also reflects a growth in new opportunities at home.

More issues

2018
February
28
Wednesday

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