2018
March
15
Thursday

Monitor Daily Podcast

March 15, 2018
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Noelle Swan
Weekly Editor

While attentions have been focused on the #MeToo movement in the United States, the seeds of another social media movement have begun to sprout in Mexico.

It began with a Facebook post listing by name 1,294 victims of femicide, murder of a woman by a spouse or intimate partner. As the Monitor’s Whitney Eulich has reported, femicides in Mexico have risen sharply in recent years. In 2017, some 2,585 women were murdered in the country, official data show. About a quarter of those have officially been classified as femicides, but activists say the actual number is likely much higher.

Seeing so many names listed, one after the other, sparked new understanding for two Mexican artists. The pair, who have chosen to remain anonymous, enlisted local artists to shed light on the problem by honoring the lives of women killed. Participating artists each produce a portrait of a victim of femicide and post it on Instagram with the hashtag #NoEstamosTodas, “We are not all here.”

The portraits range from tender sketches to bold abstracts. But each piece represents an extension of love – to the woman lost, to the family she left behind, and to women still living in dangerous situations.

Now on to our five stories for today, exploring the hidden significance of Russia's latest deal with Lebanon, Kentucky's quest for meaningful criminal-justice reform, and the role of gadgetry in the blurring of private and public lives.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Special Report

Ali Hashisho/Reuters
Lebanese Army troops patrol in Kawkaba, Lebanon, last month.

On its face, Russia's proposed arms deal with tiny Lebanon is a surprising offshoot of its resurgent Middle East presence. But under the surface, it fits with its geopolitical rivalry with the United Sates, which is playing out on the battlefields of Syria.

Alarm sparked by Congress's tinkering with bank industry regulations may be misplaced, analysts say. The real concern may not be the details of the bill that just passed the Senate, but the slippery slope it represents. In good times, vigilance can lapse, raising the risk of a new banking crisis.

Jenny Sevcik/Messenger-Inquirer/AP
Gerry Zimmermann, a police K-9 trainer, leads his Belgian Malinois in a search for drugs along the lineup of inmates at the Daviess County Detention Center in 2012.

The notion that the best way to reduce crime is to build more prisons is falling out of fashion around the US, and nowhere is that more true than Kentucky. But while there is widespread agreement that more prisons are not the answer, coming to an agreement on the safest and most effective answer is proving more challenging.

When it comes to reviving deprived neighborhoods, many communities search outward for resources and inspiration. But France’s 'banlieues' are staging their comebacks by nurturing a key segment of overlooked talent that they already have: female entrepreneurs.

What happens when voluntary technology becomes implicitly mandatory? From smartphones to Fitbits, society and its institutions have a way of coercing people to adopt new technology in ways that blur the line between public and private.


The Monitor's View

AP Photo
People attend meetings at the world's biggest start-up incubator, Station F, in Paris, Jan. 31. For a glimpse at President Emmanuel Macron's vision for the new French economy, look no farther than Station F. Entrepreneurs don virtual reality goggles and share ideas with business angels in this old Paris train station-turned-start­up incubator.

 One way to gauge the world’s pace of innovation is to measure how many people fear failure in business. In a just-released survey of 44 countries by Amway, about half of 50,000 people interviewed said they would be willing to risk failure if they were to start a business.

Where do so many people get so much confidence in even thinking about being an entrepreneur?

One answer may lie in another of the survey’s findings. Over half said they are capable of developing new business ideas.

In other words, risking failure in a start-up may rely on a person’s faith in eventually finding the right idea for success. Failure is not personal; it is merely a necessary eye-opener on where to better place one’s hopes and resources. The arc of innovation may be long. But it bends toward those who learn from blunders rather than fear them.

That’s a hard lesson in countries with cultural taboos against business failures. The potential for shame can discourage an entrepreneur. Breaking that taboo requires a big cultural shift. One place where that is now happening is Europe. Its leaders wonder why the Continent has failed to produce its own versions of Apple, Amazon, Facebook, and Google (or the Chinese equivalents).

In the Amway survey, only 19 percent of Germans said they were willing to risk failure in starting a business. In Britain, it is 33 percent. For France, 36 percent.

By comparison, the figure in the United States is 74 percent. And for China it is 86 percent. In those countries, a high tolerance for uncertainty in starting a business allows for failure. The reward is more innovation and more economic growth.

To change Europe’s culture, French President Emmanuel Macron is not only pushing reforms in his own country, such as cutting red tape and taxes, but within the European Union. He wants “breakthrough innovation” that relies on “failure-tolerant” policies toward business.

One example of this culture shift, as reported by the BBC, are weekly meetings of young techies in Berlin. They gather to learn from each other’s mistakes. The meetings, called “Failure Nights,” are part of a worldwide movement to challenge each country’s peculiar fears of failure. A similar movement is an enterprise called Startupbootcamp. It began in the Netherlands and helps people find resources for new high-tech ventures.

This rising celebration of business failures is even being measured. The Failure Institute, based in Mexico, issued a report last year on “failure trends” around the world. The report does more than simply show where firms are closing. It also makes a point of explaining why.

And that is just the kind of discovery for good ideas that can turn fear into hope for the world’s would-be entrepreneurs.


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 shares his experience of how divisiveness can give way to a spirit of cooperation.


A message of love

Hannibal Hanschke/Reuters
German schoolchildren piled 740 teddy bears outside the Konzerthaus in Berlin Thursday to show solidarity with Syrian children kept out of school as that country’s civil war enters its eighth year. 'There are more than 2.5 million Syrian child refugees, about 740,000 of them of school age but with no access to education,' Reuters reported, citing the charity World Vision Germany.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

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2018
March
15
Thursday

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