2018
March
16
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

March 16, 2018
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Clayton Collins
Director of Editorial Innovation

Sometimes the old stories are worth retelling.

Consider the kindness of the Choctaw.

The US president played host yesterday to Leo Varadkar, the Irish premier. That’s part of an annual green-tie rite, a passing of shamrock sprigs and pleasantries between allies.

Earlier this week Mr. Varadkar was in Oklahoma marking another deep bond. In 1847, at the height of the potato famine, the Choctaw Nation reflected upon the plight of the Irish and decided to act. They pulled together $170 (about $4,500 today) and sent it to Dublin. Ireland never forgot. A sculpture in Cork, called Kindred Spirits, was unveiled last year. Choctaw Chief Gary Batton was in attendance.

Consider the fearlessness of Hugh Thompson.

A half-century ago today, the Army helicopter pilot was circling a Vietnam village called My Lai. He saw noncombatants being cut down, so he landed his craft between fellow US troops and villagers to stop the killing. The fallout of that day would continue for decades. Mr. Thompson would be pilloried before he finally was honored.

He returned 20 years ago. “One of the ladies that we had helped out that day came up to me and asked, ‘Why didn’t the people who committed these acts come back with you?’ ” Thompson said, according to a new Los Angeles Times account. “And I was just devastated. And then she finished her sentence: she said, ‘So we could forgive them.’ ”

The powerful selflessness of small actors, met with the unbounded, undimmed power of gratitude.

Now to our five stories for your Friday, highlighting skillful adjustment, the durability of the democratic ideal, and the importance of correcting false narratives. 


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Jonathan Ernst/Reuters
President Trump made remarks to the media during the 12th East Asia Summit in Manila late last year. Seen alongside him were US National Security Adviser H.R. McMaster (l.) and US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson (r.). Mr. Tillerson leaves office this month. Mr. McMaster's job security has been called uncertain by some.

This US administration has been defined by volatility, which it sees as a strength. The question is whether it sharpens President Trump’s hand-picked, high-powered subordinates or pushes them past endurance.

Turmoil at either end of a relationship is not necessarily conducive to a strategic partnership. But if the Saudis fear they may be losing a key White House ally in Jared Kushner, they are cheered by the prospect of Mike Pompeo as secretary of State.

Eduard Korniyenko/Reuters
A worker prepares voting booths at a polling station inside a cadet school in Stavropol, Russia, March 16, ahead of the weekend’s presidential election.

Is popularity self-sustaining? Vladimir Putin faces a stiff set of challenges – including worsening relations with the West – as he prepares to extend his rule. What buoys him at home? “[P]eople in the West don’t understand how Russians view him,” says one former Kremlin adviser. “He isn't comparable to his contemporaries…. We can already see that he is a giant of Russian history.”

Amit Dave/Reuters
A police officer tries to detain a member of the Rajput youth wing during a protest against the release of the upcoming Bollywood movie 'Padmaavat' in Ahmedabad, India, Jan. 23.

It’s easy to say, with authoritarianism making high-profile appearances worldwide, that democracy is in retreat. This piece shows how the world’s largest democracy (and perhaps the world’s most populous nation a decade from now) provides a compelling counternarrative.

Sometimes misconceptions about the past can cloud issues that dominate the present. One brazen falsehood – that Irish migrants  faced hardships in the New World similar to those of African slaves and their descendants – has taken on a particularly insidious edge in new discussions of racial justice. 


The Monitor's View

Reuters
South Africa's Jacob Zuma gestures after announcing his resignation as president on Feb. 14 in Pretoria.

The list keeps getting longer, and for good reason.

On March 16, Jacob Zuma of South Africa became the latest current or former leader of a democracy to be charged with corruption. He now joins many other leaders – in nations from South Korea to Brazil, Israel to Argentina – who have recently faced prosecution because of rising calls to end a culture of impunity in high places.

With many countries embracing autocracy, every victory against a corrupt elected official can help ensure transparency and accountability in democratic states.

Mr. Zuma, who was forced to step down as president last month by the ruling African National Congress (ANC), faces charges related to a government arms deal in the late 1990s, before he was elected. For years he was able to fend off the charges, which only helped send a message that anyone in government can be a law unto themselves rather than to constitutional principles, such as equality before the law.

His political downfall came in large part from a robust combination of players committed to honest government in South Africa, such as civic activists, investigative journalists, and key prosecutors and judges. They all helped expose Zuma’s alleged self-enrichment. Ordinary citizens also began to see a connection between ANC corruption and their own economic woes.

The public upwelling against the ANC has forced the new president, Cyril Ramaphosa, to make a bold promise: “This is the year in which we will turn the tide of corruption in our public institutions.”

With the ANC’s popularity in decline, Mr. Ramaphosa knows he must unite the nation through a vigorous anti-graft campaign, starting within his own party. If he can shore up enough political capital, he might be able to achieve difficult reforms, such as equitable land distribution.

The other side of the argument, however, is that the “rainbow nation” of the late Nelson Mandela has a recent history of balancing harsh justice with necessary mercy for ex-rulers. South Africa is famous for its attempt to use a “truth and reconciliation commission” to offer leniency for those who confess their apartheid-era wrongdoing. Ramaphosa could be tempted to pardon Zuma – if he is convicted – to prevent potential violence among Zuma’s ethnic base of Zulus in KwaZulu-Natal province.

But first the trial must proceed, and only then can South Africans send a yet another message to their leaders about the best standards of justice for the nation. Their values, not just their leaders, are at stake.


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 column explores how we can overcome the pull of sensationalized news through understanding that there’s a higher power we can rely on to inform our actions.


A message of love

Kham/Reuters
Vietnamese villagers attend the 50th anniversary of the My Lai massacre in My Lai village, Vietnam, Mar. 16. US troops killed hundreds of civilians there – the number remains disputed – before a US serviceman stepped in.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks, as always, for being here. Come back Monday. With voters turning out in droves in special elections, and a flood of new candidates (including women) running for office, Democratic enthusiasm is running high. We’ll explore some potential downsides for the party to all that fervor. 

More issues

2018
March
16
Friday

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