2018
May
17
Thursday

Monitor Daily Podcast

May 17, 2018
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Yvonne Zipp
Features Editor

It could have been just another in a long list of people trying to go about their day when someone calls the cops on them: sleeping in a dorm, taking a college tour, having a barbecue, golfing, going on vacation, waiting for a friend in a coffee shop, moving into their apartment

But something different happened in Memphis, Tenn., this week. Real estate investor Michael Hayes, who is African-American, was inspecting a property under contract when a woman yelled at him to get out of her neighborhood and then called the police, even after he showed her a letter signed by the owner. (Mr. Hayes filmed the interaction and posted it to YouTube.) 

Here’s where the narrative changed: After listening, a white police officer, whom the Memphis Commercial Appeal identified as Brian Pirtle, told Hayes, “You keep the camera rolling. If you have any problems with her, what I want you to do is call me back over here.” 

When the woman told Hayes to hurry up and get out, the officer responded, “He can take all day.”

Both local residents and Americans across the country have praised the officers for their poise and confidence-inspiring way of handling the situation. And it shows that smartphones and dashcams can capture more positive moments as well.

The Memphis P.D. issued a statement, saying, "We are thankful to Mr. Hayes ... for sharing the true image of what our officers represent.”

Now, here are our five stories of the day, looking at ways to help new families, the power of the purse, and a high-profile milestone.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

A year into Mueller probe: knowns, unknowns, and milestones

As Robert Mueller’s investigation hits its first anniversary, it might be worth noting that the length of special counsel investigations tends to be measured in years. The average length since Watergate: 904 days. The longest? The Whitewater probe during Bill Clinton’s presidency, which morphed into an investigation of the Lewinsky scandal and stretched for more than 2,900 days. 

Peter Grier and Jacob Turcotte/Staff

On trade issues, as in other arenas, President Trump has shown an eagerness to swing for the fences. Is an aggressive and unpredictable style backfiring or about to bear fruit?

Bailey Bischoff/The Christian Science Monitor
Murat Alptekin plays with his son at a neighborhood park in Carmichael, Calif., March 7. Mr. Alptekin attributes his bond with his son in part to the first few weeks after his son's birth. He was able to spend that time at home with his son owing to California's paid family leave program.

California was the first state to provide paid family leave for workers, and in January, the state expanded its benefits. While some economists are concerned about the burden on small businesses, one study found that 90 percent of businesses said it had no impact on profitability or productivity, while it had a positive impact on morale and turnover.

Alik Keplicz/AP
A worker walks on the construction site of the second line of the underground metro in Warsaw in April 2014. The massive project was completed with the help of European Union funds.

The European Union has one major tool available to it when it comes to reining in populist governments in Poland and Hungary: the power of the purse strings. If citizens of those countries found that EU membership meant more than just handouts from Brussels, but had a democratic obligation as well, would that change their thinking?

Books

From a bestselling Chinese memoir to a study of precision engineering, here are the 10 May titles that most impressed the Monitor's book critics. One is by a husband-and-wife team who traversed the United States for five years by prop plane, and another is a lost work by a literary giant that has finally been published after more than 80 years.


The Monitor's View

AP Photo
Femmei Niahosa, left, of the Tsao people of Taiwan, attends the United Nations forum on indigenous issues April 16 at U.N. headquarters.

A country’s attractiveness to the rest of the world can come in many forms, such as cultural exports, foreign aid, high-tech inventions, or its degree of freedom. One type of “soft power,” however, is often overlooked: a generosity toward languages.

In recent months, the island nation of Taiwan, which has been conquered by several foreign forces in recent history, is moving fast to embrace its language diversity. Last year, it gave “national status” to the mother tongues of minority indigenous groups, many of whom live in the mountains. And soon legislators are expected to define Taiwanese, which is widely spoken, as a national language.

The move may seem strange, but it is an effort to free Taiwan of a language imposed on it – Mandarin Chinese – in 1949 when the army of Chiang Kai-shek fled from the mainland to escape the takeover of China by the Communist Party. Chiang tried to end the use of Taiwanese and other languages, enforcing Mandarin in schools and official documents on the assumption that his Nationalist Party would eventually rule the mainland again.

If anything, it is now Beijing’s ruling party that is bearing down on Taiwan and its 22 million people, claiming the island is simply a renegade province. In recent months, China has sent war planes and naval ships closer to the island’s maritime border.

Taiwan has never officially declared independence out of fear of retribution from China. Yet it has effectively claimed independence in other ways. Since 1987, it has moved steadily toward democracy. It maintains diplomatic ties with many nations. And now it has broadened its official languages beyond Mandarin.

Its language policy is in sharp contrast with that in China, where a law enacted in 2000 requires Mandarin as the sole national language – despite the presence of more than 100 local languages. Beijing has imposed the language in the classrooms of ethnic minorities and has jailed at least one activist, in Tibet, who campaigned to maintain the local language. And the policy has caused a backlash in Hong Kong, whose identity is embedded in the Cantonese language.

Many nations, such as Canada and India, have learned how to tolerate different languages while still finding a way to conduct business and the work of government. Their openness to other tongues is an attraction more than a nuisance, especially in a global economy.

Young people in Taiwan have taken to calling themselves the “natural independence” generation. They do not need to declare official independence from China, only to claim an identity based on the values of tolerance and empathy toward others on their island.

Its military power cannot match that of China’s. But Taiwan’s soft power keeps getting stronger.


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 recalls how a rethink of his and others’ worth helped him respond productively when college friends began conversing inappropriately about women.


A message of love

Rodrigo Garrido/Reuters
Demonstrators are hit by police water-cannon spray during a rally in Valparaiso, Chile, May 16. Marches have been occurring around the country for months in the wake of the constitutional court’s move to overturn a law prohibiting for-profit companies from controlling universities. 'Profit-making from higher education is illegal in Chile,' reported Telesur. 'But critics have long claimed that some companies that operate universities have found ways to exploit loopholes in the law.'
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte and Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks so much for joining us. Come back tomorrow! We're working on a story from Cape Cod looking at how small businesses are coping with a tight labor market and fewer guest workers.

More issues

2018
May
17
Thursday

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