2018
June
08
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

June 08, 2018
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Clayton Collins
Director of Editorial Innovation

Three very different gatherings bear watching as the week winds down.

They run from multinational to hyperlocal, and the action seems to intensify as we burrow down.

Leaders of the Group of Seven major industrialized nations are meeting, of course, as Howard LaFranchi reports in today’s top story. Some observers have taken to calling the assembly the G6+1. That’s a commentary on a perceived unity gap, with the United States as the outlier.

In Boston, an international convention of mayors yesterday batted around municipal-level ways of addressing the effects of climate change. It was cast as a joint pushback on higher-level disunity and inaction. “As a coastal city,” said Boston Mayor Martin Walsh, “we understand that [it] is one of our most significant challenges.”

And tomorrow, for the first time, a TEDx conference will take place in a refugee camp. That event, in northwest Kenya, has among its speakers not heads of state or even earnest Bürgermeisters, but individual drivers of action, including current and former refugees. Their unifying focus: perseverance and problem-solving.

“The aim,” reports Quartz, “is to steer away from the one-sided narrative of suffering and dejection.” It’s “also about showcasing how refugees can help change not only their lives but [also] the communities and countries in which they live.”

Now to our five stories for your Friday, highlighting efforts to refine roles and definitions in politics, to find safety from corruption and risk, and to guard against being lied to.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Paul Chiasson/The Canadian Press/AP
Spectators wait behind a police officer in riot gear ahead of a planned protest near the Group of Seven venue in Quebec, June 7.

With Trump focusing on his high stakes meeting with Kim Jong-un, the Group of Seven summit in Canada may feel like more of a distraction. But the dispute over trade is a reminder of a deeper G7 malaise.

“Populist” is used to describe everything from Chavista Venezuela to the Trump administration. Italy's new two-party government offers a chance to explore just how much the term encompasses. 

Political logic usually dictates that fighting corruption means catching the big guys. But for many South African voters, the bigger impact of cleanup campaigns is more about what shows up in their daily lives.

Carlos Jasso/Reuters
Evacuees wait for free ice cream in a provisional shelter after the eruption of the Fuego volcano damaged their community in Escuintla, Guatemala, June 7.

Lowering risks requires understanding their root causes. Guatemala’s deadly volcanic eruption highlights an issue seen around the world: Poor communities often live where it’s cheapest, despite the dangers.

People have a natural tendency to trust each other, but that credulity can be exploited. The solution is probably not to become less trusting, behavioral scientists say, but to nurture both caution and tolerance.


The Monitor's View

AP Photo
Political prisoners wave in jubilation prior to their release June 1 from Helicoide prison in Caracas, Venezuela. Venezuelan officials said they are releasing 39 jailed activists in a gesture aimed at uniting a fractured nation.

A majority of nations in Latin America took an extraordinary step this week to solve a crisis in Venezuela that is literally spilling across their borders. At a meeting of the Organization of American States (OAS), they stated that a May 20 presidential election in Venezuela lacked legitimacy because it violated so many democratic norms.

In effect, countries representing most of Latin America’s population declared that President Nicolás Maduro is not the legitimate leader of Venezuela. The vote was a neighborly rebuke of a country drifting toward total dictatorship and economic ruin.

In the past two years, more than 2 million people have fled Venezuela to other parts of Latin America. The exodus has reinforced the idea that the region cannot ignore a loss of liberties in nearby countries. Mr. Maduro has jailed his main opponents and created a migration crisis out of his mangled management of a once-wealthy economy.

The vote against Maduro was made easier by the fact that the Lima Group, a body of 13 Latin American and Caribbean governments, plus Canada, was negotiating with him last year to hold off on an election until a free and fair process could be ensured. He ignored the request and called the election in May. Even though the election lacked “the necessary guarantees for a free, fair, transparent and democratic process,” as the OAS stated, Maduro claimed he won another six-year term.

The OAS vote on June 5 was not only a moral statement. It could now embolden a few Latin American countries to follow the United States and European Union in placing financial sanctions on top Venezuelan leaders. The EU, too, might stiffen its sanctions.

Latin America’s response is another example of how regional bodies – rather than the West or United Nations – can exert pressure on one of their own to follow democratic norms. Groupings in Africa and Southeast Asia, not to mention the EU, have sometimes shown the backbone to coax a neighbor away from an authoritarian path.

Calling out Maduro on his legitimacy as a ruler may also embolden his domestic opponents. While the regime holds the guns, the political opposition needs moral ammunition. With so many Venezuelans flooding the region, the OAS finally had to act. Telling the truth about a sham election may help puncture a big lie that keeps Maduro in power.


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 spiritual ideas that enabled her to help a friend struggling with the question of whether his life was worth living.


A message of love

Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff/File
Campers at Beyond the Barn overnight camp in Shelburne, Vt., collect eggs for breakfast and then put the chickens in their coop. Each year, more than 11 million children attend summer camp in the United States, according to the American Camp Association. And though camp might still evoke specific images – roasted marshmallows, canoes on the lake – more students today are spending their summers expanding their knowledge at places focusing on topics such as science, cooking, or music. As the school year comes to a close, kids will learn that summer camp is less about the place and more about embracing a passion. (Click the gallery button below for more images of camps.)
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte and Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Have a great weekend, and come back Monday. Besides setting up Tuesday’s summit between the US and North Korean leaders, we’ll use the occasion of the 25th anniversary of “Jurassic Park” to look at its considerable effect on interest in paleontology. (The fifth film in that franchise comes out later this month.)

More issues

2018
June
08
Friday

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