2018
August
02
Thursday

Monitor Daily Podcast

August 02, 2018
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Arthur Bright
Europe Editor

It seems ludicrous to think that President Trump is set to imminently declare martial law, so as to arrest and execute tens of thousands of people – ranging from Hillary Clinton to Tom Hanks – on charges involving a mix of murder, pedophilia, and Satanism.

But that is just one of the beliefs of the followers of internet pseudo-prophet Q, or “QAnon,” who leaped into the mainstream at Mr. Trump’s rally Tuesday in Tampa Bay, Fla.

Q, who claims to be a government insider, offers up alleged secrets to his followers on internet forums like 4chan and 8chan. Though Q’s information tends to be vague, “followers of Q” say it reveals an ongoing battle between good and evil, with Trump leading the former and a deep state/Hollywood liberal alliance embodying the latter. The conspiracy theory is complex and sprawling, and fed by followers’ own social media contributions to the mythos.

It could also be dangerous. As QAnon-watcher Mike Rothschild notes, Q promised July 2018 would be “the month the world discovered the truth” – a promise that appears unfulfilled. The resulting disillusionment could lead to “pizzagate”-like incidents, in which followers try to harm the conspiracy’s “villains” by themselves.

But perhaps the weight of truth is what’s needed to break Q’s followers from their conspiratorial dreams.

Now to our five stories for today.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Lai Seng Sin/Reuters
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo arrives at the Royal Malaysian Air Force base in Subang, Malaysia, Aug. 2, bringing a new vision of US partnership to what the Trump administration calls the Indo-Pacific region. Many in the region remain wary of US declarations of commitment.

Is the United States a trustworthy partner or a retreating power? That question is on the minds of many in Asia as Secretary of State Mike Pompeo touts the evolving US policy toward China and the region.

Antagonism between elected officials and journalists isn't new. But in the Trump era, candidates have gone from complaining about bias to delegitimizing media – a trend that has implications for democracy.

Hyungwon Kang/Reuters
An 18-wheeler passes through the Allegheny Mountain Tunnel in Pennsylvania's Somerset County. Better pay and an improving job experience for drivers, including social media connections and fewer miles driven, are changing trucking as the industry faces a worker shortage.

Freight trucking has long been economically vital but fraught with hardship. Now a driver shortage is bringing new racial and gender diversity – and a change in on-the-road lifestyles – to the work.

Learning together

An occasional series on efforts to address segregation
Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff
Students Bissiri Diakite (l.) and Coco Rhum, from Teens Take Charge, recorded a podcast last month in New York with Taylor McGraw (c.) contrasting their high school experiences in different parts of the city and discussing their views on school integration.

Students see themselves being subjected to all kinds of racial and economic sorting. And they are increasingly using their perspectives to take activist roles.

A letter from …

Capitol Hill

For lawmakers, responding to the president’s tweets can be a full-time job – one that many would prefer to avoid. This week, tweet-mania drowned out congressional progress on spending bills.


The Monitor's View

AP Photo
Arrested members of the opposition party Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) sit in a riot police vehicle in front of their party's headquarters in Harare Aug. 2. MDC leader Nelson Chamisa says police have raided the headquarters and seized computers, while police say 18 people there were arrested. The developments come a few hours before the electoral commission is expected to start releasing the results of Monday's presidential election.

On Wednesday, when troops in Zimbabwe opened fire on thousands of people protesting a marred election two days before, it was a shot heard round the world. The violent crackdown was a clear signal that President Emmerson Mnangagwa had not delivered on a promise to Western countries of a credible, corruption-free election.

Instead, Zimbabwe, like many African countries, may be further poised to embrace China and its proposed world order, which is essentially this: Don’t worry about democratic credentials or human rights, let’s just keep doing business without meddling in each other’s internal affairs.

In many ways, Zimbabwe’s election, which came eight months after the military ouster of longtime ruler Robert Mugabe, was a contest between the current world order, designed by the West after World War II, and the emerging one of a rising China.

The West was offering loans and investments from the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank, and other international creditors if Zimbabwe held a fair election and started to tackle corruption.

China preferred the current regime, no matter what, which would allow it to further exploit the country’s abundant minerals and rich farmland while bringing Zimbabwe into its newly created international organizations. Both Mr. Mnangagwa and Vice President Constantino Chiwenga, leader of the armed forces, had visited China in the run-up to the election.

Zimbabwe’s postelection problems are still unfinished. Mnangagwa’s ruling party, Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic Front, was declared the winner in the parliamentary race by the distrusted electoral commission. The results of the presidential contest have been delayed, raising suspicions among supporters of his main opponent, Nelson Chamisa. In the meantime, foreign observers found plenty wrong with the election process.

Zimbabwe remains a test case of the two views of world order, not only because of this election but because its economy is in desperate straits. It does not have its own currency and must rely mostly on US dollars. Its people somehow endure with hyperinflation and high unemployment, a result of mismanagement and corruption under Mr. Mugabe.

For a decade, China has been the country’s biggest investor. Yet popular resentment against Chinese influence led the opposition candidate to take an anti-China position in the campaign. This week’s protests about the election were also a statement about China’s antidemocratic approach to the rest of the world.

As events play out in Zimbabwe, the ideals of democracy may still win out, reinforcing the success of the postwar order. At the least, the final result should not be decided with bullets but in a peaceful consensus that affirms basic freedoms.


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.

When unjustly blamed for something she didn’t do, today’s contributor relied on what she knew about the innocence of God’s creation, and harmony prevailed.


A message of love

Juan Medina/Reuters
Migrants rest aboard the Proactiva Open Arms rescue boat – operated by a nongovernmental organization – after they were rescued Aug. 2 in the central Mediterranean Sea. For the fifth straight year, at least 1,500 migrants have died in the Mediterranean, according to the United Nations. Some 55,000 migrants have reached Europe so far in 2018.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thank you for accompanying our exploration of the world today. Please do come back tomorrow, when we will be launching a five-part series on the Siberian republic of Buryatia: a crossroads where Cossack and Mongol, Orthodox Christian exile and Buddhist have mixed to create an altogether different sort of Russia.

More issues

2018
August
02
Thursday

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