2019
March
12
Tuesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

March 12, 2019
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Laurent Belsie
Senior Economics Writer

I dropped Grace off early Saturday for a rite of passage: the SAT. I wondered about the security: ID cards had to have exactly the same name as the test registration; mobile phones were collected.

I wonder no more. Today, federal prosecutors in Boston charged dozens of people with a scheme to allow parents to buy their children’s way into elite colleges, including Yale and Stanford.

How did the parents do it? By having others take the SAT and ACT and, sometimes, creating fake athletic profiles, according to prosecutors. The indictment charges a college counseling and preparation firm, exam and college administrators, coaches, and parents, including two actresses, with fraud.

I should feel outraged, but it’s worse. I am not surprised. We have so many examples of wealthy people tilting the system to get ahead. Has America lost its moral compass?

Many Twitter users share my sadness.

“Glad this has been exposed,” writes Rhonda. “My kid had to take the act 7 times – SEVEN TIMES – to get the best scholarship. And he did…. All on his own.”

“Thinking about all the black, brown, & low-income students who arrive at college & who are made to feel as if they don’t deserve to be there, while so many wealthy students have their parents essentially buy their way into these schools & rarely experience the same skepticism,” writes Clint Smith, a Harvard Ph.D. candidate.

“Among the heartbreaking criminal news of the #FBI college cheating case, is this nugget…. The kids don’t know their SAT/ACT scores were fake and think they ‘just improved’ and wanted to take them again,” writes marianmerritt.

So a hat tip to Grace and aspiring collegians who work hard and achieve the old-fashioned way. Honest accomplishments are a guiding star – for you and our nation – even amid storms. 

‏Before our stories of the day, here’s a bonus read about today’s Monitor Breakfast with U.S. Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., who spoke about Russian meddling in the 2020 elections. “I think we are enormously vulnerable in 2020,” he said.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Simon Dawson/Reuters
British Prime Minister Theresa May leaves Downing Street in London on March 12, hours before her withdrawal agreement was voted down for a second time.

The deadline for Brexit is not even three weeks away, and Britain still hasn’t agreed on what comes next. With time dwindling away, the path forward for Theresa May’s government and Parliament is narrow.

Patterns

Tracing global connections

A resurgence of anti-Semitic hatred prompts our writer, himself a Jew, to share a lesson from history: Hatred rarely stops with one group. 

A letter from

Lee County, Alabama

Our Alabama writer, Carmen Sisson, has traveled hundreds of miles to cover stories of communities healing after natural disasters. This time, her reporting kept her close to home.

Mohamed Nureldin Abdallah/Reuters
Sudanese women chant slogans near the home of a demonstrator who died during anti-government protests in Khartoum, Sudan, earlier this year. More than half the protesters at many demonstrations are women. Their fierce urgency in ousting President Omar Hassan Ahmad al-Bashir has led some to call this a women’s revolution.

It’s considered a repressive place for women, but in Sudan, women are leading protests, confronting authorities, and demanding freedom – changing perceptions along the way.

As many small cities see growing racial diversity and shortages of professionals – including teachers – local governments are asking: What role might immigrants play? 


The Monitor's View

Reuters
A lawyer in Algiers holds up her phone near a police member as she marches with others in a March 7 protest.

For the 30th anniversary of the World Wide Web, its inventor, Tim Berners-Lee, issued a letter of light against the dark. Despite rising doubts about whether digital systems can still be a force for good, he wrote on March 12 that it would be defeatist and unimaginative to assume the web “can’t be changed for the better in the next 30 [years].”

As if on cue, the people of Algeria showed this week how all things internet – from social media apps on phones to the web on desktops – surely are a force for good.

For the past two weeks, hundreds of thousands of Algerians collaborated on Facebook and in other ways to hold protests that, on March 11, forced President Abdelaziz Bouteflika to announce he would be leaving office after 20 years in power. The netizens had found a freedom of conscience in virtual space and, in connecting to every stripe of person across society from judges to unionists, created a real bud of freedom.

The internet helped break a “wall of fear,” as one demonstrator put it. On social media, people were advised to show up with “love, faith, Algerian flags, and roses” (the latter for soldiers). They spread the word to avoid violence and take their litter with them. “Silmiya, silmiya,” (peaceful, peaceful) chanted the protesters.

The young people of Algeria, writes novelist Kamel Daoud in The Guardian, had grown up with the freedom of social media. “Today this freedom has sprung from screens into the street. The internet has been the great giver of freedom of speech in Algeria and the regime has realized it too late.”

“Algerians – hyper-connected – found out that they could have not only a Facebook page but a country,” he wrote.

One poster captured the inner liberty that the people felt at the protests. It showed the house-elf from the Harry Potter series who wins his freedom. “Algeria has no master! Algeria is a FREE country. – Dobby,” it said.

The power of the web, says its inventor, lies in its universality. It broadens thought to encompass ideas that help bind people to each other. Even with dictatorships trying to restrict access to digital tools, Mr. Berners-Lee says there are alternatives. One, he suggests, is to decentralize the internet, allowing for smaller groups to communicate. The point is that people now realize the internet is not a physical thing but an idea of a “space” for closer collaboration. They will find a way.

Algerians still have far to go to overturn a corrupt and powerful elite. A new constitution must be written. Free elections are still not assured. But in a country where rulers have little history of yielding power, the people now realize a capacity to tell the truth over the internet. Freedom lies first in demonstrating freedom of thought. Digital tools like the web only help make that possible.


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 today’s contributor was tempted to fudge some numbers on a financial document, a last-minute decision to do the right thing led to unexpected benefits and a lesson in the spiritual power of honesty.


A message of love

Fernando Llano/AP
People collect water from an open pipe above the Guaire River during a rolling blackout affecting the water pumps in homes, offices, and stores in Caracas, Venezuela, March 11. The blackout has intensified the toxic political climate, with opposition leader Juan Guaidó blaming alleged government corruption and mismanagement and President Nicolás Maduro – whose legitimacy is broadly challenged – accusing his U.S.-backed adversary of sabotaging the national grid.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte and Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

That’s a wrap. Join us tomorrow when we look at the challenges of naturalization in 2019 America. 

More issues

2019
March
12
Tuesday

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