2019
June
28
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

June 28, 2019
Loading the player...
Peter Grier
Washington editor

Welcome to your Daily. Today we look at what the Democrats’ debates revealed about the party, what outsiders (including diplomats) should know about the people of Iran and South Korea, the business ethics of the border crisis, and a collection of works from a master-class essayist.

First, is it time for some blue socks? Or a “freedom fighter” cupcake?

Maybe. Whatever it takes for you to realize you’re in a “magic moment.”

We say all this because it’s Friday, finally. The news in recent days seems to have poured upon us nonstop. It has been one of those weeks when it seems almost impossible to keep up.

This is when lighter stories help. Whatever they’re called – human interest, heartwarmers – they help put in perspective self-important “Who Won and Who Lost, Five Takeaways” list stories.

Thus blue socks.

Will Gladstone is an Arlington, Massachusetts, high schooler. He’s worried that the population of blue-footed boobies, a wondrous Galapagos bird, has dropped by 60% in the past 30 years. Since he was in eighth grade, he and his little brother have raised more than $80,000 selling blue socks to fund research on reversing the decline.

Michael Platt makes the cupcakes. At age 11, the Bowie, Maryland, teen started a bakery as a two-for-one charity. For every item he sells, he donates another to a homeless shelter. Every month, his special “freedom fighter” cupcakes honor a personal hero.

Julia Hawkins is a record-holding sprinter. She is also 103. At the National Senior Games in Albuquerque, New Mexico, this month she competed in the 50- and 100-yard dashes. Her nickname is “Hurricane.”

“Have many passions,” she told The New York Times. “And look for magic moments.”

Our hot take: only winners here. No losers at all.


You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.

Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Mike Segar/Reuters
All 10 Democratic presidential candidates raise their hands to indicate that they would provide Medicaid benefits to unauthorized immigrants during the second night of the first Democratic presidential candidates debate in Miami June 27.

Yes, there were many – maybe too many – Democratic presidential candidates, as the first debates showed. But in their diversity they represent a party struggling to unify around new ideas and principles.

Nazanin Tabatabaee/West Asia News Agency/Reuters
Iranian women hold flowers as they attend a ceremony in Tehran, Iran, June 27 to bury the remains of 150 ‘martyrs’ from the 1980-’88 Iran-Iraq war.

There’s a painful remembrance in Iran about how broken it felt in 1988, when pressured to end the Iran-Iraq war. That emotional part of foreign relations is a reminder to see current conflicts from the other side.

Kim Hong-Ji/Reuters
Job seekers attend the 2018 Japan Job Fair in Seoul, South Korea, November 7, 2018. Slower economic growth at home has spurred thousands of young Koreans to work overseas in recent years.

South Korea’s leadership is often viewed through a diplomatic lens as the U.S. seeks to curb North Korea’s nuclear program. But its economic performance counts more for ordinary Koreans. 

Ethical issues are rarely easy for companies. Wayfair, targeted by its own employees for alleged complicity in a humanitarian crisis along the U.S. border, is the latest example. 

Book review

“E.B. White was a master of conversational prose, excelling at sentences that seem perfectly balanced,” Danny Heitman writes in the Monitor’s review of “On Democracy,” a new collection of essays selected by White’s granddaughter. “To read his work is to feel balanced too.”


The Monitor's View

AP
Poland's Supreme Court building in Warsaw.

In a comment Thursday about the drift toward authoritarian populism in Europe, Russian President Vladimir Putin said liberal democracy has become “obsolete.” He implied that values such as individual rights had “outlived their purpose.”

Not so, responded European Union leaders. What began seven decades ago as a community of trading nations has since become a community of 28 countries integrated by transnational law. To make the point, they cited a June 24 decision by the European Court of Justice.

The EU’s highest legal body ruled that Poland’s populist government had acted illegally by forcing a third of the country’s Supreme Court judges into early retirement, thus violating the principle of the irremovability of judges. The move by Poland’s ruling Law and Justice party was widely seen as a power grab to end judicial independence and stack the benches with loyalists. It is part of a broader crackdown since 2016 on media and anything else that might challenge the party.

The EU’s first disciplinary action against a member state sends a strong message to others in the bloc inclined to step on democratic values. In addition, it is a reminder that national courts are required to implement EU law. The ruling also sends a signal to seven countries on the edges of Europe that are candidates to join.

Poland could now face punitive measures, such as a cutoff of EU funding or an end to its voting rights in European bodies. Even before the ruling, Polish leaders had put on hold their scheme to retire the judges.

Rule of law requires the independence of judges. It is the basis for ensuring individual freedoms and equality before the law. Polls show two-thirds of Europeans have positive feelings toward the EU. In Poland, such support is very high.

While the bloc’s popularity may be based on its economic opportunities and the freedom to travel, it is rule of law that holds it all together. Contrary to Mr. Putin’s view, liberal values are not becoming obsolete.


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.

For one mother, an unexpected request to direct a school play became an opportunity to turn to God for guidance. Along the way, she learned more about everyone’s God-given ability to express qualities such as joy, energy, and creativity.


A message of love

Thomas Peter/Reuters
Photojournalists strive to capture moments that tell a full story, bringing news from the remotest corners of the globe in an instant. Through them we learn more about the world, and ourselves. Here is a roundup of photos from this week that Monitor photo editors found the most compelling.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us. Come back Monday. We’ll have a story on climate change and impermanence as Alaska scrambles to relocate the village of Quinhagak to a safer location that may itself one day become uninhabitable.

More issues

2019
June
28
Friday

Give us your feedback

We want to hear, did we miss an angle we should have covered? Should we come back to this topic? Or just give us a rating for this story. We want to hear from you.