2023
March
03
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

March 03, 2023
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Peter Grier
Washington editor

Attorney General Merrick Garland has said on numerous occasions that in the United States the rule of law means that the same laws apply to all.

That includes former presidents, in his estimation. Asked at a press conference last year whether Donald Trump could face charges stemming from the Jan. 6, 2021, riot at the Capitol, an animated Mr. Garland said that “no person” is above the law.

But in practice, any prosecution of Mr. Trump would be uniquely difficult and politically fraught, as a big story in The Washington Post this week made clear.

The story details how FBI agents and Justice Department prosecutors argued before executing a search warrant to recover classified documents at Mr. Trump’s Mar-a-Lago residence last August.

Prosecutors were pushing for action. Agents were reluctant. They were cautious about a step they considered momentous – and feared it could spark a backlash that could damage their careers.

“Trump’s disinformation campaign against law enforcement appears to be working, which should concern all of us,” tweeted former federal prosecutor Renato Mariotti on Wednesday.

Mr. Trump has said the main legal cases against him are political witch hunts pushed by Democrats to derail his 2024 presidential campaign.

Meanwhile the possibility of indictments looms larger. Special counsel Jack Smith is pursuing federal investigations into the Jan. 6 and Mar-a-Lago cases. Mr. Trump also faces a Georgia election-interference case and scrutiny from Manhattan prosecutors over alleged hush money payments to a porn star.

Prosecutors may yet drop these cases. But an indictment would be huge news that could have immense consequences for the developing 2024 presidential race.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

How do you preserve crisis communications with an adversary who is suspicious of your use of them? The U.S. is finding China isn’t interested in hotlines, which spells trouble as their rivalry heats up.

Daniel Schaefer/dpa/AP
Members of the Last Generation activist group glue themselves to a street during snowfall in Dresden, Germany, to draw attention to the need to achieve compliance with climate targets, Jan. 20, 2023.

Activists are taking radical steps, like gluing themselves to streets, to draw attention to the climate crisis. Such acts, if unpopular, fall in line with earlier, violent moral crusaders like British suffragettes.

India’s press freedoms were spiraling long before authorities targeted the BBC. Trends of anti-media violence, censorship, and legal intimidation could have disastrous consequences for the world’s largest democracy.

Video

Women in ‘deconstruction’ harvest value – and mutual support

This team disassembles buildings that need to be razed, reclaiming quality materials that can no longer be produced – and elevating the roles of women and gender minorities in a long-exclusionary field.

Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff
Textile artist and fashion designer Jessamy Kilcollins (center, in red) teaches a class called “Mending by Hand: Visible Stitching” at the Eliot School of Fine and Applied Arts, on Jan. 18, 2023, in Boston. Participants learn how to mend holes in an artistic way.

Could darning – or knitting – socks be more satisfying than buying new? More people are picking up needle and thread, rather than a credit card, to keep clothing out of landfills.


The Monitor's View

Reuters
People in Beijing, China, hold white sheets of paper in protest of COVID-19 restrictions Nov. 27.

This year’s celebration of International Women’s Day, held every March 8, could be a bit different. Over the past year, women in three of the world’s most oppressive countries – China, Iran, and Russia – have either led mass protests or become the face of anti-regime resistance. Many say their participation shattered a mental glass ceiling, allowing them to express individual sovereignty and a social equality often denied under the three autocracies. 

A good example is Cao Zhixin, an editor at Peking University Press who helped lead a group of women in a peaceful protest last November against the harsh impact of China’s rigid lockdowns against COVID-19.

“She was scared but excited,” one of Ms. Cao’s friends told The Guardian. “She had never seen a public assembly before and that was her first time. After they let out their long-repressed emotions, they felt liberated.”

These initial protests then exploded into anti-regime demonstrations across 31 cities, lasting for days with women on the front lines. It was China’s biggest uprising since the 1989 Tiananmen movement and forced the ruling Communist Party to quickly abandon its COVID-19 restrictions. Chinese leader Xi Jinping “had to bow to female protesters,” wrote China expert Katsuji Nakazawa in Nikkei Asia.

Ms. Cao became famous when a video she recorded in anticipation of being arrested went viral in January after she was formally charged. “Don’t let us disappear quietly from this world!” she said in the video. Her voice is now silenced as she remains in jail along with dozens of other protesters, including many of her friends.

In Russia, protests against the war in Ukraine were quickly suppressed after the Feb. 24 invasion. Yet the most famous protest came on television in mid-March. Marina Ovsyannikova, a female editor at Channel One Russia, held up an anti-war banner during a live broadcast. It said, “don’t believe the propaganda, here you are being lied to.”

She has since fled to France, but an online resistance to the war has since grown, relying on dozens of women activist groups working in an anti-hierarchical and collaborative style. As Ella Rossman, a Russian activist and historian in Britain, told The Moscow Times, the mobilization of woman activists has resulted in a “new understanding of female agency.”

In Iran, women-led protests began in September after a young woman, Mahsa Amini, was arrested for violating the female dress code and later died during police custody. The uprising that followed included many parts of society, leading to a violent crackdown but forcing the regime to pull its “morality police” from the streets.

The protests in Iran have been quelled, but many women and girls continue to shed their hijabs and uncover their hair in public. Perhaps most remarkable was that so many “men are willing to die for women’s freedom” in Iran, as actress Golshifteh Farahani told Le Monde. “Iranian women have already won.” That may be just the right message for this year’s International Women’s Day.


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.

Getting to know God on a deeper level can transform our experience in tangible ways.


Viewfinder

Martin Meissnerl/AP
A bumblebee in Gelsenkirchen, Germany, is covered in pollen as it flits around a crocus, one of the first sources of the powdery substance as spring weather emerges. March 1, 2023, was the meteorological first day of spring, though temperatures in Germany are still chilly.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Come back Monday, when we’ll have a story exploring whether urban camping bans are unfair to homeless people.

Note: Our Friday podcast, “Why We Wrote This,” resumes next week. You can catch up with past episodes here (or wherever you listen to podcasts).

More issues

2023
March
03
Friday

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