2023
August
31
Thursday

Monitor Daily Podcast

August 31, 2023
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The idea that a self-made billionaire should run for president, in part because he or she isn’t beholden to parties or donors, always struck me as an American conceit. Think Ross Perot or Michael Bloomberg, neither of whom went the distance. Donald Trump’s candidacy ended up being as much about celebrity as business acumen. 

Now Taiwan is hearing the siren call of the tycoon-as-president. Terry Gou founded Foxconn, the electronics manufacturer that assembled the iPhone in your pocket. This week, he said he will run as an independent in January’s presidential election.

Mr. Gou’s candidacy isn’t a complete surprise. He has flirted with presidential runs in the past, and he tried to win the nomination of the main opposition party, the Kuomintang. But his late entry presents a wild card. Critics say Mr. Gou will simply split the opposition and hand victory to the current front-runner, William Lai of the Democratic Progressive Party.

The world will be watching, given the tensions over China’s territorial claims on Taiwan. While the Democratic Progressive Party favors independence, the Kuomintang is more conciliatory. Mr. Gou’s extensive business interests in China and personal ties to its leadership have also raised eyebrows. At his announcement, Mr. Gou said he had no “partisan baggage” and would seek peace not war with China. “The people’s interests are my biggest interests,” he said. 

His message may resonate with some voters. But those who view Beijing skeptically will likely need persuading that a business leader, not a politician, knows how best to navigate the stormy waters between Taiwan and China.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Manuel Rueda
Protesters from the Peruvian region of Puno argue with police as they hold a rally in front of Peru's Congress in Lima, July 26.

Nearly a year after a president’s dramatic coup attempt and impeachment, Peruvians want to vote for their next president before the scheduled 2026 elections. Legislators are trying to look the other way.

Patterns

Tracing global connections
Roscosmos State Space Corporation/AP/File
The rocket carrying moon lander Luna-25 takes off from Russia's Far East. The lander crashed on the moon's surface in a setback to Russia's space program.

Vladimir Putin appears to have reasserted his authority at home, following June’s mutiny, but Russia’s international standing is taking a beating.

The Explainer

Rebecca Blackwell/AP
Jewell Baggett stands beside a Christmas decoration she recovered from the wreckage of her mother’s home, as she searches for anything salvageable from the trailer home her grandfather had acquired in 1973 and built multiple additions on to over the decades, in Horseshoe Beach, Florida, after Hurricane Idalia, Aug. 30, 2023.

As parts of the United States face extreme weather from hurricanes to wildfires, many of those same places are losing access to home insurance. We explore what’s changing and why.

Book challenges at U.S. schools are often dominated by adults. But teens are amicably inching their way into the discussion, with the goal of amplifying student perspective. 

Points of Progress

What's going right

In our progress roundup, solar energy lessens demand on a grid, allowing the third-largest power plant in New England to be safely retired.


The Monitor's View

Reuters
Chile's President Gabriel Boric puts his arm around a relative of a missing person during an Aug. 30 announcement in Santiago that the government plans to search for the remains of those who were "disappeared" during the Augusto Pinochet dictatorship.

Chile reached a turning point Wednesday in its long quest to seek healing after a massive injustice. President Gabriel Boric formally launched the country’s first plan to find the remains of more than 1,000 people who went missing during the 1973-1990 military dictatorship of Gen. Augusto Pinochet.

In the more than three decades since the restoration of democracy, the remains of only 307 of the disappeared have been recovered, leaving many families alone to find the truth of what happened to their loved ones. Chile’s new approach acknowledges the state’s responsibility in dismantling the lies that have insulated the perpetrators of those abuses from accountability.

“The state has to be responsible for finding the truth,” Mr. Boric said in signing a decree formalizing the plan. “This is not a favor to the families. It is a duty to society as a whole to deliver the answers the country deserves and needs.”

In the past half-century, as many as 70 countries emerging from conflict or violent authoritarian regimes have created commissions or other models to promote justice by seeking transparency about past atrocities. Those experiments have entrenched the idea of truth-telling as vital in restoring society. South Africa’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission, for example, offered perpetrators of politically motivated crimes during the apartheid era amnesty for full disclosure. Yet no prosecutions ever followed for those who failed to come forward.

Soon after Chile restored its democracy, the government did set up the world’s first truth commission to probe the Pinochet era and seek national reconciliation. The commission panel’s report and subsequent government audits ultimately estimated that roughly 40,000 people had suffered state violence, including those who disappeared or are known to have been killed by security forces. Despite such findings, the government at the time declined to pursue criminal actions against those implicated. That decision reinforced a culture of impunity in the police and military forces, first set out in a 1978 law during the Pinochet dictatorship that gave soldiers and officials blanket amnesty.

In the past decade, a few private lawsuits have chipped away at that impunity. Families “have put the objectivity of their suffering at the service of the fight for truth and justice, the only way – I believe – to truly rebuild a country and provide the best for its people,” said Almudena Bernabeu, a Chilean human rights lawyer, in an address at the University of California, Berkeley in 2016. “The challenge for all societies, including that of Chile, is to not desire or perpetuate a power that is based on lies, but to dare to build an inclusive society that can overcome them.”

This first attempt by Chile to recover lost loved ones marks a start for the families and all of society to combine the truth about the disappeared with, perhaps, forgiveness. A national healing has begun.


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 caring for someone who is struggling with an injury or disease, endeavoring to see them as God knows them can make all the difference in their recovery.


Viewfinder

Chris Machian/Omaha World-Herald/AP
Sure, the Nebraska Cornhuskers beat the Omaha Mavericks 3-0 in volleyball at Memorial Stadium in Lincoln, Nebraska, Aug. 30, 2023. But an even bigger victory was the world record-setting attendance for a women's sports event: 92,003 fans. The previous official record was set last year, with 91,648 fans attending a Champions League soccer game in Barcelona, Spain. The largest crowd at a women's sporting event in the United States previously was at the 1999 Women's World Cup final, where 90,185 people cheered the athletes on from the stands.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thank you for joining us today. Please come back tomorrow, when we look at Florida’s less-populated “nature coast,” which bore the brunt of Hurricane Idalia. We’ll explore the outlook for post-storm recovery in the region, including the fishing village of Cedar Key. The barrier island with an “Old Florida” identity has been seeking nature-based solutions to sea-level rise.

More issues

2023
August
31
Thursday

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