2017
May
18
Thursday

Monitor Daily Podcast

May 18, 2017
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Mark Sappenfield
Senior global correspondent

Where does extremism start? In many ways, Germany is a unique laboratory for that question. Recent right-wing anti-immigrant incidents have been more prevalent in the old East Germany than in the west. A study that came out today in Berlin sought to answer why.

Its answer: Under Communism, East Germans became socialized to have an “exaggerated need for harmony, ‘purity’ and order,” the report states. This has resulted in a “prevailing mentality” of xenophobia in places.

The study holds insight into the rise of right-wing populism in places like Hungary, Austria, and Poland. But in that way, it also offers a glimpse of a solution. Socialization is not irreversible, after all. It is the message that a society sends, repeated over years, sinking into thought and becoming action. But that message can be changed. What is needed is a similar commitment to a new message.  


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Ebrahim Noroozi/AP
A supporter of Iran’s President Hassan Rouhani, who is running for a second term in office, displayed his poster at rally in downtown Tehran.
Larry Downing/Reuters/File
Central Intelligence Agency headquarters, Langley, Va.

Special Report

SOURCE:

Kentucky Division of Water

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Jacob Turcotte and Story Hinckley
Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff/File
Children engage in collaborative play at a preschool in Lexington, Mass. A new study finds that children as young as 3-1/2 understand and value the concept of joint commitments.

The Monitor's View

AP Photo
A building is reflected in the windows of a Wells Fargo Bank in Los Angeles. Wells Fargo plans to cut an additional $2 billion out of the bank’s operations as it works to recover from its sales practices scandal in 2016 and respond to customer demand for more online services. In the results of an investigation released April 10, Wells Fargo's board of directors has blamed the bank's most senior management for creating an "aggressive sales culture" at Wells that eventually led to the bank's scandal over millions of unauthorized accounts.

A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

A message of love

Jason Reed/Reuters
Participants in glowing vests looked out toward the Sydney Opera House from the Sydney Harbor Bridge in Australia May 18 during a press preview of a new 'Vivid Climb' tour – offered in Mandarin. The city opens it annual festival of light and sound May 26, with many landmarks participating.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for reading. Come back tomorrow for a look at what GOP lawmakers are doing to save their agenda as a chaotic week in the White House winds down. 

Also, a correction: In the May 8 edition, we misstated how many people in the French presidential elections either voted for Marine Le Pen or abstained from voting. A third of those who voted opted for Ms. Le Pen, while a third of all eligible voters either abstained or spoiled their ballot papers in protest.

More issues

2017
May
18
Thursday
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