2017
June
05
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

June 05, 2017
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Mark Sappenfield
Senior global correspondent

When anti-fascist left-wing extremists showed up in Portland, Ore., Sunday to counter a “Donald Trump free speech protest” by right-wing extremists, both sides were ready for a fight. One picture of what police confiscated included bricks, knives, hammers, clubs, a wrench, a hatchet, and tear gas. While most Americans might condemn such an approach to protest, the national conversation of today is often little more civilized than a set of brass knuckles. The Portland Police cache is not unrelated to that broader trend.

But there was no large-scale violence, and there was a different snapshot, too. One pro-Trump protester spent most of the day sitting amid the left-wingers, not hurling bricks but asking honest questions. The protester told The Oregonian newspaper that he likes to keep an open mind, trying to change people’s opinions and seeing if they can change his.

“There [were] a lot more intelligent people than I thought,” he said. A liberal protester acknowledged: “You certainly have humanized a fair number of your allies.”

That was a very different kind of conversation.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Peter Nicholls/Reuters
A woman posted a sign near London Bridge June 4, a day after attackers rammed a hired van into pedestrians there and attacked others in a nearby neighborhood with knives.
Alfredo Sosa/Staff
Dalia Kasseb is the first Muslim to run for the city council in Pearland, Texas, a suburb of Houston. The Egyptian-born pharmacist talks about “smart growth,” keeping the community healthy, and opening more parks.

Discomfort Zone

Experiences that transform
Ann Hermes/Staff
Clementina Chéry founded the Louis D. Brown Peace Institute after her teenage son was killed in the crossfire of a gang-related shootout.

The Monitor's View

Reuters
A woman carries flowers across London Bridge, in London, Britain, June 5.

A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

A message of love

Owen Humphreys/PA Wire/AP
Concertgoers took selfies next to armed police as they left the June 4 One Love Manchester concert for the victims of the Manchester Arena terror attack. Held at Emirates Old Trafford, a cricket ground in Greater Manchester, the benefit show was a response to the May 22 performance by Ariana Grande at which a suicide bomber killed 22 and injured more than 100. This time, Ms. Grande was joined by performers including Justin Bieber, Katy Perry, and Miley Cyrus. Many offered the crowd messages of love. (Click below for a gallery, with quotes.)
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thank you for reading today. Be sure to watch your inbox nightly. We have a number of good pieces under way this week, including a look at some of the broader issues underlying the Trump administration’s push to privatize the US air-traffic-control system.

More issues

2017
June
05
Monday
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