2018
April
02
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

April 02, 2018
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The Dow closed down 459 points Monday, showing how skittish investors are about President Trump’s attacks on Amazon as well as a potential trade war between the United States and China. And for good reason. Presidents usually don’t pick on individual companies, and trade wars aren’t generally good for business, hence the name.

Mr. Trump and the rest of the world have had some provocation for their anti-China moves. For years, many analysts agree, China has manipulated its currency, subsidized state-owned enterprises, and used various schemes to keep foreign companies out unless they hand over their technology. A free market requires rules. When a nation the size of China bends them, you can’t send it to its room. Options are limited.

Yet there’s also another vision of tariffs and trade wars – a protectionist view. The hope is that they can boost a domestic economy. In limited cases, that can be true. But the concept misses one of the most categorical points in the history of human progress. Our prosperity depends on each other. Not as Americans. As people.

Wealth is not finite. It grows. And it has grown fastest as the world’s capacity to connect and collaborate has grown. The answer to any economic stagnation is always, How can we work better together? The bigger the “we,” the greater the potential. That doesn’t mean governments have always managed that growth well or fairly. But, as investors know well, that also doesn’t mean closing a country’s front door.

Here are our five stories for today, including a question of conscience in Yemen, a one-word look into the Russian soul, and a group of South African grandmothers you really don't want to mess with. 


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Today's stories

And why we wrote them

Abduljabbar Zeyad/Reuters
A ship unloads a cargo of wheat at the Red Sea port of Hodeida, Yemen, April 1. The port, controlled by Shiite Houthi rebels, is key to feeding the capital, Sanaa, and Houthi regions. Some 17.8 million Yemenis are considered 'food insecure.'

Saudi Arabia’s generous humanitarian aid to Yemen comes with an unusual asterisk. The country’s war with Yemen is responsible for much of the suffering, meaning Saudi Arabia is actively working against itself – or trying to deflect criticism.   

Patterns

Tracing global connections

In this week’s column, Ned Temko notes that President Trump’s high-stakes diplomacy has lacked the behind-the-scenes efforts typical of past breakthroughs. Can one man’s skill and force of will reshape the world? Mr. Trump is banking on it. 

Amid growing reverence for Vladimir Putin, one word hints at how entwined the Russian president has become with his country and its rekindled identity of alienation from the West.

Points of Progress

What's going right
Joe Duff/Operation Migration/AP/File
Endangered whooping cranes fly over Kentucky on their way to their wintering sites in Florida. Hunting and loss of habitat drove the iconic birds to the brink of extinction by the 1940s. Today, populations are more robust, but whooping cranes continue to face threats.

Sometimes, nature needs a lovable face to help humans see an ecosystem in distress. In Texas, whooping cranes could help save the Gulf Coast. 

Finding vitality – and community – in a South African gym

This story is about boxing grannies in South Africa. What more do you need to know, really?

Meet South Africa's "boxing grannies"


The Monitor's View

Sunlight can shine through the smallest crack. That may be the best way to judge a very rare apology from a high-ranking official in North Korea – who once was its chief of spies – just before negotiations with South Korea and the United States over the North’s nuclear program.

On April 1, Kim Yong-chol, head of the Workers’ Party of Korea’s United Front Department, offered an apology to South Korean journalists after they were excluded from a concert where the North’s leader, Kim Jong-un, was watching a performance of musicians from the South.

“On behalf of the North’s authorities, I offer an apology and ask for your understanding for the wrong committed,” he said, with all apparent sincerity. He blamed uninformed bodyguards for the error.

In most countries, such a mea culpa would not be news. But North Korea is a place whose leaders are glorified and portrayed as infallible. Their ideology is supposedly on the correct path of history. The people are taught their nation is the greatest on earth, an envy of the world. Those who oppose North Korea’s actions are mocked with stinging adjectives, not openings for compromise.

So rare indeed is a humble admission by a prominent person in Pyongyang. Even though the apology was over a minor incident, it is worth recalling how small gestures have helped end conflicts in world trouble spots. In many difficult talks between adversaries, negotiators stepped outside the rational self-interest of a nation or group. They laid anger and revenge aside and then offered apologies that hint at self-reflection.

To end Colombia’s long civil war, for example, leaders of a rebel Marxist group made several emotional apologies to victims, such as the families of kidnapped victims and villagers who suffered a massacre. Both the government and the rebels have recognized their respective atrocities against civilians. The effect has been profound, helping to cement a peace deal in 2016.

Apologies, either for small mistakes or large, suggest a willingness to change one’s behavior. Rather than appear as weakness, they hint at an alternative type of power. They indicate a commitment to interdependence and a respect for a code of moral conduct. They help restore the dignity of victims, which could result in forgiveness. They build a relationship of trust that allows for compromises on tough decisions in a negotiation.

After a quarter century of failed talks with North Korea, the US and its partners may need to probe if the regime of Kim Jong-un now has a change of attitude, not only about its nuclear weapons but its aggressive and violent behavior toward South Korea.

The power of apology could be the missing link in the North Korean saga. Even if offered over a minor mistake, apologies help break down perceptions of “the other.” When each side looks in the mirror first to see what they can change in themselves, it is a victory over fear, an invitation for peace, and a call for healing.


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.

Today’s column explores how we can take small steps to prove for ourselves the veracity of the Easter story.


A message of love

Timothy D. Easley/AP
Thousands of teachers from across Kentucky fill the state Capitol in Frankfort April 2 to rally for increased funding and to protest last-minute changes to their state-funded pension system. Thousands came to protest teacher pension changes, and schools were closed statewide in Oklahoma as thousands more educators rallied there for increased education funding. (Watch for Monitor coverage of the widespread teacher protests later this week.)
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte and Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us today. Tomorrow, we celebrate the 50th anniversary of “2001: A Space Odyssey” with a look at the inscrutable show-stealer, HAL 9000. Today, we continue to wonder: Will artificial intelligence help us go to Jupiter, or just shut us out of the air lock? 

More issues

2018
April
02
Monday

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