2019
October
21
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

October 21, 2019
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Welcome to your Daily. Today we have the Kurdish view from Syria, the latest on Brexit in plain British, the equestrian statue repurposed, and paired items on a time of cultural revival in Mexico.

First, a court drama with national implications. Two Cleveland-area counties reached a last-minute settlement in a case against the nation’s leading pharmaceutical distributors, alleging illegal promotion of opioids by the companies.

For these two counties, both heavily affected by opioid abuse, the $260 million settlement means they will get much-needed money to help treat addiction and prevent further deaths. “It’s about rehabilitation and getting people straight,” said Michael C. O’Malley, Cuyahoga County prosecutor.

For the United States, this outcome postpones a larger reckoning. Some 2,600 lawsuits are pending by counties, cities, states, and tribes against corporations whose marketing and distribution of these pain-relief drugs may have played a significant role in a nationwide crisis. In the lead-up to this Ohio trial, for a time it looked possible that it could become the venue for a sweeping $48 billion settlement encompassing that legion of lawsuits. 

That possibility now awaits another case. By some measures even $48 billion would be a drop in the bucket. In a report this year, White House economists said the opioid crisis cost the U.S. economy $504 billion in 2015 alone. So, at stake is relief for people in more struggling communities like Cleveland. But as the Monitor highlighted this spring, it’s also about accountability: Many plaintiffs say courtroom trials could give a full airing to alleged illegal promotion efforts that put profits above responsibility with addictive drugs.


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Today's stories

And why we wrote them

Outgunned by Turkey and feeling betrayed by President Trump, where do Syria’s Kurds go from here? It’s a sad question, and an employee of the Kurdish autonomous administration has a telling answer: Iraq.

Brexit debate

Staff

Brexit is once again nearing a critical stage, and Boris Johnson has agreed to a deal with the European Union. But getting that deal across the finish line seems just as muddled a process as ever.

Bebeto Matthews/AP
Visual artist Kehinde Wiley, best known for his portrayals of contemporary African Americans, unveiled his first monumental public sculpture, "Rumors of War," an equestrian portraiture of warfare and heroism, Sept. 27, 2019, in New York's Times Square. The work will be exhibited through Dec. 1.

A famous artist is turning the debate about Confederate statues on its head. By appropriating and reimagining the classic wartime statue, Kehinde Wiley wants to glorify the freedom and dignity that slavery tried to stamp out.

A deeper look

Alfredo Sosa/Staff
Father and son, dressed in traditional costumes, show their national pride Sept. 15, 2019, as they prepare for the Independence Day "El Grito" reenactment in the Zocalo, Mexico City's main square.

What does it mean to be Mexican? Five hundred years after the Spanish conquest, and now with a populist president, the answer is complex – but also proud.

Watch

‘The game of life and death’: An ancient sport revives in Mexico

Here’s a bonus tied to that same story on Mexican culture. Our director of photography grabbed his video camera to capture the reemergence of an ancient ballgame, and its resonance for national identity.


The Monitor's View

For the past five days, one of the most diverse nations in the Middle East, Lebanon, has been convulsed by nationwide protests. While the trigger was a proposed tax on WhatsApp and other popular internet call systems, the protesters are demanding the resignation of top leaders and an end to a corrupt system that has caused mass hardship.

Yet look deeper and it is easy to detect another goal, one that applies to many countries: the end of fearmongering by politicians who pit different groups against each other  to stay in power and divide up the nation’s wealth.

Identity politics is cooked into Lebanon’s government structure: The president must be Christian, the Parliament speaker a Shiite, and the prime minister a Sunni. During these largely leaderless protests, however, such distinctions melted away as Lebanese of all stripes rose up as citizens by the hundreds of thousands.

They united under the national flag, a sharp contrast to protests in 2015 that saw the use of flags by sects and parties. And within each religious group, protesters turned on their own leaders, accusing them of patronage and nepotism, a major reason for Lebanon’s economic dysfunction.

Instead of living in the manufactured fear of “the other” and being told how to vote, protesters rallied around shared ideals of good governance. In uniting Lebanon’s diverse population of 4.5 million people, they also embraced individual equality, a key concept for any democratic society.

One protester told The Guardian that politicians can no longer claim that a “hidden hand” is harming their particular group’s interests. “The hidden hand ... is actually just our dignity that woke up. We’ve been silent and sedated for so long, we’ve now awakened. They are not used to us, the people, having pride. But we’ll show them,” he said.

Despite its small size, Lebanon has now set a marker for the Middle East on how to escape the manipulated fear of sectarian identities. Passive acceptance of such politics has only led to lost jobs, broken highways, electricity blackouts, and a huge national debt.

“They [politicians] are not giving us anything, they took everything, and we don’t have anything here,” one protester told Al Jazeera. “The people are one – Shia, Sunni, Christian, they’re all one here.”


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.

Following Jesus’ example of a life that mirrors the power and love of God brings healing, fulfillment, and freedom from the limitations that would dampen our lives.


A message of love

Omar Ibrahim/Reuters
A girl with her face painted with the colors of the Lebanese flag gestures during an anti-government protest in Tripoli, Lebanon, Oct. 21, 2019. Over the past five days, hundreds of thousands of citizens have risen up to protest corruption.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

That’s all for today. We’ll see you tomorrow, with stories including a look at the meaning of “quid pro quo.”

More issues

2019
October
21
Monday

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