In Turkey, a long-running "strongman" saga in a strategic corner of the world is really becoming a case study in how opposition seldom works without unity, reports Scott Peterson from Istanbul.聽
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Clayton Collins
Today at the Capitol, a couple of lawmakers are playing outsize roles in the debate over health-care legislation that will profoundly affect millions of lives. In Paris, a couple of presidents met.
Zoom out. Way out. Let鈥檚 go off-world.
An interesting sub-story around the newsmaking flight of the Juno spacecraft 鈥 now delivering spectacular views from above gaseous Jupiter鈥檚 cloud deck 鈥 is the outsize role of ordinary people.
The scientific stakes are high. Humanity last took a close look at Jupiter a generation ago (Galileo). Before that, fully two generations ago (Voyager). This time around, a relatively low-budget device called the 鈥 added to the mission simply for 鈥減ublic outreach鈥 鈥 is being directed by telescope-armed citizen scientists suggesting points of interest to observe, and then helping to process the images that Juno beams home in a way that, as Scientific American reports, 鈥.鈥 (To judge for yourself, check out our Viewfinder gallery below.)
鈥淸T]he overarching takeaway from these new images,鈥 a planetary scientist tells the magazine, 鈥渋s how relatively blinkered most of our earlier views have been.鈥 Power, in part, to the people.
Now to our five stories for today.聽
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And why we wrote them
( 6 min. read )
In Turkey, a long-running "strongman" saga in a strategic corner of the world is really becoming a case study in how opposition seldom works without unity, reports Scott Peterson from Istanbul.聽
( 6 min. read )
Battle lines were renewed this week over such hot-button Title IX-related issues as the definition of campus rape. But as Stacy Teicher Khadaroo reports, the conversation left out some important work, with momentum that transcends federal politics.聽
( 4 min. read )
While 95 percent of firefighters are men, nearly a third of new firefighters hired since 2009 have been women. Will equal access to career paths 鈥 and a broadening shift in thought on career associations 鈥 lead toward equal pay?
( 6 min. read )
It鈥檚 not that they've reduced coverage of US politics to the level of "spectacle." But journalists from around the world 鈥 and their audiences back home 鈥 are finding the current US administration to be a depiction of "American" in high relief.
( 4 min. read )
We鈥檝e long read about the remarkable cognitive abilities of these birds. (Turns out they like sledding, too; see the video embedded in this story.) Eoin O鈥機arroll explains why scientists now are looking even more closely at what ravens can teach them.
( 3 min. read )
President Barack Obama once called him 鈥渢he most popular politician on earth.鈥 But on July 12, former Brazilian President Luiz In谩cio Lula da Silva was sentenced to almost a decade in prison for corruption and money laundering. Known widely as Lula, he is the biggest fish caught so far in a graft probe that has spread across dozens of countries and snared dozens of politicians. The current Brazilian president, Michel Temer, also faces corruption allegations while his predecessor, Dilma Rousseff, was impeached last year under a cloud of suspicion over a massive kickback scheme involving the state-owned oil company Petrobras.
Yet even as the world notes Lula鈥檚 downfall, it should also learn why Brazilians have come to demand honesty in their leaders 鈥 and in their daily interactions with government. What is perhaps the world鈥檚 largest anti-corruption investigation carries lessons for other nations that assume they are trapped in a culture of impunity as Brazil once was.
鈥淚n Brazil there is a consciousness about this problem as there never was before,鈥 said federal prosecutor Deltan Dallagnol in an April talk at Harvard Law School, his alma mater. 鈥淪ociety gave us a lot of support.鈥
The key idea now more widely supported in Brazil is that of equality before the law, even for someone who was once immensely popular and powerful as Lula. 鈥淣o matter how important you are, no one is above the law,鈥 said Judge S茅rgio Moro in handing down his verdict against the former president, who held office from 2003 to 2011.
Brazil restored its democracy only about a quarter century ago, but the system has been flawed by too many political parties relying on too much money for campaigns and in winning votes in Congress. As political scandals have grown, so too has a small cadre of idealistic and well-paid civil servants as well as a popular movement that has steadily pushed legislation and emboldened the justice system.
Yet it is not enough to simply prosecute powerful people, said Mr. Dallagnol. Society, he says, has 鈥減rovided a shield.鈥
Justice officials, for example, have created comic books and board games with anti-corruption themes for children. They have also opened up public records about how politicians spend money. For the first time, prosecutors set up a website to expose pending criminal cases. A popular drive to pass anti-corruption proposals drew more than 2 million signatures. And more than 15,000 people in law enforcement took newly designed courses in how to combat corruption and money laundering.
In 2013, as people became aware of overspending for the 2014 World Cup soccer games in Brazil, anti-corruptions protests began to escalate. Also, prosecutors got a big break in a case known as Operation Car Wash, which exposed huge payoffs to politicians by contractors for Petrobras. The new attitude among Brazilians was essential. 鈥淲e are pretty aware that without public support that this case is not going anywhere,鈥 says Dallagnol. One poll in January found that Brazilians support the investigations of political figures 鈥渢o the end, regardless of the outcome.鈥
Many reforms are still needed and prosecutors fear ruling politicians can still thwart their work. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not enough to take out rotten apples from a basket. You need to change the conditions which make those apples to get rotten,鈥 says Dallagnol.
Yet the momentum toward transparency and accountability seems assured 鈥 especially when the mightiest of politicians can fall before the public鈥檚 heightened demand for equality before the law.聽
Each weekday, the Monitor includes one clearly labeled religious article offering spiritual insight on contemporary issues, including the news. The publication 鈥 in its various forms 鈥 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 鈥 The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston 鈥 whose founder was concerned with both the state of the world and the quality of available news.
( 2 min. read )
When we鈥檙e faced with aggressive words or actions 鈭 or when we hear about them in the news 鈭 it can be tempting to respond in kind. But knee-jerk reactions aren鈥檛 what impel reformation where it鈥檚 needed. Contributor Susanne van Eyl shares how a Bible story about taking the higher road instead of giving in to fury has encouraged her. As the creation of God, divine Truth, we鈥檙e all capable of resisting vengeful thoughts. Even in the heat of the moment, pausing to consider how to de-escalate an explosive situation can reveal a path forward that promotes progress.
Thanks, as always, for reading (or listening) today. Have a great weekend, and drop by again on Monday. We鈥檒l have a story on a new reform-minded breed of prosecutor taking office across the United States. And one on Europe鈥檚 growing taste for celebratory light shows. Until then.聽