海角大神

This article appeared in the January 02, 2018 edition of the Monitor Daily.

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Monitor Daily Intro for January 2, 2018

Mark Sappenfield
Senior global correspondent

The report is depressing and makes no attempt to hide it. 鈥淟et鈥檚 be honest: 2018 doesn鈥檛 feel good,鈥 the begins. From there, it gets worse. 鈥淐itizens are divided.聽Governments aren't doing much governing.聽And the global order is unraveling.鈥

The report predicts a 鈥済eopolitical depression鈥 鈥 a decline of global stability 鈥 on the scale of the 2008 economic crash.

The prediction encapsulates a malaise that we so often see in the news today. The problem, the report suggests, is not necessarily that the world is becoming more dangerous. It is that the democracies that have upheld values such as freedom, individual rights, and openness since World War II are having a collective identity crisis.

This is the challenge of democracy and of freedom and peace. The more successful they are, the easier it is for vigilance to wane. 鈥淲e took our liberal democratic values for granted for so long, we鈥檝e forgotten how to defend them,鈥 New York Times columnist David Brooks writes.

But this is also the virtue of democracy and of freedom and peace. The solution is in our hands. For his part, Mr. Brooks has written a series of extraordinary columns on how effective democracy demands its citizens to aspire to and strive for the best in themselves 鈥 , , . That is a prescription for a very different 2018.

In our five stories today, we look at a unique effort to break down racial barriers in St. Louis, Morocco鈥檚 struggles to embrace a truly open democracy, and a new trend that could change literacy efforts worldwide. 聽


This article appeared in the January 02, 2018 edition of the Monitor Daily.

Read 01/02 edition
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