海角大神

2018
May
25
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

May 25, 2018
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Mark Sappenfield
Senior global correspondent

There is a superhero walking the streets of Birmingham, Ala.听Four-year-old Austin Perine听spends his allowance buying food for homeless people.

He learned that some people don鈥檛 have a place to live after watching an 鈥淎nimal Planet鈥 documentary in which a mother panda left her cubs. His dad, Terance Perine, said, 鈥淲ell, I guess they鈥檒l be homeless for a while.鈥 Austin wanted to know if people could be homeless 鈥 and then decided he should use his allowance to help others. Every time he hands out a chicken sandwich, he adds the same words, 鈥淒on't forget to show love.鈥澨

His kindness has inspired a number of media reports, and Burger King has offered to add $1,000 a month to Austin鈥檚 $25 a week allowance so that he can feed more people.听鈥淔eeding the homeless is the highlight of my life,鈥 .听

Ignoring Edna Mode of 鈥淭he Incredibles,鈥 Austin wears a cape so that he can go faster. 鈥淚t blows in the wind,鈥 he told CNN.

Now here are our five stories of the day, including a push for political unity from veterans, an attempt to reframe climate change news, and the power of laughter in the Middle East.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Europe鈥檚 new rules for online privacy are echoing around the world, not just because of their groundbreaking scope but also because they present an opportunity for technology companies to reestablish trust.

Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff
War veteran Andrew Grant (l.) meets voters Don and Sharon Holl as he campaigns for the June 5 primary in Orangevale, Calif., near Sacramento, for a seat in Congress.

Military veterans know how to trust in teams and put aside differences in the pursuit of shared objectives. Many see compromise as an essential virtue. And they鈥檙e now asking voters to deploy them 鈥 this time to temper the politics of tribalism.

It鈥檚 hardly surprising that US ultimatums directed at Iran have been answered in kind, with Iranians saying they will not be intimidated. But listen closely, and you'll also hear more pragmatic voices.

Lt. Elizabeth Crapo/NOAA Corps/AP
An Argo float is deployed to capture ocean temperature data. NOAA announced last week that April 2018 marked the 400th consecutive month with global temperatures above the 20th-century average.

Watching climate milestones whiz past can be overwhelming and disheartening.听Climate scientists are trying to walk a fine line between keeping the public informed and making people feel helpless.

It's a well-known device. Sometimes the best way to grapple with difficult personal, social, and political issues is through humor. In Jordan, entertainers are delivering just that to theater and TV audiences during the holy month of Ramadan.


The Monitor's View

AP Photo
A TV crew works outside the Popular Party's headquarters in Madrid, Spain, May 24, after the National Court issued hefty prison sentences for politicians and businesspeople involved in a kickbacks-for-contra颅cts scheme that helped fund the ruling party.

One of the healthy competitions between Europe and the United States is over which one can set a new global standard. On May 25, the European Union began to win on one standard 鈥 digital privacy 鈥 with the start of stiff rules on how companies handle personal data. The impact, though limited to firms operating in Europe, is being felt globally.

In another type of standard, however, Europe has only begun to compete with the US.

Corruption still pervades many countries on the Continent. The latest example is the May 24 sentencing of 29 people in Spain鈥檚 ruling Popular Party related to a massive scheme involving kickbacks. Another is the alleged bribery of members of the Council of Europe鈥檚 parliamentary assembly by Azerbaijan for remaining silent on discussions of human rights violations in that Central Asian country.

Yet one by one, more European nations from Ireland to Slovakia are tightening enforcement of anti-graft rules, especially against companies that operate overseas. For years, many governments have turned a blind eye toward bribery of foreign officials on a dubious assumption that their domestic firms might lose business.

In France, for example, people were shocked in April when a powerful businessman, Vincent Bollor茅, was held in jail and questioned over suspected graft in Africa. The move, however, is the result of what is considered a cultural revolution in France. A new law that took effect last year, known as Sapin II, set up a new anti-corruption agency and gives prosecutors new tools to deal with corporate corruption abroad. At least three companies have already settled with the new agency in cases involving bribery of a foreign official.

The new French law is similar to Britain鈥檚 Bribery Act of 2010, which itself is based on a ground-breaking law in the US, the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act of 1977. The US law has been effective in catching many European companies, an embarrassment that has proved听an incentive for EU member states to toughen up their own laws. Germany, for example, has cracked听down on its firms after the US settled a case with the German engineering firm Siemens in 2008.听

With each new anti-graft law in Europe, the US finds it easier to work with European officials on cases of transnational corruption. On both sides of the Atlantic, governments are rising to higher standards of honesty, transparency, and accountability. Together, they may ultimately set a new global standard.


A 海角大神 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 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.

For today鈥檚 contributor, Memorial Day is an opportunity to think more deeply about what it means to selflessly serve others.


A message of love

Kevin Rivoli/AP/File
Memorial Day 鈥 a national holiday to remember and honor members of the military who died during their service 鈥 was established as an act of reconciliation. After the Civil War, many Americans brought flowers and flags to the graves of fallen soldiers on Decoration Day in the spring. The ceremonies were local, with Northerners honoring Union soldiers and Southerners honoring Confederate soldiers. In 1913, on the 50th anniversary of the Battle of Gettysburg, more than 50,000 veterans from both sides returned to Gettysburg, Pa., to commemorate the war, moving the country toward a joint day of remembrance. Following the armistice that ended World War I, a national holiday was established on May 30 to honor those who died in all wars. 鈥 Rebecca Asoulin / Staff
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte and Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us today. Please come back Monday for our special holiday edition of the Daily. With the United States celebrating Memorial Day, we have a column from senior editor Scott Armstrong about the impressions left by a recent trip to the D-Day battlefields of Normandy.听

More issues

2018
May
25
Friday

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