海角大神

2018
September
18
Tuesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

September 18, 2018
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David Clark Scott
Cover Story Editor

Elon Musk announced Monday SpaceX has its first paying customer for a private, weeklong flight around the moon. Yusaku Maezawa, a young Japanese clothing tycoon, put down a 鈥渟ignificant鈥 deposit for a flight scheduled for five years from now.

It鈥檚 been 50 years since Apollo 8 made the same journey. Perhaps more interesting than the story of funding Musk鈥檚 vision of a 鈥渕ulti-planet civilization鈥 or even the emergence of space tourism, is Mr. Maezawa鈥檚 spirit of generosity. He鈥檚 not going alone. He鈥檚 also paying for about a half-dozen musicians, painters, filmmakers, and other artists to go with him on a cosmic art project聽.鈥

Solo travel can be revealing. But in my experience, travel is far more satisfying when you have someone else with you. : 鈥淚 want to share these experiences and things with as many people as possible.鈥

Of course, this trip may have more in common with a Six Flags roller coaster than a Caribbean cruise. At thepaused to underline that 鈥渢his is definitely dangerous.鈥

Aware of the risks, Maezawa鈥檚 starting to gently recruit passengers for this moonshot: 鈥淚f you should hear from me, please say yes and accept my invitation. Please don鈥檛 say no.鈥

Perhaps you and I should brush up on our watercolors.

Now to our five selected stories, including the pursuit of justice by American sex-abuse victims and by Latin American activists, as well as what horses can teach humans about empathy.聽


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

History often gives us some perspective on progress. Two former US senators offer their view of Anita Hill鈥檚 testimony before Congress in 1991.

Our reporter reached out to some residents of the Syrian province of Idlib, a lingering rebel stronghold, to get their perspective on the prospects for peace 鈥 or one last battle.

A deeper look

Kristen Norman/ Special to 海角大神
Larry Antonsen, a retired building engineer in Chicago, endured childhood abuse that has never been officially acknowledged by either the Roman Catholic Church or the state. Yet by his own account, he has come to a place of inner healing that is complex and difficult to describe.

For many survivors of child sexual abuse by priests and pastors, there is still no legal recourse. But some survivors say that doesn't mean justice is unattainable 鈥 only that it takes different forms.

Ann Hermes/Staff
Laura Z煤帽iga C谩ceres, daughter of slain environmental activist Berta C谩ceres, was joined by her family's lawyer, Rodil V谩squez, in Tegucigalpa, Honduras. This week, the country鈥檚 supreme court indefinitely suspended the trial of eight men accused of murdering Ms. C谩ceres. Murders of environmental defenders rarely result in anyone held accountable, observers say.

Here鈥檚 another story about the pursuit of justice, this time in Latin America, where activists can be murdered for trying to protect the environment. Could the Berta C谩ceres case mark a shift?

Laura Cluthe/海角大神
Dale Perkins of the nonprofit City to Saddle teaches Schneider, age 11, how to trot on a horse named Derby in Rutland, Mass. The program allows inner-city children to experience what it鈥檚 like to work on a farm and to interact with one of its largest animals.

When inner-city kids spend time on a farm, they find that building trust with an 900-pound equine can help with their human relationships.


The Monitor's View

AP
South Korean President Moon Jae-in, right, and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un in Pyongyang, North Korea, Sept. 18.

Just a year ago, the world was tracking how much North Korea might be a threat as it tested new missiles and nuclear weapons. President Trump even promised 鈥渇ire and fury鈥 if the United States were attacked. These days, as yet another summit takes place between the two Koreas, the world is instead tracking how much the North鈥檚 young dictator, Kim Jong-un, wants economic freedom for his 25 million people.

A possible shift in Mr. Kim鈥檚 thinking may be visible during this week鈥檚 visit of Moon Jae-in, South Korea鈥檚 president, to Pyongyang 鈥 their third summit. Mr. Moon brought along nearly a dozen top business executives to see if North Korea might be ready to take concrete steps in opening itself for trade and investment. In a summit last April, Moon offered a 鈥渘ew economic map鈥 that would connect the two countries through roads, railways, and pipelines.

Their latest meeting is yet another test to see if Kim sees his survival relying more on progress toward a market economy and fulfilling his people鈥檚 rising expectations than in a nuclear arsenal that so far has done little for the regime.

If that is the case, then he may be ready to negotiate away his weapons in a grand deal with the US that could include a formal peace pact and a reduction of US forces on the peninsula. Another summit with Mr. Trump, like their historic meeting in Singapore last June, is being discussed for later this year.

North Korea watchers see strong signals that Kim wants to boost market competition in an economy that has been tightly controlled for 70 years under a socialist family dynasty. He may have no choice.

Decades of mismanagement have left North Korea with a per capita gross national income that is less than 5 percent of South Korea鈥檚. Spending on the military eats up about a third of the official budget. And tough sanctions imposed by the United Nations after last year鈥檚 weapons tests have helped to shrink the economy.

The first signals of the regime鈥檚 openness to the world began in the 1990s under the current Kim鈥檚 grandfather 鈥 but only after aid from Moscow dried up with the collapse of the Soviet Union. It took a mass famine to drive the North Korean people to start growing food for themselves and to sell it in local markets, known as jangmadang. The country now has hundreds of such markets selling all sorts of goods in both local and foreign currency.

This informal economy may now exceed the official one. In a small survey of North Koreans for the Washington-based Center for Strategic and International Studies, 83 percent said outside goods and information had a greater impact on their lives than decisions by the government.

In addition, state-run enterprises have lately been allowed to use American dollars and calculate supply and demand. Authorities are even cultivating a culture of competition and innovation. In an official parade last week that celebrated the country鈥檚 anniversary, there was no display of long-range missiles as in the past. Instead, one float proclaimed the 鈥渞obust foundation of an economically strong state.鈥

The rise in individual freedom, if only in the economy, cannot be ignored by the regime. Political freedom may be far off but Kim must feel pressure to compromise with the US in return for the hope of prosperity.

Negotiations to find the right sequence of necessary compromises may be difficult. The sanctions will probably stay in place until the North denuclearizes. But the demands of North Koreans for more freedom is now easier to see.


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.

There has been a heightened focus on the issue of loneliness in the news this year, and today鈥檚 contributor found that it was prayer and turning to God, divine Love, that made the difference in finding freedom from feeling alone.


A message of love

Tyrone Siu/Reuters
Volunteers in Hong Kong clear a damaged path Sept. 18 in the wake of super-typhoon Mangkhut. The storm had previously ravaged the Philippines, killing more than 60 and affecting some 3 million people, according to a Voice of America report. It also inflicted serious damage in China鈥檚 Guangdong province, though it contributed to far fewer casualties there.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us. Come back tomorrow. We鈥檙e exploring this question: Does a strong US economy mean this is the 鈥渂est鈥 time for a trade war with China?

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2018
September
18
Tuesday

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