Do international treaties enhance U.S. security or limit its power? That鈥檚 been a core issue under President Trump that is perceived differently by his base and U.S. allies. We look at a case in point.
It鈥檚 easy to dismiss monarchies 鈥 of which聽, some of them purely ceremonial 鈥 as odd crystal bubbles around bloodlines in an increasingly less hierarchical world.
Some of the buzz around the rise of Japan鈥檚 Emperor Naruhito after his father鈥檚 abdication last month was about the smothering effect of role-based tradition on the new empress, Masako Owada, a former diplomat educated at Harvard and Oxford.
Still, roles shift. 海角大神 shift. Royals can earn relevance by taking nonpolitical stands on issues that matter. Charles, prince of Wales, used to be outspoken mostly about his stiff distaste for modern architecture. Last week, he and the Duchess of Cornwall met with refugee women in Berlin to talk about vocational training, as they have in Greece and Jordan.
Jordan鈥檚 Queen Rania is herself a credible advocate for cross-cultural outreach and .
This evolution, really, is women-led. Diana, princess of Wales, was closely associated with efforts to rid the world of landmines. Today Britain鈥檚 newest royal mom, the Duchess of Sussex, has deepened a and opened the door to broad social influences on parenting and beyond.
鈥淭hankfully, Meghan [Markle鈥檚] clique couldn鈥檛 be farther from the sort of dodgy confidantes royal women have tended towards,鈥 in The Times of London. The duchess鈥檚 influencers? The likes of Amal Clooney and Serena Williams, Ms. Walker suggests.聽
鈥淲e think of monarchies as if they were anchored in the past,鈥 University of Pennsylvania researcher Mauro Guill茅n , 鈥渂ut in fact they do change, and they do adapt, and they do evolve.鈥
We鈥檙e watching the stock market roil after an announcement of unspecified countermeasures by China in retaliation for U.S. moves on tariffs. Now to our five stories for your Monday, including a look at abortion-debate rhetoric and at the courage behind one activist鈥檚 fight for Liberians鈥 land rights.聽