Sometimes, the Supreme Court decisions that don鈥檛 make headlines may wind up having more significance.
Welcome to your Daily. Today we look at the quieter moves of the high court鈥檚 term, a surprising salmon-habitat solution, Ireland鈥檚 rethinking of sexual assault trials, Hawaiians鈥 take on Independence Day, and a wounded Green Beret鈥檚 will to come back stronger.
First, consider a question: 鈥淲hat do you think of Donald Trump?鈥
Just about anywhere in the world, it鈥檚 a conversation starter. In Moscow, the reactions can be priceless. Last Friday, after a week in Russia, I asked my cabdriver to share his thoughts. Andrei didn鈥檛 hesitate.
鈥淭rump is a strong uncle,鈥 the driver said. 鈥淗e drinks the blood of babies.鈥
Andrei meant this as a compliment, in an allusion to tales of how Russian czars got their energy.
More on President Trump: 鈥淗e looks like a world leader. He has money; he has everything.鈥
I just attended my seventh Dartmouth Conference since 2015, a dialogue for prominent Americans and Russians to brainstorm ways to improve a bilateral relationship that has steadily worsened. Arms control, regional conflicts, and cultural matters were on the table. Our joint recommendations were then shared at senior levels of both governments.
But it鈥檚 the peripheral interactions 鈥 the meals, the excursions 鈥 that give the process its juice. By now, core participants greet each other as old friends. New participants with new ideas are welcomed. We also watch proudly as Dartmouth veterans are called to official service, as with U.S. Ambassador James Jeffrey and leading Russian academic Vitaly Naumkin, both envoys on Syria. We can鈥檛 help but think that their Dartmouth experiences have informed their diplomacy.聽
Then there鈥檚 Andrei the cabdriver. Understanding him and other average Russians puts the rarefied Dartmouth discussions into a larger context. Andrei鈥檚 reaction to Mr. Trump came as no surprise. When I ask about Vladimir Putin, Andrei is noncommittal 鈥 鈥渕aybe good, maybe not,鈥 perhaps a reflection of the Russian president鈥檚 . 鈥淏ut Putin is eternal. Nobody can replace him.鈥
When I broach the turmoil in Ukraine 鈥 Andrei鈥檚 native country 鈥 he dismisses the new president, Volodymyr Zelensky, as a comedian and doesn鈥檛 even mention President Putin. He looks again to a leader he clearly admires.
鈥淚f Trump was president,鈥 he says, 鈥渉e would restore order.鈥
In this part of the world, the love of perceived strongmen lives 鈥 especially from afar.