To many Democrats, impeachment looks like the moral high road. But the public at large is divided on this sensitive issue. That goes a long way toward explaining leaders鈥 mixed signals.
Today鈥檚 stories examine public ambivalence about impeachment, protests against Hungary鈥檚 鈥減atriotic鈥 education reforms, scientists uniting people around climate change, intensive grandparenting, and dogs, inmates, and second chances.
She was an older mom getting on the T, Boston鈥檚 subway and trolley system, with her teenage son. 鈥淲hy don鈥檛 you sit with me?鈥 she asked. He said nothing and found another seat. 鈥淗e鈥檚 at that stage,鈥 she sighed. It turns out, though, that mother and son are united on one issue: climate change. They were headed to the local climate change strike where her son undoubtedly found good company. Students from around the country skipped school so they could join the worldwide protest on the eve of a U.N. climate summit.
Ditto for international kids from Hong Kong and Melbourne to Delhi, Athens, Paris, and the suburbs of Kampala, Uganda (#KeepMamaAfricaGreen). Inspired by Sweden鈥檚 Greta Thunberg, a teen who herself had been skipping school on Fridays to protest, these students wanted their message heard.
It鈥檚 tempting to say this new wave of protesters is more committed to battling climate change than older generations are. But a recent Washington Post-Kaiser Family Foundation survey of roughly 600 teens and 2,300 adults offers a more nuanced view: On most climate questions, parents and teens are . Where do they differ? Teens are more willing to trust the science and more eager for action: 3 in 4 say the U.S. is doing too little.