With the pandemic surging and the economy stalling, an overwhelming majority of Americans want Washington to do something. Why both Democrats and Republicans now see the possibility of making a deal.
Our name is about honesty. The Monitor is owned by The First Church of Christ, Scientist, and we鈥檝e always been transparent about that.
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Mark Trumbull
Next time you think about who might become an innovator, think perhaps of . The child of an enslaved couple who escaped and made it from Virginia to Boston, Latimer went on to develop a new way of heat-treating carbon filaments to make them last longer. It was one of many steps that helped bring electric lighting to the masses.
And according to new research, Latimer was part of a larger phenomenon. Black Americans 鈥 when they lived in Northern states that offered them greater opportunity 鈥 at the same rates as white Americans.
鈥淒uring this era, the United States was arguably the most inventive place on Earth at what was arguably the most inventive era in world history. This puts northern Black people in the global vanguard of invention in the late 19th and early 20th century,鈥 write authors Jonathan Rothwell and Andre Perry of the Brookings Institution, and Mike Andrews of the University of Maryland.
The tally of 50,000 patents by Black Americans in that era is more than an interesting revision of the history books. It鈥檚 a reminder of the flourishing that occurs when human talents are given rein 鈥 and the harm to individuals and society when artificial barriers stand in the way.
鈥淭he point is that it isn鈥檛 markets generating extreme inequality, it is political institutions,鈥 recently as the new research was released. 鈥淏lack people 鈥 and, I would say, any group of people 鈥 possess the natural ability to acquire advanced technical skills & apply them ... and have done so when given the chance.鈥
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With the pandemic surging and the economy stalling, an overwhelming majority of Americans want Washington to do something. Why both Democrats and Republicans now see the possibility of making a deal.
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Sometimes the anticipated consequences of policy changes don鈥檛 materialize. A case in point: Lifting the ban on U.S. servicewomen fighting 鈥 and dying 鈥 in combat hasn鈥檛 dampened Americans鈥 support for war.
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Seasonal fare is the escapism many viewers are longing for this year. But besides cheerful decor and happy endings,聽diversity and acceptance have also become part of the message.聽
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In their everyday jabs at each other, Iran and the United States speak of containing or restraining the other in the present-day Middle East. The U.S. keeps forces in Arab states and backs Israel. Iran shoots or provides missiles around the region, harasses U.S. vessels, and maintains a nuclear program. Yet in the background for both is an emotion that often drives much of their actions: historic resentment. With a new U.S. president taking office next month and coming elections in Iran, it may be time to finally deal with the bitterness that each holds over perceptions of past wrongs.
Many Iranians resent both the U.S. role in the 1953 overthrow of an elected prime minister and its support of an oppressive regime under Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi. In the U.S., some leaders resent the taking of 52 American hostages after the 1979 Islamic Revolution and attacks on U.S. forces in the region. Together, these not only create a trust gap in resolving current issues, they sometimes serve as convenient excuses for politicians to whip up domestic support to stay in power.
Across the globe, feelings of national humiliation often cast a long shadow over statecraft. They cannot be ignored. Russia鈥檚 recent aggressions are sometimes rooted in resentment over the fall of the Soviet empire. Turkey seems bent on restoring the influence it had before the collapse of the Ottoman Empire a century ago. China celebrates a National Humiliation Day each September to remember the encroachment of Western powers and Imperial Japan on its territory. Beijing exploits a narrative of past victimhood to justify its regional and global ambitions as restitution of historic injustices.
Such tactics often leave a country unable to seek a better future. 鈥淭he problem with the Chinese Communist Party鈥檚 rendering of the past is that it encourages the Chinese people to remain frozen in a time of humiliation,鈥 writes British historian Christopher Coker.
For President-elect Joe Biden, Iran鈥檚 sense of aggrievement 鈥 as well as resentment in the U.S. toward Iran 鈥 will be an obstacle to creating a peaceful Middle East. He intends to rejoin the international deal negotiated during the Obama administration to contain Tehran鈥檚 nuclear capabilities. The Trump administration withdrew from that pact two years ago to impose a raft of new sanctions against Tehran and its trading partners.
Mr. Biden will have a short window to coax receptive leaders in Tehran into a new relationship with the U.S. In June, Iran is due to hold a presidential election. Any diplomacy before then will be complicated by the recent assassination of Iran鈥檚 top nuclear scientist, widely suspected to be the work of Israel. On Tuesday, hard-liners in Iran鈥檚 parliament voted to accelerate enrichment of fissile material and suspend United Nations inspections of its nuclear facilities unless sanctions are eased. President Hassan Rouhani, hoping for a rapprochement with Mr. Biden, condemned the bill.
U.S. critics of restoring a diplomatic track with Iran equate lifting sanctions with financing Iran鈥檚 proxy conflicts, sponsorship of terrorism, and enmity toward Israel. Those are real and persistent dangers. But Iranians say those arguments reflect a perspective that has misguided U.S. policy toward Iran since the Islamic Revolution. 鈥淭he Americans ... don鈥檛 want to think that we have legitimate political concerns that are about a region free from imperial domination and a quest to control our resources,鈥 a former commander of Iran鈥檚 Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps told Foreign Policy last year.
What may help are small gestures that build up trust and open an opportunity to deal with the past. This is the approach widely supported in Europe. Germany鈥檚 relationship with Iran underscores the diplomatic capital of consistency. It tries to maintain cultural exchanges and economic relations with Iran that allow Berlin to retain some diplomatic influence 鈥 even during turbulent times. Under President George W. Bush, the U.S. relied heavily on European partners to start a dialogue with Iran.
Some form of COVID-19 assistance is an obvious possibility. Iran was one of the first countries outside China to be overwhelmed by the pandemic. Measures to help it could send a message that while the U.S. opposes the regime, it has no quarrel with the people of Iran.
As the Biden administration recalibrates U.S. policy toward Iran both sides need a pathway out of the past.
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.
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We鈥檝e all had encounters that were less than friendly. But starting from the standpoint that God is Love paves the way for healing and harmony among people as well as animals, as a woman experienced firsthand last winter.
That鈥檚 all for today. We鈥檒l see you Monday with stories including a view from rural Wisconsin on whether Americans are ready to heed Joe Biden鈥檚 call for face mask vigilance. Have a good weekend!