All From the Editors
- CommentaryA rebuke to oppressionThe desire to recognize and address the deeper foundations of racial prejudice is surfacing in community dialogues across the United States.
- CommentaryWhy we鈥檙e capitalizing BlackIn better cherishing the Black experience in America, we recognize its unique role and seek a firmer footing for genuine equality and freedom.
- CommentaryWe loveThe impetus of this moment is a primal cry for an expanded sense of love for all 鈥 a truer 鈥渦s.鈥 That聽idea of progress must be defended.
- CommentaryThe power of small gesturesEven as images of shattered glass have spread, another narrative has emerged: of people hearing each other, and of the power that imparts.
- Commentary鈥業 choose the river鈥After leaving her counterinsurgency career, Euphrates Institute founder Janessa Gans Wilder聽has worked to support peace builders worldwide.
- CommentaryHumanity鈥檚 ultimate laboratoryJust because something is hard does not mean that it is unnecessary, and our families give us ample evidence of that every day 鈥 especially now.
- Commentary鈥楩ake news鈥 and 鈥榬eal news鈥Journalism can inform, advocate, and entertain.聽Yet there is something greater journalism can do: it can enlighten and illumine.
- CommentaryThe Walden next doorTravel experts say many summer vacations this year will be local and outdoors.聽Close to home may not be exotic, but the unexpected abounds.
- CommentaryWhat the Monitor stands forThe Monitor is often asked to both support and condemn various political figures and movements across the world. Editor Mark Sappenfield responds.
- CommentaryOne way the world is changing pandemicsGlobalization is shaping the coronavirus, and that鈥檚 reason for hope.聽The best defense we have against pandemics is the knowledge we share, after all.
- CommentaryDid you hear the one about the Monitor?We鈥檙e the bran muffin of journalism.聽But we change lives because we force open that too-small box that most human beings think they live in.
- CommentaryEpiphany鈥檚 epiphany: One church鈥檚 storyCan itinerant preachers be part of a revival 鈥 a reimagining of American mainline 海角大神ity that brings people back to pews?
- CommentaryCoronavirus versus connectionTo me, this unprecedented moment of enforced physical isolation has only underscored the mutual power and connection we share.
- CommentaryThe Amazon you don鈥檛 knowIf we let stereotypes guide our thinking, we might think Brazilian ranchers are interested only in their crops or cows. But the truth is more complex.
- CommentaryA different kind of guidance counselorIt is widely accepted that perhaps the most powerful form of charity today is mentoring children and teens in underprivileged communities.
- CommentaryHow one Monitor friend shook a countrySince Chol Duang聽returned to South Sudan from the U.S., there had been questions. What did you learn in America? Are you a spy?
- CommentaryA man for all seasonsWhy did we write a cover story on centenarian statesman George Shultz in 2020? It鈥檚 simple. He鈥檚 a builder 鈥 someone who searches for solutions.
- CommentaryCultural approbationHas author Jeanine Cummins opened the subject of Mexican immigration to her readers? Or has the publishing industry overlooked writers of color again?
- CommentaryTwo out of 120,000The aim of the nonprofit聽House of Renewed Hope is to help those who have been unjustly imprisoned and to work to reform the justice system.
- CommentaryAustralia鈥檚 fiery trialFor Australia and its American eco-twin, California, a realization is dawning. A warming world requires new thinking 鈥 or, perhaps, very old thinking.