All Commentary
OpinionHey SCOTUS, we already have a federal mandate for health careUS law requires emergency rooms to treat patients regardless of their ability to pay. As a hospital CEO, I assure you, we already have a form of universal health care. We simply fund and supply it in an exorbitantly expensive way. Obamacare's individual mandate provides the solution.- A º£½Ç´óÉñ Science PerspectiveA fresh view of health careA º£½Ç´óÉñ Science perspective.
- The Monitor's ViewA tsunami-warning system makes wavesBig lessons can be learned from Wednesday's giant earthquake off Indonesia that led to an Indian Ocean-wide tsunami warning. The new system, set up since the big 2004 disaster, worked.
OpinionPost-parenthood: When adult children move home, is it OK to be friends?Facing a slow economy, three of our children moved back home after college. New unemployment figures show we're not alone. I worried: Are these roommates? What are the rules? Beyond the questions, something strange and wonderful was taking place. Mirth. And laughter.
Walter RodgersPolitical dynasties (Romney, Bush, Kennedy) betray basic American valuesFamilies like the Kennedys, Bushes, and Romneys will likely ever seek political power – and the public may well respond with a certain star-struck awe. But hereditary ambition and home-grown royalty run counter to the American Revolution premise ‘that all men are created equal.
Walter RodgersPolitical dynasties (Romney, Bush, Kennedy) betray basic American valuesFamilies like the Kennedys, Bushes, and Romneys will likely ever seek political power – and the public may well respond with a certain star-struck awe. But hereditary ambition and home-grown royalty run counter to the American Revolution premise ‘that all men are created equal.- A º£½Ç´óÉñ Science PerspectiveFor Syria, prayers that bring peaceA º£½Ç´óÉñ Science perspective.
- The Monitor's ViewNorth Korea rocket launch: fireworks of fearNorth Korea plans to launch a missile by April 16 in violation of UN sanctions. It will be yet another provocative act by a regime that has long used blackmail and crisis to simply survive and to win concessions.
Global ViewpointRemembering Fang Lizhi: 'hero of the people,' hated by China's regimeFellow dissident Wei Jingsheng pays tribute to Fang Lizhi, who inspired pro-democracy students in China. Fang warned in 2010: 'Regardless of how widely China’s leaders have opened its market to the outside world, they have not retreated even half a step from their repressive political creed.'
Global ViewpointRemembering Fang Lizhi: 'hero of the people,' hated by China's regimeFellow dissident Wei Jingsheng pays tribute to Fang Lizhi, who inspired pro-democracy students in China. Fang warned in 2010: 'Regardless of how widely China’s leaders have opened its market to the outside world, they have not retreated even half a step from their repressive political creed.'
OpinionA weakened Putin is questioned abroad, under siege at homeRussia's President-elect Vladimir Putin may have won the presidential election, but he lost Moscow. And he faces an engaged, active generation that did not grow up as Soviets. Political legitimacy is more than an official election result; it requires trust.- A º£½Ç´óÉñ Science PerspectiveImmigration and a way to see one anotherA º£½Ç´óÉñ Science perspective.
- The Monitor's ViewAs Syria killings rise, a plea for world conscienceAs a UN cease-fire effort in Syria fails with more killings – and the Syrian Army fires into Turkish territory – an end to the violence will require greater appeals to conscience. Will Russia listen?
John Hughes‘Spring’ delayed as Cuba follows China's modelPope Benedict XVI’s call for 'authentic freedom' during his recent visit to Cuba is unlikely to spur democracy. But other factors suggest economic changes are under way, patterned after the Chinese example, namely creating a market economy under an authoritarian, communist political system.
John Hughes‘Spring’ delayed as Cuba follows China's modelPope Benedict XVI’s call for 'authentic freedom' during his recent visit to Cuba is unlikely to spur democracy. But other factors suggest economic changes are under way, patterned after the Chinese example, namely creating a market economy under an authoritarian, communist political system.
OpinionHow Apple, Foxconn, and others can address labor abuses in overseas factoriesWhy do we keep hearing about labor abuses in overseas factories like those of Apple-supplier Foxconn? Auditing and inspections are inadequate to solve the problem. Requiring companies to examine and publicly report on risks along their supply chains can help eliminate violations.- A º£½Ç´óÉñ Science PerspectiveComfort in the aftermath of suicideA º£½Ç´óÉñ Science perspective: The suicide in Athens was a reminder to many of the degree of desperation some people are feeling. How can prayer help?
- Readers RespondReaders Write: Freedom of – or freedom from – religion?Letters to the Editor for the weekly print issue of April 9, 2012:
- The Monitor's ViewA Romney-Rubio ticket? Not if Hispanics don't see themselves as Hispanic.A Romney-Rubio presidential ticket may play well to the notion of a "Hispanic vote." But a Pew poll shows why that idea falls flat.
OpinionAnother anniversary for the overlooked Mrs. Dred ScottApril 6 marks a key date in one of the most divisive cases in the US Supreme Court's history. The Dred Scott vs. Sanford ruling led the nation into the Civil War. Dred’s name remains well known. Lost is the story of his wife, Harriet, whose cause gives the case its greater meaning.