All Editorials
Readers RespondReaders write: How to help nicotine addicts, better step for protecting beesLetters to the editor for the Aug. 1, 2016 weekly magazine.
The Monitor's ViewThe Fed’s search for breakout growthAmerica’s central bank, like other big financial institutions, seeks fresh ideas to end the ‘new normal’ of mediocre economic growth. Breaking up old models is a good first step.
The Monitor's ViewIslamic State’s failing ‘war of religion’After Islamic State claimed credit for the killing of a French Catholic priest, leaders of major faiths gathered to counter this attempt to incite Muslims and º£½Ç´óÉñs against each other. Peace is the norm between religions.
The Monitor's ViewMercy for the corrupt who come clean?The US and Tunisia are each testing whether leniency toward individuals or businesses that are open about their corruption might lead to less corruption. Confession can be a shorter path to reconciliation.
The Monitor's ViewGermany's response to mass violenceFour recent attacks on the public, some with links to Islamic State, have raised fears but also calls not to allow fear to create an overreaction.
This land, your landA national park experience can be grand and intimate. And everybody can experience them. That's their real treasure.
Global NewsstandArts in Gaza, police in Kenya, nuclear power in Japan, tech skills for students, lessons from IndiaA roundup of global commentary for the July 25, 2016 weekly magazine.
Readers RespondReaders write: Taiwan’s democracy, tobacco in California, US conflictsLetters to the editor for the July 25, 2016 weekly magazine.
The Monitor's ViewA bright spot in a dull global economyAs major economies falter, India takes the lead with the world’s fastest growth. It can lure investors with its relative peace and certainty.
The Monitor's ViewAfrica’s step to be a continent of peaceWith its decision to intervene militarily in South Sudan’s conflict, the African Union shows it may yet live up to its goal of creating a continent of peace by 2020.
The Monitor's ViewThe exhausted American voter: Ready for a change?With a polarization perhaps at a peak in politics, Americans may be fed up – not just with ‘the system’ but their own acrimony. Hitting bottom in political fatigue may have its benefits.
The Monitor's ViewWhy Melania Trump may have liked Michelle Obama’s speechMs. Trump’s near-repetition of the first lady’s words suggests the two agree on an approach to education that views children in a whole new light.
What all consumers must knowFrom food to clothing, electronics to domestic help, the era of blissful consumer ignorance is, or should be, over.
The Monitor's ViewHow Turkey’s failed coup was democracy’s successThe forces for democracy, both within Turkey and worldwide, stood up to the military plotters. A global infrastructure for freedom makes its harder for would-be strongmen to succeed.
The Monitor's ViewThe Nice attack: The Internet as instigatorAs more terrorist attacks appear inspired by the Islamic State’s appeal over social media, the struggle must move to the Internet, and winning the high moral ground with alternative narratives.
The Monitor's ViewThe rush to curb a heroin/opioid crisisCongress, in rare bipartisanship, passes a law that will help support the many local efforts to end a heroin ‘epidemic’ and a prescription opioid crisis. Still left undone: a consensus on whether addiction is a ‘disease.’
The Monitor's ViewRio Games as test of Olympics' purposeBrazil is experiencing turmoil even as it prepares to host the 2016 Summer Games. Will it be able to fulfill one of the goals of the modern Olympics: promoting peace?
The Monitor's ViewA ruling tells China why no country is an islandFor the first time, an international tribunal rules against China and its claim on the territory of another country. The decision is the basis for other countries to question China’s denial of universal values, especially those needed for world order.
The Monitor's ViewCan Britain’s new leader be a mender?After the country’s vote to leave the EU, and a leadership battle within the Conservative party, Theresa May might bring the right talents to heal Britain’s big divisions.
Global NewsstandAccepting others, China-Russia alliance is no cause for concern, African economy and ‘Brexit,’ should school zoning go?, lessons from the 1990sA roundup of global commentary for the July 11, 2016-July 18, 2016 weekly magazine.