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1. TIME 2017年1月30日号

I N A U G U R A T 10 N ☆ 2 017 T 数 E S ー S TA C E N EW FRIENDS COMMON How the Women's March brought progressives together By CharIotte AIter THE IDEA STARTED WITH WOMEN ON Facebook. On the night of DonaId Trump's surprise ViCtory in November, a grandmother in Hawaii named Teresa Shook went online and called for women tO storm the capital on lnauguration weekend. "At the same time, 5,000 miles away, I was doing the same thing; ” explains Bob Bland, a female manufacturing en- trepreneur in New York City. "Within an hour we'd found each other and merged our events, and we were OfftO the races. By the next morning, thousands of peo- ple from across the U. S. had signed up tO jOin the event that would become the Women's March on Washington. Bland quickly realized that in order t0 transform the march from an angry Face- bOOk group intO a progressive coalition, she'd need help. She enlisted veteran or- ganizers Tamika Mallory, Carmen Perez and Linda S arsour as national co-chairs with the aim of wrangling one of the largest lnauguration demonstrations in history—and making it one that brought together activists Of all stripes. "ln the past, progressive groups have beenworkingsortofinisolation; ” saysMal- lory, a New York City—based civil rights and anti-gun-violence advocate. "Peo- ple didn't really have the time and band- width tO understand other folks' issues. By the week before the lnauguration, more than 600 marches nationwide and around the world had been planned in PHOTOGRAPH BY JODY ROGAC FOR TIME

2. TIME 2017年1月30日号

第・ 0 朝 nominated the richest Cabinet and inner circle in modern U. S. history. The group has more wealth than the poorest one-third of U. S. households combined. —Abiga 〃 Abrams $ 4 上 BILLIO Net worth 0 Trump's Cabinet appointees* NET WORTH: $ 2.5 BILLION WILBUR ROSS Commerce The "king of bankruptcy" made his fortune acquiring and restructuring failing companies $4B $ 気 25 BILLION $ 325 MILLION REX TILLERSON State As the CEO of ExxonMobil, he presided over millions in campaign donations and lobbying spending BETSY DEVOS E ざ uca 0 After marrying an heirto the Amway fortune, DeVos became a conservative education activist $ 2.75 BILLION Net worth of Obama's outgoing Cabinet* $3B $ 2.2 BILLION Value Of the Chicago Cubs $2B $ 45 MILLION ANDY PUZDER Labor The fast-food magnate could use his post tO push back on policies like minimum-wage lncreases $ 300 MILLION $ 24 MILLION $ 29 MILLION $ 10 MILLION $ 250 MILLION Net worth Of TayIor Swift BEN CARSON Housing and Urban DeveIopment The retired neurosurgeon has never held elected office and ran againstTrump last year STEVE MNUCHIN Treasury A former Goldman Sachs partner, he ran a bank that foreclosed on thousands of people during the recesslon TOM PRICE Health and Human Services The Georgia Congressman invested in drug companies before co-sponsoring legislation that benefited them ELAINE CHAO ′ a spo は a 0 The former Labor Secretary is married tO Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell and SitS on four corporate boards $IB 0 SOURCES: FORBES; BLOOMBERG; ETHICS AGREEMENTS; QUARTZ Of government. Dwight Eisenhower was as competent and effective. Still, they had ness; ” which liberals have long scorned the last President tO display as overt a their awkward moments. ln alargely sym- as presidential Babbittry while conser- fondness for big businessmen as Trump. pathetic portrait Ofthe Eisenhower years vatives have celebrated Coolidge's small- lke liked corporate types so much that in his narrative history The Glory れ d the government common sense and fiscal diS- his first Cabinet, which took offce in Dream, William Manchester collected a c ipline. ln truth, C001idge was m aking a 1953 , was referred t0 as "eight million- few Ofthe businessmen's clunkier politi- more complicated point, one that bears aires and a plumber. ” (The "plumber ” cal mistakes. "I didn't come down here consideration in our own time. AS histo- was Secretary 0f Labor Martin Durkin, a tO run a grocery store; ” Wilson said when rians like the late Robert Sobel have con- union leader. ) ln a recent essay, professor asked about high Pentagon appropria- vincingly argued, in context C001idge was suggesting that the press would d0 well t0 David Stebenne ofthe Ohio State Univer- tions. Humphrey played into the liberal sity wrote that Eisenhower "felt govern- pay attention tO commerce as well as poli- caricature Of unfeeling, unimaginative tics, and his speech included this section: ment would be well served by successful businessmen When he offered an opin- men, who tend to be rich. lfthe leaders of ion of Ernest Hemingway's The 0 旧 Ma れ Americans, the President said, "rnake no successful businesses were excluded from concealment Of the fact that we want 0 れ d the Sea: "Why should anyone be in- consideration, [Eisenhower] wrote in hiS terested in some Old man whO was a fail- wealth, but there are many other things diary, the result would be an inability 'to we want much more. we want peace and ure and never amounted tO anything, any- get anybody t0 take jobs in Washington ,honor, and that charity which is SO strong way?" CEOs accustomed to speaking their an element of all civilization. The chief except business failures, political hacks minds usually learn that the political echo and New Deal lawyers. ' ” ideal 0f the American people is idealism chamber is a different, Often more brutal place than the narrowerworld ofbusiness. I cannot repeat t00 Often that America is A fair point, and Eisenhower's wealthy a nation Of idealists. That is the only mo- appointees (J0hn Foster Dulles at State, A FAVORITE PRESIDENT ofRonald Rea- tive to which they ever give any strong and CharIes WiIson at Defense, George Hum- lasting reaction. " Our new President phrey at Treasury) essentially performed gan's, Calvin C001idge, is perhaps best re- his team could dO worse than tO read those membered for his remark that "the chief well. Once dismissed as a lethargic Ad- ministration, lke's has come tO be viewed business 0fthe American people is busi- words With care. ロ

3. TIME 2017年1月30日号

Activist た 0 れ S GIoria Steinem の 1d Ⅱワ Belafonte were hO れ 0r0 りア co-chairs 可 the m 肝朝 37

4. TIME 2017年1月30日号

Conversation WOULDN'T SAY 'EXCEPTIONAL' BORN 粮 TO CRISIS RE "THE ERA OF AMERICAN RE "CHILDREN OF NO NA- G10bal Leadership ls Over. tion ” [Dec. 26—Jan. 2 ] : I Here's What Comes Next ” want tO congratulate TIME [Dec. 26—Jan. 2 ] : lan Brem- for this article and for taking mer writes that “ Trump the initiative tO follow the fate ofthese children in refu- agrees with leaders ofboth political parties that the U. S. gee camps. lt is about time iS an exceptional nation. ” I that someone Other than believe that herein lies the Greece gives a thought tO root Of many American for- these people wh0 live under eign policy problems. I lived such dire circumstances. I and worked in the U. S. for hope your series will create six years and traveled ex- a wave Of interest and mo- tensively many years after. I bilize politicians ⅲ the E. U. My hopes are with the new value many American quali- could be considered akin ties, but I fail to see the U. S. He will rave and rant. He U. N. Secretary-General, An- will manufacture truths t6niO Guterres, WhO as a for- as an exceptional nation. tO claiming it is tyranny tO and discard decency. But if force people t0 give up their mer head ofthe U. N. ?s refu- The American SOCiety iS a collection Of individualists, he can use hiS narcissism gee agency is aware 0f the slaves. pence wears Scrip- as his impetus tO find the problem and has power in and this individualism is ture on his sleeve, yet he has not a good basis for a well- his hands. best answers tO America S aligned hims elf with a most Ⅲ 0 Argyropoulos, functioning society—the modern ailments , he could unrepentant, immodest, basis for making an excep- surprise us all. greedy, lying philanderer. ATHENS tional nation. Connie Arboleda, Yes, he was indeed the per- Petter Brevik, fect choice. IWAS DEEPLY MOVED BY MANILA the story ofthe Syrian refu- ↓伍 am Simcoe, OSLO gees ⅲ Greece, particularly PERFECT PAIR KARKKI LA, the young women and babies. RE "MIKE PENCE IS NO OR- HERE'S HOPING FINLAND lt is a story of hardship and dinary ・ Wingman ” [Dec. 26 ー RE "BEWARE THE TRICKS suffering. ObviousIy every- and Traps of Donald Trump, Jan. 2 ] : Mike Pence is a most ONE THING IS CLEAR, PENCE thing must be done tO miti- News Manipulator in appropriate wingman for a is qualified for the top job. gate the discomfort ofmoth- Chief ” [Dec. 26—Jan. 2 ] : leader like DonaId Trump. lt's refreshing to read that ers and babies. Nevertheless AS a former expatriate whO Pence has used despicable the Vice President—elect has I can't help thinking that it lived in New York, I had means tO gain power, and courage, calmness and re- is extremely irresponsible tO always looked at the White then excused this by say- spect for a11 views. His influ- procreate during a devastat- House as the standard ing, "Christ Jesus came to ence 0 Ⅱ Trump is a sobering ingyears-long civil war. The bearer for democracy and save sinners, among Whom I factor for all Americans and innocent new live s brought decency for the rest of the am foremost of a Ⅱ . ” And al- those ofus who are depen- intO the world are destined world. Today I worry for though there is a separation dent on the U. s. for global tO endure a lOt Of dffculties its future. But I also believe Of church and state, pence, as SOlidarity in economics and because ofthe selfishness of that DonaId Trump is too governor Of lndiana, signed security. their parents. much Of a narcissist tO allOW a law that defended religious James D. Rogers, Sandro Berrini, his presidency t0 be one of freedom by allowing people EAST BRIGHTON, the worst ⅲ U. S. history. t0 deny services to gays. This M I LAN AUSTRALIA 0 第 C 旧池可 ~ = れ 0 na れ on TALK TO US SEND AN EMAIL•. letters@timemagazine.com Please do not send attachments Send 0 厄 0000 0 = ~ 0 00 礒 0 E 市 0000 0d0d0 " 市 " ' , ″ 0000 , address 00d 000 ・ ele ん 00 00 ア施 0 市 ~ d , 20m00 可 clari 0 , 平 000 , 00d 00 旧 be addressed 0 礒 0 000 , 00 00 , HONG KONG - TIME Magazine せ 00 , 3 〃 F , 0 , , d H000 , Taikoo 円 00 , 979 栃 g ・ Quarry Bay, Hong Kong; JAPAN - TIME Magaz ⅲ 0 せ 00 , 2-51-27FAtago , Tokyo 10 6227 卩 0 0 ; EUROPE - TIME M0g0i00 00 , po Box 63 , 30d0 , SEIP 5F. 」 , UK, AUSTRALIA - TIME Magaz ーせ 00 , GPO Box 3873 , sydney, NSW 2001 , Au 印″ FOLLOW Us: facebook.com/time @time (Twitter and lnstagram) TIME January 30 , 2017 Please ′ ecyc this magazine and remove and samples e recycllng 2

5. TIME 2017年1月30日号

TimeOff ・ WESUFFER WITHHER, BUTWEHAVENOIDEA WHO SHEIS. ' —NEXT PAGE Ventimiglia 0 れ d Moore with their children—before their lives spiral into 00S and was nominated for a Golden GIobe THE TITLE THIS IS US IS ALMOST perfectly meaningless. Together, the for Best Drama. lt's easy tO see why given the broad strokes with which three words signify nothing beyond the shOW paints the pearsons. The a vague concept 0f uplift and unity. pilot, which aired last fall, introduced A show with that title could be a show three plotlines: a husband and wife about anything. That's exactly what This Us on NBC is: a hazy attempt (MiIo Ventimiglia and Mandy Moore) expecting triplets, a man ( Sterling K. tO confront a number of human Brown) seeking his biological father, experiences gradually approaching and a brother and sister (Justin Hartle infinity. Skittering across decades tO and Chris sy Metz) who deal with his tell the story ofthe fraying Pearson distaste for his fame and her struggle family, This ls Us is fluent in the language ofempathy. lt's addicted with obesity. Any ofthese plotlines alone would tO narrative twists and tO suffering, have plenty ofpotential. Combined, and its piling on Of incident is pure they make for a shock-and-awe soap opera—and that ludicrous campaign. The first episode's twist— excess accounts for the show's that Ventimiglia's and Moore's stratospheric success. characters are expecting the babies This Us, created by Crazy, Stupid, that will become Hartley and Metz Love writer D an Fogelman, is among and adopt the baby that will become the highest-rated shows on television TELEVISION This Us metes 0 t darkness in search Of a moment's delight 3 By DanieI D'Addario 08N ー」」 00ZIV9 NOH 43

6. TIME 2017年1月30日号

VOL. 189 , NO. 3 ー Time 0 ChiefJustice What tO watch, read, Joh れ Roberts see and dO administers the 側礒可 0 ce t0 4 引 NBC's ThisIs Us Trump during the is about all ofus 58 礒 reside 1 司 lnauguratio れ 4 引 A quiz predicts 0 れ Jan. 20 i れ the right TV show Washington on royals foryou 47 ー Movies: Photograph T e 0 れ d Christopher Morris—VIIfor 48 ー 9 Questions TIME for National Book Foundation head Lisa Lucas The View 2 ー Conversation 引 Forthe Record ldeas, opinion, innovations TheBrief 1 引 John Lyndon News ル om the し S. and on the Middle around 物Ⅳ 0 月 d East conflict ⅲ the 引 What's ext for Trump era NSA leakefEdward Snowden, who 15 lWhy France's didn't get pardoned "rightto disconnect ” law 引 Faceb00k's $ 2 bil- maybe useless lion YR lawsuit 1 引 The lifesaving 1 ÅPassportIndex potential 0f ranks countriesby Video games visa accessibility 11 lWhyscientists 引 california's new are skeptical 0f the water struggles benefits Of turmeric 加 lTraditional 羽 The colonial- chinesemedicine era origins ofwild collegeparties ishurting the world'swildlife ユ創 Exiled Rohingya survive ⅲ B angladesh 三一三 0 ′ / -0 6 ら 0 8 0 8 0 bO 3 4 2 0 0 0 ・ 1 0 0 肥ッッ O

7. TIME 2017年1月30日号

[ PRESIDENT WHO [ 0 旧 By Ann Patchett IT'S AN OLD STORY.• A WISE MAN WALKS INTO THE KINGDOM 0f an angry and mistrustful king and says, "GO out and find me one truly good man. The king puts on a disguise and for the next year talks tO every person he meets, not only in his own kingdom, but in all the neighboring kingdoms, and in the end he returns and reports that this mythical creature, this truly good man, cannot be found. "Some came close,: ” says the king. "But when I really examined them, they were, in their hearts, all bad. ” And so the wise man goes to the next kingdom, where the king is loving and kind, and he says, "GO out and find me one truly bad man. ” This king, too, fails at his task. "I met some people who seemed bad at first," the king says. 'But once I got to know them, I found that there was always some good. ' A GREAT DEAL Of hOW we see the world depends on our outlook. For eight years, President Obama gave the American people the example Of his careful consideration, compassion, rigorous intelligence and, wonder ofwonders, love. Love was not something I would have previously thought t0 100k for in a President, but now l'm wondering h0W l'll d0 without it. lt was there in a11 those pictures taken Of the President with children, the mutual j oy in every enc ounter. lt was in the expansive tenderness and respect he showed his family: mother, mother-in-law, grandmother, sisters, daughters, MicheIIe. MicheIIe and Barack Obama. lfyou lived without an example ofrespectful adult love ⅲ your family, all you had to do was look tO the White House tO see how it should LOVEWAS NOT be done. SOMffHING There was love in the constant c elebration Of the achievements Of Ⅲ 0U HAVE others, in the President's willingness t0 shine the klieg light 0fhis attention PREVIOUSLY ontO veterans, scientists, artiStS and 側 G 冊 educators. He loves books! And Obama gave more Pres idential Medals 0f [ 00K FOR Freedom than any other President, saving the last one for his Vice President, A PRESIDENT Joe Biden, whom he called "my brother ” at the surprise ceremony. Biden, like the rest Ofus watching, was in tears. Obama's final days in the White House were a fire sale 0f love: he got it out there as fast as he could, trying tO release as much good as the law allowed, and it was not just the attempt tO make sure some 18 million Americans Will continue tO have the right t0 health insurance, an effort that may well prove futile. lt was bigger than that, and it was smaller. One ofhis Administration's final acts was tO declare the rusty p atched Pres ()bam em S Vice Pre d t Joe Bide a t r surprzstn with the Me 工 Freedom 0 れ 3 seemed tO believe that rigorwas not undermined by kindness andjoy ・ I keep trying t0 dissect the enormous lump in my throat as we face the end of Obama's presidency Certainly part 0fit is a fear ofthe future, and the specter Of a new President whO stands in stark opposition t0 everything Obama has worked forl and achieved these past eight years. But part 0f the lump in my throat is gratitude. Obama spent eight years showing us how it's done. He saw the good in us, he saw the love, and he told us so. Now all we have to do is live up tO it. Patchett's most recent novel, Commonwealth? is 0 五れ記 ist 工 br 0 N tiO れ B00 た Critics Circle Aw rd bumblebee an e ndangere d species, the first bee species in the continental U. S. to be awarded protection. If G0d has hiS eye on the sparrow, as I was assured as a girl in Catholic school, then Obama had his eye on the bumblebee. OR EIGHT YEARS, Amer- icans were the beneficia- ries Ofthe President's ex- ample, and I am going t0 miSS it. Love seeps in over time, just like hate. l'd got- ten SO used tO the decency ofour President that I had come to think ofde- cency as a right rather than a privilege. I was wrong about that. Presidents, like gods and fathers, have a long tradition of showing their concern through dis- cipline. Obama, wh0 was never short on discipline,

8. TIME 2017年1月30日号

FREEYOUR MIND TIME を MINDFULNE Discover why slowing down and staying present leads tO a happier life Pick 叩 your c 叩 y in stores t0day. 川 so available from 。、 Amazon.com and 、 sh 叩.time.com S P E C ー A し E D ー T ー 0 N Tune tO Your BOdy The power Of 引 ow Eating Five-Minute Meditation This year, outsmart stress, find your center, and learn tO eat, play, and thrive in this special edition dedicated tO helping you live your best life. TIME ◎ 2017 Timelnc. BOOks. TIME is a trademark of Timelnc. , 「 egistered in the U. S. and other countries

9. TIME 2017年1月30日号

The Brief 'HIS RELATIONSHIP WITH PUTINAND HIS NEWAPPROACH TO RUSSIA ARE PAYING DIVIDENDS.. ' —NEXT PAGE 0 0 0 Snowden ca still appear outside リ ss ー砒市 Amsterdamfilmfestival—but 0 れ妙 video た woman inside a military prison for RUSSIA WAS NEVER MEANT TO BE men at Fort Leavenworth, where sh Edward Snowden's final destination. has attempted suicide at least once. When he decided ⅲ 2013 to leave his But Manning's story has since taken comfortable job in Hawaii as a U. S. a happier turn. ln one Of the final acts intelligence contractor and expose his ofhis tenure, President Barack Obama government's most invasive spymg programs, the whistle-blower knew he commuted her sentence on Jan. 17. He did not grant any such clemency t0 was likely to live ⅲ exile for a while. Snowden, whose path home now 100kS He was hoping for asylum somewhere in Latin America or maybe Western a 10t mo re treacherous. During his campaign for the presi- Europe. But he wound up marooned dency, Donald Trump referred t0 ins ide a rival superp ower, playing a Snowden as a traitor, and his pick for bit part in a new C01d War. director of the CIA, Mike Pompeo, has lt could have been worse; his called for his execution for endanger- fellow leaker of government secrets, U. S. Army Private Chelsea Manning, ing the lives ofAmerican service Ⅱ 1e1 れ - bers. ln the days before Trump's ln was sentenced tO 35 years in prison auguration, some wondered whether in 2013 for sending hundreds 0f thousands of secret files to the Wiki- Russian Pre sident Vladimir Putin might decide it was now time for Leaks site. Manning has served her Snowden tO return home and face jus- time since then as a transgender WORLD Denied clemency, Snowden remams trapped in Putin's game By Simon Shuster S30Vfll ト 39 、 d 」《 5 PHOTOGRAPH BY SANDER KONING

10. TIME 2017年1月30日号

9 Questions a Lucas Nearly a year intO her tenure, the executive director Of the National Book Foundation reflects on her first award season and the future Of reading Desmond's Evicted. We talk about mass You're both the first woman and the incarceration all the time, and it's a hor- first black person tO run the Nadonal rible problem, we should talk about it Book Foundation. How does it feel tO be twice a first? You know, it's sad. 200 % more than we already dO. But we There shouldn't be so many firsts still in don't talk about unstable housing. the year 2017. You'd think it would feel like some kind oftriumph, and it does— What was a book that changed your obviously it says something about your life? Books in general have changed my own personal career. But you don't ever life. There's not a book that said, "Lisa want tO be the only one in the room. Lucas, you are a new Lisa Lucas. ” But there are SO many moments where I felt saved or encouraged. Gabriel Garcfa For the first National B00 Awards Mårquez pushed me forward in under- under your leadership, three 0f the standing that b00ks reflected a bigger four winners were black. Did that feel g00 ? Yeah! But then, should it be so world. ln college I learned that I could unusual? lt's wonderful tO see people love some ofthe great works, like Sister from different backgrounds having Carrie or A 〃 0 Karenina or Their Eyes their work celebrated—people from Were Watching God.White Teeth is an- rural backgrounds, people who did not Other one—l found there was some rec- come up going tO the best universities, ognition in the writing. And then Jame s WhO are not necessarily professors, WhO B aldwin— as a black person, there are are Asian American, Latino. I think we voices that remind you that you are not want our national bOdy Of excellent alone, that you're not crazy. literature to look like our excellent body ofAmerican citizens. What 0 yo say ifyou're asked tO blurb a b00 ? l've never been asked before. I don't know that I can. I What is going tO be the ro 厄 Of know that I would make sure not American literature in the new political era? People keep saylng we're to call any book "urgent. ” postfact, and I think that books are the special place where we can go tO WhO wo 設 ld be ⅲ your fantasy understand the world that we live in. bOOk club? Baldwin is obviously ⅲ it. Although he seems like he would be mean. Dorothy parker. ln 2014 , 27 % ofAmericans didn't read Eleanor Roosevelt. Zora Neale Hur- a single bOOk. HOW dO we change that? People whO make and market ston seems like she'd be really ん n. books probably assume that 27 % of people aren't going t0 bother with our What bOOk would yo recom- product. That's the place where you mend tO 0 r President? We were first start correcting. Assume everyone SO lucky tO have such a wonder- reads. Lately people have been talking ん 1 reader in President Obama, who a 10t about b00k deserts, places said that reading novels helped to where there access—how dO make him a better citizen. I can only encourage people tO open bookstores in hope that President Trump is as inter- these communities? e Sted in our stories , live S and litera- ture. l'd recommend some books that have recently been celebrated by the What was your personal favorite b00 0f2016 ? My favorite book of foundation : Claudia Rankine 's Citizen; 2016 is obviously one ofthe four Na- J0hn Lewis, Andrew Aydin and Nate tional Book Award winners. But ifl PoweII's March; Arlie Russell Hochs- had t0 pick one that's not, I would pick child's Strangers ⅲ Their Ow れも 0 れ d ; C. E. Morgan's The Sport ofKings, which I and lbram X. Kendi's Stamped From the thought was magnificent. Also Matthew Beginning. —SARAH BEGLEY 48 TIME January 30 , 2017 OD hftE ・ iLJßj 'We want our national body 0f excellent literature to look like our excellent b0dy Of Arnerican citizens. ' 「」 ELIZABET エ・ RENST•ROM FORTIME