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1. Newsweek 2017年1月27日号

C06 Beans SINCE NESTLE began selling Nespresso ⅲ the 1990S , its little c 叩 sules have changed theway manyin theWest consume COffee. Thirty percent ofMichelin-starred restaurants now serve Nespresso POdS, and the machines sellall overthe world, generating an estimated $ 4 billion ⅲ 20 巧 . The capsule- coffee maker is part ofkitchen geography, rightthere between the toasterand the kettle. The convenience, novelty, variety and perhaps even the pretty-colored capsules made a convert: Amir Gehl. Gehl, the 39-year-01d son 0fa tobacco family, did his postgraduate studies at the London School of Economics, followed by stints at Harvard Kellogg Sch001 ofManagement and the London Business Sch001. He spent the early part OfhiS career as a consultant tO the energy drin business; t en, in 2014 , hiS wife convinced him tO buy a Nespresso machine. From that moment on, he was 十 OD BLAST: CapsuIe coffee now has a huge audience, one that Difference Coffee Co.is hoping t0 take upmarket. in central London, where we try a cup ofDifference Coffee's Jamaica Blue Mountain, GO Cup Estate —grade 1 , medium roast—harvested 仕 om a plantation that sits 1 , 500 meters above sea level. As we sip, Gehl starts tO sound like a wine man, describingthe cup we re drinking as 。 chocolatey and nutty on the nose, and 仕ⅲ on the palate. " He's right. I have yet tO taste abetter capsule a pod convert—so much SO that coffee—l can quite understand when he drank coffee after a why lan Fleming made Blue restaurant meal, he felt that Mountain James Bond's "a Nespresso [at home] was preferred breakfast beverage ・ actually tastier. According tO Gehl, there is Gehl sawan opportunity. plenty ofbetter coffee than even Three years after that first cup this high- elevation Jamarcan ofNespresso—for the record, a stuff— Geisha coffee 仕 om purple -capsuled Arpeggi0 —his Panama, for example. Gehl Difference COffee CO. is selling sources hiS from the Hacienda both beans and pods ofspecialty la Esmeralda, an estate he says coffees, usmg 0 代 from the has been called "the coffee finest[coffee-growingl estates. equivalent ofDomaine de la The customers on hiS mailing Romanée- Conti; we buy their list include the Palace Hotel in special reserve COffee. ' He Gstaad, Switzerland, and chef recently purchased a Best 0f Heston Blumenthal, who will begin serving Difference C0ffee Panama 2016 auction lOt Of100 at his Hinds Head restaurant ⅲ pounds 0fEsmeralda Special Jamarillo beans, from which Berkshire, England, from the he hopes t0 produce 500 boxes end 0fJanuary. Gehl says he locapsules eachyse 川 sho 呼 besellingonline customers for about 毛 10 ( $ 12 ) a wider audience—though still a cup. Forthe pleasure and limiting the number ofboxes privilege ofhaving one ofthe any one customer can purchase, world's best coffees inyour as we like as many as possible ・ tchenJ'&SåYihåf'"QOrth it. ロ tO be able tO try our COffees an enj oy them. S0ft-spoken and self-effacing, For more information, ViSit Gehl meets me at a cigar lounge DIFFERENCECOFFEE ℃ OM the coffee pod Amir Gehlis reinventin BY NICHOLAS FOULKES NEWSWEEK 61 01 / 27 / 2017

2. Newsweek 2017年1月27日号

Newsweek を′ 隝ー N T E R N AT ー 0 N A L 2 017 / V 0 L . 16 8 / N 0 . J A N U A R Y 27 , Drug War Crack and Punishment 24 lntelligence Who Leaked This? 26 Economy Trumponomics, Explained 16 WWW 、 DeVosf0 「 60 0 ー n N E W W 〇 R L D 44 Prostate TumorTrackers 46 SiIicon VaIIey Digital Divide and Conquer Veterinarians \/eterinarian Sweatshops 50 Zika Unraveling Zika Cancer Slam the Screening D00 「 48 ATTERS: head theEducation Department, with 、 ・••huSband; busine 、 marf Diqk DeVOS. swork as an educ 哲 0 れ activist wo 「 teachers union9 52 D 〇 W N T ー M E D E P A R T M E N T S F E A T U R E S Cinema The Family Man 58 T 「 a 可 Highs and LOWS 61 Coffee C06 Beans 62 Comedy Pie in the Sky 64 To-Do List Your Week Made Better 54 Commander in Tweet 28 WiIl Trump's first 1 ( ) ( ) days ⅲ office be like his last 1 ( ) ( ) tweets? K オん矼 , “ The RadicaI Education Of Betsy DeVOS Will the hard-line Christian conservative leading the nation's schools briva crusad 引 G S H 〇 T S Washington, D ℃ . Tears of 」 oe Ankara, Turkey Law and Mordor Budapest, Hungary Deathly CO 旧 10 Mosu れ lraq uman ShieId 4 6 8 36 d ぐ 9 0S0 の 0 コ BVO PA G E 〇 N E COVER CREDIT; ILLUSTRATION BY Newsweek 0SSN2052-1081 ) , is published weekly except one week in 」 anuary, 」 u ツ , August and October. Newsweek (EMEA) is published by Newsweek Ltd (part Of the 旧 T Media Group Ltd), 25 Canada Square, Canary Wharf, London E14 5LQ, UK. Printed by Quad/Graphics Europe Sp z 0.0.. Wyszkow. P01and ForArticle Reprints, Permissions and Licensing www•lBTreprints.com/Newsweek FOR MORE HEADLINES, GO TO NEWSWEEK ℃ OM 12 Trump TheTrump Establishment 1 N E W S W E E K 01 / 2 7 / 2 017

3. Newsweek 2017年1月27日号

intelligence from the Kremlin, including on hiS Democratic and other political rivals. Aside from the sordi gations, the memos allege that Russia tried to entice Trump with business. "The Krem- lin S cultivation operatlon on Trump," the U. S. intelligence report said, included "offering him very lucrative real estate development business deals in Russia, especially in relation t0 the ongoing 2018 World Cup soccer tournament. However, SO far, for reasons unknown, Trump had not taken up any ofthese. The report also detailed Moscow S interest in the Clintons. Reports on Hillary Clinton were "collated ” by Directorate K Of the FSB spy agency br many years, lt said, "dating back t0 her hus- 十 RUMOR STREAM: band Bill's presidency. " But not Some ridiculed much was found by bugging Hillary Clinton s kissing, gropmg and trying t0 have sex with the veracity Of the report on Donald hOtel rooms, the sources said: The spies recorded women, ” as described by T んどⅣれ g 知れ 0 Trump, while others no unorthodox or embarrassing behavior" from when it unearthed a videotape last fall, Trump say it adds heft tO what they fear ex- countless hours ofeavesdroppmg on Clinton and and his devoted followers might have been able plains his fondness tO brush it 0 代 as just another eccen- fo 「 the KremIin. tricity by their id01. lndeed, in Oct0- ber, an earlier, abbreviated version U. S INTELLIGENCE HAD of the newly reported allegations by イ 0 ″ / 0 れビ magazine Washington BE N SAYING FOR WEEKS Bureau Chief David Corn, citing a TH T TRUMP "AND HIS former senior intelligence Offcer for a Western country whO specialized in I ER CIRCLE HAVE Russian counterintelligence, roused AC EPTED A REGUI. uAR only passing, titillating interest. FL W OF INTELLIGENCE But repackaged and expanded on by U. S. intelligence, the new report M THE KREMLIN. ” FR adds heft t0 what some fear explains Trump's otherwise mexplicable fond- ness for the Kremlin, perhaps Ameri- ca's leading antagonist. According her retinue. The best they could come up with tO the report S anonymous sources, Trump S was "things she had said which contradicted her unorthodox behavior in RLISSla over the years provided the authorities with enough embar- current position on vanous 1SSues. Whether the new report has enough blasting rassing material on the now-Republican presi- de If power tO damage the 1nd01 1 ⅱ g - ・ⅱⅱ a 1 れ - tratlon remains tO be seen. lt may even turn out they so wished. tO be phony—or even yet another concoction by Blackmail would elevate the story from tawdry us sian intellige nc e. „to-throwAmericamp Olitic s s ex tO national 、 -security. An&thexep ortunder- intO another round Of chaos. scored what U. S. intelligence had been saying The only thing it proves is that nothing sells in for weeks, with far less effect: Trump "and his lnner circle have accepted a regular flOW Of America like sex. ロ Å 11 9 、 010 工 d 8 っ N 、 V 工 S 三 N V Q NEWSWEEK 25 01 / 27 / 2017

4. Newsweek 2017年1月27日号

P A G E 0 N E / T R IJ M P bought Morris's first novel, AII / l<mght—about sex and race and money, told through the eyes 0fa lower-middle-class white kid who grows up t0 be an alienated middle-aged white guy—publisher Morgan Entrekin said,"We struggled t0 think 0f like-minded writers who could blurb the book, and [we] could hardly come up with any. " The book was published shortly after the Trump elec- tIOn and, in its political incorrectness and protean language , is something Ofan instant samizdat-like cT favorite, at least among Other Older male writers. lt has yet to be reviewed by The Ⅳビル物ⅸ襯ぉ . INSTINCTIVELY or by canny plan, Trump con- verted the conservatlves' parochial culture war 十 CHILDREN'S CRU- on abortion and gay marriage intO a much 1 れ ore SADE: The cultural vlsceral campaign against the political pieties one 0fthe masterminds 0fthe Trump campaign elite seemed to be aligned t0 the aca- and the new administration s "chief strate- Of sophisticated America, with Trump as the demic and millen- gist, ” becomes a pre-eminent retrograde white ultimate revenge on upper-middlebrow cultural nialleft, no matter how IOOPY their life. lt's the mannered and effete against the male bugaboo. The non-Trump culture can see ideas may be. him only as a threat and, without the means tO profane and immediate. For Trump, Hillary Clinton, in her guarded- describe anybody t00 far outside its circle, a ness and susp1C10n, in her inability tO express raCISt, misogynist anti-Semite. And yet, not that herself with any openness and spontaneity, long ago, Bannon would have been a perfectly summed up out-of-touchness as she struggled recognizable figure, even an admirable one: to attract crowds Of a few hundred while he was an ex-military and up-from-working-class guy, striving through marnages and various careers pulling tens ofthousands. ln an interview shortly after hiS nomination tO make it but never finding much comfort in was secure, Trump tOld me he was sure Of ViC- the establishment world, wanting t0 be part 0f tory when for the first primary debate, the usual it and tO explode it at the same time—an Amer- audience increased almost tenfold because Of lcan story for a writer like Kevin Morris. Repub- his presence. I m more entertaining than the lican politics is filled with such strivers—Lee media, ” he said. The press, in thrall to the cul- Atwater, Roger Ailes, Karl Rove—great charac- ture establishment—and signed on tO its rules ters reduced to violations ofliberal sensibilities. and concerns—was mauthentic, and he was the The election re-engages a gender battle that real thing. For"CNN sucks"-screaming Trump many people on the New York side ofthe Trump supporters, CNN sucks for the same reason that gap had thought was going in only one direc- it sucks t0 everybody else—it's phony and slav- tion. The vestigial and primitive American man, ish—but Trumpsters were suddenly saying it, unreconstructed, baying at the moon (probably high on opiates)—the alt-right in the liberal screaming it aloud. This attack on careful, orderly, prescribed view—and voiceless for many years ()r WlSe culture is what happens when the culture stops to shut (p), now had a spokesman. The obvi- talking about what a significant part 0f the ous message Of hiS sudden resurgence iS that he didn't go away or reform: He was Just shut country regards as important. Or it is—and cer- tainly is inevitably thought t0 be by those cul- out. Without any place in upper-middlebrow tural standard-bearers under attack—a simster culture, except as an occasional enemy Of rea- onslaught against enlightenment itself. son or subject ofscandal, there was no bridge tO wh0 he was—no humanity left for him. ln the view Of the latter camp, Steve Bannon, ☆☆☆ NEWSWEEK 14 01 / 27 / 2017

5. Newsweek 2017年1月27日号

ln 2011 , GLEP and its conservative allies won a 44 on reading, lagging behind Miami by 33 points. maJ0r victory when the Michigan Legislature erased DeVos claimed that her emphasis on school choice the charter schOOl cap, creating what is effectively was going t0 help poor, minority children escape unrestrained-marketfor charte r schOOl ope rator from -underperforming public scho& S0410W. -di&. ----. -. --ーーー一ーー DeVOS scored another victory last summer, when that escape route become a quagmire? she and her husband spent $ 1.45 million to stymie a Kids may suffer from a lack ofchoice, but they can legislative effort tO provide more oversight tO Michi- alSO suffer 仕 om an excess Of competition. Report- gan's charte r schOOl s. ing on the state Of charter schOOls in Detroit last summer, education reporter Kate Zernike of T んビⅣル物ⅸ Times described a system that was as at least as chaotic and unproductive as what it supplanted. "while the idea was tO foster academic com- p etition, the unchecke d growth 0f charters has created a glut 0f schOOls competing for some Of the nation s poorest students, Zernike wrote, enticing them to enroll with cash bonuses, lap- tops, raffle tickets for iPads and bicycles. Leaders of charter and traditional schools alike say they are being cannibalized, fighting so hard over students and the limited public dollars that follow them that no one thrives. Douglas Harris, a professor Of econom1CS at Tulane UniverS1ty, considers himself a proponent Of sensible reform, yet the kind of "lfl wanted tO start a schOOl next year, all I d need reform enacted by DeVOS in Michigan, he has con- 十 TOUGH t0 d0 is get the money, draw up a plan and meet a few cluded, is a disaster. ln a widely circulated op-ed PLAYING perfunctory reqmrements," wrote a dismayed ste- for T んビⅣどル物 Times, Harris wrote that DeVos FIELD: De- troit's public phen Henderson, the editorial page editor 0f schools must the Detroit Free ? . "l'd then be allowed to compete fO 「 students operate that school, at a profit ifl liked, with- with schools out, practically speaking, any accountability DeVos: Detroit has the worst offering cash for results. As long as I met the minimal state bonuses. math and reading scores Of COde and inspection requirements, I could any large city in America. run an awful school, no better than the pub- lic alternatives, almost indefinitely. lt's unclear how closely DeVos looked devised Detroit's system to run like the Wild West. at the achievements Of the charter schools that lt's hardly a surprise that the system, which has sprouted in Michigan because Of her efforts. Did she know that many ofthem were failing? And ifshe almost no oversight, has failed. Sch001s there can d0 knew, why did she do nothing? poorly and still continue t0 enroll students. Harris contrasted Detroit with New Orleans, where the schOOl system is saturated with char- 0 E T R 0 ー T- F しリ N K S ters. Those charters are successful because they re exp e e Üthe ー same higwstandards=thae¯ THE BEST argument against Betsy DeVos can e made with a single word: Detroit. On the National educators demand from students. Lax oversight Of Assessment Of Educational Progress, Michigan's a schOOl district is unlikely tO produce much better ー biggest city has the worst mathan&readingscor esults than lax oversight Of a classroom. Of any large C1ty in America. lts fourth-graders score DeVOS nomination, HarriS 、V1 ℃ te, IS a tri- a 36 on math, while the ir counterparts in Charlotte , umph ofideology over evidence. Much ofthe fault for the panoply ofbad choices in North Car01ina, score an 87. lts eighth-graders got a 4 The best argument against A11 〕 9 、 08 〕 8W00 8 、ゴ 3 工 01 NVÅ88 V 、 9 工 0S0 SO 亠 VO ら」 3 f108 」 NEWSWEEK 41 01 / 27 / 2017

6. Newsweek 2017年1月27日号

PRAYING MANTIS: A professor who has studied what DeVos did to Detroit's schools calls her appoint- secretary "the tri- umph 0f ideology over evidence. ' S C H 0 0 L S B R ー N G A C R U S A D E 0 R A N ー N 0 U ー S ー T ー 0 N ? By Alexander Nazaryan を、 VS ア E を K 37 01 / 27 / 2017

7. Newsweek 2017年1月27日号

P A G E 0 N E / E C 0 N 0 M I C S TRUMPONOMICS, EXPLAINED We've seen this movie before, and it doesn t necessarily end well IN THE weeks since Donald Trump was elected investors worldwide will seek tO invest in the president, the behavior 0f U. S. financial mar- し S. , driving up the value ofthe dollar. kets—and Ofthe stock market in particular—has But we have seen this movie before, and it represented the triumph Of hope over common doesn t necessarily end well. ln the U. S., a com- sense. The steady "melt-up Of the main stock bination oftighter monetary policy—the Federal Reserve has said it's likely tO raise rates tWO or indexes tO all-time highs is rooted not just in a slOWly improving domestic economy but in three times this year—and a 100Se fiscal policy optimism: the belief that Trump will, as prom- has consequences. One 0f them: The dollar can ised during the campaign, cut corporate and rise against Other currencies tO such an extent individual tax rates, repatriate billions Of d01- that it becomes a problem for U. S. multination- lars that companies now stash abroad rather alS dOing big business overseas, Where revenue iS than invest at home, invest a trillion dOllars in worth less in dollar terms. ln the past, that policy infrastructure and deregulate large swaths Of combination has meant that the dollar appreci- the economy—all policies that most Of corpo- ates t00 much relative tO where economic fun- rate America loves. damentals say it should be, and the result is that But in the lead-up to his inauguration, finan- U. S. corporate earnings suffer. This happened cial markets also reflected something else: during the Reagan administration—the era that apprehension. Thanks tO the expectations Of Trump s most ardent fans believe resembles what Trumponomics will bring, U. S. interest today. The early to mid-1980s became known as the "super D011ar era," as the dollar appreciated rate s have quickly ratchete d higher—the rate on a 10-year U. S. Treasury note iS now 2.4 per- significantly against b0th the Japanese yen and the German mark, then the U. S. 's most signifi- cent, compared with 1.8 percent a day before the election—and so has the value of the U. S. dollar. cant trading partners. This has put particular stress on emerging mar- N0t surprisingly, the U. S. trade deficit sky- ket economies—China in particular—to defend rocketed, as imported goods became more weakening currencles. price- competitive and U. S. exports suffered Up tO a point, economists can argue that abroad. The era ended only when then-Trea- a stronger U. S. economy driven by policies sury Secretary James Baker convened a sum- mit at Manhattan's plaza HOtel (which, in a designed t0 rampup growthwill inevitablylead t0 higher interest rates; there will be more demand mce irony, Trump would one day own), which for capital as business seeks tO invest, and stron- resulted in a huge, managed appreciation ofthe ger growth will lead t0 an uptick in inflationary yen against the dollar. BY pressures. And higher interest rates mean more What does this have to do with today? During BILL POWELL NEWSWEEK 26 01 / 27 / 2017

8. Newsweek 2017年1月27日号

物の 0 もⅳ HEAR Madrid's Teatro Real has partnered with the Opera natlonal de paris on a new production of 窺り Budd— B enJ amin Britten s tragic piece about a far darker working partnership. STAY 川Ⅳ 4 0 れ化 0 ルル " Ⅳ 4 〃知れ′ s ⅲ g 叩 0 わリ右 0 川 zg ん右ル 4 〃右知 g S00 〃去↓ー 4 ″ iO 竑ん as 02 イ 4 れル 0 ゆ 0 ⅲり - 4 ′ル i 4 ga 4 れⅲり 200k EAT Fine & Rare in New York City is named for two things—its fine foods and its rare spints. And if one viS1t Just isn t enough, guests can keep a bottle oftheir favorite tipple in a private locker at the bar. SEE TO mark the centenary of French sculptor Auguste R0din's death, the Legion of Honor museum in San FranClSC0 iS exhibiting about 50 Ofhis greatest works. And, yes, The T んⅲた r is there. BUY The designer Dina Kamal's limited edition of just 20 pinky rings might be small, but it has a larger purpose: t0 help celebrate the Pansian store Colette's 20th birthday. WATCH John Tiffany's scorching production of The G イの 74g 汽ビ moves from Broadway to London, with Cherry Jone s reprising he r Tony-nominated performance as faded belle Amanda Wingfield. 64 N E W 5 W E E K 01 / 2 7 / 2 017

9. Newsweek 2017年1月27日号

↓ ↓ ↓ T H E R E WA S A B R ー E F M 0 M E N T ー N M ー D - N 0 V E M B E R W H E N E D U C AT ー 0 N R E F 0 R M E R S W E R E T H R ーしし E D A B 0 U T P R E S ー D E N T- E し E C T D 0 N A し D T R U M P ' S S W A M P - D R A ー N ー N G ー M P E R AT ー V E A N D W H AT ー T M ー G H T M E A N F 0 R T H E N AT ー 0 N ' S E T E R N A し LY B E し E A G U E R E D P U B し一 C S C H 0 0 し S . On November 16 , Trump met at his Manhattan tower with Eva Moskowitz, whose Success Academy charter network has achieved impressive results with children ofcolor across New York City. The fol- lowing weekend, he entertained Michelle Rhee, the former head of Washington, D. C. 's public schools, at his golf club in New Jersey. Despite her uneven results, Rhee remains popular with those whO think mcompetent teachers and the umons that protect them are holding back America's kids. lnstead, Trump chose Betsy DeVos tO head the Education Department, a federal agency with over- sight over all Ofthe nation s educational institutions, from prekindergarten programs t0 graduate sch001s of business. The choice mystified all those who d fig- ured Trump was looking for a capable, fotward-look- ing technocrat focused on student testing and teacher accountability. The chOice horrified te achers unlons, as DeVos is a billionaire RepubIican who has worked assiduously t0 weaken the public schools in Michigan. Comedian R0b Delaney tweeted, "Trump's pick ofDeVos as Sec. of Education is more hateful than pouring a vat Ofshit out Of a helicopter ontO a group Of 1St graders. " Crude as that sentiment may be, it reflects the prevalent perception—unfair, perhaps— that DeVos is unsuited to her post, having never worked in a school or a school district. Her nomina- tion is in keeping with Trump s apparent conviction that nothing fuels government work better than antipathy tO the government. DeVos would not be the first ideologue to head the Education Department:William Bennett, appointed by Ronald Reagan, was a conservative culture warrior nonpareil. George H.W. Bush's appoint- ments, R0d Paige and Margaret SpelIings, were Tex- ans whO shared his right-leaning, reformist vision Of education, as encapsulated by NO Child Left Behind. But ever smce the first education secretary—Shirley Hufstedler, appointed by Jimmy Carter to the new post in 1979—nearly every person t0 h01d that 0ffce has had direct experience in teaching or educational administration (tWO were governors WhO'd enacted large education reform measures). DeVOS, by contrast, is a professional activist. For decades, she has tried tO dictate what goes on in a classroom—without ever having worked in one. ・ C H R ー S T ' S A G E N T 0 ド R E N E W A し ' GRAND RAPIDS, Michigan, has largely defined the life of the woman born in 1958 as EIisabeth Prince. She grew up in nearby H011and, near the shore 0f Lake Michigan, where her father, Edgar Prince, ran an aut0 parts empire that he would eventually sell for $ 1.35 billion. The family belonged to the Reformed Church in America, which has its roots in a kind of Protestantism known as C alvinism, the predominant faith of the Dutch who s ettle d we ste rn Michigan. Some flee home for college; Betsy prince traveled just 30 miles t0 Grand Rapids, where in 1975 she enrolled in Calvin College, 仕 om which her mother, Elsa, had graduated. Any attempt to forecast what DeVOS might dO as the natlon's education secretary must begin here, at this college of 4 , 000 that bids its students tO act as "Christ's agents of renewal in NEWSWEEK 38 01 / 27 / 2017

10. Newsweek 2017年1月27日号

十 THE BAD OLD DAYS: SO 「「 y , millennials, the new regime doesn't care if you're teed up tO create new waves Of technology that will blow away the rest of the world.lt won by promising the past. iPhone costs more tO make ⅲ a し S. factory, then some other company can get some ofApple's prof- its—l ike S amsung, which the newcomers must thinkÄsaAmerican ・ -since so many 0f -us own its phones, or at least the models that don't blow up. Finally, the new regime can keep those smug techie s gue ssing by throwing random threats at them, like boycott Apple" because the company won t crack the security on an iphone for law enforcement, or Amazon has an antltrust prob- lem ” because CEO Jeff Bezos owns The Ⅳ 4 訪 - ⅲ 0 〃 P ら which writes liberal "fake news. ” lt's healthy for tech leaders to sometimes have to scramble tO de al with a divmg stock price inste ad offocusing SO much Oftheir t11 れ e on mnovation. 2 DISMISS ALTERNATIVE ENERGY This month, China said it's going to spend more than $ 360 billion through 2020 on renewable energy, such as solar and wind. lt thinks there's a huge opportunity ⅲ solving climate change and getting the world 0 代 0 ⅱ . ln parts 0f the country, SOlar iS now cheaper than any Other power source. Companies like Google are working toward 100 percent renewable-energy use. Whatever. ln the new reglme, 0 ⅱ is better. So is coal. There 's no global warming. No carbon-burn- ing problem. That's why it's brilliant t0 make Rex Tillerson the secretary of state, so he can nego- tiate better 0 ⅱ deals for us, and give the Depart- ment of Energy to Rick Perry, who would like t0 kill it. You can't spell ス襯に 4 without ca 0 〃ー or at least some ofit. 3 DERAIL HEALTH CARE OK, so Congress is killing Obamacare. This will toss the whole $ 3.2 trillion U. S. health care indus- try intO disarray as 20 million people lose insur- ance and health care laws get reworked just as bre akthrough te chnologie s stand to re inve nt the industry. A bunch 0f startups, like C010r Genom- ics and Counsyl, are driving the cost Of sequenc- ing a person s genome down tO a few hundred dollars. Pretty soon, everybody could get a genetic test that might help people head 0 代 can- cer and Other diseases. New artificial intelligence te chnolo can help doctors sift through millions ofpages ofmedical research and match it tO data about a patient to diagnose diseases better than ever. If し S. companies get this stuff right, they Will drive the economy or years. But that seems to weird out the new reglme. Better to preserve traditions: the swamped family doctor, the half- daysittingin ・ waiting rooms rea - ing Old copies Of 0 magazine , the prostate exam. Burying Obamacare me ans adopting a policy that make s he alth insurance unaffordable for college- debt-laden millennials. So what if they're a huge generation ofAmericans raised in the digital age, teed up tO create new waves of technology that will blow away the rest ofthe world? lfmillennials want tO stay healthy, the new regime IS signaling, they can abandon the uninsured path of entre- preneurship and instead work at a company that offers health benefits, like Sears or pitney Bowes. 4 IGNORE RUSSIAN HACKING The U. S. runs on information te chnology. More than perhaps any country, it is moving work, life, commerce, entertamment, government, the THE NEW REGIME DOESN'T WANT THE FUTURE. IT WON BY PROMISING THE PAST. military and almost everything else online. Our love affair with data has been a competitive advantage. But now lt s our weakness too.We re so vulnerable that the Food and Drug Adminis- tration has warned that a heart implant made by St. Jude Medical is vulnerable to hacking. Rus- S1a could take control Ofyour heart! This would be a serious danger tO our national secunty, except in the new reglme, Russian presi- dent Vladimir Putin is now our friend. He wouldn't steal our data or harm our systems. And Other countrie s like North Kore a or lran can t possibly be smart enough to 応Ⅱ ow Russia's lead. So there's no data security threat to address. We'll be fine. 5 SHIFT RESOURCES FROM CITIES TO SMALL TOWNS AND RURALAREAS Cities have a 10t of wealthy folks and artists and people whO were born in other countries. The trend is toward movlng to cities—150,000 people d0 it every day. For the first time ⅲ history, more people live in cities than outside ofthem. lmpor- tantly, citles create a critical mass Of innovatlve thinking because people with interesting ideas are jammed together. Steven J0hnson describes that 1n 1S 00 Ⅳ尾 G00d 1 C のれ From:Cit1es, experts say, are where the future will get invented. But the new regime doesn t want the future. won by promi s ing the p ast. ー S 0-t00-b4d. ßitie s ・ Rural and small town America kicked your ass this time. Cities can bend over and kiss their federal resources goodbye. ロ NEWSWEEK 47 01 / 27 / 2017