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1. Newsweek 2017年3月24日号

mainly to 0 飛 r information for holding a town hall or explainers on policy issues. For example, the founders ofthe lndivisible Guide,whichregis- s anonprofit in January send outa we ekl email tO group leaders—more than 5 , 800 around the country at last count—with the national-level lssues they're focused on. And they disseminate things like talking points daily on social media. Susan McConnell, one of the co-founders of a local lndivisible chapter in ScottsdaIe, Arizona, says she relied on the group s tips for organiz- ing a town hall in absentia for her congressman, Republican David Schweikert, who has refused t0 hold public events. But neither McConnell, a retired teacher, nor T0dd have had any direct interaction with national lndivisible leaders— something that stands in contrast tO Republican claims Of D. C. -based operatives orchestrating the protests 仕 om afar. Many groups, however, are finding they could use help with coordination. ln the Cincinnati area, a handful 0f anti-Trump groups are bump- ing against one another as they try t0 rally the #Resistance. ln addition tO Mays's United We stand Cincinnati, there is now an lndivisible chapter; a branch OfOur Revolution, the national advocacy group formed out 0f Bernie sanders's msurgent presidential campalgn; and a 10Ca1 0 飛 shoot 0fthe pr0-Hillary Clinton Pantsu1t Nation Faceb00k group, which goes by Together We WiII. Heads of the various groups have formed a "leadership council,' Mays says, with the aim figuring out what are these groups are doing and making sure they re not duplicating efforts. The fragmentation is alSO evident in the num- ber Of anti-Trump events in the works. ln April alone, progressives are gearmg up for nafionwide marches on Tax Day and Earth Day, as well as town hall protests during Congress's two-week recess over Easter. And many local groups are alSO planning events related t0 Pride weekend in April. People who have already been on the streets or packing seats at town halls are starting t0 complain 0f burnout. "The thing is trymg t0 keep it going"' May says. D. C. -based progressive groups are eager tO help, offering their national reach, policy exper- tise and funding bases. The Center for American progress Action Fund, the sister organization Of the thinktankfounded byformerHillaryClinton c amp algn m anagefJ0hnQ0desta/aretryingft0 serve as a sort ofumbrella organization. They've made contact with roughly 70 progressive orga- i n hat have formed since the election including the lndivisible Guide and Pantsuit Nation offshoots, tO share information, staffers say. That includes things like a standing morn- lng conference call With communications direc- tors for vanous progressive groups and an online town hall search t001 t0 help people swarm events with their elected offcials. The lndivisible Guide has also teamed with the American Civil Liberties Union, MoveOn.org and Planned Parenthood for calls with members on relevant subj e cts. There are riSkS, however, if the movement takes on t00 much 0f a top-down approach. The power Of the #Resistance has been its grass- roots authenticity, which gets the attention Of politicians. LOSing that would not only slow momentum but also feed intO the White House s narrative that special interests have co-opted the protest groups—something liberals claim hap- pened with the Tea Party. What will sustain the movement, observers say, are real grievances expressed by local VOters. The proposed repeal and replacement 0f PEOPLE WHO HAVE BEEN ON THE STREETS ARE START- ING TO COM PLAIN OF BURNOUT. Obamacare, for instance, seems likely tO am- mate protesters in the weeks and months ahead. That's because it's personal for SO many people, as members 0f Congress are already finding out from angry constituents whO rely on the private health insurance exchanges or expanded Med- icaid coverage for lifesaving care. Mays says the ea llnes C01 リ out 0 Washmgton contmue tO makeforpowerfulmotivation for p e 0Ple like he r t0 keep going, despite the exhaustion. "Unless this president and this administra- tion are Oin tO drasticall chan e what the are dOing, then we are not going tO stop what we are dOing," She says. AS far as I can see, we are just beginning. " ロ P A G E 0 N E / T R U M P NEWSWEEK 17 MARCH 24 , 2017

2. Newsweek 2017年3月24日号

smuggled people into the U. S. ," a Make the Road lawyer says on the call, pausing SO Aristizabal can translate her words intO Spanish. "And ofparticular concern is how that would apply t0 arents wh0 brought their children int0 the し S. " the la Ⅵ一一 adds, raising the concern that parents could be prosecuted for bringing their undocumented kids int0 the country. After Ans- tizabal translates, the lawyer alSO notes that many Of the mea- sures are unfunded. 10t Ofthis memo is extremely scary and wornsome, but it's important tO keep in mind that it will require a 10t offunding from Congress. The bus pulls up outside what was once a cement warehouse but is now a 300-bed ICE detention center run by CoreCivic, which recently changed its name from Corrections Corporation ofAmerica and has seen itS StOCk soar 140 percent since election night. The facility's big glass windows line the street, pr0Jecting an impression Of light and openness, but a few inches behind the glass are thick concrete blocks bricked over the opening. "They think they can make money out 0f black and brown bod- les, says Aristizabal. Aristiz ab al's p ath tO citizenship—an illegal entry, followed by a slowpath t0 legal status—highlights the contradic- tlOns inherent in a common complaint against ille gal immigration : I 'm fine with immigration. But they have tO d0 it legally! " ln fact, unless a hope- brown ful immigrant has a master's degree in computer SC1ence, it S almost impossible t0 legally move to the United States. lmmi- gration permissions based on employment, family connections or humanitanan reasons have tight requirements and numen- cal restrictions, making many hopeful immlgrants ineligible tO get in line," according tO the pro-immigration nonprofit Amer- ican lmmigration Council ()I C). A U. S. State Department representative tells Ⅳルルた the backlog for legal immigration is Just over 4.5 million people. New visas will be limited to 366 , 000 for applicants with family or employment preferences, SO it would take over 12 years for everyone wh0 has already applied t0 legally immigrate. (There were alSO 315 , 000 visas glven out in 2016 tO people with imme- diate relatives whO are U. S. citizens. ) And the wait for those visas is 0ften much longer, even for people who are eligible t0 get in line because they are lucky enough tO have a U. S. citizen in their family tree. Children Of U. S. citizens from Mexico can wait over 20 years for a Vlsa, and Filipino siblings OfU. S. citizens wait about 25 years, according tO AIC. The Make the Road New York members clamber 0 代 their buses and gather between metal barricades and the detention center ・ as moreprote stersarrivefrom Make the Road Off1 cesi New 扣 rseyjconnectlcutand pennsy vanla»as -well as the S vice Employees lnternational Union and local progresslve orga- 十 RIDERS: Border patrol agent AIfredo Lujan poses W1t dog Ciro and three bundles of marijuana obtained from illegal border crossers. Sheriffs in the region say they face a constant stream Of traffickers moving drugs up north. NEWSWEEK 29 nizations. 、、 GOd bless れ says a policeman as he monitors the protesters. Standing next tO his department-issue Harley-Davidson, he says Elizabeth has always acted as basically a sanc- tuary city. lt's gotten a little shaky because the city doesn t really want tO cooperate with ICE, he says, illustrating the vast gulfin attitudes and approach toward illegal immigration between different locallaw enforcement agencies. The protest grows t0 maybe 150 people, and there are speeches in which speakers bash local politicians for failing to protect people from deportation. Then, in a piece of carefully choreographed political theater, five protesters sit down tO block the center s entrance in front Of from cities that ignore ICE detainers and even by the shorthand 0f SB4, that would cut funding Texas Repu 1Cans are pus lng a 1 , nown says the Navy veteran. You re entitled tO a nice trip home if you like," of this country, you re not entitled tO anything. 0-1 itevÆerre rasmlles 、 -ー当 If you re not a c itize t s a ne ce ssarystep t0 b ecure deThere'sno ℃ he— cer. ' Well, no one wants to hear that news. But have tO take chemo radiation tO cure this can- doctor says, Hey, you know, you re going tO dramatic cure. "You go tO the doctor, and the cancer and says the problem requires an equally his city's large undocumented population tO a water. The Hispanic msurance agent compares sipping a cold b0ttle 0f TOPO ChiC0 mineral zation in Houston, answers hiS apartment door the Magnet, an anti—illegal immigration organl- SAM HERRERA, the outreach director for Stop AMERICANS' 'THEY'RE KILLING kids? AII people [are] scared for their kids. ing the parents, and then what happens t0 their They're scared ofICE police coming and arrest- center that would imprison him ifhe gets caught ・ he says, standing next tO the type Of detention 0 代 tO come tO this protest. Everyone IS scared, a deli in the evening tells me he used his one day whO works as a mechanic during the day and at An undocumented Mexican named Simon handcuffand arrest them. a minute more policemen swoop in tO gently the protesters remaln seated, and in less than and tells them they are obstructing traffc, but phers record the scene. A policeman approaches the banner as news photographers and videogra- tations. " Aristizabal kneels down tO straighten - a large black banner that reads, "NO more depor- M A R C H 2 4 , 2 017

3. Newsweek 2017年3月24日号

三、ざ物泌 0 IN THE MOVIES ofFrench director OliVier Assayas, connectlons are made mostly by smartphone and computer. plane and train tickets are purchased from kiosks, coffee and food from self-serve counters. Dinners are eaten alone in cafés watching documentaries on a phone; train, subway and taxi rides are spent shut offfrom fellow passengers, thumbing out text me ss age s and awaiting a response. This is the tense lassitude that makes up contemporary life, and no one has proved better at capturing its melancholy seduction than Assayas. ln his haunting and haunted new film, 鹿パ 0 〃 S ん 022 どら human contact IS SO outmoded that the heroine , Kriste n Stewart , barely meets the woman she works for. Stewart plays Maureen, a young American ln paris p aying the re nt by acting as personal shopper for a temperamental 1 れ OVle Star. Maureen spends her days darting from atelier overkill of CGI. lt's the most tO turn intO bOth his home tO showroom, selecting the Three months earlier, and his studio. Mostly she convmcmg ghOSt in any outfits that her employer Maureen s twin brother, Will wear tO premieres and waits, wondering if each mOV1e S1nce T んビ I 〃〃 OC ビ〃な , Lewis, died at age 27 of knock and creak is the sign a rare heart defect that Jack Clayton s 1961 version charity events—choices she's waiting for. Until one of The 川ビ立比ル . designed tO guarantee Maureen shares. Her that her boss's picture brother was a medium and night When She recelves a The companson iS will keep turning up in promised her that, were he visitation SO terrifying it fitting. Contemporary newspapers' red-carpet to die first, he'd send her sends her scurrying from interpretations ofHenry c ove rage. lt's a grinding the house in the first light of James s novella tend tO stress a message from the Other routine, and Maureen hates that its ghosts are figments Side. And SO Maureen, dawn. This nerve-shredding both it and the woman she who has her own ability sequence features a spectral Ofa tormented psyche. ln r 〃記 S ん 022 there's no works for. But the job allows tO sense the presence Of presence that hovers in the her tO stay in Paris—and it's spirits, spends her nights by air, a marriage seemingly Of doubt as tO their reality: We see them in instances herselfin the now-deserted light and smoke; so simple in that city that she pursues When Maureen doesn't. For country house that Lewis, and yet effective, it s an a more ephemeral and Assayas, the ghosts seem an elemental connectlon. a furniture maker, hoped implicit reprimand tO the 0 1 THE SCREENING ROOM lt'll Haunt You Kristen Stewart is the still center Of a terrifying modern ghost story N E W S W E E K 62 M A R C H 24 , 2 017

4. Newsweek 2017年3月24日号

RADAR New Hat, Not 0 旧 Hat implicit rebuke t0 the lazy and arrogant assumptions Of modern li , a reminder that even 111 a world dominated by technology, the inexplicable still exists. Midway through the movie, Assayas introduces both a murder-mystery subplot and a mysterious correspondent—possibly alive, possibly not—who texts Maureen and gradually works his way past her defenses. Along with the ghosts , the s e elements form the spiritual interrogation the mOV1e puts Maureen through, an nterrogation that will not 十 FASHION VICTIM: ⅲ Personal Shopper, Stewa rt plays the bereaved ass ista nt of a demanding movie star. day, from appointment t0 appointment, riding on trains or on her moped through the Paris streets (captured in autumnal, blue-gray twilight tone s by cinematographer Yorick le S aux) , making snap decisions as She flips through racks of clothing laid out for her mspection. Stewart IS in nearly every scene, and she 's phenomen al. Assayas knows hOW tO clear a space for actresses whO understand how tO eXISt in front Ofthe camera rather than letting us catch them acting. Like Maggie Cheung in ル襯 4 Vep ( 1996 ) and C 〃 ( 2004 ) , or Asia Argent0 in B04 ⅲ g Ga ( 200 カ , such actresses lnsist we come tO them, the better tO register the nuances ofperformances that are bOth interior and e motionally direct. Stewart's face registers wild curre nts of ar and anxiety, currents that disrupt the seemingly tough , hard set Ofher expression like a sudden surge ofthe Richter scale. lt's a masterfully controlled portrait Of psychic vulnerability. Her Maureen comes tO stand for the contemporary self- suffciency that nags us at every turn with the specter ofwhat's missing from our ivesanthe world of 0 〃ーーーー THERE WAS a period ⅲ the mid- to late 1990S When 」 amiroquai seemed inescapable. The band's breed Of palatable British pop-funk filled dinner parties and dance れ 00 , telling Of a jazzy galactic 「 m populated by space cowboys and cosmic girlS. There were No. 1 、 Grammys, a place ⅲ the Guinness Book of Reco 5 (still held, fO 「 best-selling funk album) and a flare Of stardom for the band's lead singer, 」 ay Kay (below), renowned fO 「 his fancy dancing and penchant fO 「 elaborate and outsized hats. Then tastes shifted, the charm wanedy and save fO 「 a brief return in 2010 , 」 amiroquailargely disappeared from view. But 2017 is shaping up tO be the year Of the great Jamiroquairevivai. TWO new singles, "CIoud 9 ” and "Automaton," have been released since mid- February, bOth showing an evoiution of the band's musical style- The new, grown-up Jamiroquai nods to the band's classic future-funk sound, while a ー 50 encompassing a hint Of disco trailblazer Giorgio MO 「 Ode 「 and embracing 0 0 the electronic innovation Of the past seven years—a touch of Daft Punk, a do op Of vocoder and lashings of futuristic synths. An album, Automaton, is due at the end of March, and audiences are already giddy about the band's return: A video trailer for the album has notched up more than 5 million views on YouTube, and two live shows in PariS and London SOld out in under a minute. A tour through Europe and Japan will fOIIOW this spring and summer,. Perhaps 」 amiroquai's renalssance was inevitable—just another beat in the 1990S revival that is gripping bOth music and fashion. But there is a difference. Kay'S new music isn't just a rehash Of h is youthfui output—it's thrilling and effervescent, as reflective of the emergent jazz scene as it is of the zeitgeist's 「 et 「 0 inclinations. And yes, you will be heartened to hearv those outrageous hats are still very much part Of the show. —LAURA BARTON Tour beglns at La SaIIe PleyeI, Paris, Mar. 28 : album, Virgin EMI, Mar. 31 : 」 AMIROQUAI.CO. UK SO much s ettle the questiom=l—・ S ん叩 2 ー we are haunted ofher brother's place in the next world as illuminate her place in this one. Much of the movle consists Of simply watching Maureen go about her by no ghost so much as the ghost 0f ourselves. ・—CHARLES TAYLOR ロ Worldwide releases continue tO May 12. W E E K N E W S 63 M ^ R 日 24 , 、 2 ( 月ノ

5. Newsweek 2017年3月24日号

but he is also asking quesfions about how we 100k at things and what assumpfions we make. The “ MAKI NG A short, snappy titles are by design. "You don't want SICONNECTI O like'Rising PhoeniY that suggest there's more there than there is," he WITH THE VIEWER says. But he remembers a time when he used tO give his works much longer name s. 。 I would write IS KEY," HE SAYS. an essay about what was going through my mind, he says. But that was mostly to annoy curators. paintmgs and ink on paper, but as they travel, THE LANGUAGE TEST Opie has shown work in China once before, they see more Of the world, they visit museums, though as part ofthe U. K. 's pavilion for the 2010 and their interests [in art] broaden. lt's a natu- World Expo in Shanghai. He admits he has found ral progresslon. " Fabien pacory, an art adV1ser, the experience easier this time, which he puts curator and entrepreneur WhO has been based down t0 Shanghai's rapid development, cultural in Guangzhou for 13 years, agrees. "The art mar- and otherwise. saw a much more varied place, ket in Hong Kong is well established, but main- this time older bits and newer bits—it's changed land China is different; you can now feel that a great a deal. ” Changing tastes might also play a something is happemng," he says. There's a part. "Every culture starts [by buying]their own new wave Of collectors whO are young, fresh and heritage, says Patti Wong, chairman Of SOthe- active; they bring a new perspective. ” But infor- by's Asia. "For the Chinese, it's their ceramlcs, mation is key. 'We don't have the social media that's available in Europe and America thanks to heavy internet censorship, SO it's Often dffcult tO find conte nt. The Chine se are curious ; they want tO discover things, but Western artists need tO make more Of an effort tO promote their work and translate it. " When pacory searches for Opie on Baidu (the Chinese version ofGoogIe), he can find only one article in Mandarin. SO has Opie made anywork for the show that is specifically aimed at a Chinese audience? "l've thought a bit about locality," he says, "because making a connection with the viewer is key. But if I felt that some element of the work would only be understood by a few, it would seem like a failure to me. Before I leave, we talk again about his adoles- cent experiments with making and remaking. I used t0 paint the walls in my parents' house, ” he says. Sea, water, a bit 0fland across the middle. I did portraits t00 and bits of bodies. ” Even back then, he was making the same kind ofart he does today: straightforward, logical and true. That's why the new show should succeed, as the beauty Of Opie's art is in its universal language. There is an honesty and generosity tO his work that draws you in—・ it C01 れ e S With no pre S sure tO extract a deep-rooted message. SO what is it that he would —likepeoplentakeawayfrom vthe•how>"l -jusÜ want peop e tO recogmze t at S01 れ e 0 y e se IS alive and tO feel S01 れ e sort Of communication, he replies. With any luck, the art will provide its 十 KINETIC ENERGY: New works include Joggers from 2015 and Traffic from 2016. 」 ulian Opie: Fosun Foundation, Shanghai, Mar. 28 to 」 une 10. N E W S W E E K 59 M A R C H 2 4 , 2017

6. Newsweek 2017年3月24日号

INTERVIEW China Tease Julian O ie is heading east. But will his 0 叩 00k 磊 0 right 1 " g00g0 ? ulian Opie has been making art since he When we meet, though, on a drizzly Febru- YOUR FACE: was 12. While his friends were misbehav- ary morning in east London, he's deep in plan- Opie's self- ing after school, he was in his bedroom portrait in mosaic ning mode for his first major solo show in China, tiles, made ⅲ in 1970S Oxford, working on one pr0Ject which opens in late March at the slick new 2014 , shows his after another, reviSlng and remaking. Fosun Foundation exhibition sp ac e in the Bund typically clear, communicative That is where and when, he says, his driving Finance Center, Shanghai. David Tung, Asia use Of line. need t0 go back t0 things began. He was always representative 0f the Lisson Gallery, feels this is figuring out hOW tO m ake a pie ce b ette r than he the right moment for Opie tO make his move intO had the day before. "l've been doing that ever China. "There has been tremendous change 1n Slnce," he says. the cultural landscape in the past few years, ” he Opie, now 58 , has been a success from the says. There is great ambition for new [Chinese] moment he graduated, in 1982. He'd studied at institutions tO position themselves in the global Goldsmiths University in London under concep- conversatlon ofcontemporary art. ' New auctlon tual artist Michael Craig-Martin, whose way Of houses, pnvate museums and commercial art thinking, Opie says, was a close match with his fairs are launching all the time, enhancing the own. His degree show—a multimedia combi- opportunity t0 sell—and buy. ℃ hinese collec- nation Of animated films, wall paintings, fish tanks and perfume—sparke d interest almost immedi- IN EUROPE, HIS ALBUM ately from collectors and COVER FOR 召 S 〇五召力し gallerie s such as the Lis- son, which still represents SUMMED UP A WHOLE him. Opie has exhibited DECADE OF POP POSTURING. his paintings and sculp - ture s internationally and reached beyond the tra- ditional gallery audience with his animated LED outlines ofhuman figures tors are learning fast and moving faster," says walking, s ometimes pre sented on billboards on Jehan Chu, an art adviser based in Hong Kong City StreetS, sometimes elsewhere—as With the WhO works with some Of China's most promi- nent collectors. "They can be seen at all the top huge, computer-generated animatlons that acted as a backdrop t0 wayne McGregor's 2008 ballet events, from Venice tO Art Basel, snappmg up ー〃女 4 at London's Royal Opera House. works from Joan Mitchell to Jonas Wood. ” With ln Europe, he's probably most famous for his this show as a launching point, Opie is making deslgnfor theBest ofBluralbum cover from 2000. a bid tO be part 0f a powerful art marketwith a growmg ln eres ln estern art1StS. S 1g1 a y pro grap ICS 0 e an S our members (pink skin, scribble d hairlines, black The studiO where Opie is preparing tO meet dOts for eyes) were simple and vital. Faces that got hiS new ASian audience iS an unassuming four- st London. The spacevmuch like his work, is uncluttered: white walls, wooden pop postunng and cemented his position as one BY ofBritain's best-known artists. "l've been lucky, floorboards. Opie opens the door wearing jeans OLIVIA he says. "I never really needed t0 get a j0b. and a gray POIO shirt and introduces the team WEINBERG 十 3 ココ V 9 N 0 S S 一、 3 一 d 0 N V ココ「 NEWSWEEK 57 MARCH 24 , 2017

7. Newsweek 2017年3月24日号

killing Yaqui culture. Luna is now under the protection ofthe Mech- anism tO Protect Human Rights Defenders and NietO ln 2012. Everywhere he goes, Luna now carnes a panic button, a GPS-enabled device tO alert authorities in case Of trouble, and he also has security cameras installed in his house. But in the end," he says, it gives you the feeling that they 're watching you and not the bad guys ・ says. 'We need t0 recognize the work that they dO as contributors tO our democracy. ' She says For activists like Luna and others, the real problem lies in the government's failure t0 prop- her team working on a publicity campmgn erly investigate cnmes against environmentalists on social and traditional media in support Of and bring those responsible tO Justice. "There is activists, as well as holding meetings with state no political will," says AIDA'S puentes. "Here, it's governors tO investigate the problem and try tO a complete and murderous silence. restore confidence lll authorities. lldefonso Zamora, a leader 0f the indigenous For Zamora, however, that confidence is long Tlahuica community, has been fighting t0 pro- gone. Eight years after his son was killed, he was tect the lush forests that surround his home ln arrested by state police on charges ofbreaking and San Juan Atzingo, 50 miles southwest Of Mexico entering and theft. He was sent tO the prison ln Tenancingo, a place he calls rat's nest. ' lt tOOk City, since 1998. After six years campalgmng t0 stop illegal logging in the region, Mexico s nlne months and a sustained campaign from bOth federal attorney for envlronmental protection Amnesty lnternational and Greenpeace tO secure began investigating the issue. That'S when the death threats started. "The loggers t01d me they were going t0 hit me where it most zamora says. "THERE'S A DANGEROUS On May 15 , 2007 , while Zamora s CO KTAIL OF POWERFUL sons Ald0 and Misael were surveymg DOWNERS, SICARIOS the fore st looking for illegal loggers, they were surprised by armed men [C RTEL HIT MEN] AND whO fired at them several times. AldO, LO GERS. IT'S CREATED 21 , was killed—Misael, just 16 at the time, was badly hurt but survived. "lt A LIMATE OF TERROR. ” was an ambush," Misael says. Every- thing was planned. The killing drew national attention, and a few weeks later, Zamora was given the Ecological Merit Award by then-Pres- his release last year: A federal judge ruled that 。 his human right tO a presumption Of innocence ident Felipe Calder6n, wh0 promised that those re sponsible for his son's death would be brought was violated; there iS no evidence against him. t0 justice. Still, it t00k three years for two 0f the Zamora says his arrest was part Of a campalgn four suspects tO be arrested. "The Others are still t0 silence him and his campaign. "Behind all 0f this is the government, ” he says. That's whO we unpunished, ” says Zamora. need to be afraid 0 に Those efforts have worked Analysts say this kind 0f impunity is all t00 com- mon. According t0 the G10bal lmpunity Index,Just tO a degree: After SO many attacks, Zamora says, he's afraid to campaign as he used to. Still, he's 4 ・ 46 percent ofcrimes that get reported ⅲ MeXIC0 result in conuctlons. a dangerous cycle resolved tO continue the struggle. "The forest is a 0f impunity and corruption, says Mårquez. "All legacy given tO us by our ancestors," he says. lt ln spre•metokéépfig tmg ・ t00 Often sentences aren t even carne out. uEbacVi1f ℃ hihuahua, the future for ℃ om - ven worse, ac IVIS S say, IS he governmen S munitie s like the Tarahum ara and the fore sts complicity in acts Of intimidation. According tO they are trying tO protect is more uncertain after CEMDA's report, 43 percent of the attacks car- SO man ears Of ViOlel*lCe and intimidation. For ried out a ainst envlronmentalists came frOI れ José Trinidad Baldenegro, his brother's killing the authorities themselves. Mårquez admits that remams an 01 れ lnous warnmg. Out here, he thiS t00 iS a senous lSSue. CriminaIizing human says, no one iS safe. " ロ rights defenders does enormous damage," she P A G E 0 N E / M E X I C 0 Y33MSM3N d03 3d0 コ 8VOSO N E W S W E E K 21 M A R C H 2 4 , 2 017

8. Newsweek 2017年3月24日号

Obama. T0dd, an Obama voter, is now using the same playbook in pursuit ofliberal aims. lt's an approach he cribbed from a political memo that began making the rounds on social media in December. Known as the lndivisible Guide, it was drafted by a handful of former Cap - itol Hill staffers as a primer for liberals looking to influence Congress and push back against Trump. The message: Tea Party tactics work. ln fact, they may prove even more potent in the cTrump era than they did under Obama. With his squabbling over crowd size at his inauguration Just a day intO his presidency, Trump exposed perhaps his big- gest political vulnerability: his intense sensitivity tO public opinion. More than a Senate filibuster or other legislative maneuvering, Trump's thin skin may be the progressive movement's best point Of leverage. That's the lesson the self-styled #Resis- tance is taking away from these early months Of the Trump presidency. A self-described political junkie, Todd first came across the lndivisible Guide when forme r CIinton Labor Secretary Robert Reich shared it on Twitter in the days after Trump s VICtory. But it wasn t until inauguration day "that I really felt like something needed to be done," he says. soon, T0dd set up a Faceb00k page for a new group, lndivisible Roseville, and began posting news and events cnficizing the New York re al e state mogul. Within a few weeks, it had amassed hundreds of followers, and helped draw nearly 1 , 000 people to McCIintock's first town hall. Now, Todd has joined forces with a handful of other lndivisible groups that had cropped up since the election to form lndivisible CA 4 , a reference tO their con- gressional district. As ofearly March, the group s Facebook page had nearly 2 , 000 followers. The swell of activity as Trump entered his second month in Offce answers, at least tenta- tively, the central question that emerged from the anti-Trump women S marches on January 21. The marches were a cathartic moment for liberals, as turnout far outstripped expectations, clogging the National Mall in Washington, D. C. , and state capitols around the country. But many wondered, can this energy, this pushback be sus- tained? Eight weeks later, anti-Trump anger is still boiling and not just in Northern California. P A G E 0 N E / T R U M P Activists have packed town halls and staged protests even in deep-red states like Utah and Tennessee. Those scenes are likely tO continue for the foreseeable future as RepubIicans begin their effort tO repeal and replace Obamacare earnest. The Trump-backed GOP proposal, released March 6 , will have a direct impact on millions ofAmericans' health care—ample moti- vation for more protests. Trump allies scoff at the #Resistance crowds, saying they're the work ofprofessional agitators. Republicans also reject comparisons to the Tea party. "This is not the same thing," Pennsylva- nia Representative SCOtt perry told reporters in February. "Maybe some ofthe actions they take are similar, but when you see ads—and they're out there—for paid protesters tO come, and when you see the signs, they're not made in someone S living ro om; they 're printe d up in diffe rent lan- guages. This is a very different operation. National progre ssive organizafions are trylng t0 amplify the protests, and groups like Planne d Parenthood and Move On.org are also organizing rallies and demonstrafions Via their own local TRUMP'S BIGGEST POLITICAL VULNERA- B I LITY: H I S INTENSE SENSITIVITY TO PUBLIC OPINION. chapters. But there's no evidence people showing up tO these events are paid. Many at McClintock's latest town hall waved signs emblazoned with their ZIP code, a rebuffto his claim the protesters were coming from outside his district. Another sported a sheet ofposter board taped to her back with a handwritten message: 'Not a paid pro- tester!" Organizers alSO affrm that most of the people coming out tO these rallies are real constit- uents With real grievances, and many are new tO political activism. "You know, we're all waitmg for our checks," JOke s Billie Mays, an administrative assistant and single mother wh0 helped plan Cin- cinnati's local women S march in January. The Cincinnati Women's March drew roughly 12 , 000 people, a tally that floored Mays. "ln Cincinnati, people come out for football games, but you never see a huge turnout for a cause. The enthusiasm convinced her to start the 10Ca1 group, United We Stand Cincinnati, which has N E W S W E E K 14 M A R C H 24. 2 017

9. Newsweek 2017年3月24日号

N E W W 0 R L D / E N E R G Y DISRUPTIVE THIS GETTING 0 し 0 John Goodenough proves yet again that genius doesn't have an expiration date A MAN OLD enough tO be Mark Zuckerberg's great-grandfather just unveiled energy storage technology that might save the planet. J0hn G00denough is 94 , and his current work could be the key to Tesla's future—much as, decades ago, his efforts were an important part Of sony's dominance ⅲ portable gadgets. Over the years, G00denough has scuffed with Warren Buf- fett, gotten screwed by global patent wars, never be came rich 0 代 a headline-grabbing initial public offenng and defied the American tech industry's prejudice that says 01d people can't innovate. Contrast that with the way we celebrate Evan Spiegel, wh0 at 26 is worth $ 5 billion because he co-created Snapchat, an app that will probably lmpact humanity as profoundly as Cap n Crunch cereal. Maybe. G00denough announced in early March that he and his team at the University ofTexas at Aus- tin had invented a glass-based battery that blows away the performance 0f every previous kind 0f battery, including lithium-ion batterie s—which were invented in the 1980S by... him. G00de- nough's technology is powering your smartphone , laptop, electric toothbrush and Te sla , among other things. LOts Of inventors claim they're working on breakthrough batteries. G00denough fire, so a hoverboard won t melt your kid's Vans is the only one who has done it before. as she scoots across the playground). The IEEE alSO reports that Goodenough's battenes seem HiS new battery can store three tlmes more energy than a comparable lithium-ion battety, able tO soak up in minutes as much charge as a lithium-ion battery gets in hours. according t0 the lnstitute Of Ele ctrical and Elec- BY tronic Engineers. The new battery alSO SOlves Battery technology may not make you swoon, some Other lithium-ion trouble s ()t won t catch but it is the missing link in getting the planet 0 代 当 @kmaney 1 KEVIN MANEY NEWSWEEK 46 MARCH 24 , 2017

10. Newsweek 2017年3月24日号

KA VA SINGLE MALT WHISI<Y ノ彡。 -- 乙レ磁乙 Kavalan Distillery Reaches Another Milestone Five-time Winner of the IWSC Trophy for " Spirits Producer 0f The Year" ヾ會 & / 41/7Y ト ASIA PACIFIC SPIRITS PRODUCER / Ⅳ A ヾト WORLDWIDE WHISKEY PRODUCER OF THE YEAR 04P 匚ミ 04 、 04P 匚ミ 04 、 0 、」当こ 0 心ミ」 ~ コ一み IWSC TROPHY ・ 2016 IWSC TROPHY IWSC TROPHY IWSC TROPHY IWSC . , 第 - TROPHY 2015 2013 2012 2011 / Ⅳぺ Asia Pacific Asia Pacific Asia Pacific Spirits Producer Spirits Producer Spirits Producer KA VA ~ 、 LAN T'JW()RÉD#BEST:WHISKY " iVEARS IN A*ROW VA LAN 2015 World's Best Single Malt Whisky KavaIan SOIist VINHO Barrique 級 / Ⅳト WORLD WHISKIES AWARDS WORLD'S BEST SINGLE MALT 、Ⅷ SKY )OIIST = 2016 World's Best Single Cask Single Malt Whisky Kavalan S01ist Amontillad0 WORLD WHISKIES AWARDS WORLD'S BEST SINGLE CASK SINGLE MALT 2015 No. 1 2016 No. 1 PIease drink responsibly