彡 ) をダ TIME* VOL. 189 , NO. 15 ー 2017 0 The View Time Off The Features lraqis waitfor 和 od d ⅳ r 市砒 io March 29 ⅲ Mosul'sAqeedat neighborhood 2 ー Conversation 4 ー For the Record What tO watch, read, ロ The Battle for Mos 1 see and dO After six months offighting to 3 引 Margaret 、 retake lraq's second largest city, Atwood and the end is in sight Elisabeth Moss ByJaredMaIsin 18 discuss the TV adaptation of The Handmaid's Tale Dems Start Thinkin' 41 ー Monsters and About Tomorrow the IvyLeague lnside the gras sroots movement tO recruit new Democratic candidates 42 ー Dramatist JOhn for 2018 andbeyond Leguizamo ByAlexAltman 26 4 引 Taking on the government ln G e な辺 Life After Death ONTHE COVER: After losingherhusband, Faceb00k 4 引 JoeI Stein hacks A member oflraq's C00 SheryI Sandbergtalks frankly himself federalpolice takes about grief, death andvulnerability 0 、斤 0 日 i e position 48 け Questions for near 0 な ai れ station By BelindaLuscombe 32 abortion provider in southwest Mosul 0 れ A 司 4. Dr. Willie Parker Ph0tograph Emanuele S 砒 0 forTIME TlMEAS1a is pubIishedbYTlMEAsia(Hong Kong) Limited. TlMEPUbliShes ejghtdoub に i 、 00 、 Each 00 00M0 0f52 i ~ 、 0 00 00000 ub npti . 第 MEm 0 0 publish ー 00 00 引 0 0 00 02017Ti00 A 0 (HongKong) 凵 ed. 則ⅱ 0 0 . Re 面、 ctior 、 i00h0 に 0i0 代 0 曲 0 は 00 rmi ー i00 *. TIME 0 面物 0 Red 0d00D00g0 000 pro 、 " ted 物 0 0d0000k 00g な ati in 物 0 U. s. 0 面 in 物 00000 ⅵ 0 0h000 引 ME 0g0 " 00 朝 000 ね 0 00 ー 0 ~ 0 代 Bu ~ 000f Circu 師、一・ lfthe 0 00i0 " 0 に代 0 hat 00 0g0 " 0 00d0 、ⅳ 000d0 , " h " 000 曲 000b 、 ig0000 000 " 0 " 0 ⅳ 00 0 ~ 、 0d0dd00 、 0 曲 000Y000 ・ CUSTOM SE 0 AND 00 円 0 ~ , 四〃 0 0 , 00 " , 、一一一凵面 00 0 " , " 、 istt 0 ・〃・、、 ,. 面 , 。 " 。 0 / ~ ・ ~ 軸 0 ・、 0 0 0 、、 0 00 、 00 00 。 0 。 00 。、 0 。 00 ~ 、 0000 0 、。。 00-00 。 0-0 。。 , 00 0 但 0 00 、 0 ~ 00 " ~ 0 、。 ~ 0 但 0 。 g 0 。。 0 , 0 〃 F' 0 、 0 , 0 … 0 , 、 0 ……… 0 , 00 0 0 , 80000 川 0 ~ 00 、 000 0 , 00000 , 0 。 0 。・ , ・司。 000 。 " 0 。。 , 00000000000 ~ 00 ・ ) 。 0 、、 00 0 0 00 、。 , 0 。、 00000 00 ・・。 00 " 00 。。。 00 0 。、 ~ 。 00 。 0 ~ = ldeas, opinion, innovations TheBrief 15 ー A case for News from the し S. and umversal basic around the world mcome 引 The Trump- putin honeymoon 1 引 A new is over. WhereU. S. - contender for Russia relations go Disney's live-actlon from here bOX 0 ice Crown 引 A guide t0 1 引 The flip side factions inside the ofbillionaires' White House philanthropy ユ幻 patton Oswalt 1 引 ln MiIan, see remembers Don what's in store RickIes for the future of furniture 1 Egyptians mourn victims Of ユ引 Why Easter has 2 m sunday blasts eggs ユ引 Behind United 、 Airlines' crisis: should overbooking be illegal? Photograph Emanuele S 砒 0 Ⅲ和 r TIME 1
. ü: 2 『・☆をを☆ Jo 取 Jo 取 彡 Osso 難 ィ Osso を ! 物ま第ま第ー」第 ド 0 R ( 0 N G R E 5 5 - どル物ム第新 00E F 0 ( 0 N G R 石 5 5 Jo 40ss ド 0 R ( 0 N G ws•zw. 日赴日」 0 Ossoffspeaks t0 0 group 可 college Democrats 砒 Oglethorpe University in Atlanta 0 れ April 5 PHOTOGRAPHS BY BENJAMIN RASMUSSEN FORTIME
WORLD Christians Of Egypt hit by ISIS in PaIm Sunday bombings A PAIR OF BOMB ATTACKS AT churches in Egypt killed at least 44 people on April 9 , shattering the Christian festival 0f Palm Sunday for the country's Copts, the Middle East's largest Christian community. One bomb ripped through a church in the Nile Delta town ofTanta while a suicide bomber set offhis device at an Alexandria cathe dral where Coptic pope Tawadros II had held palm Sunday services. The attacks were quickly claimed by the lslamic State, which has become a persistent menace in Egypt since an insurgent movement in the Sinai peninsula proclaimed its allegiance in 2014. ln keeping with ISIS sectarian absolutism, the Sinai militants, wh0 in recent years had killed more than 1 , 000 soldiers and police, soon expanded their targets tO include Egypt's Christian community, which makes up about 10 % of the population. ln February dozens of Christians fled North Sinai for lsmailia on the Suez Canal, fearing for their lives following weeks of attacks. Egypt's President Abdul Fattah al-Sisi declared a new state Of emergency in response tO the bombings, but he faces accusations that his government is failing tO dO enough tO protect the Christian minority. lt's a tough charge for a leader WhO promised a return t0 security and order following a military coup in 2013. —JARED MALSIN 0 0 Egyptian Coptic Christians gather 砒 the れ er 和 r blast victims ⅲ the Nile Delta city 0fTanta, れ or 市 0fCairo, 0 れ April 9 PHOTOGRAPH BYAFP/GETTY IMAGES 0 0 >For more ofour bestphotography, visittime.com/lightbox 13
REXTILLERSON Secretary Of State R リ S M 旧 TARY-MINDED PRAGMATISTS UPHOLDING THE ESTABLISHED ORDER IVANKATRUMP JARED KUSHNER Special assistant Senior adviser tO the President tO the President NEW YO 府 DEALMAKERS C-SUITE SOCIAL MODERATES WITH MANHATTAN ROOTS 1 JOSEPH DUNFORD Chairman ofthe 」 oint Chiefs of Staff 1 DINA POWELL Deputy National Security Adviser fO 「 strategy WILBUR ROSS Commerce Secretary H . MCMASTER National Security Advi se r GARY COHN National Economic Council director STEVEN MNUCHIN Treasury Secretary MIKE PENCE Vice President ES 砒〃 ME ー R リ B リ以 S CONVENTIONAL AND CONSERVATIVE WASHINGTON POWER BROKERS TRUMP WHISPERERS MINDERS OFTHE BRAND イ・ SEAN SPICER Press secretary REINCE PRIEBUS Chief Of staff KELLYANNE CONWAY Counselorto the President HOPE HICKS Director Of strategic communications 00N MCGAHN White House counsel
lnside the grassroots movement tO groom a new generation Of Democratjc candidates BY ALEX ALTMAN/ATLANTA THE TRUMP EFFECT Jo 彡 Osso F 0 R ( 0 N G R E 5 5 物 w “リ「い ( 0 れ、 0 , 」 0N 0SS0 30 Candidate 加 Geo 「 g ね 6t わ Congressional District ・ Atlanta native with degrees from Georgetown University and the London School Of Economics ・ Aformer congressional aide, he became CEO of a company that makes documentaries about glObal ISSIÆS ・ Announced hiS campaign in 」 anuarywith the endorsement Of Democratic Representative 」 ohn Lewis
WORLD TRAVEL & TOU ISM COU CIL REDEFINE T 〇 URISM 〇 u 「 world is changing 、 Most ofthis change is positive, but what about the things we love and dream Of seeing that are threatened with extinction? 〇 u planet is facing growingchallenges: climate change, depleted resources, and species dying out. Travel & Tourism offers sustainable solutions tO help resolve these issues. JOin us as we diSCClSS a plan for action: THE GLOBAL SUMMIT: 、 TRANSFORMING OUR WORLD Bangkok, Thailand, 26 ー 27 、 Ap 2017 TO learn more about our research and priorities, and to watch and take part in 0 r live debates, visit our website at www.wttc.0侶 /WTTC 行 4 怩 / ル r 4 BetterWorld
ー H E BEGINNING 0 ドー H E E20 ー MOSUL THE ISLAMIC STATE IS ABOUT TO LOSE THE 0R0 Ⅳ JEWEL OF ITS SELF-STYLED CALIPHATE BY JARED MALSIM/MOSUL ー PHOTOGRAPHS BY EMANUELE SATOLLI FOR TIME
TheView finding pilot then known as the New Jersey Gradu- ated Work lncentive Experiment were named Dick Cheney and DonaId RumsfeId. ) Today, thinkers on the le 代 see the UBI as a way to combat poverty and inequality as well as a potential palliative t0 the disruptions t0 workers caused by technology. To the right, the ide a is an attractively simple alterna- tive tO bloated social-welfare regimes. Critics come from all sides too: they say the UBI is just a decoy tO starve government assistance that bOOSts universal child care or free college tuition. Or it's one more misguided program bound to result in eliminating work incentives, rendering large numbers ofpeople dependent on the government. MOSt UBI skeptics, and some proponents, sooner or later come tO the conclusion that the costs would be absurdly prohibitive ⅲ any case. One critic puts the figure ⅲ the U. S. at $ 3 trillion annually. Still, the idea is increasingly being put into real- world trials. Early this year, Finland became the first European country to pay unemployed citizens an unconditional monthly sum. The two-year national pilot program, gives 2 , 000 unemployed Finns ages 25 to 58 a guaranteed 0560 (around $ 590 ) , money that would keep coming even ifthey find work. The country's social-security agency says the test is intended tO cut red tape, alleviate poverty and, especially, reduce unemployment. lts existing system can disincentivize taking work because even IOW earnings prompt a cut in benefits. The Finns aren't alone: similar experiments are moving forward in Canada, the Netherlands and ltaly. The lndian governme nt appears t0 be mulling a small UBI as a strategy t0 cut the country's most extreme poverty. These tests are badly needed. Despite its age, the UBI has been studied only sparingly and inconclusively. Perhaps it should be no surprise then that putting it in beta has gained backers in SiIicon VaIIey. Y Combinator, a startup incubator, is trying it with 100 families in Oakland, Calif., this year, paymg eachbetween $ 1 , 000 and $ 2 , 000 a month. Tech's big thinkers, like BilI Gates and EIon Musk, have concluded a UBI is likely inevitable. They—like many in academia, finance and labor— see a great wave ofjob-destroying robots and artificial intelligence on the horizon. Anxieties, like dreams, Often tell us more about the shape of the present than the way things are likely to turn out in the future. That i s almost certainly the case when it comes tO J0b-razing technology—especially ifthe hyperbolic gloom that accompanied Ford's assembly line or the IBM mainframe are any p recurso r. Eve n S O, the result has been a new push for concrete answers. And the difference between a solution and a thought experiment, even a beguiling and storied one, is going t0 be in the data. 16 TIME April 24 , 2017 ロ DIGITS $ 983 MILLION Disney's Beautyand the Beast has earned nearly $ 1 billion worldwide at the bOX office since itS March 17 opening; it could soon dethrone Alice in Wonderland ( 2010 ) asthe company's top-grossing live-action remake CHARTOON BOOK IN BRIEF The pitfalls 0f giving it all away ARE BILLIONAIRE PHILANTHROPISTS uniquely good for society? N0t always, writes David Callahan in The Givers. The author argues that while the decision tO spend massive amounts Of money on causes ranging from curing disease tO remaking public education may seem wholly positive, mega- foundations with recognizable names can have undemocratic effects. "lfyou don't favor same-sex marrlage or charter schools or shutting down coal plants; ” he T H E G Ⅳ E R S . ・・ CALLAHAN OAVID 0 乢 0 「 0 AGC writes, you might を。△ not be too thrilled with hOW some billionaires have been deploying their money—subsidized, I should add, by your own tax dollars; ” since donations even tO foundations that specifically work to shape policy are often deductible. At issue for Callahan is not so much the impulse tO give but outdated government incentives tO miX giving With advocacy. This amounts, he says, to the wealthiest people havmg a louder voice than ordinary citizens. —SARAH BEGLEY Denial flowchart 0 」 0 H N AT K ー N S 0 N , W R 0 N G H A N D S 0 ト月用石月曜 Hands
home, wears her »wedding 物ん right われ d and her spouse's as 0 e れ da れ t eath ま 3 When she lost her husband, Sheryl Sandberg also lost her bearings. N 〇 w she wants tO help others find a way through grief By BeIinda Luscombe FOR DAVE GOLDBERG, MAY 1 , 2015 , WAS THE BEST DAY WITH the worst ending. The SurveyMonkey CEO was celebrating the 50th birthday of one of his closest buddies at a palm-fringed, $12,750-a-night villa in Punta Mita, a secluded Mexican resort favored by the Silicon Valley elite. The vacation had been んⅡ of what he loved: games with family and friends, walks and long talks by the pool. When he climbed on the fitness-center tread- mill that Friday, nothing but blue sky appeared ahead: his com- pany was doing well, his children were healthy, and he was as in love as ever with his superwoman wife Sheryl Sandberg, Face- book's C00 and the author of も ea . Then his heart gave out. Goldberg—Goldie to his friends—was only 47 when his younger brother R0b, R0b's wife and Sandberg found him lying in a halo ofblood, his skin blue. "I started doing CPR," says Rob. "I remember not being sure if I could feel a pulse or if it was really my ow れ heart pounding. ” Goldberg was rushed to San Javier Hospital, a dimly lit medical center. Sandberg and one of 町 her best friends, Marne Levine, sat on the linoleum floor waiting for a doctor tO give them the news they didn't want. ln short order—though she says it felt agonizingly slow— Sandberg, the complex-problem solver, the micromanager, the person with an almost freakish understanding OfhOW tO arrive at the best possible results, was thrust against something un- familiar: an outcome she couldn't change. "The wails ofher cry- ing in that hospital were unlike anything that l'd ever heard in my life,: ” says Phil Deutch, Levine's husband and the person whose birthday they were celebrating. "lt was an awful, awful scene. ” As they were leaving Goldberg's body for the last time, Sand- berg ran back t0 give him one more hug. "I think for Sheryl, let- ting go 0f him physically meant letting go 0f the moment that this could somehow not be real," says Rob. "I had to gently pull her off of him. She just wanted to hug him and wanted him to be there and wanted him to come back. ” Dying is not a technical glitch 0f the human operating sys- tem; it's a feature. lt's the only prediction we can make at birth that we can bank on. Everyone will die, and it's very likely somebody we love will die before we do. And yet the bereaved are Often treated like those tO whom something unnatural or PHOTOGRAPH BY PAOLA KUDACKI FORTIME
Television Time Off societies actually arrange themselves, which means some powerful people at the top. The women connected tO those people have more power than the men connected tO the bottom rank. 、嗄 OSS : The commanders' Wives have more power than the male servants. Atwood: You betcha. And Queen Elizabeth I had more power than Joe the peasant. TIME: ls it harder tO get proJects with multiple female leads made ? 、嗄 oss : l've found that to be an issue. I optioned a bOOk with tWO women in it and was tOld multiple times it was "tOO female. ” I was like, Are you even allowed to say that? Atwood: lt's not a problem in the world ofwriting because publishers have this lightbulb over their head that tells them that women read a lot of books. ln fact, there was a funny thing that happened a few years ago in which they were girlifying the covers ABOVE Moss s Offred, Peggy from the end 0fMad Men Margaæt At%00d 0 womanforced intO of fiction, including men's fiction. became a feminist meme. DO YO servitude after her child な Mos s : Really? think that will happen with The た e れ om her Atwood: You really had to fight off the Handmaid's Tale? publishers to keep them from putting Atwood: Why did that become a LEFT Everything that flowers on your bOOk. meme for feminism? Because Of happens ⅲ Atwood's novel Moss: What does Margaret Atwood smoking? n 山 i 曲 ' e 0 を e れ ed SO れ let れ e in read while she's relaxing? Moss: [Laughing] No. lt's her walking ん st0 the au 市 or says Atwood: l'm pretty omnivorous. into her new job. She leaves this old POP science—something Where place after a very long time. somebody else tells me the result come t0 being dead, such as myself, the Atwood: lt's a brave new world. You've with usually, I hope, lovely colored les s likely you are to attract such things. come a long way, baby. Virginia Slims. illustrations. ShOW me the pictures Young women With some power are Moss: Exactly. She's walking down and tell me what you found out. Don't particularly subject tO it, because it's also the hall, and she's carrying a box of make me actually d0 the study and kill a love-hate-love-hate thing. This is an her things and wearing sunglas s e s, all those mice. Everything from there attractive personwhom I ' 1 れ never going doesn't give a sh-t and has made this all the way through to sci-fi, spec-fic, to have a date with, so I hate them. Don't giant leap because it takes place in the regular novels, nonfiction, history, you think? ' 60S. l'm super-proud to have been biography and gr 叩 hic novels. A lot of 、復 OSS : lt's similar tO a scene in the show: part Ofa moment that people can gain history, as you might imagine. a woman reveals that she was the victim any inspiration from or connect With ofrape, and she's told, "You brought this women's rights. 第 M E: Margaret, you re very active upon yourself. You deserve this. ” I can ask the same question ofyou. on Twitter. Elisabeth, you re not on You go out in a sexy dress on the Does the fact that I have the れ 0 翫 e te Twitter at all. What do you make of red carpet, SO now we're allowed tO say bastardes carborundorum ("Don't let the sometimes tOXiC nature Of social whatever we want about you. But that's the bastards grind you down ” ) line media, including slut-shaming? from the book on my necklace, or the not 0. K. Atwood: I am on Twitter, but l'm too Atwood: That's always been the case. If fact that people get it tattooed, is that 01d tO attract slut-shaming. I hate to you go back t0 the 19th century, it was weird? breåk this to you, but I don't think opera stars and female theater stars whO Atwood: I'II tell you the weird thing anyone's interested in Ⅱ le. attracte d this kind 0f thing. lt's not new. about it: it was a jOke in our Latin Moss: [Sarcastically]What a shame. lt just gets amplified. classes. SO this thing from my childhood That's too bad. l'm so sorry about that. is permanently on people's bodies. Atwood: Right? There are pluses and TIME: Speaking ofsocial media, This interview has been edited fo 「 clarity minuses ofgetting 01der. The closeryou EIisabeth, an image ofyour character and context 40 TIME ApriI 24 , 2017 T 工 E 工 A N D M A 一 D ・ S TA L E 【 G E 0 R G E K R AYC 工 Y K—工 U L U