Angéla L 〇 riO never th 〇 ught she w 〇 uld have a friend like Jessica Mich 〇 t. L 〇 riO is a Republican wh 〇 〇 nce trained tO be a nun. Mich 〇 t is a Dem 〇 crat wh 〇 went t 〇 sch 〇 OI t 〇 be a social W 〇 rker. LoriO watches F 〇 x News; Michot watches MSNBC. L 〇 ri 〇 v 〇 ted f 〇 r D 〇 nald Trump. Mich 〇 t was for Hillary Clint 〇 n all the way. But the two Louisiana moms, whO live Just a dozen miles apart, were drawn tO each other by a force stronger than poli- tics. They met in 2013 , after discovering on Facebook that they had overlapped for months in a Baton Rouge neonatal intensive care unit, praying over tiny beds. Lori0's son John Paul and Michot's son GabrieI were born at 27 weeks, which led tO severe problems that require them to eat through feeding tubes and breathe through "trachs. ” B0th boys, now 4 , also have developmental delays, and their mothers rely on Medicaid t0 defray the COSts Of caring for their sons at home. LoriO and Michot connected immedi- ately over shared experiences—cleaning trachs, mixing formula, inserting feeding tubes—and they soon launched a group for parents like them. They called it Trach Mommas Of Louisiana. "This is the 6 t time l've had a very close friend that was on the other end 0f the [political] spec- 34 TIME July 24 , 2017 trum," says Lori0, 43 , wh0 cares for J0hn Paul full-time. "We can look in another mom's eyes and say, 'l've been there. ' That's what unites us. NOW, as Trump and the Republican- controlled Congress work tO overhaul America's health care policy, LoriO and Michot find themselve s united for another reason: bOth n101 れ S are committed tO stopping the Senate Republicans' health 'We're not going tO wait until there's a bill passed t0 speak up. If we wait tO speak up, it'll be too late. ' ELENA HUNG, mother Of Xiomara, 3 , WhO uses a trach tube tO breathe care plan, which they see as a direct threat to their children's welfare. Of particular concern iS a provision in a Senate draft proposal that would allow insurance companies tO impose lifetime caps on benefits, which could make seriously ill patients essentially uninsurable in the private market. LoriO and Michot also oppose a projected 35 % reduction over two decades in federal funding for Medicaid, which they fear would force states tO eliminate the programs that help parents ofdisabled children care for their kids at home. "They will be cutting offhis life support; ” Mich0t, 33 , says of Gabriel. "Without Medicaid, he would either be dead or institutionalized. ” SO onJuly 8 , Lori0 and Mich0t set 0ffin a bus んⅡ of wheelchairs and ventilators to Washington, where they joined more than 100 Other parents, patients and advocates for the chronically ill and disabled to pro- test the health care proposal. They were a motley trib e : Trump voters and ClintO n backers, children with oxygen tanks and adults with autism, experienced rabble- rousers and political neophytes. Some had never called their Senators' offces, much less showed up on their doorsteps. But tO- gether, these dedicated activists amount tO a powerful new constituency, one that is homegrown, bipartisan and mobilized behind a single issue: tO protect access tO federal health care benefits. This unlikely grassroots army is a key reason the Republican Party finds itself with few good options on health care, despite controlling b0th houses 0f Con- gress and the White House. As GOP law- makers attempt tO deliver on promises t0 repeal Obamacare and reduce federal entitlements, while simultaneously serv- ing constituents whO rely on those very programs, the result has been a series Of health care bills, first out ofthe House and now the Senate, that appear tO satisfy Ⅱ 0 one. The House bill, which passed in May, is the most unpopular legislation in three decades, according tO an MIT analysis Of public-opinion polls, receiving support from just 28 % ofvoters. The backlash led Senate majority leader Mitch McConneII t0 postpone a VOte on the Senate's version at the end 0f June. On July 11 he announced that the Senate would stay in session an extra tWO weeks intO August tO get the jOb done. The proposed revisions McConneII
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TheBrief Dispatch Twenty years 0 取 , 0 取 g Kong a 取臧 China are more apart 亡 a 取 ever By Nash Jenkins/Hong Kong IF YOU TAKE A TRAIN ABOUT 18 MILES NORTH OF HONG Kong'S city center and then board a creaky minibus, you will eventually find yourself on the outskirts ofthe village ofMuk Wu, which is comfortably lost to time. Here, the dense, dated, brutalist heights of Hong Kong's apartment complexes give way t0 rolling hills and rice paddies. There's a vine-covered temple at the village center with incense burning inside. Street dogs sleep in the alleys. Because this is meticulously run Hong Kong, a public restroom stands on the main lane, and it iS immaculate. Not far from MukWu, just before midnight on June 30 , 1997 , thousands ofmainland Chinese troops rumbled across the border into Hong Kong. lt was 156 years earlier that the British wrested it from China; in that time the subtropical territory, once hO sting little more than a fishing village , was transformed, most implausibly, into one 0f the world's great metropolises. NOW it was returning tO Beijing's rule under one country, tWO systems ” : Hong Kong would retain its own government and laws tO bulwark its liberal cap italist ethos under the ultimate sovereignty Of a communist power. TWENTY YEARS HAVE PASSED. Such anniversaries are arbitrary markers mostly, but they invite an opportunity for reflection—on where things are, on pledges kept or not, on what's tO come next. Never before in Hong Kong's history has such reflection been timelier. The story of contemporary Hong Kong, many residents say, is a story ofbroken promises, Of a city that has seen its crusades for democracy repeatedly defeated and its liberal values inexorably eroded by its overlords in Beijing. This as the mainland itselfhas flourished—China is the world's second biggest economy after the U. S. , and its middle class ranks among the most upwardly mobile anywhere—while Hong Kong suffers from unaffordable hous ing, limited profes sional opportunities and one ofthe widest wealth gaps in the developed world. T0day Hong Kong is an increasingly integrated part of China. Local authorities hew ever closer to BeiJing's line; main- land companies are dominating local commerce. And yet men- tally and emotionally, Hong Kong is a city 叩 art, more so than at any Other time since the handover, as the 1997 return to Chi- nese sovereignty iS known. ln a recent survey by the Univer- sity ofHong Kong, nearly two-thirds ofrespondents identified themselves as Hong Kongers rather than Chinese. "We've been brought up in a different culture," says Anson Chan, a former top Hong Kong offcial fighting for the city's freedoms. "We might as well have come from a different part ofthe world. The authorities have been singing a different tune. Their refrain: "One country, two systems" is working just fine; discontent is not widespread but emanates from a small group oftroublemakers. ForJuly 1 , the 20th anniversary 12 TIME July 24 , 2017 ofthe handover, the Hong Kong Supporters 可 government labored tO prepare an 日 0 れ g Kong's epic celeb ration, which was attended pro-democracy by Chinese President Xi Jinping, his Umbrella first visit tO the city as China's leader. Movement Lampposts around town carrie d the watchfireworks event's slogan: TOGETHER, PROGRESS, 0 れ Ju 1 , the OPPORTUNITY. The anmversary S 20th 0 れれⅣ ersa 以 offcial theme song, called "Hong 可市 e city's Kong Our Home,: ” extols a city that is return tO China "shining ever brighter. ” One local online commentator wondered, "Does this 'home ' still look like a home ? ” IT CAN BE ARGUED that thiS malaise is nothing more than the logical conclusion ofa century and a half ofpowerlessness. "Hong Kong has always been a colony," says 26-year-old independence activist Chan HO-tin. "We were a colony under the British, and we're a colony under the Chinese. never had a say in our future. ” That's not an unfair point. ln the early 1980S , London and Beijing started negotiating the future of Hong Kong, the British lease on which was set to T Y R 0 N E S 一 U ー R E U T E R S
Time Off B00 s FICTION AMONG SPENCE'S DISCOVERIES: Red lighting and high-pitched music enhance fruit notes in Wine The moving spirit JOSHUA COHEN HAS BECOME one ofAmerica's top young novelists with his fiction that draws on biblical stories, including Witz ( 2010 ) and B00 た ofNumbers ( 2015 ) , bOth twists on classic Jewish themes. HiS new novel, MovingKings, is the tale ofa modern-day King David: a moving and storage magnate named David King. He's a sad clown with blue collar sensibilities and white collar bank accounts. And though the characters may not be p articularly erudite, C0hen's writing is filled with sharp turns ofphrase and elegant rhythms. David is "local color, just out ofhis locale, at a high-society party: “ They probably thought he was physically tough. They probably thought he was in with the mob. ” Cohen's cadence is inflected with Hebrew, a language that David defines as "the speech ofthe beleaguered, the last exasperation before a spanking. ' And a spanking is coming for David and his family. An lsraeli cousin and his army friend come to work for David in New York, moving boxes but also evicting African Americans who've defaulted on their mortgage payments. The denouement iS as vengeful as any Old Te stament plot twist. —SARAH BEGLEY GASTROPHYSICS CHARLES SPENCE THE NEW SCIENCEOF EATING "The scientist changing the way we —The Guardian NONFICTION The shape and sound of a perfect meal hadn't altered the recipe; consumers ATRULY GREAT MEAL IS ABOUT SO MUCH more than the flavors that touch our just thought it had, because we perceive tongue s ー including the napkins , the light- f00d presented ⅲ round shapes (whether ing, the company we re with. ln Gastro- a candy bar, beetrootjelly or chocolate physics: The New Science 0fEating, Uni- shavings on a latte) tO be sweeter than versity ofOxford psychology professor angular sh 叩 es. Charles Spence examines the way our five senses, as well as our emotional states and Pop the lid offyour coffee. ln order to expectations , influence hOW we experi- fully experience your food—including a ence fOOd. Drawing on hiS research jolt ofjava—you need to smell as well as and others', Spence offers simple adjust- taste it. The lid on a t0-go cup 0f coffee ments that can enhance dining pleasure. puts a barrier between that invigorating fresh-ground scent and the part ofyour Decorate your surroundings. The secret brain that forms expectations ofwhat ingredient tO your signature lasagna can be you're about t0 enjoy. Without what's hOW you set the table. When researchers called orthonasal information, your coffee set up tWO dining areas—one with ltalian may taste the same way it does when you posters and checkered tablecloths, and have a cold—weak. one with white tablecloths and plain walls—patrons in the decorated setting Listen. Spence calls sound "the forgotten judged the pasta dishes t0 be more flavor sense ” and says it iS essential tO a authentically ltalian than those in the pleasurable dining experience. He found neutral setting. that, for instance, enhancing the sound Of a potato -chip crunch impacted its Cue sweetness with shape. Chocolate perceived freshness. some suggestions maker Cadbury faced complaints when to add crunch in Gastrop hysics : sprinkle it changed the sh 叩 e ofits Dairy Milk bar croutons or toasted seeds over a saladjust from rectangles tO rounds in 2013 ー not before serving. (Those who hate the sound because Ofthe lOOk, but because the new of others ' chewing, beware. ) treats were t00 sweet. But the company —LUCY FELDMAN 50 TIME July 24 , 2017 JOSHIJA COHEN
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reckless for sure and potentially treason- ous in the worst-case scenario. Maybe this is what it means tO elect a billionaire de almaker to the White House. Trump has promised tO put "Amer- ica first. ” But in this episode, the guid- ing mind-set seems, at best, tO be a very strange, postnational wheeler-dealer- ism. The juicy fruit dangled ⅲ front of Trump Jr. was supposedly passed 仕 om the Kremlin's chief prosecutor tO a real e state oligarch name d Aras Agalarov. He has been a pal of the Trumps ever since the future Pre s ident staged a Mis s Uni- verse pageant in Moscow in 2013. Known as "Putin's builder ” for his close ties tO the Russian leader, Agalarov proposed a part- nership tO construct a Trump-branded skyscraper in the Russian capital, and he remained in touch with the new Presi- dent even after the deal fell through. Ag- alarov also had well-established ties to Yuri Chaika, Russia's pro secutor general since 2006 , and publicly came t0 Chaika's defense against corruption claims in 2015. Agalarov's son Emin, a pop star in Russia for whom Trump once appeared in a music video, iS on a first-name basis with Trump Jr. lt was Emin who first asked for the meeting—via his publicist, a Fleet Street veteran of Britain's rough-and-tumble tabloids named Rob Goldstone. Although E min did not wind up at Trump Tower (instead, the visitor was a connected attorney named Natalia Veselnitskaya), the overall picture was a series Of transactions, from 1 れ ogul tO mogul, heir tO heir, Moscow tO London tO Manhattan. Borders vanish when you're 100king down 仕 om a privatejet at cruising altitude. BUT WITH CONGRESSIONAL commit- tees at work and with Mueller bulking up his staff at the Justice Department, questions Of patriotism may pale beside questions oflegal and political jeopardy. ln 1974 , before Trump had built his first tower or Trump Jr. had drawn his first breath, Senator LIoyd Bentsen of Texas explained in a silky drawl the reasoning behind his proposed ban on international SUpport for U. S. political campaigns. "I am s aying that contributions by foreign nationals are wrong, B e nts en honeye d "and they have no place in the American political system. Over the years, the Bentsen amend- 30 TIME JulY24, 2017 ment has been interpreted tO ban many types Of informatio n sharing, on grounds that information is itself a thing Of value. For example, the Federal Election Commission ruled in a 1990 case that polling data can be a thing of value if shared with a campaign. Legal experts are split on the question 0f whether Trump Jr. could be charged with conspiring to break Bentsen's law by accepting anti-Clinton research—a thing Of value t0 the Trump campaign—even ifthe supposed research was never, in fact, delivered. One skeptic is Jan Baran, an expert 0 Ⅱ campaign laws at the firm 0f Wiley Rein. For many years, he notes, federal regulations have permitted foreign nationals tO volunteer on U. S. campaigns, and in this case the Agalarovs might simplybe volunteers wh0 offered t0 carry 'documents and information ” that they picked up at no cost. SO where is the foul? "Everyone's upset that Don Jr. met with Russians, but I don't see where there's a violation Of campaign-finance laws, let alone a conspiracy tO violate those laws,' Baran says. Other theories of legal peril lurk out- side of campaign law. Perhaps Trump Jr. violated the ancient Logan Act, a relic of the 18th century that forbids "intercourse With any foreign government ” in connec- tion With "disputes or controversles With the United States. ” Would it matter that no one has been convicted under the law in more than 200 years? Senator Tim Kaine, a Democrat from Virginia and Clinton's running mate, raised the stakes further by saying that these fresh revelations move the Russia investigation intO the realms Of' perjury, A more plausible charge iS obstruction Of justice—and here the President himself might be vulnerable false statements and even, potentially, treason. ” The first two crimes on his list might apply t0 Kushner, who had t0 6 Ⅱ out a form disclosing contacts with foreign offcials as part 0f the screening process for security clearance for an offlcial White House position. lfhe could be shown tO have omitted the meeting with the Russian lawyer on purpose, he could be vulnerable. Neither Trump Jr. nor Manafort was subject tO the vetting. Treason, meanwhile, iS an extremely hard case to make. Only about 30 Americans in the history Of the country have been charged with it. The only crime defined in the Constitution, treason is limited t0 "levying war ” against the U. S. , "adhering tO their enemies ” or giving [those enemies] aid and comfort. ” The attempted hanky-panky at Trump Tower is not likely tO meet that test. A more plausible charge is obstruction ofjustice—and here the President himself might be vulnerable. As inve stigators dig deeper into all things Russia-related, they might find explanations for some 0f Trump's seemingly erratic decisions. Why did he praise former FBI director James Comey publicly, allegedly court his loyalty privately and then fire him so abruptly? Why didTrump encourage the Russians to hack Clinton's emails, then deny evidence that Russian hacking t00k place? Was he tryng tO derail or divert the inve stigation? Even ifhe was, can a Presidentbe indicted for thwarting an investigation when his exe cutive authority clearly includes the Justice Department? Such questions may explain why one Of Mueller's first hires is an expert in constitutional law and the limits Of executive power. Mueller, WhO was for a dozen years the director Of the FBI, has been summoned back tO the Justice Department tO riddle out his own verslon ofthe question "HOW bad is it? ” SO far he isn't saymg. Beyond the legal implications lies the political damage, which will be tallied over time. Trump hadjust returned from a trip to Europe when the latest bad news broke, blotting out coverage ofhis speech defending Western values in Poland and casting ajaundiced light on his first meet- ing with Putin. With his agenda bottled up in Congress by the cork 0f an unpop- ular health care bill, Trump may be los- ing any ability t0 focus political attention
1 TheBrief FOREIGN POLICY NO good options on North Korea By PhiIip Ⅲ 0 WHEN DAVID PRESSMANWOULD SIT down with his counterparts from China or Russia tO discuss the provocations Of North Korea, he often heard the same message coming across the tables: "You need to talk. You need to talk. ” lt was maddening tO Pressman, the former U. S. ambassador to the U. N. for special political affairs. Talking works only ifboth parties agree t0 an agenda, and the U. S. and North Korea could not even get that far. "The United States is prepared t0 talk. We're prepared tO talk about denuclearization Ofthe Korean peninsula; ” says Pressman, now a partner at BOies Schiller Flexner. "But the North Koreans are not willing tO have that conversation. The North transient and flawed. And North Korea's Kim celebrates the test launch 可市 e Koreans want tO have a conversation most potent quasi friend, China, has Hwaso れ g -14 ICBM ⅲ thisphoto released that accepts their status as a nucle ar proved tO be reluctant tO pressure 妙 the North Koreangovernment 0 れ 5 power. ” That, many argue, is not a Pyongyang. President Donald Trump difference the U. S. can overlook. has signaled that he wants action ofsome And yet the need for some kind of sort. ln April, Vice President Mike Pence would also be fierce—and 25 million engagement has become more urgent visited the demilitarized zone between South Koreans live within range Of in recent weeks. North Korea tested North and South Korea to declare that conventional weapons, while Japan an intercontinental ballistic missile on "the era ofstrategic patience is over. ” But is also a target. An incomplete U. S. - July 4 that, in theory, can reach Alaska. lt the new Administration has not backed led military strike on just one facility was a remarkable milestone for a country up its tough talk with a stated strategy, could COSt as many as 1 million lives that routinely pledges to annihilate raiS1ng concerns from veteran observers. and $ 1 trillion, according tO one Americans. And it isn't stopping. "The worst option is Just to threaten Pentagon estimate given tO Clinton- SO what is tO be done? There are without understanding what the is sues era negotiators. The math has n't gotte n no good options, current and former are,' warns former Secretary ofState kinder in the intervening years. government offcials agree. "You're not MadeIeine AIbright. The most immediate at-risk Ameri- choosing between good and bad; ” says Here's a lOOk at the three main cans, beyond those living in South Korea Victor Cha, a former NationaI Security approaches and their complications: and Japan, are the Alaskans , who are bet- CounciI director for George W. Bush. ting that U. S. antimissile defenses can "You're choosing between bad, really intercept an incoming nuclear weapon. M ー L 夏 TA R マ AT TA C K bad, worse and much worse options. Alaska Governor Bill Walker has toured FEW THINK THE し S. CAN BOMB ITS North Korea's nuclear program has way 0f this. For one thing, North the missile base at Fort Greely and tells bedeviled U. S. Presidents 仕 om both Korea is adept at hiding its missiles, TIME that he has confidence ⅲ the mili- parties, across decades. Attempts tO and there's no guarantee the U. S. c ould tary's ability to defend his state ofabout curb its program have been shown as get them all. North Korean retribution 740 , 000 people. "As the threat grows, we 0 JULY 1994 North Korea's founder, President Kim Ⅱ Sung, dies, ending 45 years in power. HiS son Kim 」 ong Ⅱ succeeds him. 8 TIME July 24 , 2017 OCTOBER 1994 2000 North Korea signs Secretary Of State the Agreed Frame- MadeIeine Albright work, WhiCh sus- visits North Korea pends its nuclear- and is the first senior American officialto power program and commits ittO meet with a North nonproliferation. Korean leader,. JANUARY 2002 President George W. Bush says North Korea is part Of an "axis ofevil ” with lran and lraq in his State of the Union address. OCTOBER 2006 North Korea conducts an under- ground nuclear test, sparking U. N. condemnation and economic sanctions.
A PO 催 YOUNG M MINISTERASA IN IRELAND, SOFT POWER IS USUALLY SERVED up in a pint glass. World leaders visiting the country can expect tO be treated tO a Guinness by the Taoiseach (). k. a. Prime Minister) during the obligatory ph0t0 op inside a genuine lrish pub. But when lreland's new Taoiseach, Leo Varadkar, welcomed Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to Dublin in early July, he broke with tradition. lnstead 0f clinking pints 0f the black stuff in a dimly lit bar, Varadkar invited fitness fanatic Trudeau tO don his running shoes and go for a jog in a 10Ca1 park. The unorthodox meeting wasn't just a phOtO op, the new Prime Minister insists, sitting in his Dublin Offce on JuIy 7. The jog also allowed him to talk freely with his Canadian counte rp art away from the note takers and photographers. "He was able t0 give me some advice on the experience ofbeing a new head ofgovernment; ” Varadkar says. "He was 18 months in offlce and I was 18 days in offce, so he had a few tips to give me. " When Varadkar ascended tO his country's highest offce 0 Ⅱ June 14 , he became, at 38 , the youngest prime Minister in lreland's history, and by far its least typical. Born t0 an lndian PHOTOGRAPH BYNICK BALLON FOR TIME BY 」 ENNIFER DUGGAN/DUBLIN had a leader like Leo Varadkar The RepubIic Of lreland has never ロ OF THE PRIME order that is turning inward. He names Trudeau, are defining themselves in opposition tO an Older and growing cohort ofyouthful world leaders who He and the 45-year-01d Canadian represent a new meeting with a head Of state was with Trudeau. a "Xennial ” ). lt was no accident that his first at the tail end 0f Generation X, he's technically world (although hejokes that, being born ⅲ 1979 , openness tO hOW his country approaches the Varadkar wants t0 bring this spirit 0f millennial eyebrows were raised. was t0 lead a pride parade through Dublin. Few but little dismay. One ofhis first acts as Taoiseach radiO, a revelation that was greeted with surprise Minister for Health, came out as gay on national During the referendum campaign, Varadkar, then tO legalize same-sex marriage by popular vote. lreland became the first country in the world once abastion ofstaunch Catholic values. ln 2015 , in social attitudes in this country Of 4.7 million, F il. His premiership also reflects a sea change Fine Gael Party and its center-left rival Fianna predated him, and from his own center-right a break from the parade ofaging white men who father and an lrish mother, Varadkar represents
8 Questions Ma1ala Yousafzai The Nobel peace prize winner turned 20 in the Hassan Shami camp for displaced people outside MosuI, lraq, a stop on her pre-college GirI Power Trip people outside 0f these regions would What is your first impression Of the girls and this camp? Seeing h0W not even imagine for a second are a hot it is, the lack 0f electricity, the reality other people are going through, lack Of facilities—it's quite a lOt tO and we cannot be silent. live here. But then seeing these girls whO still have the courage tO continue Does it ever feellike t00 much their education and tO have dreams. pressure t0 speak on behalfofall These people wanted t0 change their these girls? I think the pressure is not community, they wanted tO change from 0ther people but from me. There their education, and they wanted tO are millions ofchildren WhO can't access rebuild their communitie s. their education, and I can't be silent. But my aim is tO appoint inspiring stars among these communities WhO want tO ISIS has been defeated ⅲ Mosul, speak up and tO encourage them tO dO but it doesn't mean these girls are SO. Because ifyou keep on waiting for going ome. What are some Of the someone else, things Will never change. challenges that yo 収 faced ⅲ Pakistan that YO see here? The first thing is a lack ofinvestment, because many Has it been a challenge for yo tO be ⅲ governments and people are treated the public eye for SO long? I wanted tO as short-term. There are no schools. change the world when I was 11. I wanted Syrian refugees have been away from to be the Prime Minister ofPakistan and their homes for more than five years, fix eve rything. I still b elieve that through and they have missed school. There's a raISing your VOice , you can bring lack of funding from the international change in your community. But it has community and governments. The bee n challenging. I was getting my organizations working here, like own education. I had tO go tO schOOl, I UNICEF, need the funding to be had to do my homework, I had exams , sustained. Other than that, raising I had teachers. And then l'd come awareness iS lmportant, tO ensure that out Of schOOl, and there 's another the message is sent tO refugee families life , traveling to Jordan and Leb anon, that education is important for their speaking t0 Syrian refugee s , working daughters. in Pakistan, running the fund, the book … Women can do lots of things at the same time. We're What Other countries are yo 収 visiting on your GirI power Trip? My plan good at multitasking. is tO go tO Africa, South America and North America—one country in each YO just finished sc ぬ 00 廴 ofthese continents—to meet girls who What dO yo 設 want have inspiring stories and tO encourage tO study at college? them tO raise their VOice. Nayir, a girl in Philosophy ofpolitics and this camp, has lived under terrorism for economics. I got an Offer more than three years, and she suffered. from Oxford, so I hope that She lost her father, and now she's living I get the grades that I need as a refugee, but ifyou listen t0 her, she tO go tO the university. still has hope. People often forget that this is the way refugee children can have DO yo 設 still want tO a future: you educate them. Otherwise be the Prime Minister it is a generation lOSt. Of Pakistan? Ah, not as much. ln any case, I think you have t0 be 35 years or What dO yo hope drawing attention tO these girls' stories will dO? l'm older to be the prime Minister, hoping people will listen t0 these so I still have time 卩 augh 引 . incredible stories. Situations that most ー・ REBECCA COLLARD 52 TIME July 24 , 2017 'PeopIe Often forget that this is the way refugee children have a future: you educate them. Otherwise it is a generation lOSt. ' PAUL ELLIS—AFP 、 GETTY IMAGES