TheView ・ WE ARE QUICKER TO WEEP, QUICKER TO RAGE, QUICKER TO RISE UP. ' —NEXT PAGE SP0rts C00t00 d00 「 pool 12 1 Princess D greets 0 crowd during herfirst 0 が ci visit tO Wales, ⅲ 1981 her marriage tO prince Charles was I MET PRINCESS DIANAIN 1991 , breaking down. She spoke of adultery when I was 11 years 01d. I belonged t0 on both sides and ofher struggles the ch0ir 0fSt. George's Chapel, Wind- with bulimia. lnstead ofbeing a future sor Castle, and we sang services for the Queen ofthe country, she said, she royal family on occasion. Diana came tO wished t0 be a "queen ofpeople's talk tO us boys in the cloisters after one hearts. ” The British press sneered. such service, being the mother Ofsons Yet now, 20 years after her death, on close tO our age. The conversation was Aug ・ 31 , 1997 , this is her legacy: less a mostly about the hardships ofboard- queen ofhearts, perhaps, than a queen ing school, and one ofour number ad- ofthe heart. Demonstrating the cour- mitted tO missing his family. "Me tOO' ” age to break out 0fa rigidly hidebound she replied. I remember it seeming establishment tO expose notjust her curious at the time—isn't she with her failing marriage but also her wounded family? —but I am old enough now t0 feelings—that wasn't something people realize that her replywas characteristic did in the mid-'90s, not in Britain. Of D iana, at least as the public came tO Those were changing times, hOW- know her: expressive, empathetic and ever. The ruling Conservative Party giving ofherself, perhaps t00 much so. that gave us Winston Churchill, lt was this Diana wh0 would give Harold McMiIIan and Margaret a nakedly confessional interview tO Thatcher was then coming apart, the BBC's Martin Bashir in 1995 as CULTURE HOW Diana became Britain's 'queen Of the heart' By Dan Stewart/London S 39V 一Å 113 9 PHOTOGRAPH BYTIM GRAHAM
0 IME The View The Features Time Off K ⅲ g 訳〃 Owens, 0 top 9 ツ e -01d basketball 明 at home i れも OS Angeles onAug. 2 2 ー Conversation 引 For the Record ldeas, opinion, innovations ユ 5 ー How Princess Diana's death, 20 years ago, changed Britain ユ 7 ー The American 、 V01 れ en WhO were elected before they could vote 1 The fight tO put up more statues ofwomen What tO watch, read, This Land ls Whose Land? see and dO President Trump's review 0fU. S. 43 ー The science nationalmonuments has set Offa behind songs that bitter clash over public space and Win the summer private rights B ア Ka 収 Steinmetz 20 46 ー Movie reviews : Beach Rats Americans in North Korea and C brn Typewriter Roughly 200 U. S. citizens live or work in North Korea. NOW they 4 引 Jesmyn Ward's have until Sept. 1 tO get out latest novel, Sing, By Elizabeth Dias 26 Unburied, Sing, probes race in the South ロ The Kids' Sp 0 s Machine 5 幻 JoeI Steintakes lnside the boomingbusiness that is his liberal wife to a overwhelming American families shooting range By Sean Gregory 32 52 Questions for tennis star Garbifie Muguruza The Brief News 斤 om the し S. and around the world 5 ー President Trump ShOWS tWO sides, but reveals his true one 6 ー Emmanuel Macron's first 100 days 8 llan Bremmer: WhyNigeria's President needs tO name a successor 9 ー Remembering comedians Jerry Lewis and Dick Gregory ONTHE COVER 10 ー Terrorist ANDABOVE: attacks across the Photographs 妙 Mediterranean FinlayMacKay threaten tourism forTIME TIME Asia is published 可 TIME Asia (Hong Kong) Limted. TIME publishes eight double issues. Each counts as 0 of 52 issues in an annual subscriptlon. TIME may 引 so publish occasional extra issues. @ 2017 Time Asia (Hong Kong) Limited. AII rights reserved. Reproduction in whOle 0 「 in Wlthout written FHmission is p 「 Ohib 8. TIME and the Red Border are protected 物「 ou trademark registration in the U. S. and in the countries ⅷ肥「 e TIME magazine circulates. Member, Audit Bureau Of Circulations. れ : げ the services 謝 e 代 us that u 「 magazine is undeliverable, have no further ObligatlOn unless 、肥「 ecei 肥 a cnrrected address within 20 a 「 s. CUSTOMER AND For 24 / 7 e , 加 more a 0 e 博 OI , pleaæ v 忙わ年//W物、既ゼinea引äsu騰.com/驪′ⅵ8.php. You may 引 SO email our Customer Serviæs Center at enqui′iæ@timeasia.* 0 「 call ( 852 ) 312 & 5688 , 0 「 write tO Time Asia (Hong Kong) Limlted, 3 〃 F, 0 対 Ord House,Taikoo 日 ace , 979 Kings Road,Quarry Bay, Hong Kong. 旧」 apan,these are eれ4ⅵ村$扣paれ8”1聞引a.com 0 「 012066 236 (Free Dial) 0 「 2- 1-27FAtago , MinatO-ku,TOkyo 1056227. Ad 冊杙 ir : Forinformation and rates, Hong KongTelephone: ( 852 ) 312 & 5169. Orvisit: 曲ーー .0 / 1 ね k 肥 Reprint: lnformation is available at 物れ e. 00 れ 1 / 物れ e / ′ ep ′域 TO requestcustom *. M 物胸 t : We make a ⅲ on ofourmailing listavailableto reputable rms. lfyou w 旧 prefer that 、 not include u 「 name, please contact ou 「 Customer Serviæs Center. TIME Asia is edited in Hong Kong and pnnted in and Hong Kong. Slngapore MCI(P) NO. 067 / 08 / 2017. Malaysia KKDN 5Ermit no. PPS 676 / 03 / 2013 ( 022933 ). 1
LightBox combined With several seasons Of political upheaval has torpedoed its tourism industry. ln 2014 , Turkey was the sixth most popular tourist destination in the world, welcoming 37 million visitors. ln 2016 , when Turkeywas shaken by bombings, a failed military coup and a political crackdown, only 25.3 million arrived, according t0 the government. Throughout 2016 , ISIS specifically targeted the nation's tourist infrastructure, attacking lstanbul's main airport ; the historic Sultanahmet district ; and lstiklal, a vast pedestrian boulevard comparable t0 Las Ramblas. "You know how people get when hearing those stories. SO they don't want tO come; ” says Emin Emingil, 28 , a tourist guide in lstanbul. The damage to other European tourist economies by ISIS-inspired attackers has not been as catastrophic, but the toll has been felt. FoIIowing the November 2015 gun and bomb attack in Paris, 1.5 million fewer tourists visited the French capital in 2016 , compared with the year before. But France remained the world's top tourist destination in 2016 , welcoming as many as 83 million visitors, a number that was slightly down from the record of 85 million in 2015. For lslamic State extremists, these attacks Offer an inexpensive way notJust tO target victims 仕 om across the world, but also to pr0Ject power and sow fear. Using a diffuse network ofoperatives and homegrown devotees, ISIS continues tO assert itS position as the world's foremost j ihadist group, making its case tO would-be "soldiers ” and posing a challenge for secunty services everywhere. Even as ISIS gunmen lose the ground war in their citadels in lraq and Syria, the group's campaign of terrorism ShOWS no sign ofslowing down in Europe and the Middle East. When mayhem iS sown SO easily using tOOlS no more high-tech than rented vans and trucks, it is hard for anybody tO stop. The assault on Las RambIas was only the latest attempt to target travelers enjoying the culture, the sun and the salt sea Ofthe Mediterranean. lt is not expected t0 be the last. For more ofour bestphotography, visittime.com/lightbox 12 TI M E September 4 , 2017 第第 3 、第イを A souvenir s 可厄「 naps during a SIOW day ⅲ Cappadocia, one Of Turkey's most popular tourist destint There are plenty Of spare sun beds ⅲ the Turkish 肥 so 戒 town of Side
For the Record 98 % 'THETRUMP PRESIDENCY THAT WE FOUGHT FOR, ANDWON, IS OVER' STEPHEN BANNON, ex—chief strategist tO the U. S. President, afterleaving the Administration and retaking the helm Of the conservative populist news site Breitbart Rate of increased risk for P00 「 sleep quality among people whO watch three- plus TV episodes in one sitting right before bed 'We will have to die on the side of the road. ' Bing The search engine claims tO account for a surprisinglylarge 33 % ofU. S. search traffic '0nce this Pandora's b0X is 0 ened, it to close.' MOHAMMADSAHI MUDDIN, resident Of Birgun. 」 , Nepal, describing the dire situation after flooding across South Asia, which has killed at least 800 people and destroyed more than 500 , 000 homes and over 400 , 000 hectares of farmland 37 ・Ⅳ角 a 亡 is bad in the 〇 / 〇 gy bad in /aw as we//.' KURIAN 」 OSEPH, 」 ustice oflndia's Supreme Court, writing in a majority opinion that the fundamentalistlslamic practice Of a man's needing only tO say "talaq" thrice tO divorce a woman iS unconstitutional Consecutive games in which Yankees star rookie Aaron Judge struck out, an MLB record Bong London's BigBenwentsilent on Aug. 21 while it undergoes renovations ELON MUSK, Tesla CEO, and 115 Other leading experts on artificial intelligence, calling on the U. N. tO ban the use Of Alin weapons manufacturing ILLUSTRATIONS BY BROWN BIRD DESIGN FOR TIME $60,000 'You're ad 〇 rably 〇 u 亡可亡〇 uch. ' LOUISE LINTON, wife ofTreasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin, replying tO an lnstagram commenter whO criticized Linton's phOtO Of her and her husband exiting a government plane with a caption listing the high-end designers of her clothes Money spent by the Secret Service on go cart rentals in 2017 tO protect the President at two of his resorts 4 TIME September 4 , 2017 SOURCES: AL-JAZEERA; ARS TECHNICA; JOURNAL OF CLINICAL SLEEP MEDICINE; MLB; USA TODAY; WEEKLY STANDARD
DATA おを SPEED TEST Singapore hasthe world's fastest broadband speeds, according tothe new S peedtest G lObaI lndex, a monthly globalranking that allows you tO compare your speed with the national average. Here's a sample Of countries and their average speeds in 」 uly's rankings, by megabits per second: 4 OVER THE MOON A pair Of newlyweds, Nathan Mauger and Connie Young, toast the solar eclipse on Aug. 21 with theirwedding party at ManitO park's Rose Garden in Spokane, Wash. The couple exchanged vows on the morning Ofthe cosmic event, dubbed the Great American Eclipse. According tO NASA, the tOtal eclipse could be viewed in 14 states across the U. S. Photograph by COlin Mulvany—The Spokesman-Review/AP ユ 54-38 Singapore 9 ュ .48 Romania icant autonomy. Within days, tens ofthousands Of Hong Kong jails its first protesters tOOk tO the streets in a 79-day occupation known as the Umbrella Movement. prisoners Of conscience THE PUNISHMENT The three were convicted in THREE OF HONG KONG'S MOST INFLUENTIAL summer 2016 on charges ofunlawful assembly activists, Joshua Wong, 20 , Nathan Law, 24 , and and inciting unrest and sentenced tO community Alex Chow, 27 , were sentenced on Aug. 17 tO six- tO service. But on Aug. 17 an 叩 peals court ruled the eight-month prison terms for their roles in the 2014 punishment tOO SOft and sent them immediately Umbrella Movement protests, dealing a major blow tO prison. The new sentences mean they will be tO the territory 's youthful democracy movement. barred 仕 om Offce for five years. "This is meant tO be a threat,: ” wong told TIME shortly before the THE OFFENSE On Sept. 26 , 2014 , Wong, Lawand verdict was handed down. chow led a group ofstudents in storming a fore- court at the governme nt headquarters tO protest THE FUTURE The jailing has been viewed by many as perceived chinese interference in elections in Hong a warning by china that dissent ⅲ Hong Kong will Kong, a special administrative region granted signif- no longer be tolerated and a sign that the courts, long regarded as independent, may be bowing t0 political pressure. With its leaders behind bars' Hong Kong's democratic youth movement now lOOk t0 their political party, Demosist0, for new life. —FELIZ SOLOMON/HONG KONG く wong helped kick-start the Umbrella Movement protests ⅲ 2014 , when he was 17 ears 0 旧 ACTIVISM 70.75 47.62 Germany 24-32 Australia の一 A1139 、 9d39W0018 ー一 3 」 YIA 》 V コ 纛をー . ー , まン Ⅲ当一十 ユ 2.66 Greece 3-20 Venezuela
0 物 0 0 第第 0 0 第を 0 UTAH 0 第鳳第 0 第第 0 ー第第 物 largely comes from new rules that may follow, from bans on building new roads tO no longer allowing mining tO b arring ATVs. "The people who have this in their backyard feel like nobody listens to us,: ” Utah Governor Gary Herbert tells TIME. Ranchers in the Bears Ears area, for instance, fret that the federal government may eventually ban cattle grazing inside the monument's boundaries, land they depend on to feed their herds. Such enterprises are "very hardscrabble; ” says Chris Mehl of Headwaters Economics, a Montana-based research firm. "lt's profitable, but there's a tight margin, and unlike ⅲ the East, the federal government plays a huge role in that. ” The frustration is not limited to the West, however. ln Maine, Governor paul LePage accused Obama of ignoring local opposition last year when the former President proclaimed an area Of dense forests and trout-filled streams tO be Katahdin Woods and Waters National Monument. The RepubIican governor has refused to put up signs that would help direct visitors there. The land was donated by Burt's Bees co-founder Roxanne Quimby with the understanding that Obama would pre- serve it, says her son Lucas St. Clair. "You can lOOk in every direction and all you see is trees," he says. "lt's a rare thing. ' Many locals are hopeful that the monument designation will benefit the area. Others prefer things the way they were. "lt's a vanity parl< ” says B0b Meyers, executive director ofthe Maine Snowmobile Asso- ciation, lamenting a streamside trail that he can no longer ride. ln ()regon, an organization represent- ing timber mills has sued over Obama's expansion 0f Cascade-Siskiyou National Monument, a hub Of biodiversity that sits at the crux ofconverging ecosystems. Critics argue that the action effectively banned logging on lands that Congress des ignated for timber production decades ago, deprivmg county governments Ofrev- enue they need for libraries and mental- health services. "We're very dependent on timber dollars; ” says Tim Freeman, a commissioner in Douglas County. Conservationists are concerned for animal habitats. When Zinke visited in July, hundreds 0f monument supporters greeted him with signs bearing messages like, WHAT WOULD TEDDY DO? 0 ・ 0 を、滝 0 VIL 3 and sea that some value for future yields and Others treasure for its ties tO the past. "We don't want the land to be de- き stroyed; ” says James Adakai, a member Of the NavajO Nation who lives across the river from Bears Ears, where Native Americans have held ceremonies and gathered herbs for centuries. "lt's like saymg, 'Let's shrink Mount Rushmore. IT'S NOT QUITE ACCURATE tO call a monument designation a "land grab,: ” because Presidents can only anoint places that the federal government already owns 舅 or controls. ()t requires an act ofCongress tO create a national park. ) The resentment TO 広 Activists at Utah's state capitol 叩 pose making 0 changes tO れ atiO 〃 monuments in the state; bottom: lnterior Secretary ッ 0 Zinke, 10 Westerner, has been ViSiting contested monuments 妙 horseback 0 れ d canoe 23
the new travel ban has prompted many to break that rule. They say they respect the State D epartment 's national-security concerns but that the cost Of withdraw- ing aid is severe. "The President has tO make a strong stand,: ” says Franklin Gra- ham, whose global aid organization has done work in North Korea for 20 years. But, he adds, "we've got to continue to try tO worlc ” Many ofthe Americans who call North Korea home are pushing the Trump Ad- ministration for new perm1SSion tO re- turn. The State Department may allow limited exceptions, but the scope is not yet clear. "lt's an abhorrent moral alge- bra that has overtaken us, that if moral evil is visited on great numbers, then the plight ofindividuals—and thus [the] work t0 relieve the suffering of individuals— somehow doesn't matter,: ” says RObert Carlin, a former U. S. offcial and behind- the-scenes diplomat during the Clinton, Bush and Obama years. "Have we lost our moral compass? ” THE U. S. —NORTH KOREArelationship has long wavered between delicate and dan- gerous. Although the Korean War ended ⅲ 1953 , leaving more than 1 million North Koreans and 36 , 000 Americans dead, a peace treatywas never signed, and enmity remains. Attempts tO restart relations in the decades since have been short-lived, poisoned by distrust. Time and again, nuclear-nonproliferation negotiations have fallen apart or deals have been bro- ken, with te ns ions spiking, though they have recently receded since North Korea stopped testing missiles in mid-August. that time, starting the first program for alleged crimes against humanity, includ- ing persecution for political crimes with As recently as early August, North KO- multidrug-resistant TB. "These efforts rean state media threatened torching the torture, starvation and forced labor. But are really outliers, in part because they are the U. S. groups are careful t0 respect the mainland U. S. with "an unimaginable sea completely going against the grain 0f the of fire. ” President Trump, meanwhile, body language that both governments are rules, and their focus is service projects. counterthreatened with "fire and fury Christian Friends Of Korea grew out sending t0 their people; ” says SC0tt Sny- of Graham's visit tO North Korea in the like the world has never seen. der, a senior fellow for Korea studies at The quiet U. S. humanitarian effort the Council on Foreign Relations. early 1990S. Linton, the group's execu- in North Korea began as a response tO The new relationships were fragile tive director, traveled tO North Korea in a famine there ⅲ the mid-1990s, which August for a routine visit with a team Of at the start. A century ago, Christianity eight Other Americans, three Norwegians killed hundreds of thousands of people. thrived in the region, and American evan- and an Australian, all volunteers, tO install Groups like UNICEF, Mercy Corps and gelist Billy Graham's late wife Ruth even clean-water systems and continue their World Vision delivered food aid. When attended school ⅲ Pyongyang. Today North Korea's constitution 引 lows for free- hep atitis B tre atment program. LintO n the world's focus shifted away, Christian Often visits the tWO Protestant churches charitie s stuck around and deepened their dom of religion, but the country forbids and the one Cath01ic-heritage church in ties. The Eugene BeII Foundation, which proselytizing. Such subtle distinctions Pyongyang, but she does not proselytize may be lost on an outside world preoccu- was founded by a Southern Presbyterian or preach. Her team ofvolunteers works 舅 minister, began supporting tuberculosis pied with North Korea's outlaw status: in alongside Korean offcials during every 2014 , the U. N. condemned its leaders for treatment efforts in North Korea around 29 PYONGYANG MEDICAL Ⅷ旧 S 胛 HOS 円瓏 } { u れ 10 itaria workers た e the 0 , to 0 れ d も i tO above, have helped Ⅳ or 市 Koreans foryears
High-end polarized sunglasses are a CO 1n10n accessory Ⅳ 00d bats are cheaper but frequently break One cross-country レゆが t unusual, and 0 e 「 players a 居 0 travel far fo 「 CO 〃 ege showcases TRA レド ( TRAINING S300 Helmet 日 bOW protector FOOt guard S400 /WEEK Camps and clinics /HOUR Batting-cage rental Metal bat Round-trip airfare S70 Equipment bag Batting gloves S600 /SEASON Gas S100 /HOUR Private coaching S100 /NIGHT L0dgi ng S250 Spikes Glove NOTE: COSTS VARY WIDELY. THE FIGURES SHOWN HERE ARE AVERAGES BASED ON INTERVIEWS WITH COACHES AND ADMINISTRATORS FOR TRAVEL BASEBALL AND SOFTBALL CLUBS AROUND THE U. S. G R A P H ー C S B Y E M に Y B A R 0 N E AND LON TWEETEN like myself, a quote-unquote expert on youth-sports development complex, pressure, especially if your kids have this stu 圧 Because l'm human. l'm a dad. ” they're naive; ” says sports psychologist some talent. You feel it a little more. But Jim Taylor. "They absorb the message we want the kids to have fun and be with THERE ARE FEW better places tO take they hear most: 'You mean, your kid's not their friends. We have t0 take a step back the measure Of the youth- sports indus - playing on a travel team? She's not playing and keep asking ourselves, What's the all the time? what's wrong?* " Taylor, trial complex than the Star, the gleam- end goal?" ing, 91-acre, $ 1.5 billion new headquar- wh0's writing a b00k about yo th- sports ThiS parenting experience iS new, ters and practice facility 0f the Dallas parenting, has tWO daughters, 12 and 10 , given that the hypercharged kids' sports Cowboys. Turn le 代 upon entering the who ski and swim. “ lt's hard not t0 get scene didn't exist on this scale just a building and you'll find the offces 0fBlue sucked he says. for someone few years ago. 'When parents enter the Average annual spending 0f families with children ages 8 tO 18 whO play organized sports COSt tO families, by sport $1 , 143 BAS KETBALL $7 , 956 LACROSSE $1 , 472 SOCCER $2 , 739 FOOTBALL $4 , 044 BASEBALL/SOFTBALL $7 , 013 HOCKEY SOURCE: NATIONAL FAMILY SURVEY ANALYSIS BY TRAVIS DORSCH. UTAH STATE UNIVERSITY 37
物を一 FOOTBAIL PITCIIES EVERY DAY! Did YOU know that European forests, which provide W00d fO 「 making paper and many 0 す he 「 prodUCts. have grown by 44 , 000km2 over the pa 引 10 years? That's more than 1 , 500 footballpitches every day! LO 肥 maga = in ? Y00 ' 旧 0 肥 them 0 ~ 0 000 k000i0g they,re made from natU 「 0 し renewable and recyclable wood す UN 「ÄO. 60 面ぼ 0 「 e 引 Resources Assessment 2005-2015. TWO Sides 0 g ba ⅱ市 0 ′ⅳ e p 「 0E0 加 g the responsible use Of print and paper which. when sourced from certified 0 「 sustainably managed forests. is 0 powerful and na 扣「 communications medium. There 0 「 e some great reasons ー 0 Discover them now, twosides. info #LovePaper
NOW more than ever, the lnternational Rescue Commjftee js needed on the f 「 ontlines of the world's worst c 「 ises—to help those whose lives are shatte 「 ed by conflict and disaste 「 to survive, 「 ecover and gain control 0f their futures. Now more than ever, we need you. J O i n u S at Rescue.org ー N T E R N A T ー 0 N A L RESCUE C 0 M M ー T T E E ◎ 2014 lnte 「 national Rescue Com mittee