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They eulogized him as a â[warrior for peace],â but Shimon Peres spent much of his career as one of [Israelâs chief hawks]. He built up the countryâs defense industry, created its nuclear program, and for years championed the settlements in the occupied territoriesâthe settlements that, ironically, are now one of the biggest obstacles to the peace process for which he shared the Nobel prize.
His rebranding as a dove is thanks in no small part to his countryâs rightward shift since the peace process collapsed. Itâs also thanks to the elder-statesman patina that settled on him as his political rivals died off. If in his prime he was Israelâs Hillary Clintonâcompetent, experienced, but not much likedâby the time he assumed the ceremonial role of president in 2007, he was its Nelson Mandela, a grandfatherly embodiment of the countryâs best, most noble self.
This is what the [world leaders] who flocked to his funeral were mourningânot only Peres the man, with a manâs flaws and complications, but Peres the invocation of the Israeli ideal. He was the last of Israelâs demigods, those who oversaw the state-building project from its very beginning; a link to a more unpretentious, more egalitarian, and more idealist country, a place that actually believed the Palestinians were grateful to it for occupying them in 1967âand in which, for a brief moment after it took over the role from Egypt and Jordan, that was actually true.
As president, Peres no longer really had the influence to serve as Israelâs moral compass. But his presence enabled the fiction that it had one. This is what is being mourned now, too: the loss, to Israelis and their allies, of the last figurehead of the âlight unto the nationsâ that they once hoped Israel would become.âGideon Lichfield
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Five things on Quartz we especially liked
The problem with European citizenship. The EU gave its citizens all the benefits of internal migration, without trying to cultivate a feeling of belonging to the countries they moved to. Kabir Chibber draws a historical parallel with ancient Rome to show whyâas the Brexit vote made clearâthis was [a fatal flaw in the European project].
What you get when you âbuyâ digital goods. Think you understand a terms-of-service agreement? Take our quiz, and you may be surprised. Christopher Groskopf explains how online retailers have, in the absence of laws about digital goods, stealthily eviscerated the concept of ownership, leaving you with [very few rights].
Should we be scared of bushmeat? More than three-quarters of all new human diseases emerge from animals. In a Quartz collaboration with Mosaic, Yepoka Yeebo traced [the route of wild meat] from the bush to the dinner plate in Ghana and tried to understand why, despite the risks, people still eat it. And Akshat Rathi analyzed whether the illegal trade in such meat could be the [source of the next global pandemic].
Denimâs existential crisis. The growing popularity of âathleisureâ wear has prompted Leviâs to addâhorror!âstretch fabric to its iconic 501 jeans. Marc Bain charts the changing tastes of fashion and how brands are struggling to keep denim cool in the face of [the yoga-pant onslaught].
The trials of traveling while African. Or, how it feels to be [a second-class global citizen]. Kenyan writer Ciku Kimeria has been, as she puts it, a âgood Africanââsheâs visited countless Western countries, and always left on time. âSo, why is it that every time I want to come back, you still doubt I will leave?â
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Five things elsewhere that made us smarter
The children who mine for your batteries. Cobalt goes into the lithium-ion cells that power all your digital devices, and most of it is mined in the Congo by adults, and sometimes children, with no safety equipment, health coverage, or even regular pay. The [Washington Postâs investigation] is superbly done and shocking, not least for the mining companiesâ own ignoranceâor indifference.
When Goldman went to Tripoli. After Muammar Qaddafiâs regime renounced nuclear weapons, some $60 billion in oil wealth was suddenly freed from international sanctions. Goldman Sachs was the first to pounce. For Bloomberg Businessweek, Matthew Campbell and Kit Chellel tell the sorry tale of Libyaâs [ill-fated sovereign wealth fund], or what happened âwhen Wall Streetâs most aggressive bank took on the worldâs most incendiary client.â
How China will win the robot wars. Hundreds of engineers compete in Shenzhenâs annual RoboMasters tournament, organized by Chinese drone maker DJI. The Vergeâs Ben Popper explored the contest and spoke with DJIâs elusive CEO, Frank Wang, about how heâs corralled 1,500 engineers to build a robotics company he hopes can compete [against any of the tech giants of the West].
Take health reporting with a mug of salt. Studies published by agencies like the US Food and Drug Administration are supposed to be the sort of gold-standard science the public can trust. But a Scientific American investigation by Charles Seife shows how the FDA [manipulates media coverage of its work] by denying access and offering deceptive half-truths to some news organizations, and forcing others to play by restrictive rules.
Hitler was a junkie. The Nazisâ aggressive deployment of crystal meth pills, cocaine chewing gum, heroin, and morphine was a contributor to some of their biggest World War II successesâincluding the invasion of Franceâand to Hitlerâs ultimate dissolution. In the Guardian, [Rachel Cooke profiles] Germanyâs Norman Ohler, who credits his own past use with helping him write a remarkable history of the Third Reichâs unbounded drug problem.
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