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  • The Week Evening Review
    The Modi-Jinping meetup, hate speech on Roblox, and Jimmy Lai on trial

     
    TODAY'S BIG QUESTION

    Did Trump just push India into China's arms?

    Not long ago, the U.S. cultivated India as a potential bulwark against China. Then, President Donald Trump imposed 50% tariffs on Indian goods as retaliation for that country’s purchases of Russian oil. Now, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi is meeting this weekend with Chinese leader Xi Jinping amid signs of warming relations between the Asian rivals.

    That improvement was "spurred on in no small part by Trump's global trade war," said The Washington Post. Modi's shift "underscores the way Trump's approach has alienated some friends" who, until recently, had a "warm diplomatic and trade relationship" with America.

    What did the commentators say?
    Trump is the "great peacemaker" who deserves "all the credit" for the possibility of a China-India alliance, said Ashley Tellis, of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, to The Times of India. The tariffs are "causing considerable distress" to Modi's government. India and China have a history of fractiousness, but Trump is a "good incentive" for both countries to put aside their differences, said Antara Ghosal Singh at the Observer Research Foundation.

    Trump has "dealt a heavy blow to efforts" by American leaders to align with India against "Chinese domination of the Indo-Pacific," said the Financial Times editorial board. During his first term in 2020, Trump told a crowd that "America will always be faithful and loyal friends to the Indian people." But his "U-turn" will help Beijing "portray itself as a more reliable international interlocutor," said the Times. India and China are "unlikely partners" who will need "nimble footwork" to make their relationship last. But Trump's stumble is clear. "By alienating its friends, Washington is playing into Beijing's hands."

    A burgeoning Russia-India-China alliance is "unlikely to endure," said Karishma Vaswani at Bloomberg. There are "inherent tensions" in the India-China relationship that make a solid partnership difficult. Border disputes have caused bloody clashes in the past, and the "risk of future standoffs can't be discounted." 

    What next?
    The Xi-Modi summit is "unlikely to usher in a fundamental realignment," said CNN. The big test is whether the meeting translates into "de-escalation on the ground" at the border. If that happens, the two countries can look forward to a "more stable relationship," said Tanvi Madan, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, "where competition isn't necessarily over but conflict is at bay."

     
     
    QUOTE OF THE DAY

    'I have gotten a lot of good on-the-job training over the last 200 days.'

    J.D. Vance, in an interview with USA Today, when asked if he's ready to be president. Despite recent questions over Trump's health, Vance seemed to downplay them, telling the outlet that the president is in "incredibly good health" and has "incredible energy."

     
     
    THE EXPLAINER

    A wildly popular video game is now a bastion of hate speech

    Roblox has become one of the most popular video games of all time, but it has a darker side, with racism and hate speech reportedly spreading unchecked. Roblox's online platform enables users to interact with one another while creating various games, and this has allowed Roblox's 111 million daily users, many of whom are children, to be exposed to hate, according to a series of investigations. 

    What kind of hate speech is on Roblox?
    While Roblox claims it moderates against hate speech, it "currently has at least 18 active lawsuits pending nationwide due to inappropriate content," attorney Matthew Dolman, whose firm is representing people suing Roblox, said to CBS News. There are millions of different games, and "hate can run rampant." 

    In the popular Roblox game Spray Paint!, users can "bypass moderation by spray painting hate messages across walls, ramps and other virtual game settings," said CBS. There were "dozens of swastikas and at least a dozen instances of hate speech targeting minority groups across Spray Paint! servers," and they can often be hard to avoid. 

    Investigations have also found "white supremacist virtual clothing being monetized on the platform," said the Global Project Against Hate and Extremism. This includes "direct references to transnational neo-Nazi networks such as the Active Club Movement, mass deportation operations conducted by ICE in the United States, and white nationalist political parties abroad such as the National Party in Ireland." And these items are available to kids under 13.

    What else is happening on the site?
    At least one prominent group has "gained notoriety for creating Roblox maps that replicate real-life mass shootings, including the infamous tragedies at Columbine, Uvalde and Parkland," said the Anti-Defamation League (ADL). Other maps also reproduce "mass shootings conducted by white supremacists and other extremists as terrorist attacks."

    These maps are "disturbingly graphic and detailed, designed to mimic the mass shootings they are based on with unsettling accuracy and gore," said the ADL. In the Uvalde map, for example, students are "programmed to hide under desks or play dead when the shooting begins." 

    Roblox has denied any allegations of wrongdoing. The company's "24/7 moderation system closely monitors the platform," Roblox said to CBS. It will take "swift action against any content or users found to be in violation."

     
     

    Statistic of the day

    978,731: The number of guns purchased last month, according to the National Shooting Sports Foundation. This marks a six-year low for firearms purchases and is the first time that sales in a singular month have fallen under 1 million, down 8.1% year-to-year.

     
     
    IN THE SPOTLIGHT

    Can anyone save Jimmy Lai?

    President Donald Trump has promised to step in and "save" the Hong Kong businessman Jimmy Lai, who's facing life in prison for his vocal opposition to the Chinese regime. The 77-year-old founder of the pro-democracy paper Apple Daily has been in a maximum-security prison since December 2020, mainly in solitary confinement. And he's now on trial again, accused of two counts of colluding with foreign forces and a separate sedition charge. 

    'Inertia' on Lai's behalf
    Lai is "in poor health, and the risk of his dying in prison" is real, said Jodie Ginsberg at The Independent. "This wasn't how it was supposed to be after the U.K. passed Hong Kong back to China in 1997," said The Economist. China "promised to preserve freedoms" and allow Hong Kong to "keep a common-law legal system, which set the bar high for putting dissenters in jail." But a new National Security Law in 2020 "transformed the legal landscape," creating "sweeping, fuzzy categories of crime that Hong Kong had not known before, such as secession, subversion and the collusion of which Mr. Lai is now accused." 

    Testing Trump's resolve
    The U.K. needs to signal that "any normalization of the relationship with China must be conditional" on Lai's immediate release and return to the U.K., said Ginsberg. And then there's Trump's apparent willingness to fight in Lai's corner. In a recent interview on Fox News Radio, the president said he was "going to do everything I can to save him." A guilty verdict, expected to be handed down in the next few weeks, will "test Trump's resolve to make good on his pledge," said CNN, while he's also "trying to clinch a trade deal" with Xi Jinping.

     
     

    Good day 🏖️

    … for indigenous Canadians. A 1.5-mile stretch of beach will be returned to the Saugeen First Nation in Canada 170 years after it was mistakenly left out of the nation's reserve. After decades of fighting by the Saugeen, Canada's Supreme Court declined yesterday to hear a challenge to the decision.

     
     

    Bad day 📰

    … for print journalism. After 157 years, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution will end publication of its print version after 2025, the newspaper announced yesterday. The ouetlet will continue with its digital edition, which the newspaper plans to invest heavily on.

     
     
    Picture of the day

    Show of colors

    A protester waves an Indonesian flag during clashes with riot control police in Jakarta. There have been demonstrations all week in the capital and other major cities over a lack of jobs, rising living costs, and perks for MPs, and outrage intensified after a 21-year-old motorcycle taxi driver was killed by a police car during a protest last night.
    Yasuyoshi Chiba / AFP / Getty Images

     
     
    Puzzles

    Daily crossword

    Test your general knowledge with The Week's daily crossword, part of our puzzles section, which also includes sudoku and codewords

    Play here

     
     
    The Week recommends

    Hotels that show off the many facets of Japan

    There are two sides to Japan. Travelers marvel at its advanced technology and infrastructure, often saying the country is "living in the future," but Japan is also a place bound by tradition and formalities. Experience it all by traveling to both major cities and visiting spots with a slower pace. And you can stay at these hotels along the way. 

    Asaba Ryokan, Shuzenji
    For more than five centuries, the Asaba family has welcomed guests to its ryokan, a traditional Japanese inn. Service here is rooted in the concept of omotenashi, or the "spirit of selfless hospitality," said The Japan Times. All rooms have hot spring baths, sliding doors made of wood and washi paper, and tatami mat floors, with 10-course kaiseki dinners served every evening. 

    Halekulani Okinawa
    Live like a local at the serene Halekulani Okinawa. It starts at breakfast, when guests enjoy soba noodles and Okinawan pork sausage. From there, become immersed in cultural activities, including a guided meditative experience through Yambaru National Park and kayaking on Lake Fukugami. Okinawa is a Blue Zone, meaning residents on average live longer, and the hotel offers wellness-focused retreats exploring longevity. 

    Roku Kyoto
    Roku Kyoto (pictured above) sits on the site of a former artists' colony established by celebrated artist Hon'ami Koetsu and pays homage to the past by ensuring its rooms and public spaces are "graced with traditional Japanese artworks and crafts," said The Points Guy. Guests can also get creative themselves, participating in workshops on how to make porcelain and the art of the tea ceremony.

    Read more

     
     

    Poll watch

    Almost three in five Gen Z students (57%) feel prepared for the future, an 11-point increase from 2024, according to a Gallup survey. The poll of 1,687 Gen Zers found that female students are as confident as male students in their preparedness at 58%, while Black students (67%) are more confident than their white peers (54%).

     
     
    INSTANT OPINION

    Today's best commentary

    'Seventy years later, America has yet to reckon with Emmett Till's murder'
    Renée Graham at The Boston Globe
    "History isn't that many yesterdays ago," says Renée Graham. Emmett Till is "forever a child, murdered by white supremacists, who has become an eternal symbol that ignited the modern civil rights movement and has inspired generations to fight racial injustice." To "erase from museums — this nation's public memory — what happened to Emmett would be another white supremacist atrocity." His "murder, and the revolution that it fueled, is a hallowed part of our heritage that must be protected."

    'At Dartmouth, a green shoot in the higher-ed desert'
    Mitch Daniels at The Washington Post
    "Sian Leah Beilock, the president of Dartmouth, has charted a path worthy of emulation by her higher-ed peers, especially in the 'elite' orbit her school inhabits," says Mitch Daniels. In so doing, she has "kept her institution out of the line of fire" from the Trump administration. She "didn't protect her school by merely 'playing dead.'" She has "taken a series of actions, well ahead of the change of national administrations, that distinguishes her and her college from the higher-ed herd."

    'Singapore's real lesson for Britain and Europe'
    Sumantra Maitra at The American Conservative
    Singapore is "clean, orderly, modern and civilized — a perfect city-state," says Sumantra Maitra. In an "era of resentment and social upheavals across the West, it's a bastion of old-school, conservative political stability." But "there's a "fundamental tension between democracy and order in a modern, multiethnic state." We "might soon get a continent-size Singapore after all." But for those in the "Anglosphere who still desire liberty and democracy, imperial-style race-neutral policing would solve the liberal dilemma."

     
     
    WORD OF THE DAY

    nanodiamond

    A carbon nanoparticle that's less than the length of a human hair. A study published in the Blue Journal has found that nanodiamonds can be used as a delivery system for hormones. This can help repair the damaged lungs of babies in the womb with congenital diaphragmatic hernia, a rare sometimes-fatal disorder that affects one in every 3,000 babies. 

     
     

    Evening Review was written and edited by Nadia Croes, Catherine Garcia, Anya Jaremko-Greenwold, Justin Klawans, Joel Mathis, Summer Meza and Anahi Valenzuela, with illustrations by Stephen Kelly and Julia Wytrazek.

    Image credits, from top: Illustration by Julia Wytrazek / Getty Images; Leon Keith / AP Photo; Anthony Wallace / AFP / Getty Images; Roku Kyoto
     

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