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  • The Week Evening Review
    The Gaza peace deal, Syria’s election, and digital addiction

     
    today's big question

    Can Trump bully Netanyahu into Gaza peace?

    Israeli leader Benjamin Netanyahu has shrugged off the world’s criticisms as he prosecutes his country’s war in Gaza. But with a peace deal possibly at hand, there’s one person he cannot ignore: President Donald Trump.

    Netanyahu was “strong-armed by Trump” into going along with the president’s peace proposal, said The New York Times. While the prime minister presented the deal as a joint American-Israeli effort, Trump suggested otherwise to reporters. Netanyahu has “got to be fine” with a deal to end the war, said Trump. “He has no choice.” 

    Netanyahu now has a “delicate balancing act” to perform, said the Times. His political survival depends on “appeasing his far-right coalition partners” who will not approve a deal that lets Hamas survive. At the same time, he knows that fighting Trump will “hurt Netanyahu, not Trump,” said Al-Monitor’s Mazal Mualem.

    The draft peace deal offers a pathway, “however vague,” to a future Palestinian state, said the Financial Times. Netanyahu has built a career on his opposition to such a state. But Trump reminded Netanyahu that Israel was “propped up by billions of dollars in U.S. aid.” 

    What did the commentators say?
    Trump is “successfully bullying Netanyahu,” Yair Rosenberg said at The Atlantic. If the war is to come to an end, he will “need to do more of it.” The prime minister is facing a “mutiny” from far-right members of his coalition government who want to “ethnically cleanse” Gaza and fill it with Israeli settlers. Trump is the “only actor who can provide a counterweight to these radicals.” The president has “incredible leverage” over Netanyahu. He “just needs to use it.”

    Meanwhile, Netanyahu is selling the proposed Gaza deal to his voters as a “tremendous diplomatic achievement” that was possible only because of the prime minister’s “stubbornness,” Amos Harel said at Haaretz. 

    What next?
    Indirect talks between Israel and Hamas began Monday in Egypt, said Axios. Trump “wants to see a deal as soon as possible,” and his team is pushing for “implementation of the deal without delay.” The process has a “really good chance” of producing peace after two years of war, the president said Monday.

     
     
    QUOTE OF THE DAY

    ‘They are scraping and grasping at straws because they have nothing else. Laugh at them! Stephen Miller is a clown!’

    Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) on Trump's White House deputy chief of staff during a livestream on her social media. She urged Americans to fight self-described authoritarianism by making fun of "insecure masculinity."

     
     
    the explainer

    Inside Syria’s strange post-Assad election

    Syrians are getting the results of their first elections since the fall of Bashar al-Assad, which authorities hope will represent a new chapter for the war-torn country. But while Sunday’s limited vote was a “historic moment” after the oppressive rule of Assad, said Al Jazeera, the electoral process has been “subject to debate.”

    How did the elections work? 
    In the new People’s Assembly, a third of the 210 seats will be directly appointed by Syria’s interim leader, President Ahmed al-Sharaa, with Sunday’s vote deciding the remainder. However, only members of electoral colleges appointed by an elections committee to represent the country’s 60 districts were eligible to vote — a total of about 7,000 people. In 10 of those districts, in the Druze-majority Sweida province and Kurdish-controlled areas in the north, the vote was indefinitely postponed due to what the central government in Damascus described as the danger posed by ongoing sectarian violence in the regions. 

    Were they a success? 
    With so few people eligible to vote, there were “few signs in Syria on Sunday that an election was taking place,” said The National. “No rallies preceded the poll, and there were no election manifestos or campaigns by any parties.” This was an “indirect election using a set of electors who have basically been handpicked by the current rulers,” Syria expert Aron Lund, a fellow at the Century International think tank, said to Al Jazeera. 

    Sharaa admitted that the process was not perfect but said it “suited the phase Syria is undergoing.” Authorities claim that mass displacement and administrative chaos resulting from 14 years of civil war and the sudden fall of the Assad regime last December made holding a nationwide election impossible. 

    Who will make up the next government? 
    Given their close affiliation with the Assad regime, all existing political parties were dissolved when the interim government took power, so every candidate in the election ran as an independent. While there are no quotas for representation, the majority of seats, 70%, will go to academics and experts, underlining the aim of creating a technocratic government rather than one dominated by members of prominent families.

     
     

    Statistic of the day

    40,000: The number of deaths that could be saved globally every day by adopting a "planetary health diet," according to a report published in the journal Lancet. Following this diet of more vegetables, fruits and grains and fewer animal products could also slash food-related emissions by 50% by 2050. 

     
     
    in the spotlight

    Digital addiction: the compulsion to stay online

    Digital addiction is a broad term for unhealthy behaviors related to spending too much time on the internet, in particular when a person cannot stop these behaviors despite experiencing negative consequences. The problem can take many forms and is becoming more common.

    The basics
    Digital addiction can come in many forms, including excessive interaction with social media, video gaming, online gambling, online shopping and web pornography. And as with gambling and pornography, the internet can amplify these addictions by increasing accessibility. Some people can be especially vulnerable to falling into digital addiction, like those with “high levels of internet use for socialization, education and entertainment,” said Psychiatry.org.

    Addictive by design
    It’s not surprising the internet is so addictive — it’s designed that way. Many social media apps, for example, use what’s called the hook model to keep users on their apps. With this concept, the app first triggers a person to interact, like with a notification. This, in turn, prompts someone to enter the app. Then, the app uses a variable reward system to prompt a user to remain there. 

    Another way websites and apps keep people hooked is through gamification, which turns internet interactions into a game. The way the shopping app Temu prices and promotes products is “deliberate,” with the company “pushing the exact consumer psychology buttons necessary to keep shoppers shopping,” said the BBC. 

    The consequences
    Digital addiction can significantly affect a person’s mental health. Excessive internet use can lead to anxiety and depression. It can also cause “dishonesty, anxiety, aggression and mood swings,” said the Addiction Center. And it can affect physical health and lead to “body aches, carpal tunnel syndrome, insomnia, vision problems and weight gain/loss.” In the worst cases, it can lead to suicide.

    Teens in particular may “frequently fall behind on schoolwork, stay up late and fight with parents,” said ADDitude. Adults may neglect their jobs and other responsibilities, which could lead to unemployment and even homelessness. And those with ADHD may also “spend more time on digital media and have more severe symptoms of problematic internet use.”

     
     

    Good day 🏴‍☠️

    … for hunting treasure. A long-lost Spanish treasure worth about $1 million has been located off the Florida coast, treasure hunting company Queen Jewels has announced. The discovery includes over 1,000 silver coins and five gold coins believed to have been minted in the Spanish colonies in the 1700s.

     
     

    Bad day 🪵

    … for gathering around the fireplace. Burning wood indoors can cause negative health effects similar to inhaling cigarette smoke, according to a University College London study of 1,700 people. Declines in lung capacity were found to be larger among people who used indoor wood burners. 

     
     
    Picture of the day

    Colors of resilience

    Breast cancer survivors don artful body paint in a performance at the Cabañas Museum in Guadalajara, Mexico. The project “A Brushstroke for Life” brings together more than 100 of these survivors to raise global awareness during Breast Cancer Awareness Month.
    Ulises Ruiz / 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

    A reliable, personal Chinese cookbook

    Four authors with four points of view could be a recipe for cookbook disaster. “The Woks of Life: Recipes to Know and Love from a Chinese American Family” instead hinges on the four varied, yet complementary, stances of the members of the Leung family: dad Bill, mom Judy and daughters Sarah and Kaitlin.

    Digital to analog 
    In 2013, Sarah launched a blog called The Woks of Life. In the ensuing years, the site enlisted her three family members, grew to monster size and became a contemporary resource for fans of Chinese dishes. The cookbook takes on that same mission. Much like the blog, a different Leung often introduces each recipe. 

    Predictably, the dim sum section is labor-intensive. For homemade pan-fried garlic, chive and shrimp dumplings, you will require three kinds of starch for the wrappers, then a whole lot of rolling and pleating. The crackling result warrants the effort, and the Leungs’ clear instructions encourage a win.

    Other sections trumpet both Chinese American fixtures and more traditional regional Chinese home cooking. Sesame chicken, for example, is a sticky, comforting similitude of the takeout staple.

    How to succeed in Chinese cooking
    Any great cookbook needs to give you the tools to triumph. The Leungs stack the front of “The Woks of Life” with a series of guides that cover cooking tools, a nine-ingredient pantry compilation and a short primer on cooking techniques, including a four-step map to achieving wok hei, the “complex charred, savory aroma and flavor” central to the best stir-fries.

     
     

    Poll watch

    Over two in five Americans (43%) think the legalization of sports betting has been a bad thing for society, according to a Pew Research Center survey. Two in five of the 9,916 adults polled (40%) also think legalized sports betting is bad for the sports industry itself. 

     
     
    INSTANT OPINION

    Today's best commentary

    ‘Afghanistan’s internet blackout was a warning’
    Shabana Basij-Rasikh at The Washington Post
    Millions in Afghanistan “went dark in an unprecedented nationwide internet shutdown that lasted more than two days,” and “blame immediately fell on the Taliban — properly so,” says Shabana Basij-Rasikh. This “most recent episode seemed like a ratcheting-up to total information control.” The Taliban is “very obviously working on implementing a dark vision.” They “made the internet go dark for two days. They can do it again, and they can do it for much longer. This cannot be allowed.”

    ‘Jane Goodall taught us to see the natural world. Now it’s our turn to act.’

    Jeff Corwin at USA Today
    Jane Goodall’s “remarkable story was the light bulb moment that sparked my dream to share the wonders of nature with the world,” says Jeff Corwin. Goodall “used patience, not force, to build trust with animals. It paid off.” At a “time when the scientific establishment prized distance and detachment, she chose connection. She treated animals with respect, giving them names, not numbers.” Goodall “proved you don’t need prestige to make lasting discoveries. You simply need to care.”

    ‘Gold is not a risk-free asset’

    Allison Schrager at Bloomberg
    The “jaw-dropping spike in gold prices is a reminder of what primal creatures we humans are,” says Allison Schrager. But the “surge should also remind us of the importance of calling on the more evolved parts of our brain.” There’s “nothing safe about gold as an asset. Like any other commodity, its prices are extremely volatile. All it adds to a portfolio is risk.” If markets “turn, there’s no guarantee gold will hold its value.”

     
     
    WORD OF THE DAY

    newstalgia

    A trend that takes nostalgic lifestyle products and habits and gives them modern twists. This can include comfort foods, such as cookie companies turning popular desserts of the past like blueberry pie into new cookie flavors, and at-home cooks returning to the baked potato but preparing it in a more healthy way. 

     
     

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

    Image credits, from top: Illustration by Stephen Kelly / Getty Images; Omar Albaw / Middle East Images / AFP / Getty Images; Illustration by Julia Wytrazek / Getty Images; Penguin Random House
     

    Recent editions

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