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has a much bigger platform to push the idea of new cookstoves that
cost as little as $25 each. “This could be as transformative as bed nets
or even vaccines,” she says, the excitement in her voice palpable.
“We are excited because we think this is actually a problem we can
solve.”
That’s rare. Development challenges and global conflicts often seem
intractable, and that has to be a little discouraging at three in the
morning in the skies over Kabul or Cairo. “You can’t just look at
these conflicts and issues and say, ‘O.K., that’s been solved,’” Hillary
says to me at the end of an interview, starting to chuckle. “Because
most of these problems are never solved.” Now she’s back in dutiful,
dogged mode, which happens to be the mode that best fits today’s
Hillary—the one almost everyone seems to like. “You know,” she
says, “you just keep working at them and working at them and
working at them.” Who can argue with that?
Jonathan Alter is an award-winning columnist, television analyst and
author. Since 1991, Alter has written a widely-acclaimed Newsweek
column that examines politics, media and social and global issues.
His 2010 book "The Promise. President Obama, Year One," a New
York Times bestseller, offers the first inside look at Obama's difficult
debut after his historic election.
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