Showing posts with label human. Show all posts
Showing posts with label human. Show all posts

Monday, March 18, 2019

Does the West really care about development?

A great opinion piece. People of the developing world always forget that the developed Global North didn't "develop" without hampering the development of the Global South. Large & intelligent populations of the Global South were seen as dangerous for the Global North's ambitions of developing themselves & keep ruling the world.

As I have blogged earlier, Global North developed by mass murdering, looting, & effectively disabling the development of the Global South by constant interference through military & political means. They wanted an easy & cheap access to human & mineral resources of the Global South, which could only be achieved by effectively controlling the region through any means, necessary.

Those means included interfering in political matters to install their own strongmen, abuse human rights at their own will, create such conditions of non-development & violence in the Global South, just so people of those countries have to move out of those countries, & their human labour is used in the development of the Global North, instead of developing their own countries in the Global South.

Corruption & human rights abuses in the Global South were done with the full consent & acknowledgement of the leaders of the Global North. But, as we should already know that Global North is a hypocritical world; they cry the crocodile tears, decrying the corruption & human rights abuses in the Global South, but then turn around & approve those activities as long as they are helping them achieve their own objectives of looting their resources of the Global South.

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When it comes to international affairs, western politicians love to celebrate their devotion to development. In her flagship speech on development as secretary of state, Hillary Clinton offered stories about US aid transforming the lives of poor people in Indonesia, Nicaragua and South Africa. Laurent Fabius, the minister of foreign affairs for France, recently hailed his country’s commitment to development in the former colonies of west Africa. And at last year’s UN sustainable development goals summit, David Cameron spoke proudly about Britain’s record of providing “stability and security” to poor countries.

But this narrative of western benevolence only works by relying on our collective amnesia. For a slightly less fairytale-like version of the west’s relationship with development, we need to rewind to the decades following the second world war.

After the end of European colonialism in Africa and Asia, and with the brief cessation of US intervention in Latin America, developing countries were growing incomes and reducing poverty at a rapid pace. Beginning in the 1950s, countries like Guatemala, Indonesia, and Iran drew on the Keynesian model of mixed economy that had been working so well in the west. They made strategic use of land reforms to help peasant farmers, labour laws to boost workers’ wages, tariffs to protect local businesses, and resource nationalisation to help fund public housing, healthcare, and education.

This approach – known as “developmentalism” – was built on the twin values of economic independence and social justice. It wasn’t perfect, but it worked quite well. According to economist Robert Pollin, developmentalist policies sustained high per capita income growth rates of 3.2% for at least 20 years – higher than at any other time during the whole 20th century. As a result, the gap between the west and the rest began to narrow for the first time in history. It was nothing short of a miracle.

One might think western states would be thrilled at this success, but they were not amused. The new policies meant that multinational companies no longer had the easy access to the cheap labour, raw materials and consumer markets to which they had become accustomed during the colonial era.

Western powers – specifically the US, Britain and France – were not willing to let this continue. Instead of supporting the developmentalist movement, they set out on a decades-long campaign to topple the elected governments that were leading it and to install strongmen friendly to their interests – a long and bloody history that has been almost entirely erased from our collective memory.

It began with Iran in 1953. The democratically-elected prime minister, Mohammad Mosaddegh, was rolling out a wide range of pro-poor reforms, part of which included wresting control of the country’s oil reserves from the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company (now BP). Britain rejected this move, and responded swiftly. With the help of the CIA, Churchill deposed Mosaddegh in a coup d’etat and replaced him with an absolute monarch, Mohammed Riza Pahlevi, who reversed Mosaddegh’s reforms and went on to rule Iran with western support for 26 years.

The following year, the US did the very same thing in Guatemala. Jacobo Arbenz – the country’s second democratically-elected president – was redistributing unused portions of large private estates to landless Mayan peasants, with full compensation for the owners. But the American-based United Fruit Company took issue with this policy, and pushed Eisenhower to topple Arbenz. After the coup, Guatemala was ruled by US-backed dictatorships for 42 years, which presided over the massacre of more than 200,000 Mayans and one of the highest poverty rates in Latin America.

Brazil, too, was hit by a US-backed coup; they deposed President Goulart for his land reforms, corporate taxes, and other pro-poor policies that western companies disliked, and replaced him with a military dictatorship that lasted 21 years. President Sukarno of Indonesia was ousted for similar policies and replaced by a dictator, who – with British and US support – killed more than one million peasants, workers, and activists in one of the worst mass murders of the century, and went on to rule for 31 years. And then of course there was Chile: the US helped depose President Allende, the soft-spoken doctor who promised better wages, fairer rents, and social services for the poor, and replaced him with a dictator whose economic policies plunged some 45% of Chileans into poverty.

Some regions never even got a shot at developmentalism, western intervention was so swift. In Uganda, Britain raised the murderous Idi Amin to power, who crushed the progressive Common Man’s Charter before it could be implemented. In the Congo, Patrice Lumumba, the country’s first elected leader, was assassinated by Belgium and the CIA when it became clear he would restrict foreign control over resource-rich Katanga province. Western powers installed Mobutu Sese Seko in his place, a cartoonishly corrupt dictator who commanded the country for nearly forty years with billions of dollars in US aid. Under Mobutu’s reign, per capita income collapsed by 2.2% each year; ordinary Congolese suffered poverty worse than that which they had known under Belgian colonial rule.

In west Africa, France refused to cede control over the region’s resources after the end of colonialism. Working through the secretive Françafrique network, they rigged the first elections in Cameroon and handpicked the president after poisoning his main opponent. In Gabon, they installed the dictatorship of Omar Bongo and kept him in power for 41 years in exchange for access to the country’s oil.

We could rehearse many, many more examples, all the way up to the recent western-backed coups in Haiti. It is tempting to see this as nothing but a list of crimes – albeit one that casts serious doubts on the west’s claims to promoting democracy and human rights abroad. But it is more than that. It reflects an organised effort on the part of western powers to destroy the developmentalist movement that flowered in the global south after colonialism. They simply would not tolerate development if it restricted their access to resources and markets.

The legacy of this history is that there is now greater inequality between the west and the rest than there was at the end of colonialism. And a soul-scorching 4.2 billion people remain in poverty today. No one has been brought to justice for the coups and assassinations that destroyed the global south’s most promising attempt at development and crushed popular dreams of independence. Probably no one ever will. But we need to acknowledge that they happened, and stop pretending that the US, France and Britain are benevolent champions of the poor.

Monday, August 27, 2018

Criminal Minds, S1E21 Quote 1

No human or a person can ever claim that he / she has complete knowledge or truth, since no human can ever gain complete knowledge or know exact truth. Only Allah or God or Yahweh or Bhagwan or whatever other name you have for a Supreme Being can ever claim or say that because only It knows the what the real truth is.

Allah revealed that truth in Quran & whoever reads it, without any biases or presumptions, & with an open mind, starts to see the real truth & gain that knowledge, which will benefit him / her the most in this mortal life & in the immortal life in the hereafter.

Disclaimer: Yes, Albert Einstein was an atheist, & hence, most likely didn't believe in the latter half of the quote.


Sunday, February 28, 2016

Criminal Minds, S1E16 quote


A quote with which I can really relate to ...

Humans are born as social creatures with pack mentality, they will naturally seek to follow the majority, & rarely step outside of social protocol or ethical rules in social gatherings. Neither will they stand up & ask too many questions about the authorities of our society, since they would rather avoid such conflict to keep their conformity.

Nietzsche argues in this quote that to truly be the master of yourself, & to truly grasp the full potential of your life, you have to realize that the ideals & norms of society are hollow & without any real value or justification for their existence. Once you realize this, then you become a much better human.

I believe the ultimate morale behind this quote is that you should not just follow the majority blindly, which is something humans have a natural tendency to do, you have to be critical of the majority, & of the authorities. And you should never be afraid to go against the majority.

Monday, September 28, 2015

Criminal Minds, S1E13 (quote 1)

Everyone doesn't have the same values or thoughts. What's valuable to one is worthless to another. What's considered by one household as good is not considered as good by another. What's important to one city is not so important to another. What's a priority to one province / state is not such a big priority to another. What's considered fundamental to life by one country (e.g. democracy) is not considered as much important to another country.

Sunday, September 20, 2015

World War Z quote

 IMDB          RottenTomatoes          Wikipedia

So true. That's the same problem people have, for instance, with understanding the problem of climate change or cloning or economics or finance or any number of problems, on a micro or macro level. Regardless of how much an expert tells them that it will become a problem later on, people will hold on to their beliefs until that given event has happened. Watching it by their own eyes is the only way for them to believe. BUT, by that point, it's already too late for those people to save themselves from whatever that problem or calamitous event it is.

It's the same problem Quran mentions multiple times. Several prophets came & told the same thing to their people, but until & unless, God's punishment came down upon them, the public didn't believe those prophets. And by that time, it was already too late for any repentance. Be it Noah's people or Lot's, Shelah's (Saleh's) or Eber's (Hud's), they all didn't believe their prophets until God's punishment came down upon them.

Thursday, September 17, 2015

Criminal Minds, S1E12 (quote 2)

This quote is from Elizabeth Barrett Browning's "Aurora Leigh":

   Shall I fail?
   The Greeks said grandly in their tragic phrase,
   'Let no one be called happy till his death.'...

   To which I add,-Let no one till his death
   Be called unhappy. Measure not the work
   Until the day's out and the labour done;
   Then bring your gauges. If the day's work's scant,
   Why, call it scant; affect no compromise;
   And, in that we have nobly striven at least,
   Deal with us nobly, women though we be,
   And honour us with truth, if not with praise.

Although, this quote seems simple enough, looking at the context of the whole passage, it seems to me that Elizabeth Browning was saying something along the lines of speaking truth to women in our lives. If we don't like something they have done in both their professional and/or personal lives, then we should give them an honest judgement of their work.

At the same time, we can expand it to include the general public. Like she says, we cannot judge someone's life to be a failure until his/her death. Death spells the "work done" for an individual. Life is full of ups & downs. So, one can't say about another's life to be a waste until that person has died. The "performance review" of life can only be done after the life ("work") has ended.

Tuesday, September 8, 2015

India marital rape victims' lonely battle for justice

Let me start this post by saying that sexual assault (i.e. rape) is wrong, regardless of it's marital rape or any other kind of rape. Perpetrators should be punished to the full extent of the law.

BUT, I don't agree with campaigners in India or anywhere else that marital rape be criminalized. Why?

Problem is that marital rape will be criminalized just like any other kind of rape is in the country. But will that solve the problem? If we forget about India, a developing country, for a minute, & focus on how rape criminal laws help fight / reduce rapes in developed countries, we see that it still happens quite a lot; from marital rapes & domestic abuse to sexual harassment & assault on streets & offices. So much so, that in Canada, there's a project, started by Rogers, called Project97. It's called "Project 97" because, per the organizers of this project, 97% of sexual assaults & harassment are never reported. Please keep in mind that this is in Canada & not something happening in a developing country.

Nobody around the world is trying to resolve the root problem of sexual assaults. What is the root problem?

Media around the world, be it internet, TV, magazines, movies etc. constantly keep pushing the boundaries of female nudity. Sexualized imagery is becoming the norm. Heck, even roaming around nude in the street is now being discussed in New York & Kitchener, because women there want to go out topless or, in some cases, even completely nude. We have celebrities like Kardashian clan or Miley Cyrus who are brainwashing young minds that female nudity in public should be celebrated & not criminalized.

Due to male biology, on the other hand, heterosexual men, who are still in the majority around the world, get aroused by watching a female who is trying to flash as much flesh as she can. The only things holding them back from humping that woman, right there & then, are laws & some moral views (for example, incest is not liked in any culture or country, irrespective of the law of the land).

Now, women in the West are far more liberal. They will go to a dance club & may go home either with a man or sexually satisfy themselves before going back home. If that's not enough, then annual "young sexapalooza" or, in other words, Spring Break in Florida, is internationally famous event, where young female nudity is wholly encouraged. Young males are there to only fornicate & get drunk.

However, women in the East are stuck in between conservative Eastern & liberal Western values. For example, in India, young women want to study, have a career, live in the metropolitan cities all by themselves, & want to choose their life partners themselves. They want to enjoy the night life, just like all those girls do in the Hollywood movies. Bollywood movies are full of Indian actresses in skimpy dresses, dancing all over the place, & men are ogling them like hungry wolves.

But, Indian women also want to marry someone who is highly educated, earns enough money to keep them well pampered, & of course, not a player. They want a respectable family man to raise their children.

On top of that, female infanticide in India is common. Although, it is illegal in the country, couples are still forced by their families to have as many boys as they can have, & girls are killed as soon as the ultrasound results come around. So, in the general population, demographically, the male to female ratio is skewed towards males. So, fewer females for more males in the general society.

One more problem all this sexualized media is causing is infidelity. As you may know how Ashley Madison, the site of cheaters, was hacked recently & the data of 33 Million users was released in the public. As you may know that Ashley Madison is one of the businesses of a Canadian company. It has operations in several countries around the world, including India.

There is nothing essentially wrong with what Ashley Madison is providing to the masses around the world. Since, rape is criminalized in the West, & infidelity or adultery is grounds for divorce, men try to cheat the system by cheating on their wives through an intermediary, Ashley Madison. Men are watching sexualized imagery all around them & women in their lives are trying to control the relationship through sex. So, men just simply cheat to satisfy their sexual arousals.

Some may say at this point that "men are pigs." Male reaction to sexualized imagery is just natural. A couple in love undress in their bedroom to sexually arouse themselves & physically enjoy their love. But, what a man gotta do when he is surrounded by sexualized imagery 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, 365 days a year? Did he ask for Miley Cyrus or Kardashian clan to get naked on the worldwide media?

Anyway, now, a poor, young man is watching Bollywood & Hollywood movies, watching porn on Internet, watching supermodels around the world wearing skimpy dresses in fashion magazines, & then watching Indian girls dating & having sexual relations with their boyfriends & even office colleagues. He is sexually aroused on a daily basis. So, at that point, he has 4 options:

1. If he is single & not in a relationship, then find a girlfriend & satisfy his sexual need or pay a prostitute (assuming he has enough money to hire a prostitute).
2. If he is single & in a relationship, then he will try to satisfy himself with his girlfriend, & due to his education level & social upbringing, he may or may not force himself on her.
3. If he is married, then he will try to satisfy himself with his wife, & due to his education level & social upbringing, he may or may not force himself on his wife.
4. If he is married, then he may try to cheat on his wife with a girlfriend or a prostitute.


As you can see in the example above, I started the example with the word, "poor". Because, in many cases, especially in India, but it happens all around the world, poor men have a very difficult time in starting a relationship. Girls want to start a relationship with a man who can pamper them. Money is an issue. An educated, but poor, man has a hard time in getting married in South Asia. But that poor man still has sexual needs, & even more so, after watching so much sexual images all around him. He may want to get married but he can't, because girls or their families want him to be educated (education costs money, too) or be education & be rich.

So, as you can see, nobody influential in the world of media is working towards reducing female nudity in the media. Quite contrary, it is being encouraged. Men, however, are being told to 'keep it in their pants', which goes against their biological nature. Women are trying to control relationships through sex; rewarding their male partners by sex when they are good & holding it back if their male partners do something undesirable. It is similar to being a pet that desirable behaviours are rewarded & undesirable ones are punished by the owners.

Cheating or adultery or infidelity is illegal in a majority of the countries. So married men are forced to rely on their wives for sexual satisfaction. They wouldn't have so much sexual needs if they are not bombarded 24/7 by sexualized media. But that's not the case. So, he is "forced" to relieve his sexual tension through his wife, since adultery is not allowed. But the wife just doesn't "feel" like having sex. What's he supposed to do? If he forces her, then it becomes marital rape. If he finds another girl, then it becomes cheating.

Today's man, around the world, is stuck between rock & a hard place.
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In India, it is not a crime for a man to rape his wife. And many believe that marriage is a source of sexual satisfaction for men &, therefore, women must submit.

No equality
...
Campaigners have long demanded that marital rape be criminalised in India.

A committee formed after the December 2012 gang rape & murder of a student on a bus in Delhi to suggest criminal law reforms recommended that martial rape should invite the same punishment as any other rape. The government of the day, led by the Congress party, rejected the recommendation.

Victims of marital rape, however, refuse to give up the fight.
...

Widely prevalent

Supreme Court lawyer Karuna Nundy who specialises in human rights litigation & gender justice says Indian law provides little relief to victims of marital rape.

"At the moment, a wife can file a case under the domestic violence act which are dealt with in a civil court. It gives a woman a legal right to separate from her husband on the grounds of cruelty.

"But what is the legal provision to punish the act of crime? Any sexual act which is forced or is being done without the consent of the woman is a crime. The relationship of the victim with the perpetrator makes no difference."

A number of studies done over the years suggest that sexual violence in marriage is prevalent in India.

The last National Family Health Survey (2005-2006), conducted among 124,385 women in 29 Indian states, had 10% women reporting that their husbands had physically forced them to have sex.

Another study conducted by the International Centre for Women (ICRW) & United Nations Population Fund's (UNPFA) across 7 states in India last year covered 9,205 men & 3,158 women aged 18-49 from each state. One-third of the men interviewed admitted to having forced a sexual act on their wives.

The victims of "marital rape" say they fight a lonely battle because their suffering falls under no category of Indian legal system. Moreover, society often blames them for maligning the institution of marriage.

However, Save the Family Foundation, a men's rights group, cautions against criminalising marital rape.

"We have already seen how 498A, the anti-dowry law, has been largely misused by women in India to harass men & their family. The Central Woman Commission of India has accepted that a number of rape cases reported each year are false. How can one prove a marital rape? Taking bedrooms to court is a dangerous idea," a spokesman said.
...

Monday, September 7, 2015

Criminal Minds, S1E12 (quote 1)

Don't blame the evil deeds you yourself do on a supernatural being. As the Quran says that we humans can be better than angels or worse than devils.

Friday, July 3, 2015

Animal-sex tourism banned in Denmark

Speechless after reading this news. What humans are becoming. Question to evolutionists: can we call this de-evolution?

I was surprised to read that there are actually organized animal sex shows & clubs in Denmark. Bestiality is still legal in Romania, Finland, & Hungary. So, this ban will only drive more traffic to those countries.

Next, Pride's slogan of "marriage equality for all," will be used by bestiality aficionados for themselves. Thinking logically, "marriage equality for all," should include them & their carnal desires to marry their dogs, cats, cattle & whatever other animal come across their way. But then where is the social boundary, if at all?

That's why, Islam recommended Muslims to marry so they have each other for their own sexual satisfaction. It provided relationship boundaries among Muslims who is legal for whom & when. Islam used months like Ramadan & fasting to train Muslims in controlling their physical urges for food, water, & sex.

I simply can't fathom where is the human race is heading. Are we really so much hungry for sex that anything & anyone will do, be it a little kid, a sex slave forced into this prostitution trade, or even an animal? Are we humans not worse than any other animal, which at least, satisfies itself only with its own species?
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Denmark has approved a law banning bestiality, in a move to tackle animal-sex tourism. Those found guilty of engaging in sexual relations with an animal will now face fines & prison terms.

Those in favor of the legislation said Denmark did not want to remain the last northern European country where bestiality was legal, as this was attracting animal-sex tourists.

"There are frequent reports of the occurrence of organized animal sex shows, clubs & animal brothels in Denmark," the Danish Ethical Council for Animals, an independent advisory board under the food & agriculture ministry, said in a report, as quoted by Reuters.

A 2011 Justice Ministry report found that 17% of veterinarians surveyed suspected an animal they treated had previously been subjected to intercourse with a human.

Farm Minister Dan Jorgensen didn't believe the current law was adequate & sought to strengthen animal welfare & protection in the country.

"The current legislation does not protect the animals enough. It's hard to prove that an animal suffers when a human has sexual intercourse with it, & that is why we must give the animal the benefit of the doubt,” he wrote in an opinion piece.

He also said earlier this month that offenders “must be made aware that we find maltreatment of animals absolutely unacceptable."

Animal rights campaigners, including People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA), also petitioned Prime Minister Helle Thorning-Schmidt & Jorgensen to amend the existing legislation.

But members of the Liberal Alliance, a libertarian party, have expressed opposition to the new law.

Best case, this is a superficial law. Worst case, it is political populism & moralism,” Liberal Alliance's Joachim Olsen said in February, as quoted by Mashable.

Once the law goes into effect on July 1, anyone found guilty of having sex with an animal will face fines & time in prison.

Hungary, Finland, & Romania are now the only EU countries where bestiality is legal.

Thursday, June 25, 2015

Era of loneliness? More than 66% of British adults are lonely

Ironically, "social media" has made the developed world (where social media is used the most) a lonely place.

What I disagree with the most in the article is the generalization that younger people who use social media the most are the most lonely. Now, admittedly, I don't know what is the definition of "using social media the most." I use social media often, even though, I am not lonely, & I dislike talking to people, other than my family, because I find most people morons.
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More than two thirds of adults in the UK feel lonely as social interaction appears to be on the decline. Younger people who use social media & technology daily experience the most loneliness, a study has found.
 
A nationwide study conducted by The Big Lunch found that 68% of adults in the UK say they feel lonely either often, always or sometimes. This is most acute among 18 to 34 year olds, with 83% of this age group experiencing loneliness.
 
More than a third (38%) said they now have less interaction with people they know than they did 5 years ago, while a quarter (27%) only interact socially with others once a week or less.
 
The research also found that adults in Britain spend only 4% of their time – around one hour a day – engaging in social interaction &, in a typical week, interact with only 6 friends, family members or neighbors, either in face-to-face conversations, a phone call or chatting online.
 
On average, women spend 15 minutes longer interacting socially each day than men.
 
Dr. Rebecca Harris, a psychologist at the University of Bolton, said: “The findings show that we’re spending less time having social interaction than we used to, we have fewer friends than we’d like & we’re finding it harder to make new friends. This decline in social contact could be contributing to the rise of loneliness in the UK.”
 
Loneliness is far more complicated than people imagine. It’s often seen as a one dimensional state, either ‘lonely’ or ‘not lonely’ & that just isn’t the case,” she added. “It can be a temporary state, but when prolonged, it’s a serious issue.”

While social interactions are declining, many also find it harder to make new friends. A third (33%) admitted they now find it harder to make new friends than they did 10 years ago.
 
The majority of UK adults have a small number of close friends. One in 10 even said they do not know how to start friendships any more. More than 40% of 18 to 34 year olds wish they had more friends, while 15% say they are “too scared” to talk to people they don’t know.
 
Young people feel lonelier than the elderly, the study suggests. Around half (48%) of people aged 55 and over say they never feel lonely. In comparison, 16% of 18 to 34 year olds said they always feel lonely.
 
Commenting on the research, Dame Esther Rantzen DBE, Founder of ChildLine & The Silver Line, said: “Loneliness has become an epidemic in the UK. This survey highlights how loneliness affects both young people & the older generation, while other research shows that it can contribute to depression & other serious risks to health.”

Tuesday, June 16, 2015

Tenancingo: Small town at the dark heart of Mexico's sex-slave trade

As I have blogged before that human trafficking, & especially women being trafficked, for the sole purpose of sex slavery is very common around the world; be it from Nepal to India, or South Asia to Dubai, or East Europe to West Europe, or in Latin America, but the sad part is that it has not only increased in the past decades or so, it is not even reported in the news as vigorously as what ISIS is apparently doing with captured Yazidi girls.

I am not saying that what ISIS is doing is correct, but we need to put this human trafficking & sex slavery phenomenon into perspective. What ISIS is doing is definitely abhorrent & should be stopped, but young girls are becoming sex slaves in Western Europe, Dubai, India, & even North America ... countries / regions, which purport to protect women & their rights.

The scope of what ISIS or Boko Haram is doing is rather small compared to how many girls are being forced into prostitution in law-abiding countries/regions. What's happening to girls in Iraq, Syria, or Nigeria is wrong but considering those are warzones, why is this such a prominent practice (sex slavery) in non-warzones, like Dubai, India, US, Canada, UK, Germany etc.?

Halfway through the article below (around paragraph 11), what strikes me as a universal trait of criminal nowadays is that criminals are the community leaders now, who host & fund religious & community gatherings. They all seem so genuine to the public. It's same all over the world. Now, it's becoming in our society, all over the world, that the younger generation wants to emulate the criminals of their communities. What will happen to that society when role models of the younger generations are the people who themselves are devoid of any morals & ethics?
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María Méndez was a live-in domestic worker when she met Ricardo López on her way to the supermarket. She was 15, from a poor family in the state of Mexico, & had been cleaning houses since the age of 8. He was a cocky, charming 16-year-old from Tenancingo, a small town in the neighbouring state of Tlaxcala. He courted her, promising marriage & a home. She desperately wanted it to be true, & within a fortnight moved with him to Tenancingo.
 
At first López & his family treated her well, but it quickly turned violent. “He sent me to work as a prostitute in Tijuana, Guadalajara, Torreón, Aguascalientes – all over the country to make money selling my body,” Méndez, now 59, told the Observer. “He said the money was to buy land so we could build a little house, but it was all false, even the name he’d given me was false. He made me live a very sad, ugly, desperate life. I was so ashamed.”

Méndez, like thousands of other vulnerable women in Mexico, was hoodwinked by a family of traffickers in Tlaxcala, the country’s smallest state just 2 hours east of Mexico City. This is a deeply religious place, where the indigenous Nahua people united with the Spanish to conquer the mighty Aztecs, but which over the past 5 decades has transformed into an unlikely hub of human trafficking.
 
In the US, five of the 10 “most wanted” sex traffickers are from Tenancingo, where Mendez’s nightmare began. Trafficking networks rooted in Tlaxcala are the biggest source of sex slaves in the US, the state department has said.
 
This improbable crime story began in the 1950s after industrialisation, when working-age men returned home from neighbouring states to find few opportunities beyond badly paid factory jobs. Pimping & trafficking, which they had seen while working away, was a way to get ahead, & many set up small, family-run sexual exploitation rings.
 
Some of the most powerful Tlaxcala families are believed to collaborate with Mexico’s most feared cartels.
 
In 2008 trafficking was detected in 23 of Tlaxcala’s 60 municipalities. By last year this had increased to 35, according to research conducted by local human rights group the Fray Julián Garcés centre, which has identified six “red zones” where sexual exploitation is most concentrated. (A government official told the Observer there were no red zones in Tlaxcala).
 
In Tenancingo, population 11,000, the presence of organised crime is breathtaking. Huge, tawdry houses are scattered among rows of ordinary, modest homes. Everyone knows who own the big houses, though, despite pressure from NGOs to improve transparency & target trafficking proceeds, there is no public land registry. The mansions look like fancy multilayered wedding cakes adorned with sculptured eagles, lions & swans. The grandiosity continues into the cemetery, where tombs are ornate & extravagant – not unlike those seen in villages of the northern state of Sinaloa, from where many of the drug cartel leaders hail.
 
In Tenancingo’s main square, a striking colonial church towers over taco stalls & shoe-shiners, a typical lunchtime scene apart from the new white Mustang & Chevrolet parked beside a bar. Here, a group of men in their 30s & 40s sporting designer jeans & T-shirts knock back cold beers under the piercing afternoon sun. Two police officers are stationed less than 150 metres away.

These guys are the archetypal padrotes [pimps],” said Emilio Muñoz, a Tlaxcala native & director of human rights & gender violence at the Fray Julián Garcés centre.

They are the ones who go to other states looking for vulnerable girls to trick – that’s their role in the family business. Everyone knows who the padrotes are, it’s no secret, & it’s the same families who sponsor religious festivals & community events. They operate with almost complete impunity. Trafficking has become so normalised & rewarding that young people look up to them.”

One in 5 children here wants to be a pimp when they grow up, according to a 2010 University of Tlaxcala study. Two-thirds of youngsters surveyed knew of at least one relative or friend working as a pimp or trafficker.
 
Tenancingo is the most notorious hotspot in Tlaxcala, with some estimates suggesting one in 10 people are actively involved in trafficking. But 16km north in Axotla del Monte, population 2,000, the concentration of garish mansions & flashy sports cars is even more conspicuous. This is another red zone, home to loyal, close-knit communities. In December 2012 the army was drafted in after police officers were almost lynched trying to detain an alleged trafficking family.
 
The old interstate highway connecting Axotla with Tenancingo is lined with cheap hotels. Official notices indicate a few recent closures, but many more are under construction. Around midday, young women wearing fake leather trousers & platform heels emerge near the hotels to attract the attention of passing motorists.
 
It is a wretched scene. The women’s features suggest they come from the poor southern states of Chiapas, Oaxaca & Guerrero, where a large proportion of trafficking victims originate, according to the United Nations Office for Drugs & Crime (UNODC). For most, Tlaxcala is only a pit stop until they are sent to more lucrative locations in northern Mexico & the US.
 
In recent years the modus operandi for trafficking throughout Mexico has shifted from kidnap & brute violence towards psychological deception & fake relationships. Poor, uneducated & often indigenous girls & women are dazzled & lured with the promise of jobs or marriage. Most commonly, as in Méndez’s case, women are initially persuaded to prostitute “for love”, in order to help resolve a financial crisis which the trafficking family feigns. By the time they realise & accept they are victims, their “husbands” use beatings & threats against their parents & children – often fathered by the traffickers – to control them.

The few successful prosecutions have mainly involved international crime groups, yet most trafficking in Mexico occurs within close family & friends’ circles using rustic methods of seduction which are very difficult to investigate & prosecute,” Felipe de la Torre, UNODC adviser in Mexico, said.
 
US authorities have prosecuted several powerful Tlaxcala families, most famously the Carreto clan, who between 1991 & 2004 duped, coerced & trafficked Mexican women into prostitution in New York City.
 
It took almost 10 years for one victim, a woman from Guadalajara, to be reunited with her daughter who was left growing up within the Carreto family in Tenancingo.

There is a lack of political will & legal sensitivity when it comes to reuniting victims with their children – who are at huge risk of being trafficked or absorbed into the crime family,” said Gretchen Kuhner, director of the Institute for Women in Migration.
 
The Tlaxcala government told the Observer that it has jailed 14 people for trafficking-related crimes since 2011 – around 10% of the national total. Authorities have rescued 127 trafficking victims, closed down more than 200 bars, nightclubs & hotels, & conducted hundreds of awareness-raising events, it added.
 
There are an estimated 20,000 trafficking victims in Mexico every year, according to the International Organisation for Migration. Tlaxcala has no refuge for trafficking victims.
 
Méndez endured 10 years of arrests, humiliation & threats, before finding strength through her faith to stand up to López & stop prostituting herself. “He beat me, threatened to take our children, but I stayed with him because of the shame. I couldn’t bear to tell my family the awful things I had done, or who my husband really was.”

They are still married, & live together near where the girls are forced to prostitute themselves on the highway. López works in a shop, though his extended family continue trafficking. Méndez added: “These men in their nice cars think money is more important than human dignity, but they are monsters, just like my husband. Sometimes when I see the poor girls I can’t breathe. I pray one day this town can come out of this.”

Monday, June 1, 2015

New studies link pollution to a variety of health risks

Obviously, who suffers the most with air pollution & its related illnesses: the poor. And thanks to the government's cutting of the healthcare budgets, those poor can't even get proper healthcare. It's like a double whammy.
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Since the US Clean Air Act’s passage in the 1970s, there have been a steady stream of reports correlating exposure to air pollutants with a variety of health impacts. But in the early days, much of that information was too rudimentary to be of much use. Monitoring technology has improved in the decades since, & state air-quality boards have amassed volumes of actionable data about air pollution.
 
The increase in available data coupled with advances in chemistry & 3D modeling over the past few years has enabled scientists to identify new particle systems within air pollution. Researchers are now able to determine all the various chemicals & particles that air pollution includes, & to study precisely how these various elements interact with, & in some cases fundamentally change, the human body.
 
Those advances have led to a rapid increase in published studies about air pollution over the past year, as researchers have focused their work on the interaction between pollution particles & human health. Multiple long-term studies of human health are beginning to produce results, as are ongoing studies of air pollution. 3 studies published just last week illustrate the state of rapidly advancing science around air pollution today.
 
In one study, Louisiana State University researcher Stephania Cormier reported that a particular type of free radicals (called environmentally persistent free radicals, or EPFRs), formed within the particulate matter emitted by cooking stoves, cars, factories, waste incinerators, wood fires, & cigarettes, can damage human cells.
 
The findings could have broad implications for businesses, considering that the Supreme Court is currently wrestling with how to interpret the Clean Air Act.
 
Cormier & her team divided a population of mice into 2 groups, exposing one to EPFRs & the other to no pollution. They then infected both groups with a flu virus.
 
The pollution-exposed mice were rendered virtually defenseless to the virus: 20% more of them died from the flu. Instead of fighting off the disease, their bodies reacted by triggering an anti-inflammatory signal, Interleukin-10, & switching on both an immune-regulating protein called aryl hydrocarbon receptor & immune cells called regulatory T cells, both of which turn off the body’s defenses against infection.
 
The researchers also found that the EPFRs caused oxidative stress, an imbalance between the production of free radicals & the ability of the body to counteract or detoxify their harmful effects.
 
What that means for similarly exposed communities is that asthma & the flu will be more severe for vulnerable members, like infants & the elderly.
 
More & worse allergies
 
Another study, published on 22 March by researchers at the Max Planck Institute for Chemistry in Germany, found that common traffic-related air pollutants may make allergies more severe.
 
The study’s authors conducted lab tests & computer simulations to study the effect of ozone & nitrogen dioxide on a primary birch pollen, Bet v1, & found that both pollutants affected how proteins in the pollen bound together, potentially creating a more potent allergen.

“Our research is showing that chemical modifications of allergenic proteins may play an important role in the increasing prevalence of allergies worldwide,” Christopher Kampf, one of the study’s authors, said in a statement.
 
Impact on the brain
 
Yet another study released last week, this one a collaborative effort between researchers at the Institute for the Developing Mind at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles & at Columbia University’s Center for Children’s Environmental Health, found a connection between common pollutants found in a wide range of emissions & cognitive & behavioral impairment.
 
The study looked at the effects of airborne polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH), a molecule prevalent in emissions from motor vehicles, oil & coal burning, wildfires & agricultural burning, hazardous waste sites, & tobacco smoke as well as charred foods.
 
The research team selected 40 minority youth, born to Latina or African American women, that Columbia researchers have been following from birth, & used magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to measure their brains.
 
The Columbia researchers had previously reported that PAH exposure during gestation in this group was associated with multiple neurodevelopmental disturbances, including development delay by age 3, reduced verbal IQ at age 5, & symptoms of anxiety & depression at age 7.
 
In the group of 40 studied in the MRI test, the researchers found a loss of the brain’s white matter surface, which correlates to slower processing of information & severe behavioral problems, including ADHD & aggression.
 
Postnatal PAH exposure – measured at age 5 – was found to contribute to additional disturbances in development of white matter in a separate area of the brain, one associated with concentration, reasoning, judgment, & problem-solving ability.

“This sample of 40 was quite ‘pure,’ in that their exposure to other known neurotoxicants was minimal, so we have more confidence in being able to attribute the brain abnormalities to the effects of prenatal & early childhood exposure to PAH,” Peterson said.
 
While the study group was small, Peterson said these results emphasize what we already know about the harmful effects of tobacco & add to the growing base of knowledge about the impacts of other sources of air pollution. Given the mounting evidence, he said, clinicians should educate prospective parents about these risks, especially in early pregnancy.
 
Peterson said that in less urban areas, exposure to pollutants from wildfires, agricultural burning & hazardous waste sites might be more relevant, & that women & children should remain indoors & use air conditioners as much as possible to avoid the airborne products of these fires.

“As the link between air-borne pollutants & adverse brain changes is linear & seems not to have any threshold that defines safe & unsafe exposure, any reduction in exposure during the most active periods of brain development – in fetal life & in early childhood – will be helpful.”

Translating research into action
 
According to the most recent American Lung Association State of the Air report, more than half of Americans live in areas with dangerously high levels of air pollution.
 
Children are the most severely impacted by air pollution, both in utero & in early childhood.
 
Air pollution also remains an issue of class & race. The dominant sources of pollution – traffic, industrial emissions, energy-related emissions (from oil refineries & coal plants), & hazardous waste – all disproportionately affect low-income & minority communities.
 
The quickest way to improve the air quality of all communities is increased state & federal regulation of the sources of air pollution. To that end, the US Supreme Court is due to address 2 major Environmental Protection Agency rules this summer, one that aims to regulate cross-state air pollution & one that would require better pollution controls on coal power plants.
 
Both have been criticized for being expensive & onerous to implement, but Supreme Court justices in favor of the rules have pointed to the EPA’s obligation to protect public health, not private profits.
 
Judge Judith W Rogers wrote as much in the majority opinion on the EPA’s mercury rule, which would require coal power plants to install scrubbers that would limit mercury emissions, costing them $9.6bn a year. Rogers said the EPA’s focus on “factors relating to public health hazards, & not industry’s objections that emission controls are costly” should motivate Congress to make appropriate & necessary regulatory rules.
 
Moreover, because the scrubbers required would also reduce other air pollutants, the EPA has estimated that the rule would save $26bn to $89bn per year in healthcare costs. The latest batch of air pollution research helps support that claim.

Beautiful Creatures (Quote 3)

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Friday, May 29, 2015

Are men becoming collateral damage in the battle for gender equity?

A good piece about how, "in order for women to be raised up, men have to be put down," in this modern age of ultra-feminism. We do undoubtedly need gender equality in our society, but we seem to forget whose rights are we trampling upon in achieving that. We need to be careful of how we are achieving our goals.

Primary problem with Western neo-feminism culture is that man & woman are not considered as 2 halves of the same species / human race. They are considered as 2 opposing forces. Modern neo-feminism teaches society that men are nothing more than garbage with their brains good for only one action only (in the bed) & they are good for nothing else.

Yes, there are men who are abusing women. And I am not talking or even defending their actions. But actions of a few are defining the whole half of a human race.

When society talks about men & male violence towards women, they forget to think about women & female violence towards men. Be it being portrayed in comedy movies like "Horrible Bosses," where Jennifer Aniston's character is sexually harassing & blackmailing her assistant, or news stories after stories coming out from North American schools where female teachers are sexually abusing their male students.

Islam teaches woman & man are equal, but both in their own places. Just like all fruits are equally required for our body to function properly (apples & oranges are 2 different fruits, but they are both needed by the body), both male & female halves of the human race / species are required for the proper functioning of the society. Similar to functions of the fruits, both of these halves of human race have different functions but both equally important.

If Islam has made woman in charge of the house & man out of the house (except in some special conditions), then it doesn't mean that man has more power in society over woman. Or, in a witness stand, if one man's testimony is enough versus 2 women's, then it doesn't mean that women are somehow below men or women are somehow more retarded than men.

Similar to these rules, in a home, husband is made to be the head of the household, since only one person can make decision in any organization (usually one CEO in organization) but the wife is not barred from giving her sincere advice to help her husband & her family, & husband is required to listen to her advice, even if, in the end, he makes a decision seemingly contrary to her advice (just like a CEO takes suggestions from his/her corporate team, but may not follow through on all of the suggestions).

Islam required both males & females to get education but it doesn't mean both of them need to be out of the house to use their education, to bring home the turkey. An educated mother is far more important to raise proper citizens for the society than an educated mother who is leading a billion-$$$ multinational corporation, all the while, ignoring her kids.

Other religions, like Christianity, considered woman akin to dirty distractions who takes away the focus of man from his work (that's why, Catholic priests used to not marry ... but they still had biological needs, which they fulfilled by sexually abusing young boys).

The Western feminism took woman out of the house but it didn't reduce the woman's workload at home. Whereas, man are still implicitly considered to not do anything at home. So, woman is doing the double the work in the Western society (outside & inside), whereas, man is only doing half (outside). Now, Islam didn't stop husbands from helping their wives in the household work or in raising their children.

In this race of showing sympathy to women's cause, the Western world is quickly beating down men. For instance, paternal rights to their children after a divorce. Maternal rights are strictly upheld, while paternal rights gets trampled upon.

Man & woman are not two opposing & competing forces in a society. They are both essential in forming a healthy & strong family unit & the whole society. One half of the human race (man) need not be put down so another half (woman) can come up, to achieve gender equality.
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Fraternity culture doesn’t have a fig leaf to hide behind these days.
 
I’m not making an apology for brutish, sexually violent behaviour. In recent reports from postsecondary campuses, some fraternity brothers ... sound like Neanderthals in fine wool sweaters.
 
At the University of Oklahoma, members of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity were caught singing a racist song. At Penn State, 144 members of Kappa Delta Rho participated in private Facebook postings of “nude females that appeared to be passed out or in other sexual or embarrassing positions,” according to police. One of the members, disgusted with the postings, reported them to authorities. The women were not aware that their photos were being taken. The fraternity has been suspended, & an investigation is reportedly under way.
 
And these stories are just the latest additions to a heaping pile of dirty frat laundry, much of it inadvertently aired by social media & surreptitious smartphone video.
 
But in the need to ensure there are safe places for women to be educated – which is crucial – isn’t it worth asking if there can be safe places for men to gather without suspicion of being a cabal of misogynist terrorism? In the heated discussion about rape culture, the feminist voice is loudest at the moment, which makes many young men feel that their every move, every thought, is policed. Some might even suggest they’re victims of misandry, if they weren’t sure their complaints would fall on deaf ears.
 
A witch hunt, you say? Well, I won’t use that loaded term, because it only serves to ratchet-up the gender wars when what we need is a little calm.
 
Earlier this year, when I was at Dalhousie University in Halifax to look into the dentistry faculty’s ordeal, in which a group of final-year male students posted sexually violent content to a private Facebook page, I came across a story about an altercation between female students & a fraternity last year. It spoke to the heightened tension between men & women in the fraught sexual culture on campus. Kappa Alpha fraternity at King’s College, which is connected to Dalhousie University, was criticized by a group of female students for being exclusionary.

I became aware that a lot of the first year [female students] in the first couple of weeks at school were being targeted by frat members while they’re learning their limits with alcohol & being invited to frat parties,” Bethany Hindmarsh, one of the students who wrote a letter to the King’s Students’ Union (KSU) about the fraternity, told me in an interview. While Hindmarsh & others canvassed opinions about the fraternity on campus to start a conversation about gender-equality issues, she says, one of the Kappa Alpha men reportedly threatened the KSU president, warning her not to interfere with their club. Several of the women were called “feminazis” by men & received sexually violent hate mail, Hindmarsh told me.
 
In an effort to unravel the he-said, she-said conflict, I also talked to a current Kappa Alpha member, Ari Flanzraich, who reported that the fraternity had meetings with King’s equity board in the wake of the women’s complaints. “Nothing came of it,” he said of the discussion. The complaints about the fraternity “were largely theoretical & broadly social [about the idea of exclusion].” He acknowledged that the “default patriarchal white-hetero-capitalist” society prevails & that it needs to change, but he feels the “anti-frat idea” is unrepresentative of what the men in Kappa Alpha at King’s uphold. “We’re open to talking. There is no personal animosity. What often goes on in fraternities in the States is despicable. We have no interest in that.” The King’s chapter of Kappa Alpha, which consists of approximately 15 friends, was set up as a literary society, he says.
 
Asked how rape culture pathologizes male thought & behaviour, he was cautious about making a comment for fear of how it might be misinterpreted. “As soon as I open my mouth, I’m judged,” he said. “I don’t walk around thinking of myself as a sinner,” he finally confessed, after some hesitation, adding that men are expected to constantly “be vigilant of their potential slippage” from politically correct actions & comments.
 
He’s right, of course. And that’s because part of the cultural discussion about fraternity culture centres around how aware men are of internalized (and normalized) misogyny.
 
But in the effort to bring about a harmonious culture of gender equity, how helpful is it to alienate all men, given that their collaboration is part of the solution? Sometimes, the cultural equation seems to be that in order for women to be raised up, men have to be put down, which is just as reductive as women being defined by their biological function – something early feminists found understandably demeaning & offensive.