Kanye West plans to evangelize Americas youth with music: No weapon formed against me shall prosper – The Christian Post

By Leonardo Blair, Christian Post Reporter | Monday, November 18, 2019 Rapper Kanye West speaks with Pastor Joel Osteen at Lakewood Church in Houston, Texas, on Sunday November 17, 2019. | Photo: Lakewood Church

Popular rapper and music producer Kanye West declared himself a formidable servant of Jesus Sunday as he called America back to God, teased big plans to evangelize the youth through new music and warned agents of the devil that no weapon formed against me shall prosper.

Every time I stand up, I feel that Im standing up and drawing a line in the sand and saying, Im here in service to God and no weapon formed against me shall prosper, West said in a wide-ranging discussion with Pastor Joel Osteen of Lakewood Church in Houston, Texas, before an audience of 17,000, at the churchs 11 a.m. service.

West, who revealed that his mother and father raised him in church and taught him the fear of God, said he now wants to do the same for his children he shares with wife, Kim Kardashian West.

As I now have a family. Im 42 years old, married for five years, there is a latent responsibility for me to become more like my mother, whos gone to Heaven, and more like my father, whos working and building a water purification system in the DR. You know with rappers theres so many things that weve done to maintain the idea of coolness. You know we have our own daughters and wed still be rapping about trying to hook up with somebody daughter, West said.

He explained that he is no longer blinded by the grip fame once had on him.

A lot of times when you are in service to fame, money, manpower, you start to feel like Satan is the most powerful. And you start to feel like if you service God that in life it means you will not prosper. And the only way to prosper is in service to fame. You know its like the devil stole all the good producers, the devil stole all the good musicians, all the good artists, all the good designers, all the good business people and said you got to come over and work for me. And now the trend, the shift is going to change.

Jesus has won the victory. Because now, now I told you about my arrogance and cockiness already, now the greatest artist that God has ever created is now working for Him, he said with a grin.

Looking back at Wests life in the secular music industry which glorifies anything but the fear of God, Osteen asked the rapper if he had any words of advice he could share with his younger self that could have helped him change the trajectory of his life.

While noting that there is nothing he could say that could reach his younger self, West explained that he believes music could and said he was working on new music to evangelize the younger generation.

Its nothing I could say to the younger Kanye through words. I could speak to the younger Kanye through music so this music gon come every month. We dropping that heat. We in the studio. God is strengthening our hands. We have writers, we have producers, were taking all the most fire producers and bringing them back to God. All the best voices, all the best dancers for us to see that its through Christ, West said.

The rapper, 42, who previously revealed that liposuction, a growing addiction to painkillers and wife Kim Kardashians robbery factored into a mental breakdown in 2016, told Osteen that he began feeling Gods call on his life around that time.

I know that God has been calling me for a long time. The devils been distracting me for a long time. When I was in my lowest point, God was there with me and sent me visions and inspiring me. I remember sitting in the hospital at UCLA after having a mental breakdown. Theres documentations of me drawing a church. ... Even after that I made, went and made the Life of Pablo album. I said this is a gospel album, he said.

I didnt know how to totally make a gospel album and Christians that were around were too, I would say, beaten into submission by society and not speak up and profess the Gospel to me because I was a superstar. But the only superstar is Jesus."

West launched his popular Sunday Service events, which generally include prayer and live music, inJanuary 2019. At the time, his wife said her family was on a path to spiritual enlightenment.

The journey has since led to West's recently released first faith-based album,Jesus Is King,which has gone on to make history onBillboard'sHot Christian SongsandHot Gospel Songscharts. The set opened at No. 1 on both the Top Christian Albums and Top Gospel Albums tallies (dated Nov. 9) with 264,000 equivalent album units earned in its first week (ending Oct. 31),according to Nielsen Music.

On Sunday, he pointed out how important it is to counter the influence of media on young children and explained how he is trying to do that through his music.

Thats why I say Closed on Sunday is the hardest record ever made. Its hard as the NWA record because its talking about protecting your kids from the indoctrination of the media. Thousands and thousands of images that are fed to children by the age of six or seven. And within those images, there are images mixed in that as parents we dont know about, purposely mixed in to lower the kids superpower and esteem so that they can be more susceptible to consumption and feel that they need to consume and become part of the robotic numeric system that controls so much of the media, West said.

West, who recently performed with his choir for an installment of his Jesus Is KingSunday Service concert in Texas jails,was praised by the states Republican Gov. Greg Abbott, who encouraged other artists to follow his lead.

What @kanyewest does to inspire the incarcerated is transformative. Saving one soul at a time. Inmates who turn to God may get released earlier b/c of good behavior & may be less likely to commit future crimes. It would be great if other artists followed Kanyes lead, Abbott noted on Twitter.

West alluded to the experience of ministering in Texas jails and called on America to set itself as an example of a Christian nation.

Following the Bible can free us all. Its an interesting thing, when we were at the prison professing how Jesus can set you free and its true. The more and more this entire country follows Christ and sets the example that we are a Christian country. They are attempting to take prayer out of schools. When you remove the fear and love of God you create the fear and love of everything else, he said to applause.

Reinstate the fear and love of God and eliminate everything else, he said, noting that he got that wording from Osteen.

Theres a lot of people in the Christian community that try to give Joel a hard time because when you turn on the radio he keeps on showing you how good God is.

God is not the enemy. God is not the negative part. God is not just the perception of fire and brimstone. God is love God is family. God is friendship. God is prosperity. Keep your eye on the sparrow. Keep your eye on the beauty and love and grace of God that allows us to be here today with all of our sins, West further noted.

When youve got Kanye defending you, youve made it man, Osteen quipped in response.

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Kanye West plans to evangelize Americas youth with music: No weapon formed against me shall prosper - The Christian Post

MOVIE REVIEW: Scorsese, De Niro and Pesci at their best in ‘The Irishman’ – Gwinnettdailypost.com

Four out of four starsThe Irishman is director Martin Scorseses 37th feature film. While it marks a milestone in his storied career, many are prematurely considering it to be his swan song.

If this is the case, hes certainly going out on a high note. But dont expect him to quietly fade into the sunset. This is a man who views his art as lifeblood and will continue working until his dying breath.

Scorsese (who turns 77 this Sunday) has six more projects in various stages of preproduction (including biographies on Theodore Roosevelt, George Washington and Mike Tyson) and he shows no sign of slowing down.

In the pantheon of Scorsese films, The Irishman ranks near the top (fifth in my opinion) and joins his other crime dramas as the finest of that particular genre ever produced. Scorsese has successfully branched out into other types of storytelling (documentary, spiritual enlightenment, fantasy, musical), but he will be always associated with crime movies which is accurate but also a disservice to his legacy. Hes made many other great movies, but mob flicks are the undeniable zenith of his output.

Clocking in one minute shy of three and a half hours, The Irishman is an epic by any definition, yet it goes by in a relative flash. The narrative is the cinematic equivalent of Shakespeares Hamlet, Mozarts Jupiter symphony or Miles Davis Kind of Blue album.

Beginning with nary a whisper, the story builds with exacting precision; every frame, glance and word of spoken dialogue serves a distinct purpose, slowly growing in intensity. Scorsese, his longtime editor Thelma Schoonmaker and screenwriter Steven Zaillian (Schindlers List, Gangs of New York) are determined to let the story breathe and evolve at its own measured pace, and never once do they ever allow it to lull or languish.

This deliberate, methodical and patient approach to storytelling might not work for everyone. Those wishing for another variation on Mean Streets, GoodFellas, The Departed or Casino should avoid the film or greatly temper their instant gratification expectations. There are no jump cuts, no whiplash editing, zero classic rock accompaniment or overt grandiose, operatic flourishes. It is bravura, but not braggadocio, and shows a master filmmaker clicking on all cylinders without ever getting winded or appearing to break a sweat.

Playing the titular character, Scorsese mainstay Robert De Niro takes the lead as Frank Sheeran, a foodservice truck driver who figures out early on hes stuck in a dead end job. He starts a side hustle by short-changing some customers, paying off others, selling stolen goods on the cheap and gaining a reputation for pinching without too many people noticing. This grabs the attention of Philadelphia mob kingpin Russell Bufalino (Joe Pesci), a man wielding immense power with a similar low-key approach.

More resembling Paul Sorvinos calm Pauly from GoodFellas than his high-voltage character from the same film, Pesci speaks in a muted cadence for the duration and recalls the unfussy grandeur and knowing self-confidence of Marlon Brando in The Godfather or Al Pacino in The Godfather II.

As Teamster head honcho Jimmy Hoffa, Pacino has the showiest part in the film, often recalling his roles in Scarface and Scent of a Woman. This is not in any way a slam on Pacino. Hes playing a guy who reveled in blustery self-promotion and barking his resentment at the most minor slighting. One of the movies best subplots portrays Hoffa as a huge JFK supporter-turned-enemy after Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy began investigating organized labor in general and Hoffa in particular.

After a breaking-in period of sorts, Bufalino assigns Sheeran to be Hoffas shadow and right hand. For a while, all three men are content with the arrangement. As he did with Bufalino, Sheeran gains the respect, affection and admiration of Hoffa, who is indebted more than hed like to be to Bufalino.

The principal rub of the main plot occurs when Sheeran becomes torn in his allegiances to the two men who control his life; it permanently drives a wedge between him and one of his daughters (Anna Paquin).

Based mostly on the Sheeran biography, I Heard You Paint Houses by Charles Brandt, Zaillians screenplay is air-tight regarding continuity, but also takes some degree of artistic liberty on at least two key occasions. Its worth noting that Brandts book is Sheerans slant on events when Sheeran was in the throes of death; a period when he might have been seeking some type of confessional moral cleansing or semi-inflated puffing up of his own legend. In either case, Sheeran by proxy becomes something of a third person, Richard III unreliable narrator, and the story is presented from his often unverified perspective.

If you wish to see The Irishman on the big screen, you better do so prior to Nov. 27. That is the day when it will only be available on Netflix. Whatever viewing venue you choose, The Irishman is a film which furthers the searing impact of the medium to a level we havent yet experienced and is something every serious movie fan should treat themselves to at their earliest possible convenience.

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MOVIE REVIEW: Scorsese, De Niro and Pesci at their best in 'The Irishman' - Gwinnettdailypost.com

Who Was the Buddha? – Lion’s Roar

Each Friday, we share three topical longreads in our Weekend Reader newsletter. This week, Lions Roardeputy editor Andrea Miller tells the story of Siddhartha Gautama. Sign up hereto receive the Weekend Reader in your inbox.

For thirteen years, Ive worked as a journalist, interviewing writers, actors, activists, dharma teachers, and more. Recently, someone asked me whom Id interview if there were no limits and I could interview anyone I wanted.

This was not a question I had to think twice about. Beyond a doubt, I would zip back in time some 2,600 years and hoof it all over northern India until I found the Buddha. Then I would turn on my recorder and dive into my million and one questions.

Tradition has it that the Buddha was born a prince named Siddhartha Gautama. There was a prophecy that Siddhartha would either become a great king or a great spiritual master. Siddharthas father carefully sheltered his son from anything unpleasant so his son would choose the path of royalty.

Prince Siddhartha got married and had a son of his own. Then, at the age of twenty-nine, he saw suffering for the very first time: an old person, a sick person, and a corpse. He also encountered a spiritual seeker who was attempting to find freedom from suffering. Siddhartha was profoundly affected and, in the middle of the night, he slipped away from his worldly life in the palace.

For six years, Siddhartha lived as an acetic, eating almost nothing. Eventually he realized that if he continued to mistreat his body, he would die. If he wanted to reach enlightenment, he needed a middle way neither harsh asceticism nor indulgence. Siddhartha ate a bowl of milky rice, which gave him enough strength to sit under a tree until he understood the true nature of things, becoming the Buddha.

For the next forty-five years, the Buddha taught others how they too could reach enlightenment. Then at the age of eighty, he apparently died of food poisoning.

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So that is quite a lot of information about the Buddha and, trust me, there is a mountain more but is it true? Nothing, apparently, was written down about him neither his teachings nor his life story until the end of the first century BCE. Passed down orally for hundreds of years, parts of his biography were surely misremembered and maybe even fabricated.

Since I cant actually get that interview with the Buddha, each of us will just have to decide for ourselves what we believe is factual and what we believe is myth. But in the end Im not convinced it matters so much. Whats important is whether or not we feel the basic tenets of the teachings attributed to the Buddha, such as the four noble truths and the practice of mindfulness, are deeply true and helpful to our lives, however they originated.

Here are three articles from theLions RoarandBuddhadharmaarchivesabout Siddhartha Gautama.

Andrea Miller, deputy editor,Lions Roar

The Buddha was a real historical person who ate, slept, sweated, and got tired. Yet he was also an extraordinary person who developed inspiring qualities that we are all capable of developing. If you find some of the details of the developed hagiography of the Buddha an off-putting burden, look to him as a great human teacher of the path beyond human limitation.

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I approached him, the twenty-fifth buddha, knowing that something new and marvelous had happened in the forest that night. Instead of going where the path might lead, he had gone instead where there was no path and left a trail for all of us. I asked him:

Are you a god now?

Quietly, he made answer. No.

Well, are you an angel?

No.

Then what are you?

Awake.

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Like the Stoics, Epicureans, and Platonists in ancient Greece and Rome, Gautama instructed in the manner of a philosopher, a lover of wisdom. He taught and modeled a viable way to human flourishing, and did so rooted firmly in everyday life. With precision, care, and intelligence, Gautama articulated for us the categories and practices through which we may clearly understand our lives and, doing so, know for ourselves the simple happiness of existing, in difficult as well as trouble-free times. And all of his advice onthesematters stands in full view conspicuous, open to scrutiny, testable.

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Lions Roar is a nonprofit. Our mission is to share the wisdom of the Buddhas teachingsto inspire, comfort, support, and enlighten readers around the world. Our aspiration is to keep LionsRoar.com available to everyone, providing a supportive, inspiring Buddhist community that anyone can access, from curious beginners to committed meditators. Do you share our aspiration? We cant do this without your help.

Lions Roar reaches more readers like you than ever before. Unfortunately, advertising and other revenues are falling for print and online media. We know we have something deeply precious to share with the world, and we want to continue this important work. Can you help support our efforts now?

Lions Roar is independent, unbiased, not-for-profit, and supported by readers like you. Please donate today and help the lions roar echo for readers around the world.

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Who Was the Buddha? - Lion's Roar

The Funeral Traditions of Different Culture and Religion – Agence de presse D.I.A.

The funerals Ive attended have all been very much the same. Relatives and friends arrive in all black and take seats in the church or synagogue pews for a somber ceremony where prayers are said, memories are shared and tears are shed. The attendees walk slowly out to their cars and form a single file line a behind the hearse, arriving at the graveyard where they place roses on the casket just before its lowered into the ground. Then, they proceed to the immediate familys home, where the doorbell rings with a steady stream of loved ones casserole dishes in hand since, in the days ahead, people often forget to eat.

A funeral usually consists of a religious service followed by a procession to the cemetery or crematory. A brief service usually takes place as the body is buried or cremated. Most funeral services as held in chapels, mortuaries, or in churches. Muslims bury their dead as soon as possible. The body is buried with face facing towards the holy city of Mecca. Signs of grief are discouraged, for Muslims believe they should accept the will of God without murmur.

Hindus in India perfume the corpse and adorn it with flowers. They then burn it, and later throw the ashes in the Ganges River. Buddhists believe in reincarnation and that death is a transformation into the next incarnation. Each incarnation brings the soul closer to nirvana, which offers complete spiritual enlightenment. Because of this belief, Buddhist funerals celebrate the souls ascent from the body, rather than the demise of the body itself.

Beside different funeral tradition in religion, there are different tradition in many culture. For example Traditional cremations in Bali are a colorful and elaborate event that can take weeks or even months to prepare.

The coffin, or Lembu, is shaped like an ox or horse and decorated with gold and red. The Waddhu is a decorative tower carried during the funeral procession. Orthodox, Russian rituals, that are held to say farewell to the deceased one. Eastern Orthodox funerals are important rituals with a set structure. There will often be an open coffin, which mourners will circle round in an anti-clockwise direction. Priests sprinkle soil and holy water onto the person who has died as part of the traditional funeral ritual.

Another example Aboriginal mortuary rites in Australia. When a loved one dies in Aboriginal society in Australias Northern Territory, elaborate rituals begin. First, a smoking ceremony is held in the loved ones living area to drive away their spirit. Next a feast is held, with mourners painted ochre as they partake in food and dance. The body is traditionally placed atop a platform and covered in leaves as it is left to decompose. It has been reported that in some traditions, fluids from the platform can help identify the deceaseds killer.

What will your funeral be like? Will you have a traditional ceremony or modern celebration of life? You make arrangements in advance and know youre getting the farewell you want with a funeral service company to prepare a funeral in Sydney.

A funeral service, whether traditional or more modern has two primary functions to publicly acknowledge the death and lifetime achievements of an individual and to bring grieving family members and friends together in support of one another during this difficult time of transition. While the event also involves the final care of the physical remains of the deceased through burial or post-funeral cremation, the service helps repair the tear of the social fabric of a community caused by the death and helps grieving friends and family members through an orchestrated time of social support.

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The Funeral Traditions of Different Culture and Religion - Agence de presse D.I.A.

Children in Need events across Gwent – South Wales Argus

FUNDRAISING events are going on up and down Gwent today as part of Children in Need.

Across the UK adults and children are putting on fun events to raise money to help children all over the world - culminating in a mammoth live TV show.

And this year youngsters from Gwent will be taking part, with children from Pillgwenlly Primary School and Ysgol Gyfun Cwm Rhymni taking part in a special performance at Cardiffs Broadcasting House.

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Here are some of the events going on across Gwent today:

Caldicot

Caldicot town centre will be a hub of all things Children in Need this evening. Between 5pm and10pm there will be a load of events going on in the town. Hosted by Winds of Time, the entertainment will be hosted by DJ Sam of Get Dancing. Circus skills will be on show, theres crazy golf, inflatable domes, glitter painting, balloon making and more for the kids and adults to do. Pudsey himself will even be along for a visit and you can get your photo taken with the bear.

Malpas

Malpas Spiritual Enlightenment Clinic will be hosting an event to raise money for the charity. Between 6.30pm and 9.45pm, you will be able to take part in a psychic supper. This event will give you the chance to have a one to one reading and a nice supper. This is a ticketed event and you will have to book ahead of turning up. Tickets are 12 and can be bought from Malpas Spiritual Enlightenment Centre.

Valleys Gymnastics

Valleys Gymnastics Academy are hosting a pyjama day to raise money for Children in Need. So, if your child is attending a class at the academy today, make sure theyre ready with their PJs over their leotards.

This is happening at all their venues.

They are also able to make donations and bring in cans of food for the foodbank making it a double whammy of fundraising.

Do you have an event for Children in Need? Let us know and send us your pictures and you could be featured in the South Wales Argus.

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Children in Need events across Gwent - South Wales Argus

With Kartarpur, Pakistan says: Our arms are always open for you whenever you visit – Gulf News

"I want to congratulate our govt for readying Kartarpur, in record time, for Guru Nanak jee's 550th birthday celebrations," twitted Prime Minister Imran Khan. Image Credit: Twitter/ @ImranKhanPTI Highlights

As hope lays frail, darkness recedes when slivers of sunlight, splendid, proud, reach an arctic cave. The world moving towards its moral centre is a barefoot walk on a frozen expanse. It is still joyous.

Asia bibi, a poor Christian woman from the village Ittanwala in Punjab, arrested in 2009 on an allegation of blasphemy, was sentenced to death in 2010. Her life was a series of solitary confinements, her punishment based on an unproven, false accusation a challenge for a few human rights activists and conscientious lawyers, her release a taboo in a Pakistan where even mentioning her case placed a bullseye on your faith. Salmaan Taseers midday assassination in a public place was the deadly silencing of any future courageous voice rising against the blackness of the British-made blasphemy law, practised in Pakistan, that destroyed lives in the name of Allah and His prophet who require no human protection.

Many appeals failed. Several years passed. Asia bibi remained jailed, forgotten, hidden in the dark.

On October 31, 2018, two months after swearing-in of Imran Khan as the new prime minister of Pakistan, the Supreme Court, in a historic move, overturned Asia bibis conviction and death sentence. A nationwide protest, headed by self-appointed vigilantes of religion, swelled on the outrage of a blasphemer having been pardoned. Instead of jubilation that even the highest human court had found Asia bibi not guilty of any kind of blasphemy, hordes of men, duped on the sanctification of their intention, threatened harm if the decision remained unrevoked.

Prime Minister Khan, reiterating his absolute faith in Allah and His prophet, supported the Supreme Court verdict, and issued an ultimatum to those who threatened to unleash havoc in Pakistan misusing religious injunctions. He told them not to clash with the state.

Protests ended without any damage to life and property. The Supreme Court verdict and Khans stance brought a hint of solace amidst the lingering dismay and disappointment of Khan governments September 7 rescinding of its appointment of the world-renowned Princeton economist, Atif Rehman Mian, as an advisor to Khan-led Economic Advisory Council. Atif Mian, despite his impeccable educational and professional credentials, was removed, albeit much reluctantly, because a large section of Pakistan, ostensibly, had a fundamental issue with his faith. Atif Mian is an Ahmedi Muslim. Human beings have forcibly patented as their religious right what is only a divine prerogative: judging an individuals faith.

Kartarpur Corridor

On November 26, 2018, Prime Minister Khan, along with Chief of Army Staff Qamar Javed Bajwa, inaugurated the Kartarpur Corridor or Rahdari in the Narowal district of Punjab. The corridor linking Pakistans Kartarpur to Indias Gurdaspur opened the way for Sikh pilgrims to visit one of their holiest places, the shrine of Guru Nanak Dev Saheb. Celebrated as the residence where Guru Nanak is said to have spent the last eighteen years of his life, the Gurdwara Darbar Saheb in Kartarpur is as sacred to Sikhs as Mecca is to Muslims. Khan promised to open the corridor for the 550th birth anniversary of Guru Nanak Dev Saheb in November 2019.

The January of 2019 ended with the Supreme Court upholding its verdict of Asia Bibis release. Outrage whimpered in the background.

One road opens the way for another. In March 2019, the government of Pakistan stated its willingness to open the Sharda Temple Corridor in Pakistan Administered Jammu and Kashmir for Hindu pilgrims from Kashmir across the border and India.

In April 2019, the government announced restoration and reopening of Hindu temples that had been closed for prayer for decades. The restoration work, according to the Evacuee Trust Property Board, was to start with two historic Hindu temples in Sialkot and Peshawar.

In May 2019, Asia Bibi, despite strident noise about her release, was sent to Canada to join her family.

Speaking to a delegation of Thai Buddhist monks in October 2019, Pakistan Foreign Secretary Sohail Mahmood said: Pakistan is proud of its multicultural heritage, which has been assiduously preserved and promoted as the shared heritage of mankind. Thai Monk Most Venerable Arayawangso, reiterating Pakistans mission to realign its ethos vis--vis recognising and respecting sensibilities of followers of other faiths, stated: This sends a message to the world that peace existed on the land of Pakistan...This will be a gateway to peace and harmony.

Buddhist monks from South Korea visited the Bhamala Stupa in Haripur, Pakistan, earlier this month. Buddhist chief monks Dr Neung-her Sinim, Jeok Kyung and Jeong Wei prayed for peace in the region at their scared stupa. Speaking to Gulf News, Dr Neung said: Pakistanis and the world must realise the significance Bhamala holds for the spiritual community. Our ancestors chose this place. This is why we pray here for peace in the region and the world.

Earlier this week, PTI Central Secretary Information Ahmad Jawad announced the reopening of four hundred Hindu temples in Pakistan. He said: This development is being made in line with the longstanding demand of the Hindu community that their places of worship be restored to them.

On November 9, Indias Supreme Court announced the Ayodhya verdict. The verdict reopened, in all its bleeding horror, the memories of the enormity of the demolition of the centuries old Babri Masjid and its aftermath.

Landmark day

On November 9, Pakistan opened the Kartarpur Corridor. The day became another landmark in Pakistans rediscovered enlightenment and acceptance with generosity of spirit a fundamental tenet of humanity: inclusiveness. With the arrival of Sikh pilgrims from India, including former Indian prime minister, Manmohan Singh, the few-mile Kartarpur Corridor became the pathway to one of Sikhs holiest places. Today, the Guru Nanak Gurdwara is the magnificent symbol, resplendent in its white simplicity, of deep significance of religion working as a collective embrace of humanity, and not a divisive political tool.

A year ago, Prime Minister Khan made a promise to his Sikh friend and guest, Navjot Singh Sidhu, and all visiting Sikhs that Pakistan would open the Kartarpur Corridor for the 550th birth anniversary of Guru Nanak. Pakistan kept its promise.

Khan, speaking on the occasion of the opening of the Kartarpur Rahdari said: First of all, I congratulate the Sikh community on the 550th birth anniversary of Baba Guru Nanak and welcome you all... I am always so happy to see the Sikh community that has come here. God lives in the hearts of all of us. All the messengers who have come and gone only ever brought two messages, that of peace and justice.

Khan said: I am happy we could do this for you. Believe me, I had no idea of the importance this place holds; I found out a year ago. That Khan is the leader of a Pakistan that is inclusive, diverse, generous, compassionate. That is the Pakistan of Mohammad Ali Jinnahs vision, and the hope of millions of Pakistanis. That is my Pakistan.

And that is the Pakistan of all those Pakistanis who think of their neighbours like the bus driver Saddam Hussain does. His unrehearsed, glorious words to an Indian journalist on November 9, while driving a shuttle bus from the Kartarpur terminal to the Gurdwara, echo the collective sentiments of a Pakistan that believes in the power of religions, even in their differences, acting as a unifier.

Hussain said: My happiness is such it might be more than yours. My eyes have welled up with tears that you have come to your home, to your Gurus home. Allah knows. We have that feeling when we go for Haj. The way you have come, I swear I dont know how to describe it. I dont have words; I feel so much joy. Punjab has united again. May Allah keep you happy like you are now, and you keep visiting like you are now. Our arms are always open for you whenever you visit, sir.

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With Kartarpur, Pakistan says: Our arms are always open for you whenever you visit - Gulf News

The Rights Judeo-Christian Fixation – The New Republic

Second,Gaston reveals that Judeo-Christianitys ascendance was not powered by the liberalbelief that all religions should be equal in the eyes of a neutral government.Instead, Judeo-Christianity was most commonly the domain of fiery anti-secularists,who railed against any separation between church and state. Building off ideas developedin the interwar period, thinkers in this camp spent the 1940s and 1950s claimingthat religious teachings needed to dominate the public sphere. Limiting state supportfor religious schools or charities, they warned, would foster secularism, whichwould directly lead to nihilism and social anarchy. Indeed, in their minds, secularismwas the true core of totalitarianism; Hitler and Stalins regimes were notsimply oppressive, but were atheist plots to replace religious authority withsoulless states. Such anxieties even motivated thinkers later consideredprophets of tolerance, such as the influential Catholic theologian JohnCourtney Murray. While he vocally advocated for Catholic cooperation with otherfaiths and embraced religious liberty (a principle that the Catholic churchformally opposed until the 1960s), he also warned that limiting funding forreligious schools would send the United States down the path of Nazi Germanyand the Soviet Union. Judeo-Christianity, then, sometimes served as a tool ofanti-secular exclusion.

Thisexclusionary impulse only hardened after the U.S. intervention in Vietnam, aswriters began to understand Judeo-Christianity not only as a religioustradition, but as one with clear racial and sexual meanings. Up until the early1960s, progressive activists occasionally employed the term; Martin LutherKing, Jr., for one, claimed that Judeo-Christianity should engender racialequality. By the 1970s, however, anti-racist and anti-sexist activists condemnedthe concept as a source of Americas moral rot. Black radicals such as OssieDavis railed against white Western Judeo-Christian capitalist civilization. Feministwriter Mary Daly agreed, decrying in Beyond God the Father: Toward aPhilosophy of Feminist Liberation (1973) the history of antifeminism inthe Judeo-Christian heritage. Thinkers in this camp found little comfort intradition. Rather than providing the template for freedom, the United Statesalleged spiritual tenets had to be overthrown.

Conservatives,in response, doubled down on their insistence that the United States was an inherentlyreligious nation and appealed to Judeo-Christianity to challenge taxation andabortion. American values, wrote Secretary of Defense Elliot Richardson in1973, called for Judeo-Christian charity, not big government. By the 1980s,the term encapsulated the rights powerful cocktail of white resentment,sexism, and anti-welfare rage. Judeo-Christianity, writers implied, was morethan a specific variation of American evangelism; rather, it was a timelesstradition whose defense necessitated opposition to affirmative action, equalityfor women and sexual minorities, and redistributionist policies. Jerry Falwell,for example, in his best-selling booklet Listen, America! (1980), replacedhis older language of Christian nationalism with praise for traditional Judeo-Christian values concerning thefamily. That same year, Judeo-Christianity made its first appearance in aparty platform, as the Republicans swore to defend it. It would reappear there insubsequent elections, an epitaph for the terms anti-egalitarian flavor.

Inthe conclusion to her book, Gaston wonders if Judeo-Christianity is approachingthe end of its journey. In the decades since the terms emergence, after all, thenations religious and ideological composition has changed substantially, fosteringnew political languages. This shift is especially pronounced on the Americanleft, where political coalitions have expanded not only to include religiousgroups beyond Christianity and Judaism, but also the religiously unaffiliated(the so-called nones). Barack Obama was sensitive to this reality when hebecame the first president to celebrate American atheists and agnostics. Trump, Gaston argues, has similarlybroken with Republican precedent, measuring righteousness not through piety butthrough military and economic domination. While the president may utter somehollow paeans to Judeo-Christianity, these are merely bones he throws hisevangelical supporters and their anti-secular fixations.

Thoughthis may be true, Imagining Judeo-Christian America spends less time than it could* on the termsmore recent adoption on the radical right. Perhaps because Gaston is focused onexposing Judeo-Christianitys anti-secularist bent, she is sometimes less attunedto its entanglement with racial politics and to its use by avowedethno-nationalists. Few represent this transmutation better than Steve Bannon, Trumpsformer senior advisor and a significant figure in the global alt-right. Hardlya practicing Christian, Bannon has often claimed that societies strengths lay in theirethnic homogeneity. This is why, he argues, nationalists must smash the powerof globalism, epitomized by international organizations, finance, andmigration. For Bannon, however, this nationalist revolution also has ageopolitical aspect, best captured through a religious terminology. The whitenations, he explained in a recent interview, constitute the Judeo-Christian West,which should to come together with Russia to defeat their Muslim and Chineseopponents. Indeed, Judeo-Christianity has been a long-standing obsession forBannon, who nostalgically waxed about the long history of the Judeo-Christian Wests struggle against Islam in a 2014 speech to a Vatican conference organized byreactionary Catholics. So enchanted hewas with this concept that in 2018 he sought to establish a new center in Italy for nationalist and populist teachings, the Academyfor the Judeo-Christian West.

Theradical rights embrace of Judeo-Christianity is more than a linguistic tic. Inusing this terminology, the new right replicates its predecessors ambiguousfeelings about Judaism, simultaneously depicting Jews as villains and allies. Theradical right remains haunted by the specter of Jewish financial control, ananxiety dramatically embodied in the conspiracy theories swirling around GeorgeSoros. And as the murderer in the 2018 Pittsburgh synagogue shooting explainedin his violent manifesto, some also associate Jews with support for immigrationof non-whites, vilifying them as agents of white genocide. At the same time, Israeland Jews often loom large in the right-wing imagination as a powerful incarnationof Western values. Israels military clashes with Muslim neighbors and itsinsistence on preserving ethnic exclusivity, recently solidified in the 2018 nation state law declaring that the state belongs to Jewsalone, enchant the radical right. As the white supremacist Richard Spencer has gushed, Jews are, onceagain, at the vanguard, rethinking politics and sovereignty for the future,showing a path forward for Europeans. In all of this, the American right ishardly alone. Hungarys Viktor rban and Frances Marine Le Pen similarlytraffic in anti-Semitic tropes about Jewish global control while simultaneouslymusing on Judeo-Christian values and warmly embracing Israels BenjaminNetanyahu.

Thesedynamics matter not only when it comes to Judaisms status in American politics.They are part of the rights broader strategy to bolster hierarchies by using termsthat sound as if they foster egalitarianism. Freedom of religion, forexample, ostensibly a universal protection for worship, has been recentlyappropriated by American evangelicals in their crusade to protect Christianprayers in state-run events. The Trump Administration followed suit, and complementedits Muslim ban with the establishment of a special Religious Freedom TaskForce, whose goal was to defend conservative Christians right to discriminateagainst women and LGBTQ+ people (by protecting corporations and organizationsright to deny coverage for contraception and to fire individuals based onsexual orientation and gender identity). Similar dynamics have come into playwhen right-wing speakers have weaponized the right to free speech. In thehands of figures like Jordan Peterson and Ben Shapiro, free speech is mostly invokedto support the right to harass and insult women and people of color. Collegecampuses have drawn especially intense attention from conservatives, who, underthe banner of diversity of thought, demand spaces and resources for right-leaningfaculty and speakers. In the intellectual universe concocted by the Americanright, universities most urgent challenge is not to curtail crushing studentdebt, address savage budget cuts by legislators, or improve the representationof women and people of color; instead, it is to protect the opinions of the alreadyprivileged.

Inthis regard, Gastons brilliant book uncovers not only a fascinating history,but also a powerful template used in conservative politics today. She shows howeasily inclusive language can be mobilized for anti-egalitarian purposes. Bydoing so, her book further hints at the limited nature of many Americanconcepts of inclusion. The radical rights use of Judeo-Christianity, afterall, is not a brazen co-option or appropriation so much as it is an update of theterm, which has largely been used in an exclusionary way. A more egalitarianfuture cannot simply rely on reclaiming or rescuing historical concepts. Thereis little point on insisting that progressive agendas fulfill long-standingAmerican virtues, especially those that have become linguistic mainstays ofconservative politics. New realities are instead more likely to emerge by discardingsuch historical concepts altogether. And among the first terms to be retiredshould be Judeo-Christianity.

* The article originally stated that the book overlooks the terms more recent adoption on the radical right.

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The Rights Judeo-Christian Fixation - The New Republic

The World-Soul, Natura and Mother Earth – Patheos

Viv Lynch: Mother Earth: The Legend of Aataentsic / flickr

When not dealing with dogmatic issues, the Christian faith allows for a great diversity of thought. This is why there are a variety of theological schools of thought, each which promote the basics of the faith, but otherwise differ radically from each other in various different ways.[1]

Christians can differ with each other on many of the characteristics which they predicate to creation as a whole, as well as to each particular object within creation. What might seem to be absolutely absurd to one Christian can seem to be perfectly true to another. Thus, for example, Christians can believe in the existence of alien life, but they are also free to deny it[2]. Each person will have their reasons for their beliefs, and each can be a perfectly orthodox Christian thinker despite the differences of their beliefs. Indeed, they can be wrong about such secondary things and still be perfectly sound in their Christian faith.

We find some medieval Christians believed that God has given intellectual life not only to humanity, but to the planets and stars in the heavens. Likewise, no one less than St. Augustine himself considered it possible that the Earth itself was alive, that is, that it had a soul of its own, allowing it to be treated as another sentient being of God. To be sure, Augustine was not certain, and left the question open, as to whether or not the Earth should be seen as having such life, but in his early works, there are indications that he accepted the notion of the world-soul, granting the Earth life. Thus, in his Immortality of the Soul, he said Hence, the body subsists through the soul and exists by the very fact that it is animated, whether universally, as is the world, or individually, as is each and everything that has life within the world.[3] When he reflected upon the matter further, he did not deny the possibility, but only came out agnostic about it:

But if this same beauty be understood as applying to all bodies, this opinion compels one to believe that this world itself is an animate being so that what in it imitates constancy is also transmitted to it through the soul by the supreme God. But that this world is an animate being, as Plato and numerous other philosophers thought, I have not been able to investigate by solid reasoning, nor have I found that I accept this idea on the authority of the Sacred Scriptures. Hence, something said by me, too, in the book, On the Immortality of the Soul, which can be interpreted in this way, I have noted was said rashly not because I maintain that this is false, but because I do not understand that it is true that the world is an animate being. For, assuredly, I do not doubt that it must be firmly maintained that this world is not God for us, whether it has any soul or no soul, because if it has a soul, He who created it is Our God; if it is not animated, it cannot be the God of anyone much less ours. [4]

What Augustine makes clear is that if someone were to believe the world is alive, that it has a soul, and so designed by a title like Mother Earth, this did not mean the Christian saw in it a replacement for God. They understood it to be a creature of God, though one worthy of respect because of the greatness God gave to it in its creation. Indeed, like Origen, they said we could consider the Earth itself to be an animal with some level of self-government:

Although the whole world is arranged into offices of different kinds, its condition, nevertheless, is not to be supposed as one of internal discrepancies and discordances; but as our one body is provided with many members, and is held together by one soul, so I am of opinion that the whole world also ought to be regarded as some huge and immense animal, which is kept together by the power and reason of God as by one soul.[5]

Later generations would take up similar ideas with the notion of a personified form of Nature, Natura, which could be (but does not have to be) seen as something separate from Mother Earth. Indeed, it is often through the notion of some world-soul, or Natura, that many Christians used to explain away any and all sense of rational activity from animals, for it would be said that such rational behavior came from the world-soul directing the actions of animals in the world.[6]

Looking beyond the Earth, St. Thomas Aquinas, looking upon the stars, suggested some intelligence existed behind the stars and their movement in the sky

Nor does it make any difference, as far as our present purpose is concerned, whether a heavenly body is moved by a conjoined intellectual substance which is its soul, or by a separate substance; nor whether each celestial body is moved immediately by God, or whether none is so moved, because all are moved through intermediary, created, intellectual substances; nor whether the first body alone is immediately moved by God, and the others through the mediation of created substancesprovided it is granted that celestial motion comes from intellectual substance. [7]

We might think it strange to consider the stars (and planets) to be living things, with wills and intellects of their own, but to the medieval mind, as well as to the ancient Christian mind, as well as to many of the philosophers, it seemed to be the most natural explanation for their movement. They were more connected with their natural good, being in the heavens, so their actions were more stable, more predictable. They loved God, and circled around in the heavens just as a holy soul will circle around God in eternity. Christians, then, could accept a cosmology which allowed for a great diversity of beings, indeed, of a great variety of intellectual beings, in the universe, some of which were far more stable in their relationship with God than humanity. But, as C.S. Lewis pointed out, this did not turn such creatures into gods to be worshiped in place of God. Indeed, they rarely were looked upon and invoked by the ordinary Christian, while the saints were:

We might expect that a universe so filled with shining superhuman creatures would be a danger to monotheism. Yet the danger to monotheism in the Middle Ages clearly came not from a cult of angels but from the cult of the Saints. Men when they prayed were not usually thinking of the Hierarchies and Intelligences. There was, not (I think) an opposition, but a dissociation between their religious life and all that. [8]

Now, it might seem strange to some Christians today to hear that many Christians believed in the existence of a spiritual substance lying behind the stars, or the Earth itself. This is because of the change of perspective which happened as a result of the Enlightenment. Many principles and beliefs which came after the Enlightenment have been so normative that many Christians today assume not only that they are true, but they are normative for the Christian faith. For with the Enlightenment has come the notion that animals do not have souls, a notion which many think is a Christian teaching, despite the fact it has been normative in the Christian tradition to teach they do. If animals do not have souls, then it is not hard to understand how and why the rest of the universe became dead, treated as if it were not alive. Anyone says contrary to this are treated as insane, if they come from the developed world, are as people holding non-Christian pagan beliefs, if they do not.

Nonetheless, as tradition shows, it is not Christianity which says we must reject the notion of Mother Earth. And though the Enlightenment might have at one time led to the ridicule of that notion, scientists are now considering the possibility that the interdependent relationship of all that exists on the Earth itself demonstrates some sort of life which can be attributed to it (via the Gaia hypothesis). Obviously what the scientists consider is not exactly the same thing as Christian metaphysicians, as science in general knows nothing of the notion of soul, and so what a scientist looks for to determine whether or not something is alive will differ from the metaphysical standard. But if science can determine something is alive, then, by that fact, it should be said to have a soul, for the most elementary notion of the soul (metaphysically) is that it is the life-force which makes something alive. So, what once was believed, then became ridiculed, now can be believed again, with greater reason than before. The radical metaphysical notion which was normalized by the Enlightenment has been brought into question, and so Christians, taking seriously the new insights of science can take seriously once again the question of Mother Earth and accept that there is some truth to the notion. In doing so, then, they can find themselves bridging the gap between themselves and indigenous societies which never lost sight of Mother Earth. Inculturation allows for Christianity thought to grow beyond the dead-ends of the past because it allows Christians to come in contact with those who did not follow those dead-ends, and so who were not corrupted by the implications they gave. Non-Western societies which did not fall for the worst parts of the Enlightenment, far from being primitive and worthy of ridicule, actually can help give back to Christianity a spirituality it lost due to modernity.

The Western tradition has dishonored, indeed, defiled the Earth. Those who have continued to hold the Earth in honor are spiritually more astute than those who have dishonored it. Now, it is time to recognize that we are called to honor the Earth, perhaps even to recognize Mother Earth (either as a symbol, or if we want, as a reality) and do so in a way which does not dishonor the creator, but instead, as a way to honor him as well. Those who would dismiss such a response to the Earth and call it idolatrous are only trying to justify their own sins against creation, and through creation, against God. Would they call it idolatrous if people honored them, showed them respect instead of abused them? Obviously not. Therefore, they know full well honoring something in creation, respecting it, does not go against God. It is clear that their argument is pure sophistry, the kind used to justify the unjustifiable.

The Christian faith allows for diverse opinions. We might not come to it with the same world view. We do not have to. Even if what someone else believes is odd and silly, so long as it does not contradict the faith itself, it is permissible. And if history has shown us anything, what some at one time think is silly and indefensible, ends up being the truth. Common sense more often than not is a cultural construct which often impedes the discernment of the truth. We do not have to agree with others, if we think they are wrong, but likewise, we must be careful and not condemn them for their beliefs if there is nothing in them which runs contrary to Christian teaching on faith or morals. For we must try to ascertain the view of others in the best light possible.

[1] Obvious examples include, but are not limited to, Augustinians, Thomists, Bonaventurians, and Scotists.

[2] So long as such life has not been encountered, obviously. Once it has, then it will be silly to deny its existence, just as it is now silly to accept a flat Earth.

[3] St. Augustine, The Immortality of the Soul in Writings of St. Augustine. Volume 2. Trans. Ludwig Schopp (New York: CIMA Publishing Company, 1947), 43-44.

[4] Saint Augustine, The Retractions. Trans, Mary Inez Bogan, RSM (Washington, DC: CUA Press, 1968), 47-48.

[5] Origen, De Principii in ANF(4):269.

[6] Nonetheless, belief in Mother Earth, or Natura, or the world-soul does not require this interpretation, that is, it does not necessitate we deny reason to animals, just as we do not deny it for ourselves.

[7] Saint Thomas Aquinas, Summa Contra Gentiles. Book Three: Providence. Part I. trans. Vernon J. Bourke (Garden City, NY: Hanover House, 1956), 93 [chapter 23].

[8] C.S. Lewis, The Discarded Image (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1964; repr. 1988), 120.

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The World-Soul, Natura and Mother Earth - Patheos

Dispatches #2 and #3 from Doc NYC: Mr. Toilet: The World’s #2 Man and We Believe in Dinosaurs – Bright Lights Film Journal

Mr. Toilet.

This is the second (and third) in a series of reviews by our New York correspondent Claire Baiz of entries in this yearsDoc NYC, the Big Apples and one of the worlds premier documentary festivals, running November 6-15.

* * *

MR. TOILET: THE WORLDS #2 MAN

Toilet is a spiritual room. Theres a man behind an opaque door, going about his business. Let go, the voice says. Connect to the Universe.

That voice belongs to Jack Sim. When we meet him, suffice it to say hes not conserving toilet paper.

Sim, a native of Singapore, is famous. Hes done a TED Talk. Hes won dozens of international awards, including a commendation by Britains Queen Elisabeth. Now hes a movie star.

Sim uses energetic humor to disarm people. Still, Sim knows this shit is serious: sanitation is perhaps the number one cause of death in the undeveloped world. Forty percent of earths population doesnt have access to a toilet. Its not just the disease, sanitation, and smell that rankle Sim its pollution and crime: rivers are defiled, and girls are raped every day simply because they dont have a place to go.

Mr. Toilet: The Worlds #2 Man, is an intimate portrait of a businessman-turned-activist who has dedicated the last 22 years of his life to something most of us dont want to talk about.

Its also the first feature-length documentary by Accelerator Lab grantee Lily Zepeda. The amount of time and resources Zepeda dedicated to defecation is brave especially for a new filmmaker. Even Sim complains that when it comes to philanthropic priorities, Shit is on the bottom.

Sanitation is Sims passion. Hes the founder of the WTO not the World Trade Organization but the World Toilet Organization, headquartered in a modest, crowded upstairs office in Singapore. Our job, one WTO staffer says, is to keep Jack focused. Sim is a fountain of ideas, a dangerous thing when it comes to toilets.

When Mr. Toilet starts out, the WTO has nine staffers, lots of decorated toilets and poop-shaped hats. By the end of the movie, some shit has hit the fan.

Theres more to this movie than social ills and cheap jokes.

This is the story of Sims difficult journey, a hard lesson in not giving up and the importance of turning our own lives into performance art.

Sims takes joy in realizing a creative vision, whether its paint on canvas, stickers on a public streetlight, or dodging poo piles beside train tracks.

Zepeda follows Sim from Singapore to rural China and Indias Andhra Pradesh province, where he works hard to make toilets sexy.

While she doesnt flinch from shovelfuls of human feces, Zepeda softens the story with effective animation. The most poignant moments in the film are when Zepeda captures the effervescent Sim as his bubbles disappear, and begin to ferment again.

My job isnt to build toilets, Sim says. My job is to motivate people to build their own toilets.

Especially in places where the need is urgent, toilets are a hard sell. Sim and his Indian counterpart, Dr. Bindeshwar Pathak, work to implement Prime Minister Modis promise to build toilets for the people of Andar Pradesh province. Sim and Pathak are given two years to install six million toilets (thats over 8,200 toilets per day).

Its a logistical nightmare, notwithstanding Indias bureaucracy and 5,000 years of cultural tradition that urges Indians to keep their homes clean and go outside. Now the government wants toilets IN the house?

Sims successes may be smaller than he hopes, but he always seems to build momentum. In a Q&A after the DOC NYC screening, Sims reported the Chinese government has promised to put toilets in all rural schools.

I appreciate Zepetas unflinching portrait and were all better off because Jack Sim gives a shit.

* * *

WE BELIEVE IN DINOSAURS

Why were there were baby dinosaurs on Noahs Ark? Because adult dinosaurs were too big.

We Believe in Dinosaurs asserts there were dinosaurs on the ark, but doesnt try to explain what happened to brontosaurus and triceratops after the ark went aground.

As far as we know, one creationist shrugs, they arent here anymore.

We Believe in Dinosaurs co-directors Monica Long Ross (The Believers, This Has Been to Space) and Clayton Brown (The Believers, The Tennessee Waltz) allow people to speak for themselves. It was never our intention, Ross says, to make fun or mock.

The documentary had its New York City premiere this week at DOC NYC, and will be released November 19 on iTunes. Its also scheduled to air as an episode of Independent Lens on Apple TV in February.

Ken Ham, the charismatic Australian CEO of Answers in Genesis (the other AIG), allowed these filmmakers extended access to the crown jewels of his empire: the Creationist Museum and the Ark Encounter, about 40 miles apart in Kentucky.

While We Believe in Dinosaurs doesnt look down on creationists, it doesnt look up either: you wont find Bill Nye busting a capillary, or Neil deGrasse Tyson patiently explaining carbon dating. Ross and Brown wisely limit passionate discord to locals.

Its Kentucky: its hard to tell creationists and Darwinists apart. Georgia Purdom, PhD, the very picture of prim professorship, decries the term Bible stories. These arent stories, Purdom says, theyre Biblical accounts.

After Purdom, at a fast food restaurant, we meet local paleontologist Dan Phelps. In a pleasant Kentucky drawl, Phelps explains his longtime, lonely battle against taxpayer-subsidized creationism.

Phelps does have some company. Theres a minister from Williamsburg, the town that expected and failed to benefit from the Ark Encounter, and the Tri-State Freethinkers (who are, frankly, a little easier to pick out of the crowd of creationists).

Spanning the divide is fellow Kentuckian David McMillan, who, after a cosmic enlightenment of sorts, went from teenage creationist to evolution blogger.

We Believe in Dinosaurs riles folks up, but it doesnt spew wet smoke. If the friction between creationists and scientists is the engine that drives the story, the films third rail is the conflict between public interest and personal freedom.

There are lots of creationist heels dug deep in the Kentucky bluegrass. They are not alone.

Thirty-eight percent of Americans believe God created man less than 10,000 years ago. Many believe Adam and Eve were created on the sixth day, the same day God made dinosaurs.

From the racial makeup portrayed in the film, it appears there are very few people of color in the creationist camp.

Creationism, believers say, has to be true, because the Bible says so. If only part of it is true, how do you know any of it is true? (This standard, I gather, is not applied to politicians.)

From the time they are children, creationists are offered inspiration and refutation. Ham prompts a grade-school assembly over a PA system, When people say dinosaurs lived millions of years ago, what do you say?

The children shout back in unison, Were you there?

One undeniable truth is the massive infrastructure that supports creationism. Answers in Genesis owns a distribution center that rivals the warehouse in Raiders of the Lost Ark. AIG sends out hundreds of boxes of educational materials to schools where creationism is taught, either exclusively, or in some public schools, alongside evolution.

After a lengthy court battle, soon-to-be-ex-Kentucky governor Matt Bevin, a creationist, ultimately declared the Ark Encounter a tourist attraction, allowing it to collect an $18.2 million tax break. For other purposes, local paleontologist Phelps complains, the group is considered a church.

The only effect the Ark Encounter has had on nearby Williamstown is the fifty-cent fee theyve been allowed to collect on every admission ticket (general admission is $48), to pay for increased EMT services. Businesses that ramped up for tourism, like Elmers General Store, were forced to close.

A testament to the films fairness can be found in audience reaction. At a post-screening Q&A in Connecticut, a creationist grilled the filmmakers at length. After some heated banter, the creationist admitted she enjoyed the show. After the New York City screening, one audience member, a science professor, expressed concern the documentary might be used as pro-creationist propaganda.

A mural inside the Ark depicts the horror of the Great Flood and asks, Does our sin-filled world deserve any less? If that happens, dont rush to Kentucky. This Ark doesnt float.

* * *

Images courtesy of Doc NYC and YouTube.

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Dispatches #2 and #3 from Doc NYC: Mr. Toilet: The World's #2 Man and We Believe in Dinosaurs - Bright Lights Film Journal

Seattle City Council election results set the stage for transformative change – Real Change News

Seattle may finally be ready for something new. The electoral victories of socialist Kshama Sawant, democratic socialist Tammy Morales and the rejection of all the corporate-backed candidates, except one, sets the table for policy changes. The decisive leftward swing on the council and the repudiation of all but one of the Amazon-backed candidates paves the way for major shifts in affordable housing, police accountability, climate policy, restorative justice, homeless services, rent control and more.

It may seem that a third term for Sawant maintains the status quo. This superficial understanding is precisely the narrative promoted by the Seattle Metropolitan Chamber of Commerce and their candidates.

But, as J.R.R. Tolkiens Bilbo Baggins said, the third time pays for all. With this election, Sawant is no longer a council outlier. When the City Council is sworn in, she will be the longest-serving member and she will have strong allies. This election is a game-changer and a deal-sealer in our city politics.

A few years ago, the poorly branded head tax was unanimously adopted by the City Council as a way to build affordable housing by taxing big businesses. Amazon temporarily stopped construction on a building and reminded everyone they were going to build an alternative headquarters in a different city, scaring every councilmember but Sawant and Teresa Mosqueda into rescinding the tax.

In January, Amazon and the Chamber will face a City Council that has every reason to reinstate the policy with gusto (hopefully with a more appealing name and greater emphasis on targeting the big businesses that can afford it). Even Councilmember Lorena Gonzalez showed up at a rally at the Amazon spheres protesting the companys massive spending. The winds of change are no longer swirling in turbulent circles they are about to blow into laminar flow.

Becoming ready for something new takes more time than we wish. We are eager to embrace stark and clean change narratives, but that is not real life. Recovery communities teach us that relapse is usually part of recovery. When we wish to adopt habits of exercise, creative expression or spiritual practice, it takes multiple attempts before we succeed. The sacred texts of many religions tell stories of cyclical changes rather than linear ones. Odysseus takes a score of wrong turns on his journey. Siddhartha pursues dead ends to enlightenment before becoming the Buddha. Saint Peter is revealed as a fool, coward and doubter again and again on his way to becoming the rock on which the revolutionary Jesus movement would be built. Perseverance and the humility to evolve is at the heart of a real change narrative.

The lesson I am taking from this election is that change does not come in a single night, through a single action or through a single person. Change does not come even in a single year, by a single strategy or from a single movement. Transformation is a slow, rocky, gritty process, but it is not a fantasy. When the time is right, the heart is prepared and the table has been set, both soul and society may finally be ready for something new.

Rev. John Helmiere is the convener of Valley & Mountain-Hillman City.

Read the full Nov. 13 - 19 issue.

2019 Real Change. All rights reserved.| Real Change is a non-profit organization advocating for economic, social and racial justice since 1994. Learn more about Real Change and donate now to support independent, award-winning journalism.

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Seattle City Council election results set the stage for transformative change - Real Change News

Lights of Faith: Candles Keep Vigil, Become Votive Offerings – National Catholic Register

Not far from Puget Sound, at St. Mark Church in Shoreline, Washington, Mike Scarpelli regularly lights a five- or seven-day votive candle by the Sacred Heart statue and another votive candle before the statues of St. Joseph and the Blessed Mother on both sides of the sanctuary. He remembers as a child watching his grandmother and mother light votive candles and say prayers, always at the statue of Mary. I learned it was a special way to pray, in that case to Immaculate Mary, and also to ask for her intervention to God to hear and answer our prayers.

In Philadelphia, Vincentian Father Michael Carroll also uses candlelight to recall his loved ones in prayer.

Every time I go into a new church, I light a candle for my parents, he said. Its my custom and a way of remembering them and acknowledging them.

The votive candle also recalls some memorable pontifical moments of prayer, said Father Carroll, noting that Pope Emeritus Benedict, while visiting Ground Zero in New York City, prayed for the lost souls of the horrific Sept. 11 attack there and lit a large candle. Likewise, more recently, after the 9/11 memorial was completed, Pope Francis visited Ground Zero while a candle was lit at St. Patricks Cathedral in memory of the 9/11 victims and their families.

Neither Scarpelli, Father Carroll nor the Holy Fathers are alone in their fondness for votive candles.

Enduring Legacy

Father Carroll, current director of the Miraculous Medal Shrine in Philadelphia, said that from the 1940s to the 1960s, people lit approximately 2,500 candles every Monday during several Miraculous Medal novena services held throughout that day. After every service, the candles had to be moved to the downstairs Marian shrine chapel. Even with fewer novena services scheduled today, still approximately 400 candles are lit every Monday at the shrine.

Lighting votive candles and vigil lights is a strong tradition in the Church that began at least 1,800 years ago, when lights were burned in the catacombs at the tomb of martyrs as a sign of unity with them. The lights kept vigil; hence they were named vigil lights.

Fire and Prayer

Father Carroll points out that candles have long been recognized with prayer. Whenever the faithful light a candle and say a prayer before or after lighting it, he said, they are turning that lit candle into a continuation of our prayer as long as that candle is lit. It, too, keeps a vigil.

The word vigil comes from the Latin vigilia and means to keep watch. How? With light, explains Father Chris Alar of the Marian Fathers of the Immaculate Conception. The vigil candle we light for a period of time symbolizes how we as persons wish to remain present to the Lord in prayer even though we might leave the church and go to our own homes.

Scarpelli is comforted as he reflects on this. The light staying there as the candle is burning will continue to maintain your prayer to God.

Because the lit candle maintains that prayer, it is also called a votive candle. The terms vigil lights and votive candles or lights are basically interchangeable. The word votive comes from the Latin votum, meaning a promise or a prayer, indicating that a candle which we call a votive candle really represents our prayer before God, Father Alar said. When we light a candle, were basically giving a prayer intention. Its a physical sign of a spiritual prayer.

My prayer is in my heart, he explained. How do I show this internal prayer? The votive candle is the way we can express in a physical, tangible way our inward prayer. Our prayer is symbolized by the candle.

We dont light candles because God is going to be able to see and hear our prayer better, but because we need something visual to connect our body and our soul, he said. Even the Mass has this soul-body engagement when, for instance, we make the Sign of the Cross or kneel down.

By lighting the candle our prayer is physically represented, and we join our prayers to the light of Christ, explained Father Alar, allowing that light to burn on and on in our souls, even when we have left the church.

Thats also why these candles are official sacramentals, which, like the sacraments, are an external sign of an internal grace and involve the body and the spirit; although, unlike the seven sacraments, the Churchs sacramentals, which also include holy water and sacred images such as the crucifix, do not directly confer grace upon the faithful but prepare them to receive the graces of the sacraments (Catechism of the Catholic Church, 1669-71).

This shows my intention, Father Alar added. This candle symbolizes the prayer.

A Candle for All Reasons

The faithful illuminate up vigil lights and votive candles for any number of reasons.

Everyone has an intention when they light the candle, noted Father Carroll. They may tell a person, I will light a candle for you. Thats an expression of I will say a prayer for you.

Hes even found that when the faithful tell loved ones whove grown cold in their faith that theyve lit a votive candle for their intention, those loved ones find consolation and peace in it.

Father Alar pointed out the common practice of lighting votive candles before a saints statue to express devotion to that saint, such as St. Rita, the paton saint of impossible causes. Yet most candles are placed before Jesus and Mary. When I light a candle before the Sacred Heart or in front of the Blessed Mother, Father Alar said, it shows my devotion to them, asking for their help.

Along with showing devotion to Our Lord, Our Blessed Mother and the saints, the faithful will also light a vigil candle asking for God or his saints intercession or expressing thanksgiving for a favor granted.

St. Mark Church has many places where people can take a quiet moment and can be in peace and prayer, said Veronica Olson, pastoral assistant for liturgy and parish life. The faithful regularly light votive candles placed by every image and work of art in the church, including in the Shrine to Divine Mercy alcove, before the Infant of Prague statue, at the Piet alcove, before the Sacred Heart image and Blessed Virgin Mary and St. Joseph statues, and before the painting of St. Thrse of Lisieux.

Everyone obviously prays in thanksgiving, Olson explained. We often see people kneeling and praying. We also see people having hardship and going through trials, some weeping, some for joy raising hands any kind of emotion. They take special moments to be in the church, praying outside of normal Mass times.

Scarpelli connects lighting the candles also to different events in life, like illness in family, or death, or happier occasions and you want to emphasize your prayers to God more deeply.

Similarly, at the National Shrine of Divine Mercy in Stockbridge, Massachusetts, visitors and pilgrims can lightseven-day votive candles at different locations, such as at the Lourdes Grotto and the Immaculate Conception Candle Shrine, Holy Family Shrine, Shrine of the Holy Innocents and at Our Lady of Mercy Candle Shrine and Oratory.

As director of the Association of Marian Helpers,Father Alar said he has seen lots of answered prayers reported by the people who have lit candles with great devotion. One case was a cure of cancer. One was a pregnancy for a woman who was told she could not have children. He told the Register he hears of these answered prayers on a regular basis.

The many candles burning in the votive light racks in shrines and parish churches have another uplifting message.

As Father Carroll explained, Youre not in the church alone; youre there with the prayers of others. We know we are never alone in our prayer, and the candles around us remind us of it.

Centuries-Old Tradition

In the Tradition of the Church, the candle is a sign of Christs presence, Father Carroll emphasized.

The presence of God is shown by light, noted Father Alar, explaining that in Scripture, God is symbolized by light, and both the Old Testament and Jewish tradition are full of references to candlelight.

Light shows Gods presence in Exodus (27:20-21) and Leviticus (24:2-4). The Jews always had candles lit in the temple and synagogue.The Talmud instructs a lit lamp to be at the Ark of the Covenant because the Ark held the Torah, which is Gods presence in his written word.

This is like what we do with the Blessed Sacrament today, Father Alar said. We look for the lit candle. It shows the presence of God in the tabernacle in the Eucharist the presence of the real Body, Blood, Soul and Divinity of our God, Jesus Christ.

We also see this in the Pascal candle at the Easter vigil, when the priest says, Christ, our light. Our individual candles are lit from that Pascal candle, which symbolizes our light being united with the light of Christ.

Father Alar quoted Scripture to recall how Jesus revealed, I am the light of the world (John 8:12). Jesus made clear, I have come as light into the world (John 12:46). Christs words largely inform the tradition of candlelight as a symbol for the Savior of the world.

With this in mind, in the Middle Ages, a candles beeswax symbolized the purity of Jesus, its wick the human soul of Christ, and its light his divinity.

Father Alar associated this enlightenment to our lighting candles. This is very powerful, not the candle in and of itself. Its what is symbolizes: the light of Christ.

Light From Light

Father Alar concluded, The beauty of the votive candle is that the light signifies our prayer offered, united in faith going to the light of God. So with the light of faith, we basically ask Our Lord or a saint in prayer to help us. We ask the light be given to the Light, which is God.

In the last several years, some places have made a slight change with votive candles and vigil lights. Some parishes have replaced wax or paraffin candles with electric or battery-powered ones.

Fire safety is something were more conscious of, explained Father Carroll from the Miraculous Medal Shrine, which has switched to battery-operated candles. Prayers are the same, he assured. Its really the light rather than whether the light is electric or wax. Its the light, not the method for votive candles. This is not true of all candles, however, as the Church does specify, for instance in the case of the Paschal candle, that a candle cannot be electric and must consist at least in part of beeswax.

Father Alar concurred. Electric is an acceptable form of votive candle used in shrines for prayer intentions. The strength of the prayer is by the love with which you make it.

Joseph Pronechen is a Register staff writer.

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Lights of Faith: Candles Keep Vigil, Become Votive Offerings - National Catholic Register

From ’embryo glue’ to ‘assisted hatching’: Do these expensive IVF add-ons actually work? – The Daily Briefing

As demand for in vitro fertilization (IVF) has grown, fertility clinics have developed supplementary procedures, or "add-ons," that are purported to increase the odds of successbut there's little evidence these add-ons actually work, Sharon Begley reports for STAT News.

Cheat sheets: Evidence-based medicine 101

One add-on that received closer scrutiny earlier this year is "endometrial scratching," Begley reports. The theory behind the procedure is that using a pipette to scratch the endometrium could trigger a hormonal response to make the tissue more receptive to the implantation of an embryo.

Fertility practices started using the procedure about 20 years ago, after doctors in Israel observed that women who underwent a biopsy of their uterine lining seemed to have higher pregnancy rates.

Since then, a handful of case reports showed that some patients who underwent the procedure gave birth at a higher rate than those who didn't. But a large randomized controlled study of 1,364 women published in the New England Journal of Medicine earlier this year found that endometrial scratching had no effect on live birth rates.

"Assisted hatching" is another common IVF add-on that has been shown to have little effect on birth rates, Begley reports. In this procedure, embryologists use acid, lasers, or other tools to poke a hole in a woman's zona pellucida, which covers the ova, to increase the chances of embryo fertilization.

But an analysis in 2016 found that, while the procedure may increase pregnancy rates, it had no effect on live birth rates because it came with higher miscarriage rates.

Other add-ons have a bit more evidence behind them, Begley reports. For example, research on "artificial egg activation," in which clinicians cover fertilized eggs in chemicals called calcium ionophores to induce the embryo development process, has shown that it may improve fertilization rates once sperm is injected into an egg. However, other research has found the procedure has no benefit, Begley reports.

Similarly, some clinics add hyaluronan, known as "embryo glue," to a lab dish to increase implantation chances. The practice has been found to increase the chances of live birth by about 10% in the United States, which translates to 39% of IVF cycles resulting in a live birth, Begley reports.

Meanwhile, some IVF add-ons have been shown to be counterproductive and may even increase the risk of miscarriage, Begley reports. For example a 2019 analysis, found that time-lapse systems to monitor IVF embryos had miscarriage rate of 4% to 14%, compared to 4% through traditional incubation.

Moreover, an add-on called preimplantation genetic testing for aneuploidy (PGT-A) "indisputably hurt women's chances of giving birth," Begley writes. In this add-on, embryos are tested for aneuploidy, a chromosomal anomaly, and those that show an anomaly are not implanted and are typically discharged.

However, a large randomized controlled trial published last year by the European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology said that PGT-A, which usually costs around $5,000, "makes no difference to live birth rates," meaning that embryos discarded through PGT-A potentially could have been viable.

According to Jack Wilkinson, a biostatistician at the University of Manchester in England, who led one of four analyses on IVF add-ons published in the journal Fertility and Sterility, there is "at best, extremely weak or contradictory evidence of benefit" for IVF add-ons. "At worst, there is good evidence that some of the add-ons lower the chance" of conception through IVF.

Lax regulation of fertility clinics could be one reason why add-ons are easily incorporated into a treatment plan, Begley reports. FDA requires a safety and efficacy assessment of procedures that manipulate human cells "more than minimally," but fertility procedures do not rise to that standard. That means FDA doesn't require any proof that IVF procedures benefit patients, Begley reports.

Pamela Mahoney Tsigdinos, co-author of Wilkinson's paper and a former IVF patient, said, "Patients are given the impression that the procedures have been studied and shown to be effective. But in most cases, they haven't been. You're on your own at a time when you're in no position to be objective."

Meanwhile, Alan Penzias, a Massachusetts-based fertility doctor and chair of the American Society for Reproductive Medicine practice committee, said doctors use add-ons typically when the core procedure doesn't work. He noted, "Patients and providers have the same interests. A pregnancy with a healthy singleton baby as soon as possible."

He continued, "Sometimes, when you're down to your last hurrah" with a patient who doesn't have much money, time, or emotional or physical strength left for IVF, "you want to throw everything you've got at it" (Begley, STAT News, 11/5).

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From 'embryo glue' to 'assisted hatching': Do these expensive IVF add-ons actually work? - The Daily Briefing

Endocrinologist and Reproductive Physiologist Wayne Bardin Dies – The Scientist

Clyde Wayne Bardin, an endocrinologist known for his work on birth control devices such as Norplant and Mirena, died at home last month (October 10). He was 85.

Bardin was a giant in the field of endocrinology who contributed substantially to our knowledge of reproductive physiology, the development of unique methods of contraception and the clinical care of patients with disorders of reproduction, write five leading endocrinologists, including three of his former students, in the Endocrine Societys Endocrine News. His legacy includes not only his research contributions but also his leadership and service to the endocrine community.

Born in 1934 in McCamey, Texas, Bardin grew up with a love of opera and football. He studied biology at Rice University, graduating in 1957, and went on to earn an MD in 1962 from Baylor Universitys medical college (now Baylor College of Medicine).

During the 1960s, Bardin received further medical training at Cornell University and then at the National Cancer Institute, where he became interested in the role of hormones in disease. He took a position as the head of Penn State Universitys division of endocrinology in 1970, and later as vice president of the Population Council, a nonprofit launched by John D. Rockefeller III that researches biomedicine, social science, and public health.

It was during the late 1970s that Bardin started developing new methods of contraception for women that could provide long-lasting effects, as an alternative to the daily contraceptive pill introduced in the US in the early 1960s.

COURTESY OF THE ENDOCRINE SOCIETY

One approach was the development of implants that would release small amounts of the hormone progestin under the skin over several years. An early version of the technology, called Norplant, was introduced to the US market in 1991, although side effects and bad press led to the device being withdrawn from the market in 2002.

Bardin was also involved in the creation of Mirena, an intrauterine device (IUD) that releases the synthetic progesterone-like hormone levonorgestrel, and was approved as a contraceptive device by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in 2000. He additionally helped promote the development of other synthetic hormones for contraceptive purposes, and encouraged researchers to work on contraceptives for men as well as for women.

There has been a lot of skepticism around whether men would ever use a contraceptive, James Sailer, the executive director of the Population Councils Center for Biomedical Research in New York City, tells The New York Times, but Dr. Bardin saw it as an obvious unmet need.

In addition to publishing hundreds of scientific articles and book chapters during his career, Bardin worked to promote the success of the endocrinology community as a whole. He acted as president of the Endocrine Society from 1993 to 1994, mentored many students who went on to become endocrinologists themselves, and later in his career became a consultant for companies trying to develop new contraceptive agents.

The endocrinologists writing for Endocrine News note that Bardin was especially capable when it came to juggling his research and clinical practicethough he still found time to keep up his lifelong interest in opera with visits to the New York Metropolitan Opera House and to spend time with his family.

C. Wayne Bardin can be considered one of the Giants of Endocrinology over the last 40 years, they write, as well as a great human being, and an inspiration to those who follow in his footsteps.

Bardin is survived by his wife, Beatrice, as well as two daughters, three stepchildren, and six grandchildren, the Times reports.

Catherine Offord is an associate editor atThe Scientist. Email her atcofford@the-scientist.com.

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Endocrinologist and Reproductive Physiologist Wayne Bardin Dies - The Scientist

7 Fertility Myths That Belong in the Past – NYT Parenting

CreditArmando Veve

As an ob-gyn, Ive personally encountered many fertility myths in my office or online some of them even during my training. Why do they persist? Sex education, particularly about the physiology of reproduction, is typically incomplete and subpar. And when we do talk about fertility and reproduction, we dont talk about it directly euphemisms for the uterus, menstruation, the vagina and the vulva are still common, and when you cant use a word, the implication is that the body part is shameful. And, of course, many myths persist simply because theyre alluringly fantastical, and were inclined to believe these tall tales over the stodgy facts. Here are seven fertility myths that need to be forgotten.

This is not an uncommon belief some women even refer to menstruation as their moon time. The confusion is understandable: The 29.5-day lunar cycle (from new moon to new moon) is very close to the average 28-day menstrual cycle. But studies show no connection between the moon and menses. Moreover, it is hard to envision how a moon-menstruation connection would be biologically beneficial to human reproduction.

This is a common modern myth in gynecology exam rooms all across North America and it results in a lot of unnecessary testing of hormone levels. The truth is that, for women of reproductive age, the hormone levels for FSH, LH, estrogen and progesterone change not only day to day, but also often hour to hour. When a woman has certain symptoms for example, an irregular menstrual cycle or infertility hormone testing may be recommended to make a diagnosis. But in these situations, doctors will look at individual levels in conjunction with symptoms, rather than comparing levels with some mythical balance. Being in balance may sound natural, like a person who is in tune with her body. But it is simply not a factual statement, or even a good analogy, for what happens biologically.

How long should I lie flat after sex? is one of the most common questions asked of OB-GYNs. The myth is that sperm will rush back out of your body once youre standing up because of the effects of gravity. But most sperm with any chance of fertilization have gone past the point of no return almost immediately. There are no studies that establish a correlation between the length of postcoital recumbent time and subsequent pregnancy rates but there is a large study that examined pregnancy rates after insemination in a doctors office. That study concluded there was no difference in pregnancy rates between people who spent 15 minutes lying flat versus those who got up and moved around as soon as the procedure was completed.

[Read our guide to fertility and getting pregnant.]

The myth is that menopause isnt natural because for most of history women did not live long enough to experience it a misconception born both of a mischaracterization of life expectancy and of the way that society has historically tied a womans worth to her reproductive capacity. Although its true that for centuries the average life expectancy for women was less than 50 years, its not as if women were dying en masse at 50, having lived long enough to satisfy evolution. In fact, if you exclude infant and childhood mortality (which were largely due to a lack of basic medical care, sanitation and immunizations), the life expectancy of women, even before 1900, rises sharply. Women in the 17th century who survived the traditionally perilous gantlet of childbirth had an average life expectancy of 60 years. For that matter, the life expectancy for men was never much longer yet for some reason society has never needed an explanation for the age-related decline in reproductive function in men.

The bulk of the evidence tells us that female orgasm does not affect conception one way or the other. If it did, orgasms would most likely almost always occur with penile penetration; but the reality is that they occur only 25 percent to 33 percent of the time. For orgasm to affect sperm transport and hence conception it would also have to occur immediately before or during the male orgasm, which, well, is uncommon. In reality, many women achieve orgasm once or more before their male partner does or after, or not at all.

Myths and fears about vaccinations have been around almost as long as vaccines have, and fertility-related myths are no exception. This myth was propagated by six cases of premature ovarian failure that were described in the HPV vaccine literature, in what is known as a case series. But this is not proof although it did prompt a number of provocative headlines that gave birth to this myth. Fortunately, a much larger study, involving more than 199,000 women, tells us that there is no association between HPV vaccination and premature ovarian failure.

Its a common myth that all men can reproduce until their 80s. And its true that we see some celebrities in their 50s, 60s and even their 70s announcing their new fatherhood (almost always with a much younger female partner). But both sexes experience an age-related decline in fertility. For women, the decline begins in their 30s, and by their mid-40s, pregnancies without reproductive assistance are rare. For the aging male, erectile dysfunction increases with age, and the quality of seminal fluid and sperm also declines. Men over 51 (notably, this is also the average age of menopause for women) experience a significant decrease in success with infertility therapies. It is true that men dont experience the same absolute reproductive cutoff that women do, but every discussion about age and fertility should also include men.

[Read more about male infertility.]

Jen Gunter, M.D., an OB-GYN, is a regular contributor to The New York Times, the host of the web docuseries Jensplaining and the author of The Vagina Bible.

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7 Fertility Myths That Belong in the Past - NYT Parenting

Opinion | The End of Babies – International New York Times

In the fall of 2015, a rash of posters appeared around Copenhagen. One, in pink letters laid over an image of chicken eggs, asked, Have you counted your eggs today? A second a blue-tinted close-up of human sperm inquired, Do they swim too slow?

The posters, part of a campaign funded by the city to remind young Danes of the quiet ticking of their biological clocks, were not universally appreciated. They drew criticism for equating women with breeding farm animals. The timing, too, was clumsy: For some, encouraging Danes to make more babies while television news programs showed Syrian refugees trudging through Europe carried an inadvertent whiff of ugly nativism.

Dr. Soren Ziebe, former chairman of the Danish Fertility Society and one of the brains behind the campaign, believes the criticism was worth weathering. As the head of Denmarks largest public fertility clinic, Dr. Ziebe thinks these kinds of messages, fraught as they are, are sorely needed. Denmarks fertility rate has been below replacement level that is, the level needed to maintain a stable population for decades. And as Dr. Ziebe points out, the decline is not solely the result of more people deliberately choosing childlessness: Many of his patients are older couples and single women who want a family, but may have waited until too late.

But the campaign also notably failed to land with some of its prime targets, including Dr. Ziebes own college-age daughter. After she and several classmates at Copenhagen University interviewed him for a project on the campaign, Dr. Ziebe sought answers of his own.

I asked them, Now, you know you have gained a lot of information, a lot of knowledge. What are you going to change in your own personal lives? he said. He shook his head. The answer was Nothing. Nothing!

If any country should be stocked with babies, it is Denmark. The country is one of the wealthiest in Europe. New parents enjoy 12 months paid family leave and highly subsidized day care. Women under 40 can get state-funded in vitro fertilization. But Denmarks fertility rate, at 1.7 births per woman, is roughly on par with that of the United States. A reproductive malaise has settled over this otherwise happy land.

Its not just Danes. Fertility rates have been dropping precipitously around the world for decades in middle-income countries, in some low-income countries, but perhaps most markedly, in rich ones.

Declining fertility typically accompanies the spread of economic development, and it is not necessarily a bad thing. At its best, it reflects better educational and career opportunities for women, increasing acceptance of the choice to be child-free, and rising standards of living.

At its worst, though, it reflects a profound failure: of employers and governments to make parenting and work compatible; of our collective ability to solve the climate crisis so that children seem a rational prospect; of our increasingly unequal global economy. In these instances, having fewer children is less a choice than the poignant consequence of a set of unsavory circumstances.

Decades of survey data show that peoples stated preferences have shifted toward smaller families. But they also show that in country after country, actual fertility has fallen faster than notions of ideal family size. In the United States, the gap between how many children people want and how many they have has widened to a 40-year high. In a report covering 28 countries in the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, women reported an average desired family size of 2.3 children in 2016, and men wished for 2.2. But few hit their target. Something is stopping us from creating the families we claim to want. But what?

There are as many answers to this question as there are people choosing whether to reproduce. At the national level, what demographers call underachieving fertility finds explanations ranging from the glaring absence of family-friendly policies in the United States to gender inequality in South Korea to high youth unemployment across Southern Europe. It has prompted concerns about public finances and work force stability and, in some cases, contributed to rising xenophobia.

But these all miss the bigger picture.

Our current version of global capitalism one from which few countries and individuals are able to opt out has generated shocking wealth for some, and precarity for many more. These economic conditions generate social conditions inimical to starting families: Our workweeks are longer and our wages lower, leaving us less time and money to meet, court and fall in love. Our increasingly winner-take-all economies require that children get intensive parenting and costly educations, creating rising anxiety around what sort of life a would-be parent might provide. A lifetime of messaging directs us toward other pursuits instead: education, work, travel.

These economic and social dynamics combine with the degeneration of our environment in ways that hardly encourage childbearing: Chemicals and pollutants seep into our bodies, disrupting our endocrine systems. On any given day, it seems that some part of the inhabited world is either on fire or underwater.

To worry about falling birthrates because they threaten social security systems or future work force strength is to miss the point; they are a symptom of something much more pervasive.

It seems clear that what we have come to think of as late capitalism that is, not just the economic system, but all its attendant inequalities, indignities, opportunities and absurdities has become hostile to reproduction. Around the world, economic, social and environmental conditions function as a diffuse, barely perceptible contraceptive. And yes, it is even happening in Denmark.

Danes dont face the horrors of American student debt, our debilitating medical bills or our lack of paid family leave. College is free. Income inequality is low. In short, many of the factors that cause young Americans to delay having families simply arent present.

Even so, many Danes find themselves contending with the spiritual maladies that accompany late capitalism even in wealthy, egalitarian countries. With their basic needs met and an abundance of opportunities at their fingertips, Danes instead must grapple with the promise and pressure of seemingly limitless freedom, which can combine to make children an afterthought, or an unwelcome intrusion on a life that offers rewards and satisfactions of a different kind an engaging career, esoteric hobbies, exotic holidays.

Parents say that children are the most important thing in my life, said Dr. Ziebe, a father of two. By contrast, those who havent tried it who cannot imagine the shifts in priorities it produces, nor fathom its rewards see parenting as an unwelcome responsibility. Young people say, Having children is the end of my life.

[The topics parents are talking about. Evidence-based guidance. Personal stories that matter. Sign up now to get NYT Parenting in your inbox every week.]

There are, to be sure, many people for whom not having children is a choice, and growing societal acceptance of voluntary childlessness is undoubtedly a step forward, especially for women. But the rising use of assisted reproductive technologies in Denmark and elsewhere (in Finland, for example, the share of children born via assisted reproduction has nearly doubled in a little more than a decade; in Denmark, it accounts for an estimated one in 10 births) suggests that the same people who see children as a hindrance often come to want them.

Kristine Marie Foss, a networking specialist and event manager, almost missed out on parenthood. A stylish woman with a warm smile, Ms. Foss, now 50, always dreamed of finding love, but none of her serious boyfriends lasted. She spent most of her 30s and 40s single; those were also the decades in which she worked as an interior designer, created several social networks (including one for singles, before it was cool to be single), and expanded and deepened her friendships.

It wasnt until she was 39 that she realized it might be time to start thinking seriously about a family. A routine visit to the gynecologist prompted an unexpected revelation: If I become 50 or 60 and I dont have kids, I know Im going to hate myself the rest of my life, said Ms. Foss, now the mother of a 9-year-old and 6-year-old via a sperm donor. Ms. Foss has joined the ranks of what Danes call solomor, or single mothers by choice, a cohort that has been growing since 2007, when the Danish government began covering IVF for single women.

There are those who have always sought to lay the blame for declining fertility, in some way, on women for their individual selfishness in eschewing motherhood, or for their embrace of feminisms expansion of womens roles. But the instinct to explore life without children is not restricted to women. In Denmark, one out of five men will never become a parent, a figure that is similar in the United States.

Anders Krarup is a 43-year-old software developer living in Copenhagen who recently rediscovered his love of fishing. Most weekends he drives to the Zealand coast, where he communes with the sea trout. When hes not working at his start-up, he meets friends for concerts. As for a family, hes not particularly interested.

Im feeling very content with my life at the moment, he told me.

Mads Tolderlund is a legal consultant who works outside of Copenhagen. At age 5, he was struck with wanderlust when he saw an advertisement for Uluru, or Ayers Rock, in Australia. He eventually resolved to visit every continent in his lifetime, and today, at 31, has just Antarctica to go. In his view, people have children either because they truly want them, because they fear the consequences of not having them, or because its the normal thing. None of those reasons apply to him.

I have so many other things that I want to do, he said.

Are all these options not precisely what capitalism promised us? We were told that equipped with the right schooling, work ethic and vision, we could have professional success and disposable income that we could use to become the most interesting, most cultured, most toned versions of ourselves. We learned that doing these things learning, working, creating, traveling was rewarding and important.

Trent MacNamara, an assistant professor of history at Texas A&M University, has been pondering human attitudes toward fertility and family for over a decade. Economic conditions, he notes, are only part of the picture. What may matter more are the little moral signals we send each other, he writes in a forthcoming essay, signals that are based on big ideas about dignity, identity, transcendence and meaning. Today, we have found different ways to make meaning, form identities and relate to transcendence.

In this context, he said, having children may appear to be no more than a quixotic lifestyle choice absent other social cues reinforcing the idea that parenting connects people to something uniquely dignified, worthwhile and transcendent. Those cues are increasingly difficult to notice or promote in a secular world in which a capitalist ethos extract, optimize, earn, achieve, grow prevails. Where alternative value systems exist, however, babies can be plentiful. In the United States, for example, communities of Orthodox and Hasidic Jews, Mormons and Mennonites have birthrates higher than the national average.

Lyman Stone, an economist who studies population, points to two features of modern life that correlate with low fertility: rising workism a term popularized by the Atlantic writer Derek Thompson and declining religiosity. There is a desire for meaning-making in humans, Mr. Stone told me. Without religion, one way people seek external validation is through work, which, when it becomes a dominant cultural value, is inherently fertility reducing.

Denmark, he notes, is not a workaholic culture, but is highly secular. East Asia, where fertility rates are among the lowest in the world, is often both. In South Korea, for example, the government has introduced tax incentives for childbearing and expanded access to day care. But excessive workism and the persistence of traditional gender roles have combined to make parenting more difficult, and especially unappealing for women, who take on a second shift at home.

The difference between life in tiny Denmark, with its generous social welfare system and its high marks for gender equality, and life in China, where social assistance is spotty and women face rampant discrimination, is vast. Yet both countries face fertility rates well below replacement levels.

If Denmark illustrates the ways that capitalist values of individualism and self-actualization can nonetheless take root in a country where its harshest effects have been blunted, China is an example of how those same values can sharpen into competition so cutthroat that parents speak of winning from the starting line, that is, equipping their children with advantages from the earliest possible age. (One scholar told me this can even encompass timing conception to help a child in school admissions.)

After decades of restricting most families to just one child, the government announced in 2015 that all couples were permitted to have two. Despite this, fertility has barely budged. Chinas fertility rate in 2018 was 1.6.

The Chinese government has long sought to engineer its population, reducing quantity in order to improve quality. These efforts are increasingly focused on what Susan Greenhalgh, a professor of Chinese society at Harvard, describes as cultivating global citizens through education, the means by which Chinese people and the nation as a whole can compete in the global economy.

By the 1980s, she said, child-rearing in China had become professionalized, shaped by the pronouncements of education, health and child psychology experts. Today, raising a quality child is not just a matter of keeping up with the latest child-rearing advice; its a commitment to spending whatever it takes.

These notions of the quality child, the quality person, got articulated in the language of the market, she said. It means, What can we buy for the kid? We need to buy a piano, we need to buy dance lessons, we need to buy an American experience.

Talking to young Chinese people who have benefited from their parents investments in them, I heard echoes of their Danish peers. For those with the right credentials, the past few decades have opened up opportunities their parents never imagined, making having children look burdensome by comparison.

I feel like I just got out of college, just started working, said Joyce Yuan, a 27-year-old Beijing-based interpreter, whose plans include earning an M.B.A. outside of China. I still think that Im at the very beginning of my life.

But Ms. Yuan and others were also quick to note Chinas harsh economic conditions, a factor that rarely, if ever, came up in Denmark. She cited, for instance, the high cost of urban living. Everything is super expensive, she said, and quality of life, especially in big cities, is extremely low.

The factors suppressing fertility in China are present throughout the country: In rural areas, where 41 percent of its nearly 1.4 billion citizens still live, there is little enthusiasm for second children, and policymakers can seemingly do even less about it. In Xuanwei Prefecture, after the central government announced in 2013 that couples in which one spouse was an only child could apply for permission to have a second baby, just 36 people sought such approval in the first three months in a region of around 1.25 million people. Local family planning officials blamed economic pressure on young couples for the low take-up, the authors of a study on China and fertility wrote.

In urban settings, the opportunities for education and enrichment are more abundant, and the sense of competition more intense. But Chinese couples everywhere are responsive to the pressures of the countrys hyper-capitalist economy, where setting a child down the right path could mean life-changing opportunities, while heading down the wrong one means insecurity and struggle.

As access to college has expanded, the value of a diploma is worth less than it once was. Competition for places in top schools has grown more brutal, and the need to invest heavily in a child from the start more imperative. For many mothers, arranging the details of a childs education, seen as the most critical channel for upgrading his or her quality, has almost become a full-time job, said Dr. Greenhalgh.

One Beijing resident, Li Youyou, 33, sees the stratified nature of reproduction in China playing out within her own circle. A wealthy friend with a high-earning husband is having her second child this year. Another, from a modest background, gave birth this summer; when Ms. Li asked her about a second, she said she could barely contemplate providing for this one. Ms. Li, who teaches English, was planning a visit to bring a gift for the baby. She wondered if she should just give money.

Ms. Li has no near-term plans for a family. She hopes instead to pursue a doctorate in linguistics, preferably in the United States.

Having a relationship is not my priority right now, she said. I more want to focus on my career.

My own experience as an American has been in some respects Danish, in others Chinese. I am one of the lucky ones: Thanks to scholarships, and my mothers tremendous sacrifices, I graduated from college without debt. Thus unencumbered, I spent most of my 20s working and studying overseas. Along the way, I got two master's degrees, and built a rewarding, if not especially remunerative, career. In my late 20s, I learned about egg freezing. It seemed like a secret weapon I could use to stave off the decision of if and when to have kids an absolution, of sorts, for spending these years abroad and not searching terribly hard for a partner.

At 34, I finally underwent the procedure. Last year, I did another round. Ever since then, theres a number Ive been playing with as Ive wondered about whether and when I will use those eggs. According to my back-of-the envelope calculations, I should have $200,000 saved before having a child.

To be clear, I am fully aware that people far worse off than me have children all the time. I know that even the prospect of a pre-pregnancy savings target vaults me firmly into the realm of tragicomic middle-class absurdity. I am resolutely not saying that if you dont have this (or any sum of) money, you should reconsider children.

Rather, this number is a hybrid an acknowledgment of the financial realities of single parenthood, but also the arithmetic crystallization of my anxieties around parenthood in our precarious era. To me, it demonstrates that even with my abundant privileges, it can still feel so risky, and on some days impossible, to bring a child into the world. And from the dozens of conversations Ive had in reporting this essay, its clear these anxieties are shaping the choices of many others, too.

Where did I get the $200,000 figure from? First, theres at least $40,000 for two rounds of IVF. (That I am contemplating this route also speaks to the obstacles of dating under late capitalism but thats a subject for a different article.) Thousands of dollars in hospital bills for a birth, provided its not a complicated one.

As a freelancer, I wouldnt be eligible for paid leave, so Id either need child care (easily $25,000 a year or more) until the child starts prekindergarten, or have enough saved to support us while Im not working. I could sell my studio apartment, but homeownership is a key means by which parents pay for college, and I am as terrified of relinquishing this asset as I am of launching a child into the job market sans higher education credentials. On some days, I tell myself Im being responsible by waiting. On other days, I wonder how this anxiety over my present might crowd out the future I envision.

The point is not really whether $200,000 is reasonable; it is that the very notion of attaching a dollar figure to an experience as momentous as parenthood is a sign of how much my mind-set has been warped by this system that leaves us each so very much on our own, able to avail ourselves of only what we can pay for.

For decades, people with as much good fortune as I have were relatively immune to these anxieties. But many of the difficulties that have long faced working-class women, and especially women of color, are trickling up. These women have worked multiple jobs without stability or benefits, and raised children in communities with underfunded schools or poisoned water; today, middle-class parents, too, are time-starved, squeezed out of good school districts, and anxious about plastic and pollution.

In the 1990s, black feminists, facing the conditions above, developed the analytical framework known as reproductive justice, an approach that goes beyond reproductive rights as they are usually understood access to abortion and contraceptives to encompass the right to have children humanely: to have children, not have children, and parent the children we have in safe and sustainable communities, as the collective SisterSong put it.

Reproductive justice was not always well understood or embraced by mainstream reproductive rights groups. (Loretta Ross, one of the founders of the movement, said an early focus group found people thought the term referred to seeking fairness for photocopiers.) But the trickling up of reproductive injustice could potentially give it broader traction. White America is now feeling the effects of neoliberalism capitalism that the rest of America has always felt, Ms. Ross said.

Are we prepared, though, for what it asks of us? Ms. Ross compared reproductive justice activism to parenting. When you parent, youve got to work on safe drinking water, and safe schools and a clean bedroom at the same time, she said. Peoples lives are holistic and interconnected. You cant pull on one thread without shaking up the whole thing. Seen in this light, incremental improvements like paid parental leave are only a partial fix for our current crisis, a handful of crumbs when our bodies and souls require a nourishing meal.

The solution, therefore, is not to compel a man like Anders Krarup to put aside his fishing and procreate, nor to dissuade Li Youyou from pursuing her Ph.D. Instead, we must recognize how their decisions take place in a broader context, shaped by interrelated factors that can be hard to discern.

The problem, to be clear, is not really one of population, a term that since its earliest use, according to the scholar Michelle Murphy, has been a profoundly objectifying and dehumanizing way to discuss human life. Hundreds of thousands of babies are born on this planet every day; people all over the world have shown they are willing to migrate to wealthier countries for jobs. Rather, the problem is the quiet human tragedies, born of preventable constraints an employers indifference, a belated realization, a poisoned body that make the wanted child impossible.

The crisis in reproduction lurks in the shadows, but is visible if you look for it. It shows up each year that birthrates plumb a new low. Its in the persistent flow of studies linking infertility and poor birth outcomes to nearly every feature of modern life fast-food wrappers, air pollution, pesticides. It is the yearning in your friends voices as they gaze at their first child, playing in their too-small apartment, and say, Wed love to have another, but It is the pain that comes from lunging toward transcendence and finding it out of reach.

Seen from this perspective, the conversation around reproduction can and should take on some of the urgency of the climate change debate. We are recognizing natures majesty too late, appreciating its uniqueness and irreplaceability only as we watch it burn.

I see a lot of parallels between this tipping point that people feel in their intimate lives, around the question of reproduction under capitalism, also playing out in broader existential conversations about the fate of the planet under capitalism, said Sara Matthiesen, a historian at George Washington University whose forthcoming book examines family-making in the post-Roe v. Wade era. It seems like more and more people are being pressed to this place of, O.K., this system of value is literally going to kill us.

Conversations about reproduction and environmental sustainability have long overlapped. Thomas Malthus worried that population growth would outstrip the food supply. The 1970s saw the emergence of ecofeminism. Since the 1990s, reproductive justice groups have sought a better planet for all children. Todays BirthStrikers disavow procreation due to the severity of the ecological crisis.

While climate catastrophe has revived elements of the insidious discourse of population control, it has also prompted a new wave of activism, born of an understanding of just how deeply these foundational components of life reproduction and the health of the planet are linked, and the collective action that is required to sustain them.

The first step is renouncing the individualism celebrated by capitalism and recognizing the interdependence that is essential for long-term survival. We depend on our water supply to be clean, and our rivers depend on us not to poison them. We ask our neighbors to watch our dogs or water our plants while were away, and offer our help in kind. We hire strangers to look after our children or aging parents, and trust in their compassion and competence. We pay taxes and hope those we elect spend that money to keep roads safe, schools open, and national parks protected.

These relationships, between us and the natural world, and us and one another, testify to the interdependence that capitalist logic would have us disavow.

Reproduction is the ultimate nod to interdependence. We depend on at least two people to make us possible. We gestate inside another human, and emerge with the help of doctors or doulas or kin. We grow up in environments and communities that shape our health, safety and values. We must find concrete ways to recognize this interdependence and resolve to strengthen it.

One of the people upon whom my existence depends, my father, died of a heart attack when I was 7. At some point, I started wearing his watch, a beautiful gold thing that would slide up and down my wrist, heavy with sentiment. This year, on a work trip, I sat down in a hotel lobby to get some writing done. I took the watch off to type, only to realize on a bus going home that Id left it at the hotel. Hours of searching the lobby and sobbing to the hotel staff failed to bring it back.

Later that evening, writing in a journal, I consoled myself by listing some of the things he had left me that I couldnt lose if I tried: the large-ish nose, the sense of humor, the shrimpy stature that curtailed both his basketball career and mine.

In that moment, I understood why I had frozen my eggs. Intellectually, I am skeptical, even critical, of the inherent narcissism of preserving ones own genetic material when there are already so many children without parents. Even as I was going through with it, injecting drugs into my abdomen each night until it came to resemble a dart board, I struggled to articulate why, at least in a way that made sense to me.

But as I reflected on the immaterial gifts I like to think I inherited from him, it became clear I craved genetic continuity, however fictitious and tenuous it might be. I recognized then something precious and inexplicable in this yearning, and glimpsed how devastating it might be to be unable to realize it. For the first time, I felt justified in my impulse to preserve some little piece of me that, in some way, contained a little piece of him, which one day might live again.

Anna Louie Sussman is a journalist who writes on gender, reproduction, and economics. This article was produced in partnership with the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting.

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Opinion | The End of Babies - International New York Times

Anna Louie Sussman: Is this the end of babies? – Salt Lake Tribune

In the fall of 2015, a rash of posters appeared around Copenhagen. One, in pink letters laid over an image of chicken eggs, asked, Have you counted your eggs today? A second a blue-tinted close-up of human sperm inquired, Do they swim too slow?

The posters, part of a campaign funded by the city to remind young Danes of the quiet ticking of their biological clocks, were not universally appreciated. They drew criticism for equating women with breeding farm animals. The timing, too, was clumsy: For some, encouraging Danes to make more babies while television news programs showed Syrian refugees trudging through Europe carried an inadvertent whiff of ugly nativism.

Dr. Soren Ziebe, former chairman of the Danish Fertility Society and one of the brains behind the campaign, believes the criticism was worth weathering. As the head of Denmarks largest public fertility clinic, Dr. Ziebe thinks these kinds of messages, fraught as they are, are needed. Denmarks fertility rate has been below replacement level that is, the level needed to maintain a stable population for decades. And as Dr. Ziebe points out, the decline is not solely the result of more people deliberately choosing childlessness: Many of his patients are older couples and single women who want a family, but may have waited until too late.

But the campaign also notably failed to land with some of its prime targets, including Dr. Ziebes own college-age daughter. After she and several classmates at Copenhagen University interviewed him for a project on the campaign, Dr. Ziebe sought answers of his own.

I asked them, Now, you know you have gained a lot of information, a lot of knowledge. What are you going to change in your own personal lives? he said. He shook his head. The answer was Nothing. Nothing!

If any country should be stocked with babies, it is Denmark. The country is one of the wealthiest in Europe. New parents enjoy 12 months paid family leave and highly subsidized day care. Women under 40 can get state-funded in vitro fertilization. But Denmarks fertility rate, at 1.7 births per woman, is roughly on par with that of the United States. A reproductive malaise has settled over this otherwise happy land.

Its not just Danes. Fertility rates have been dropping precipitously around the world for decades in middle-income countries, in some low-income countries, but perhaps most markedly, in rich ones.

Declining fertility typically accompanies the spread of economic development, and it is not necessarily a bad thing. At its best, it reflects better educational and career opportunities for women, increasing acceptance of the choice to be child-free, and rising standards of living.

At its worst, though, it reflects a profound failure: of employers and governments to make parenting and work compatible; of our collective ability to solve the climate crisis so that children seem a rational prospect; of our increasingly unequal global economy. In these instances, having fewer children is less a choice than the poignant consequence of a set of unsavory circumstances.

Decades of survey data show that peoples stated preferences have shifted toward smaller families. But they also show that in country after country, actual fertility has fallen faster than notions of ideal family size. In the United States, the gap between how many children people want and how many they have has widened to a 40-year high. In a report covering 28 countries in the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, women reported an average desired family size of 2.3 children in 2016, and men wished for 2.2. But few hit their target. Something is stopping us from creating the families we claim to want. But what?

There are as many answers to this question as there are people choosing whether to reproduce. At the national level, what demographers call underachieving fertility finds explanations ranging from the glaring absence of family-friendly policies in the United States to gender inequality in South Korea to high youth unemployment across Southern Europe. It has prompted concerns about public finances and work force stability and, in some cases, contributed to rising xenophobia.

But these all miss the bigger picture.

Our current version of global capitalism one from which few countries and individuals are able to opt out has generated shocking wealth for some, and precarity for many more. These economic conditions generate social conditions inimical to starting families: Our workweeks are longer and our wages lower, leaving us less time and money to meet, court and fall in love. Our increasingly winner-take-all economies require that children get intensive parenting and costly educations, creating rising anxiety around what sort of life a would-be parent might provide. A lifetime of messaging directs us toward other pursuits instead: education, work, travel.

These economic and social dynamics combine with the degeneration of our environment in ways that hardly encourage childbearing: Chemicals and pollutants seep into our bodies, disrupting our endocrine systems. On any given day, it seems that some part of the inhabited world is either on fire or underwater.

To worry about falling birthrates because they threaten social security systems or future work force strength is to miss the point; they are a symptom of something much more pervasive.

It seems clear that what we have come to think of as late capitalism that is, not just the economic system, but all its attendant inequalities, indignities, opportunities and absurdities has become hostile to reproduction. Around the world, economic, social and environmental conditions function as a diffuse, barely perceptible contraceptive. And yes, it is even happening in Denmark.

Danes dont face the horrors of American student debt, debilitating medical bills or lack of paid family leave. College is free. Income inequality is low. In short, many of the factors that cause young Americans to delay having families simply arent present.

Even so, many Danes find themselves contending with the spiritual maladies that accompany late capitalism even in wealthy, egalitarian countries. With their basic needs met and an abundance of opportunities at their fingertips, Danes instead must grapple with the promise and pressure of seemingly limitless freedom, which can combine to make children an afterthought, or an unwelcome intrusion on a life that offers rewards and satisfactions of a different kind an engaging career, esoteric hobbies, exotic holidays.

Parents say that children are the most important thing in my life, said Dr. Ziebe. By contrast, those who havent tried it who cannot imagine the shifts in priorities it produces, nor fathom its rewards see parenting as an unwelcome responsibility. Young people say, Having children is the end of my life.

There are, to be sure, many people for whom not having children is a choice, and growing societal acceptance of voluntary childlessness is undoubtedly a step forward, especially for women. But the rising use of assisted reproductive technologies in Denmark and elsewhere (in Finland, for example, the share of children born via assisted reproduction has nearly doubled in a little more than a decade; in Denmark, it accounts for an estimated one in 10 births) suggests that the same people who see children as a hindrance often come to want them.

Kristine Marie Foss, a networking specialist and event manager, almost missed out on parenthood. A stylish woman with a warm smile, Ms. Foss, now 50, always dreamed of finding love, but none of her serious boyfriends lasted. She spent most of her 30s and 40s single; those were also the decades in which she worked as an interior designer, created several social networks (including one for singles, before it was cool to be single) and expanded and deepened her friendships.

It wasnt until she was 39 that she realized it might be time to start thinking seriously about a family. A routine visit to the gynecologist prompted an unexpected revelation: If I become 50 or 60 and I dont have kids, I know Im going to hate myself the rest of my life, said Ms. Foss, now the mother of a 9-year-old and 6-year-old via a sperm donor. Ms. Foss has joined the ranks of what Danes call solomor, or single mothers by choice, a cohort that has been growing since 2007, when the Danish government began covering IVF for single women.

There are those who have always sought to lay the blame for declining fertility, in some way, on women for their individual selfishness in eschewing motherhood, or for their embrace of feminisms expansion of womens roles. But the instinct to explore life without children is not restricted to women. In Denmark, one out of five men will never become a parent, a figure that is similar in the United States.

Anders Krarup is a 43-year-old software developer living in Copenhagen who recently rediscovered his love of fishing. Most weekends he drives to the Zealand coast, where he communes with the sea trout. When hes not working at his start-up, he meets friends for concerts. As for a family, hes not particularly interested.

Im feeling very content with my life at the moment, he told me.

Mads Tolderlund is a legal consultant who works outside of Copenhagen. At age 5, he was struck with wanderlust when he saw an advertisement for Uluru, or Ayers Rock, in Australia. He eventually resolved to visit every continent in his lifetime, and today, at 31, has just Antarctica to go. In his view, people have children either because they truly want them, because they fear the consequences of not having them, or because its the normal thing. None of those reasons apply to him.

I have so many other things that I want to do, he said.

Are all these options not precisely what capitalism promised us? We were told that equipped with the right schooling, work ethic and vision, we could have professional success and disposable income that we could use to become the most interesting, most cultured, most toned versions of ourselves. We learned that doing these things learning, working, creating, traveling was rewarding and important.

Trent MacNamara, an assistant professor of history at Texas A&M University, has been pondering human attitudes toward fertility and family for over a decade. Economic conditions, he notes, are only part of the picture. What may matter more are the little moral signals we send each other, he writes in a forthcoming essay, based on big ideas about dignity, identity, transcendence and meaning. Today, we have found different ways to make meaning, form identities and relate to transcendence.

In this context, he said, having children may appear to be no more than a quixotic lifestyle choice absent other social cues reinforcing the idea that parenting connects people to something uniquely dignified, worthwhile and transcendent. In a secular world in which a capitalist ethos extract, optimize, earn, achieve, grow prevails, those cues are increasingly difficult to notice. Where alternative value systems exist, however, babies can be plentiful. In the United States, for example, communities of Orthodox and Hasidic Jews, Mormons and Mennonites have birthrates higher than the national average.

Lyman Stone, an economist who studies population, points to two features of modern life that correlate with low fertility: rising workism a term popularized by the Atlantic writer Derek Thompson and declining religiosity. There is a desire for meaning-making in humans, Mr. Stone told me. Without religion, one way people seek external validation is through work, which, when it becomes a dominant cultural value, is inherently fertility reducing.

Denmark, he notes, is not a workaholic culture, but is highly secular. East Asia, where fertility rates are among the lowest in the world, is often both. In South Korea, for example, the government has introduced tax incentives for childbearing and expanded access to day care. But excessive workism and the persistence of traditional gender roles have combined to make parenting difficult, and especially unappealing for women, who take on a second shift at home.

The difference between life in tiny Denmark, with its generous social welfare system and its high marks for gender equality, and life in China, where social assistance is spotty and women face rampant discrimination, is vast. Yet both countries face fertility rates well below replacement levels.

If Denmark illustrates the ways that capitalist values of individualism and self-actualization can nonetheless take root in a country where its harshest effects have been blunted, China is an example of how those same values can sharpen into competition so cutthroat that parents speak of winning from the starting line, that is, equipping their children with advantages from the earliest possible age. (One scholar told me this can even encompass timing conception to help a child in school admissions.)

After decades of restricting most families to just one child, the government announced in 2015 that all couples were permitted to have two. Despite this, fertility has barely budged. Chinas fertility rate in 2018 was 1.6.

The Chinese government has long sought to engineer its population, reducing quantity in order to improve quality. These efforts are increasingly focused on what Susan Greenhalgh, a professor of Chinese society at Harvard, describes as cultivating global citizens through education, the means by which Chinese people and the nation as a whole can compete in the global economy.

By the 1980s, she said, child-rearing in China had become professionalized, shaped by the pronouncements of education, health and child psychology experts. Today, raising a quality child is not just a matter of keeping up with the latest child-rearing advice; its a commitment to spending whatever it takes.

These notions of the quality child, the quality person, got articulated in the language of the market, she said. It means, What can we buy for the kid? We need to buy a piano, we need to buy dance lessons, we need to buy an American experience.

Talking to young Chinese people who have benefited from their parents investments in them, I heard echoes of their Danish peers. For those with the right credentials, the past few decades have opened up opportunities their parents never imagined, making having children look burdensome by comparison.

I feel like I just got out of college, just started working, said Joyce Yuan, a 27-year-old Beijing-based interpreter, whose plans include earning an M.B.A. outside of China. I still think that Im at the very beginning of my life.

But Ms. Yuan and others were also quick to note Chinas harsh economic conditions, a factor that rarely, if ever, came up in Denmark. She cited, for instance, the high cost of urban living. Everything is super expensive, she said, and quality of life, especially in big cities, is extremely low.

The factors suppressing fertility in China are present throughout the country: In rural areas, where 41 percent of its nearly 1.4 billion citizens still live, there is little enthusiasm for second children, and policymakers can seemingly do even less about it. In Xuanwei Prefecture, after the central government announced in 2013 that couples in which one spouse was an only child could apply for permission to have a second baby, just 36 people sought such approval in the first three months in a region of around 1.25 million people. Local family planning officials blamed economic pressure on young couples for the low take-up, the authors of a study on China and fertility wrote.

In urban settings, the opportunities for education and enrichment are more abundant, and the sense of competition more intense. But Chinese couples everywhere are responsive to the pressures of the countrys hyper-capitalist economy, where setting a child down the right path could mean life-changing opportunities, while heading down the wrong one means insecurity and struggle.

As access to college has expanded, the value of a diploma is worth less than it once was. Competition for places in top schools has grown more brutal, and the need to invest heavily in a child from the start more imperative. For many mothers, arranging the details of a childs education, seen as the most critical channel for upgrading his or her quality, has almost become a full-time job, said Dr. Greenhalgh.

One Beijing resident, Li Youyou, 33, sees the stratified nature of reproduction in China playing out within her own circle. A wealthy friend with a high-earning husband is having her second child this year. Another, from a modest background, gave birth this summer; when Ms. Li asked her about a second, she said she could barely contemplate providing for this one. Ms. Li, who teaches English, was planning a visit to bring a gift for the baby. She wondered if she should just give money.

Ms. Li has no near-term plans for a family. She hopes instead to pursue a doctorate in linguistics, preferably in the United States.

Having a relationship is not my priority right now, she said. I more want to focus on my career.

My own experience as an American has been in some respects Danish, in others Chinese. I am one of the lucky ones: Thanks to scholarships, and my mothers tremendous sacrifices, I graduated from college without debt. Thus unencumbered, I spent most of my 20s working and studying overseas. Along the way, I got two master's degrees, and built a rewarding, if not especially remunerative, career. In my late 20s, I learned about egg freezing. It seemed like a secret weapon I could use to stave off the decision of if and when to have kids an absolution, of sorts, for spending years abroad and not searching terribly hard for a partner.

At 34, I finally underwent the procedure. Last year, I did another round. Ever since then, theres a number Ive been playing with as Ive wondered about whether and when I will use those eggs. According to my back-of-the envelope calculations, I should have $200,000 saved before having a child.

To be clear, I am fully aware that people far worse off than me have children all the time. I know that even the prospect of a pre-pregnancy savings target vaults me into the realm of tragicomic middle-class absurdity. I am resolutely not saying that if you dont have this (or any sum of) money, you should reconsider children.

Rather, this number is a hybrid an acknowledgment of the financial realities of single parenthood, but also the arithmetic crystallization of my anxieties around parenthood in our precarious era. To me, it demonstrates that even with my abundant privileges, it can still feel so risky, and on some days impossible, to bring a child into the world. And from the dozens of conversations Ive had in reporting this essay, its clear these anxieties are shaping the choices of many others, too.

Where did I get the $200,000 figure from? First, theres at least $40,000 for two rounds of IVF. (That I am contemplating this route also speaks to the obstacles of dating under late capitalism but thats a subject for a different article.) Thousands of dollars in hospital bills for a birth, provided its not a complicated one.

As a freelancer, I wouldnt be eligible for paid leave, so Id either need child care (easily $25,000 a year or more) until the child starts prekindergarten, or have enough saved to support us while Im not working. I could sell my studio apartment, but homeownership is a key means by which parents pay for college, and I am as terrified of relinquishing this asset as I am of launching a child into the job market sans higher education credentials. On some days, I tell myself Im being responsible by waiting. On other days, I wonder how this anxiety over my present might crowd out the future I envision.

The point is not really whether $200,000 is reasonable; it is that the very notion of attaching a dollar figure to an experience as momentous as parenthood is a sign of how much my mind-set has been warped by this system that leaves us each so very much on our own, able to avail ourselves of only what we can pay for.

For decades, people with as much good fortune as I have were relatively immune to these anxieties. But many of the difficulties that have long faced working-class women, and especially women of color, are trickling up. These women have worked multiple jobs without stability or benefits, and raised children in communities with underfunded schools or poisoned water; today, middle-class parents, too, are time-starved, squeezed out of good school districts, and anxious about plastic and pollution.

In the 1990s, black feminists, facing the conditions above, developed the analytical framework known as reproductive justice, an approach that goes beyond reproductive rights as they are usually understood access to abortion and contraceptives to encompass the right to have children humanely: to have children, not have children, and parent the children we have in safe and sustainable communities, as the collective SisterSong put it.

Reproductive justice was not always well understood or embraced by mainstream reproductive rights groups. (Loretta Ross, one of the founders of the movement, said an early focus group found people thought the term referred to seeking fairness for photocopiers.) But the trickling up of reproductive injustice could potentially give it broader traction. White America is now feeling the effects of neoliberalism capitalism that the rest of America has always felt, Ms. Ross said.

Are we prepared, though, for what it asks of us? Ms. Ross compared reproductive justice activism to parenting. When you parent, youve got to work on safe drinking water, and safe schools and a clean bedroom at the same time, she said. Peoples lives are holistic and interconnected. You cant pull on one thread without shaking up the whole thing. Seen in this light, incremental improvements like paid parental leave are only a partial fix for our current crisis, a handful of crumbs when our bodies and souls require a nourishing meal.

The solution, therefore, is not to compel a man like Anders Krarup to put aside his fishing and procreate, nor to dissuade Li Youyou from pursuing her Ph.D. Instead, we must recognize how their decisions take place in a broader context, shaped by interrelated factors that can be hard to discern.

The problem, to be clear, is not really one of population, a term that since its earliest use, according to the scholar Michelle Murphy, has been a profoundly objectifying and dehumanizing way to discuss human life. Hundreds of thousands of babies are born on this planet every day; people all over the world have shown they are willing to migrate to wealthier countries for jobs. Rather, the problem is the quiet human tragedies, born of preventable constraints an employers indifference, a belated realization, a poisoned body that make the wanted child impossible.

The crisis in reproduction lurks in the shadows, but is visible if you look for it. It shows up in each year that birthrates plumb a new low. Its in the persistent flow of studies linking infertility and poor birth outcomes to nearly every feature of modern life fast-food wrappers, air pollution, pesticides. It is the yearning in your friends voices as they gaze at their first child, playing in their too-small apartment, and say, Wed love to have another, but It is the pain that comes from lunging toward transcendence and finding it out of reach.

Seen from this perspective, the conversation around reproduction can and should take on some of the urgency of the climate change debate. We are recognizing natures majesty too late, appreciating its uniqueness and irreplaceability only as we watch it burn.

I see a lot of parallels between this tipping point that people feel in their intimate lives, around the question of reproduction under capitalism, also playing out in broader existential conversations about the fate of the planet under capitalism, said Sara Matthiesen, a historian at George Washington University whose forthcoming book examines family-making post-Roe v. Wade. It seems like more and more people are being pressed to this place of, O.K., this system of value is literally going to kill us.

Conversations about reproduction and environmental sustainability have long overlapped. Thomas Malthus worried that population growth would outstrip the food supply. The 1970s saw the emergence of ecofeminism. Since the 1990s, reproductive justice groups have sought a better planet for all children. Todays BirthStrikers disavow procreation due to the severity of the ecological crisis.

While climate catastrophe has revived elements of the insidious discourse of population control, it has also prompted a new wave of activism, born of an understanding of just how deeply these foundational components of life reproduction and the health of the planet are linked, and the collective action that is required to sustain them.

The first step is renouncing the individualism celebrated by capitalism and recognizing the interdependence that is essential for long-term survival. We depend on our water supply to be clean, and our rivers depend on us not to poison them. We ask our neighbors to watch our dogs or water our plants while were away, and offer our help in kind. We hire strangers to look after our children or aging parents, and trust in their compassion. We pay taxes and hope those we elect spend that money to keep roads safe, schools open, and national parks protected.

These relationships, between us and the natural world, and us and one another, testify to the interdependence that capitalist logic would have us disavow.

Reproduction is the ultimate nod to interdependence. We depend on at least two people to make us possible. We gestate inside another human, and emerge with the help of doctors or doulas or kin. We grow up in environments and communities that shape our health, safety and values. We must find concrete ways to recognize this interdependence and resolve to strengthen it.

One of the people upon whom my existence depends, my father, died of a heart attack when I was 7. At some point, I started wearing his watch, a beautiful gold thing that would slide up and down my wrist, heavy with sentiment. This year, on a work trip, I sat down in a hotel lobby to get some writing done. I took the watch off to type, only to realize on a bus going home that Id left it at the hotel. Hours of searching the lobby and sobbing to the staff failed to bring it back.

Later that evening, writing in a journal, I consoled myself by listing some of the things he had left me that I couldnt lose if I tried: the large-ish nose, the sense of humor, the shrimpy stature that curtailed both his basketball career and mine.

In that moment, I understood why I had frozen my eggs. Intellectually, I am skeptical, even critical, of the inherent narcissism of preserving ones own genetic material when there are already so many children without parents. Even as I was going through with it, injecting drugs into my abdomen each night until it came to resemble a dart board, I struggled to articulate why, at least in a way that made sense to me.

But as I reflected on the immaterial gifts I like to think I inherited from him, it became clear I craved genetic continuity, however fictitious and tenuous it might be. I recognized then something precious and inexplicable in this yearning, and glimpsed how devastating it might be to be unable to realize it. For the first time, I felt justified in my impulse to preserve some little piece of me that, in some way, contained a little piece of him, which one day might live again.

Anna Louie Sussman is a writer on gender, reproduction and economics. This article was produced in partnership with the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting.

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Anna Louie Sussman: Is this the end of babies? - Salt Lake Tribune

WALSH: Growing ‘Anti-Natalist’ Movement Calls For The Extinction Of Humanity. This Is The Logical Conclusion Of Leftism. – The Daily Wire

The Guardian has a lengthy article about a movement that, it says, is gaining mainstream popularity. Anti-natalism is the belief that human life is objectively worthless and pointless. As The Guardian explains, anti-natalists contend that human reproduction causes unjustified harm to human society (which shouldnt exist to begin with, by this way of thinking) and the planet. Furthermore, parents are guilty of a moral crime by imposing existence on children who have not consented to their existence.

One man has even tried to exact revenge on his parents for forcing life upon him:

In February, a 27-year-old Indian man named Raphael Samuel announced plans for an unusual lawsuit. He was going to sue his parents for begetting him. It was not our decision to be born, he told the BBC. Human existence is totally pointless.

Samuel subscribes to a philosophy called anti-natalism. The basic tenet of anti-natalism is simple but, for most of us, profoundly counterintuitive: that life, even under the best of circumstances, is not a gift or a miracle, but rather a harm and an imposition. According to this logic, the question of whether to have a child is not just a personal choice but an ethical one and the correct answer is always no.

Paradoxically, anti-natalists often claim that their belief in the worthlessness of human life is motivated by compassion for human life:

While [South African philosopher David Benatar] also sought to discourage reproduction, his ideas grew out of different premises. The objective of anti-natalism, as Benatar sees it, is to reduce human suffering. Since life inevitably involves some amount of suffering, bringing another person into the world introduces the guarantee of some harm. He argued that the quality of even the best lives is very bad and considerably worse than most people recognize it to be. Although it is obviously too late to prevent our own existence, it is not too late to prevent the existence of future possible people.

In another paradox, anti-natalists wish to protect humanity from harm by ensuring its obliteration:

Dana Wells, the Dallas-based YouTuber, felt validated by Benatars work. About five years ago, she reunited with her biological brother (she was adopted), and he grilled her about why she didnt have children. Feeling annoyed after their meeting, she searched online for books Im a reader. Im a nerd, she says in hopes of finding out about others who didnt want kids.

For the first time, she encountered the terms childfree and anti-natalism. She began to see that this life game is an imposition. For her, it was simple: Living things can be harmed. Non-living things cannot be harmed.

On one level, this all seems like depression and self-loathing dressed up as a philosophical system. But it cant be a valid philosophical system because it contradicts itself at every turn. For one thing, anti-natalists undermine their own position simply by sticking around to articulate it. If you really think that life is not only pointless but also harmful, and that non-existence is preferable to existence, then the obvious question is why you yourself have chosen to continue existing. A skeptic might suspect that even you recognize, deep down, that life is worth living. If you didnt, you wouldnt be living it anymore.

Also, terms like better or preferable or harmful or bad are all meaningless in a vacuum. David Benatar wrote a book called Better Never to Have Been: The Harm of Coming into Existence. But better to whom? For whom? It couldnt be better for me if I dont exist because if I dont exist, then there is no me to reap the benefit. The term for me does not apply if I do not exist. And it cant be better for society if humans dont exist because without humans there is no society to enjoy their absence. Even the fate of the planet itself is arguably meaningless without conscious beings around to care about it. Does it matter if a planet 15 trillion miles away from the nearest intelligent civilization explodes? Why? An entire galaxy could cease to exist and Im not sure why it would really matter if no conscious beings are affected by it. You cannot argue that Situation B would be better than Situation A if there isnt anyone around in Situation B to profit from the improvement. If there is no one, then it is literally better for no one. Which is just another way of saying that its not better.

Third point: The idea of existence without consent is incoherent. In fact, you do have a say in whether you exist or not. The only way to fully remove consent from someone is to never bring him or her into existence to begin with.

The anti-natalists clearly have some bugs to work out. But the incoherence of their position does not mean that their position should be ignored. It should concern, though not surprise us, that modern culture has given rise to such a movement. Concern us because it indicates that our culture is losing its will to live; not surprise us because the rejection of inherent human worth has been the cornerstone of mainstream leftism for decades now.

Indeed, the pro-abortion position rests squarely on the premise that life has no inherent value. Clump of cells, they call it in the womb. But if I aminherentlya valueless chunk of matter at conception and for nine months thereafter, I must logically continue to be a valueless chunk of matter for the rest of my life. I might be able to make myself useful for a time, but I am only useful to other chunks of useless matter. There is nothing about my innate nature, nothing at the core of my being, that gives me value. If there was, I would have had that value from the moment I was a being, from the moment of conception. By rejecting my value then, we reject it in principle. I am just a parasite and my birth is merely the spread of an infestation. The anti-natalists see this implication and embrace it. At least theyre honest.

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WALSH: Growing 'Anti-Natalist' Movement Calls For The Extinction Of Humanity. This Is The Logical Conclusion Of Leftism. - The Daily Wire

Ask A Priest – Why is the Church opposed to same sex marriage? – The Catholic Weekly

Reading Time: 3 minutes

Id like to try to answer this by asking myself four key questions:

Jesus once spoke about marriage, drawing on the Book of Genesis: Havent you read that he who made them from the beginning made them male and female, and said, For this reason a man shall leave his father and mother and be joined to his wife, and the two shall become one? What therefore God has joined together, let no man put asunder (Mt19:45).

Jesus laid down the basis of Christian living with what he called his new commandment: That you love one another even as I have loved you (Jn 13:34). The hard part of Christian love is that little word, as, which for Jesus means that Christians, including spouses in marriage, are ready to lay down their life for each other. Jesus is only asking us to do what each Person of the Blessed Trinity are doing for one another. So Pope Francis has said that marriage is the icon [or image] of God, created for us by him, who is the perfect communion of the three persons of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit.

Jesus is definitely not obsessed with sexhes only said one sentence about it, which sets such a high standard I think it refers to any and every sexual failure we humans can fall into: Every one who looks at a woman lustfully has already committed adultery with her in his heart (Mt 5:28). As St John Paul II explains, heart means the full depth of the person as loved by God, where God loves each of us for our own sake, not for what he gets out of us. If I dont love you other unconditionally and purely for your own sake, and treat you as an object to provide myself with pleasure, Im committing adultery in my heart.

The only way a same sex married couple could have children would be through adopting or fostering a child of other parents, or through another partner. Ill leave a discussion of Same Sex Marriage adoption/fostering for another day. Lesbians are likely to access donor-assisted human reproduction, while gay men desiring children have to adopt, foster, or use surrogacy. Donor-assisted reproduction, or the use of surrogacy, seems to be a terrible injustice to children acquired in this way, intentionally depriving them of at least one biological parent.

U-S childrens rights Heather Barwick, born to lesbian parents, has an interesting take on this: I dont support gay marriage. But it might not be for the reasons that you think. Its not because youre gay. I love you, so much. Its because of the nature of the same-sex relationship itself. Same-sex marriage and parenting withholds either a mother or father from a child while telling him or her that it doesnt matter. That its all the same. But its not. A lot of us, a lot of your kids, are hurting. My fathers absence created a huge hole in me, and I ached every day for a dad. I loved my mums partner, but another mum could never have replaced the father I lost.

Originally posted here:
Ask A Priest - Why is the Church opposed to same sex marriage? - The Catholic Weekly

Louth teacher puts pain of five failed rounds of IVF treatment into new song to raise awareness – The Irish Sun

AFTER enduring five failed IVF attempts, most women might choose to retreat to deal with their grief in private.

But singer-songwriter Sinead McNally has done the opposite, sharing her struggles in a powerful new song and music video.

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The 40-year-old took the brave decision to share her personal story in a bid to start a conversation about one of the last taboo topics fertility.

She revealed: I work as a substitute primary teacher so Im of the opinion that its good to put something out there, especially something youre struggling with, because were always saying to kids, dont hold that in.

With fertility, I was a bit, I suppose ashamed is the word, in the beginning.

It sounds terrible, but I felt my body wasnt operating the way it should.

She was also struck by the secrecy surrounding infertility, explaining: Wed be in a coffee shop and you might be chatting about a cycle coming up and youd whisper.

I know you dont want everybody else to know your business but everybodys automatic reaction is to nearly whisper the letters IVF.

I suppose because Ive been frank in talking about it, it seems normal to me, but yet I knew it wasnt normalised.

Over the last four years, Sinead and her husband Conor have had repeated heartbreak with five unsuccessful rounds of IVF, attending clinics in Dublin, Hungary and Greece.

After their last disappointment, Sinead channelled her despair into her music, writing the song My Silent Night.

The accompanying music video by Zoe Kavanagh shows her using IVF needles to burst baby shower balloons.

She explained: When I was about to take the needles back to the chemist, I thought I cant, because they kind of represented the three or four years of my life up to that point.

With the video, all I needed to do was to bring the symbols of IVF and the loss. A lot of the loss is all the baby showers Ive been to over the years.

When I did the video I could genuinely feel the feelings of what its like to not have a child when you want one.

The Dundalk woman feels strongly that opening up the conversation can help lead to increased support for men and women in this position.

Ireland is one of only two EU countries that do not offer State funding for IVF.

Some private health insurers provide very limited cover but couples quickly amass huge debt while paying for IVF and associated treatments.

The Government has pledged to tackle the problem via its Assisted Human Reproduction Bill, but there is still no legislation and no funding in place.

Yet, financial support is just one of the missing pieces of the puzzle, as Sinead is also angry about the lack of medical leave for couples undergoing treatment.

She said: Its so unfair that a woman or a man has to take unpaid leave or holiday time.

Even working as a teacher, there isnt that allowance there for fertility treatment so youre taking unpaid leave or holidays.

You might have borrowed to get the cycle in place. So youre down your holidays and then youre trying to find more money if the cycle hasnt worked.

She added: I dont necessarily want to go back to work the day after my pregnancy test is negative. But I have to.

You should be able to say: I cant do this today, and not to be down the wages that you need.

You still have to pay the loans back and theres no baby still.

After so much heartache, Sinead and Conor are hopeful that another IVF cycle can help them achieve their dream of becoming parents.

And theyre buoyed by the hugely positive reaction to Sineads song.

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Sinead said: I was having sleepless nights in the months leading up to this, thinking: maybe this is a stupid thing to do, why am I letting people into my life?

One thing I noticed in the last week is that Ive gotten so much strength from people and I feel like if everybody could speak this way about something thats troubling them it would help.

Hear Sineads song on youtu.be/OW1iabHc8hM and on Spotify.

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Louth teacher puts pain of five failed rounds of IVF treatment into new song to raise awareness - The Irish Sun

Eugenics on the Farm: Ray Lyman Wilbur – The Stanford Daily

Columnist Ben Maldonado traces the eugenicist history of Ray Lyman Wilbur. (Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons)

On Jan. 22, 1916, Ray Lyman Wilbur became the third president of Stanford University. In his inaugural speech, Wilbur promised that Stanford would aim for control of those unnecessary diseases that devour the very marrow of the [human] race and would lead in the fight against oppression, evil, ignorance, filth. These words would have perhaps been less ominous if Wilbur was not a eugenicist.

Between 1916 and 1929 and between 1933 and 1943, Ray Lyman Wilbur served as Stanfords president, leading the same university where he received his bachelors and masters degrees. A physician by training, Wilbur was influential in the development of Stanfords School of Medicine, first as dean then as university president. Wilburs key academic focus was public health: studying the health of America and methods of bettering it. This interest showed clearly in both his work at Stanford and in the Hoover Administration, where he served as Secretary of the Interior.

Wilburs interest in public health, however, also inspired his support of eugenics, the science of human improvement through selective breeding. As historian Martin S. Pernick has argued, public health and eugenics often historically went hand-in-hand what better way could there be of creating an ideal population than controlling who could reproduce and who could be born? Besides being a member of many health associations, Wilbur was also a prominent figure in eugenic organizations, such as the American Eugenics Society and the Eugenics Research Association, and often combined these two pursuits. As he put it in his 1937 article on the health of Black people, a pair of healthy grandfathers and of healthy grandmothers is the greatest personal asset a human being can have. In the name of public health, eugenic policies were therefore a necessity to Wilbur: We would not dream of treating a strain of race horses, he argued before Stanford alumni in 1935, the way we treat ourselves.

This emphasis on eugenics as a form of public health advocacy manifested in Wilburs work in the Hoover Administration as well. As historian Wendy Klein recounts, Wilbur served as conference chair at the 1930 White House Conference on Child Health and Protection, a massive convention attended by thousands of experts on child health, development and education. In his opening speech, Wilbur used eugenic language to emphasize the importance of fit future citizenry, encouraging the United States to become a fitter country in which to bring up children. Wilbur was not just supporting the health of children; he was supporting the goal of breeding eugenically fit children. As he put it in a 1913 speech, Wilbur believed that the products of the marriage of the weak and the unfit, of the criminal, of the syphilis and of the alcohol that fill many of our most splendid governmental buildings must largely disappear.

One of Wilburs greatest contributions to Stanford University as president was the development of the Stanford University School of Medicine, turning it into an organization at the forefront of medical education as well as eugenic education. Wilbur believed that all medical students should be taught the science of eugenics. He encouraged medical universities to study both the health and economic impact of the physically and mentally handicapped, promoting extensive research on eugenics. He presented before the Medical Society of the State of California in 1922, and argued that physicians must be educated to understand the importance of eugenically fit genetic material, for if it deteriorates a family or a race soon dies out. This genetic material must therefore be protected through eugenic means such as the sterilization or segregation of the unfit. With his development of the medical school, Wilbur aimed to emphasize the necessity of racial health in the name of eugenics.

Wilbur was also deeply concerned with race relations and the role of the United States in international affairs. In a 1926 speech, he expressed fear that white women were degenerating and becoming incapable of producing breast milk due to a reliance on dairy milk when nursing. For Wilbur, this was exceptionally frightening as the Chinese, who were immigrating to the American West (to the displeasure of many eugenicists) continued to use breast milk with their babies. Wilbur saw this as a eugenic threat to white dominance. If dairy production were to be halted, Chinese populations would overtake white populations a eugenicists nightmare.

Wilburs concerns with Chinese immigration led him to chair a 1923 survey looking into the potential dangers of Asian immigration into the American West. This Survey of Race Relations, as it was called, was led by many Stanford affiliates, and its findings were presented at a conference on Stanfords campus. Looking at both Chinese and Japanese immigration, this study chaired by Wilbur sought to objectively determine the value of allowing Asian immigrants to travel, stay, and reproduce in the United States. In the end, the survey concluded that Asian immigration was, for the time being, acceptable due to the cheap labor immigrants provided, but interracial marriages and reproduction were deeply discouraged. These attempts to objectively determine the value of immigrants to society was emblematic of a larger eugenic trend to quantify the value of human existence.

Wilburs belief in public health and the objective research of racial health inspired his promotion of eugenic thought. His legacy shows clearly the interconnections of medicine, public health and eugenic thought, and how many projects in the name of human health with noble intent were shaped by racist and ableist assumptions. Though he was less explicitly racist than some of his peers at Stanford, Wilbur still promoted the sterilization of unwanted people and still studied the potential dangers of non-white immigration. Today, Wilbur Hall bears his name, honoring his presidency and contributions to the University. I cannot help but wonder how many residents of that hall would be deemed unwelcome by its namesake.

Contact Ben Maldonado at bmaldona at stanford.edu.

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Eugenics on the Farm: Ray Lyman Wilbur - The Stanford Daily