‘The Matrix Has You…’ – The Good Men Project

Have you asked yourself What year is this? How is this happening? Its impossible. You struggle to make sense of it all and the more you see how the sausage gets made in America, the less appetite you have for it.

Im gonna go out on a limb.

Im a geek so I see metaphors in popular culture.

A majority of Americans for the first time, are starting to realize the truth. Born into bondage in a prison you cant see or touch until rudely awakened by the perfect storm of the global pandemic, economic tailspin, and abuse of power overseen by an inept despot who let the cat out of the bag.

The predicament we find ourselves in today in the grip of a fatal error that threatens to crash the entire system unless something intervenes to stop it is much like the predicament of the films.

And, that film holds the key to a better future.

The Film:

The premise that the real world was actually a future dystopian nightmare where human beings were merely replaceable batteries to support a system that they were totally dependent upon. While 95% of humanity lived oblivious to their servitude within an artificial construct of the titular Matrix.

Our Reality:

Today, we all support and are totally dependent upon a hyper-capitalist system, fueled by rampant consumerism, for-profit prisons and war, governed by an elite that holds the very people that support their unchecked hedonism in utter disdain.

The Film:

Very few knew the truth. Those were Morpheus and the Zionists waring against the machine system. But, those freedom fighters were themselves also duped into thinking their actions were outside the system. When in fact, the resistance was only another layer of control for humanity.

Our Reality:

I see a stark parallel.

The sleeping masses, the resistance all operating by design as the 1% continue to pull everyones strings.

Much like the machine overlords within the fictional world of The Matrix. Imwary of all these victories because they are all cosmetic changes.

Another MLK boulevard in an over-policed black community does nothing to address Kings Poor Peoples March that was to kick off the economic changes that his nonviolent marches did to usher in the political changes he championed before King was silenced by an assassins bullet.

I ask you, how does retiring Aunt Jemima or Uncle Bens troubling archaic black stereotypical imaging address the MASSIVE systemic headwinds of White Supremacy black and brown Americans face on a daily basis?

Its VERY easy for the corporate lobby to pat itself on the back for meager acquiescence.

-Painting Black Lives Matter on Fifth Ave. outside Trump Tower.

-Pulling down Confederate statuary.

-Changing the racist names of Football teams that should have been erased years ago.

For example. When Vanity Fair can trumpet they have the first Black Photographer in their history?

Folks can applaud, and representation does indeed mater.

What about the CEO?

The Editorial Staff?

Is their ANY black woman on their masthead?

It feels like wining without an actual prize. These are distractions, light without heat.

Only providing the illusion of progress without the cost of tangible progressive movement to dismantle The System.

The Film:

Neo meets Morpheus, who offers him a choice between two pills; red to reveal the truth about the Matrix, and blue to return him to his former life.- This is your last chance. After this there is no turning back. You take the blue pill: the story ends, you wake up in your bed and believe whatever you want to believe. You take the red pill: you stay in Wonderland and I show you how deep the rabbit hole goes.

After Neo swallows the red pill, his reality falls apart, and he awakens in a liquid-filled pod among countless others attached to an elaborate electrical system.

He is retrieved and brought aboard Morpheuss hovercraft, the Nebuchadnezzar. In a former iteration of the Matrix, the machines wished to impose a perfect world on humans in an attempt to keep people content, so that they would remain completely submissive to machines, both consciously and subconsciously, but humans were not easy to make content.

Our Reality:

As in the Matrix, most people are so dependent upon the current system, they will fight to defend it. And depending upon your political views, both left and right claim they are the truth-tellers.

In the film as in life, people are their own agents of deceit, and so in order for them to know the truth, they must choose to openly pursue truth. Complicated by the fact that bias is rampant among media and most consumers dont take the time to source what they intake or repeat.

Red pill has become a popular phrase among cyberculture and signifies a free-thinking attitude, and a waking up from a normal life of sloth and ignorance.

Red pills prefer the truth, no matter how gritty and painful it may be.

A decade ago, truthiness and fact-checker ratings like Four Pinocchios and Pants on Fire werent part of the political vernacular.

Disagreements over policy have always existedbut disagreements over basic facts have not.

Cognitive ease actually plays a huge role in our everyday lives.

The more you hear it, the easier it is for your brain to accept. This echo chamber is self-perpetuating.

It explains why the partisan divide about basic science is a chasm.

Because Trump wants it this way. He works the refs and reaps the reward of the doubt.

If 1% drop in GDP is a recession.6.5% drop in GDP The Great Recession and a15% drop in GDP in 1929 The Great Depression. Whats 33% drop in GDP if not a Fatal Error?

One of the best examples of cognitive ease exploitation is Trumps propaganda surrounding masks.

Its well documented how blatantly misleading The President was about the severity and or response to containing the epidemic while we had the chance.

The politicization of basic science has made many conservatives resistant to new thinking about the current severity of the pandemic.

Having been told its like the flu reinforced by the phenomenon of cognitive ease and political polarization of masks, has many ignoring basic science and medical recommendations to wear masks and social distance.

As you read this, that COVID burns throughout 33 states unchecked is a direct consequence of Trumps failure.

MAGA purists who repeatedly emphasize Trumps views about our current dilemma, like FOX NEWS helped morphed his dwindling followers from right-wing Trump apologists into by all intents and purposes a militant death cult.

Determined to thwart any common sense methods just to own the libs.

The Film:

In the end,The Matrix is rebooted, and the Architect encounters the Oracle in a park.

They agree that the peace will last as long as it can and that those humans who so desire it will be offered the opportunity to leave the Matrix.

When questioned about Neos fate, the Oracle tells Sati that she thinks they will see Neo again as Sati reveals she created a beautiful sunrise over the horizon in Neos honor.

Seraph, the Oracles Guardian, asks the Oracle if she knew this would happen. She replies that she did not know, but she believed.

Our Reality:

Real systemic change will be traumatic for the oppressed, more so for the oppressors.

Since its apparent even the smallest act of self-preservation and stopping the spread of disease masks and social distancing cause the privileged to lash out in irrational public displays.

Meanwhile, most people at the bottom and the middle are hungry for REAL change.

No more so than the essential workers or disposable batteries depending on if you are among the elite.

A total of 25 states have statutes preempting local minimum wage laws. To date, 12 cities and counties in six states (Alabama, Iowa, Florida, Kentucky, Missouri, and Wisconsin) have approved local minimum wage laws only to see them invalidated by state statute, harming hundreds of thousands of workers in the process, many of whom face high levels of poverty.

If you get paid $15 dollars an hour 40 hours a week thats $600 before taxes. I hear complaints about folks staying on unemployment. Perhaps if folks were paid a living wage theyd go back to work?

Remember, these are the people who are now seen as #essentialworkers the heroes who cannot work from home like you or I can.

Many of these heroes cant afford to shop at the shops and businesses they work for and dont have health insurance in a pandemic? Thats a travesty of the highest order. The wheels come off if they dont show up.

Its attainable clearly today when so much we thought were essentials turn out to be luxuries, and whats essential is invisible to the eye.

When the federal government allows a deadly virus to burn through the country unchecked but can mobilize secret police to terrorize the populace to protect buildings? We clearly see the agenda of those who weve trusted to ensure our safety.

The Elite are empty, corrupt, without wisdom, leadership, compassion, or self-sacrifice for the greater good. The least of us, everyday people are our societal lifelines.

So why do we need the Elites?

Throughout the first film, Morpheus (played by Laurence Fishburne) is trying to change Neos (Keanu Reeves) limiting beliefs about the Matrix and himself being The One The Oracle told Neo Being The One is like being in love, no one can tell you youre in love, youve got to feel it .Balls to Bones.

There will be plenty who will scoff at the idea that there is even a problem to be solved furthermore creating a better America by telling the truth about history and scraping the lies we tell ourselves about The American Dream.

Dismantling White Supremacy and employing new ideas for systemic change.

Apologizing for Slavery (we never officially have as a nation) and paying reparations to the descendants of American Slavery.

Admitting the truth about entrenched class inequities and the impediment poverty places on real economic growth for the majority of people inAmerican society.

Theres no shortage of Good Trouble we can get into this instant.

Rep. John Lewis called for beyond the grave on his New York Times Op-Ed published the day of his funeral.

I reckon John Lewis was our Morpheus.

The demands of The Movement For Black Lives isnt outrageous by any means. These demands help everyone, not only Black people. I dare say its the way toward a more perfect union.

The Elites are visibly shaken, increasingly desperate and will never be more vulnerable.

Take a look at an Axios HBO interview with Trump. A new low. Frost/Nixon mixed with This Is Spinal Tap. We must act to benefit everyday people. All of us, the disposables. I believe now that we find ourselves with our collective backs against the wall, we can work together to make real, societal change this time around instead of just talking about it.

Most will say, Nobodys ever done this before! My answer- Thats why itll work coppertop!

***

All Premium Members get to view The Good Men Project with NO ADS. Need more info? A complete list of benefits is here.

stock photoID: 1686838822

Follow this link:

'The Matrix Has You...' - The Good Men Project

How we met: ‘He spoke to me in a French accent, and I went weak at the knees’ – The Guardian

Peter Kavanagh flew to Copenhagen from his home in Brighton for a long weekend in May 2014. I went to a street party for the Eurovision song contest and then discovered there was an afterparty going on, he says. He made his way to Freetown Christiania, an area of the city that was taken over by hippies in the 1960s and now exists as an international commune. I was really excited, as its somewhere Ive always wanted to go.

The party was in full swing when he spotted Franck Thierry across the room. Franck was living in Copenhagen at the time, and had been attending another house party with friends before the club night. He spoke to me in a French accent, and I went weak at the knees, laughs Peter. Franck noticed his partners dancing. I loved Peters whole look. We spent the next three hours chatting.

As the sun began to rise, Franck invited Peter back to his home in Copenhagen. I was sitting on the back of his bike and got my own personal tour of Christiania, says Peter. It was so romantic. As well as the instant attraction, the pair had plenty in common. We both realised we loved gardening, so we chatted about that for ages, says Franck. He didnt go back to his Airbnb until the very end of the weekend.

As soon as Peter left for the airport, Franck made plans to come and visit him in Brighton. When I landed in Gatwick, he texted me to say he was coming the next weekend. I was really excited as otherwise getting home could have been a real downer.

When Franck arrived, he fell in love with Brighton. We had this incredible weekend together. The sun was shining the whole time. At the time, Franck was working as a freelance massage therapist, while Peter had flexible hours as the owner of a hairdressing salon. It meant they could see each other regularly throughout the summer. I think the cheap flights from easyJet played a big part in our relationship, jokes Franck.

After several months of fun and hedonism, they started finding it harder to say goodbye at the end of their weekends together. In the autumn, Franck moved to Brighton. I am originally French, but had been living in Copenhagen for 34 years, he says. It was quite a drastic move and I think some of my clients thought I was mad. He has never regretted it. The couple found an allotment together and Franck began working in Peters salon. All the clients love it when Franck is in charge of doing the hair washing because of his massage skills, says Peter.

After splitting from his first civil partner after a few years (Denmark was the first country in the world to legalise civil partnerships, in 1989) and losing his second to Aids in the 90s, Franck had no plans to marry again. Peter changed my mind, though he laughs. He insisted.

The couple got married in Brighton in August 2016, carrying flowers theyd picked from their allotment. There were just a few friends there. We both wore our gardening clothes, as its what we always wear, says Peter. They are now happily settled with their dog. During lockdown, they spent all their time gardening and have now managed to reopen their hairdressing salon.

Franck always gives me confidence, says Peter. Hes so attentive, charming and romantic. Hes also really sexy. Franck says they bonded through music and a shared philosophy on life. He believes they also have a rare spiritual connection. Sometimes you just really understand someone. Im old enough to know that doesnt happen very often. I think our personalities complement each other well.

Peter jokes that Franck tells him to calm down quite a lot, but agrees their differences balance each other out. From that first night when we were cycling through Copenhagen at sunrise there was something special. Were really lucky to have found each other.

Want to share your story? Tell us a little about you, your partner and how you got together by filling in the form here.

See the article here:

How we met: 'He spoke to me in a French accent, and I went weak at the knees' - The Guardian

Sea level rise: three visions of a future summer holiday at the coast – The Conversation UK

The COVID-19 pandemic will ensure summer 2020 is a washout for most. With international travel restrictions limiting holidays abroad, many people in the UK have opted to stay somewhere closer to home. As a result, there have been remarkable increases in the number of visitors to beaches across the UK. Thousands flocked to a beach in Bournemouth on a single day in June, causing the local council to declare a major incident.

But far greater disruptions to our summer holidays lie ahead. About half of all tourism takes place in coastal areas, but with global warming set to raise sea levels by somewhere around two metres over the next 80 years, how will our relationship with the coast change?

Will we commemorate the old coastal boundaries with forlorn sojourns above the sunken land? Will we recreate the beach in the heart of our cities? Or will we preserve the drowned coast as a nature reserve a quiet memorial to what was lost?

We imagined three different versions of what a beach holiday might look like as climate change eclipses the coastline we once knew.

Sea level rise may seem a distant threat, but resorts and other tourism operators are already considering how they can stay near the coast and operate above the water. On the Caribbean island of Barbuda, resort huts have been built on stilts.

The aim is to keep tourism viable in the same place it has thrived for decades, while minimising damage from higher water levels.

Seasteading is one answer to this conundrum. The idea to build settlements on platforms at sea originated with the hope of creating more sustainable and equal societies away from land. The technology is still being developed, while researchers consider the engineering, legal and business implications.

New research suggests that coastal flooding could threaten up to 20% of global GDP by 2100, with much of it tied to the tourism industry. Tourism could instead become a new source of income for seasteads. Given the dwindling coastal space for tourists, creating new spaces out at sea might be a way to meet the problem of sea level rise head on.

The urban beach is a concept thats growing in popularity worldwide. It involves creating sandy areas in towns and cities by importing sand onto concrete. There may also be artificial pools and fairground rides. Each one has different features. There are family-friendly options, and those catered to adults, with cocktail bars or restaurants.

The opportunities for hedonism are still there, but instead of travelling miles to enjoy it, its right on your doorstep. Less travel means less carbon emissions, and urban beaches might help ease pressure on the real coast.

Perhaps the most famous urban beach is the Paris Plage. Since its opening in 2002, Parisians and summer tourists have been able to lounge under palm trees on the banks of the river Seine. It cost over two million Euros to create and has since been extended due to its popularity.

The Nottingham Riviera is an attempt to recreate this success in the UK. The landlocked beach in the middle of the city has sand and water, amusement arcades and beach bars.

The urban beach is becoming an industry in itself, with companies specialising in fake beaches that can be built as seasonal fixtures or permanent areas. If reaching the coast becomes too arduous in the future, these examples could provide everything needed for a seaside experience without the sea.

Perhaps the most pragmatic solution is to accept nature taking its course and relinquish control as rising seas reshape the terrain. Allowing the new coastline to rewild could create millions of acres of new wetlands habitats that are very good at storing carbon and that have deteriorated by about 50% since 1900.

Examples from Hong Kong, Spain, and Wallasea Island in the UK demonstrate how turning heavily managed coastal areas into new habitats can create new opportunities for wildlife and people.

Read more: Rising seas: to keep humans safe, let nature shape the coast

So does the Mexican island, Mayakoba. Its unique mangrove forests were damaged and polluted by the building of numerous hotel chains on the seafront, but today, only 10% of these hotels remain on the coast.

The local community abandoned their high-density model of tourism and protected the dunes and mangroves, which were being eroded by excessive development. New canal networks were dug to create an estuary, attracting birds and amphibians. This new wetland was designated as a nature reserve and visitors arrived to enjoy a new kind of tourist experience.

Visitor capacity and beach activities were reduced to ensure sensitive coastal environments could remain protected. But allowing the sea back into reclaimed coastal territory allowed a more sustainable model of tourism to flourish one which could be replicated elsewhere as sea levels rise.

But before that can happen, our views of the coast must change. Humans once saw land and sea as a continuation of one another, rather than two discrete entities. Reviving this concept could allow us to navigate a future in which once certain borders have blurred beyond recognition.

Original post:

Sea level rise: three visions of a future summer holiday at the coast - The Conversation UK

Review: ‘Beastie Boys Story’ on Apple TV+ examines the growth of the iconic band – The Oakland Press

"Beastie Boys Story" is available to stream on Apple TV+.

More memorial and a laugh-fest than a concert movie, this is a spirited chronicle of the memories and reflections from the Beastie Boys' surviving members Michael Diamond (Mike D) and Adam Horovitz (Ad-Rock).

Director Spike Jonzes Beastie Boys Story takes place in front of a live crowd in May 2019. Diamond and Horovitz take the live audience through their punk and hip hop influences to its roots, exploring the origins and giving vivid insights into their controversial lyrics, songs and personas. They discuss the late Adam Yauch, give personal details in what led to their success and talk about being represented by Def Jam executive Russell Simmons, who saw instant opportunities in the young kids. The film gives a soulful, conscious side to the Beastie Boys' love and passion for hop hop. The film keeps things lively, with wit and banter on camera, punctuating the acts with archival footage and gags, while always maintaining the viewers' interest.

Jonze does allow the material to meander as some of the pacing suffers past the one hour mark. But the material and personal insights triumph throughout. It would have been great had they performed a live song together in tribute to Yauch even if they hold a principle of never performing again without him.

The best explorations in Beastie Boys Story is the growth this iconic band endured from their youth through adulthood not just in their music, but in character too. The band started off rowdy with their misogynistic spectacle of go-go dancers and their giant penis prop.They could have just become a one hit wonder type of band as their first pop hit, 1986s Fight for Your Right, became an instant smash hit on the billboards.

Their style from their debut album Licensed to Ill was very novice with basic metal riffs and minimal beats, which led to them improving and experimenting, with far lesser success on their sophomore album Pauls Boutique a commercial flop that would later be hailed as their masterpiece. At this point, their music had a wide range of different styles and samples, which led them back to their punk influences with the early-90s hit Sabotage," which put them back into relevancy. The music video of that song was also directed by Jonze.

The live concert film is inspired by the book Beastie Boys Story," in which Diamond and Horovitz published a collection of essays from friends and music critics that also examined the bands fascinating history with photos and prose. Beastie Boys Story holds up to the task of being a compelling watch. One of the highlights of the film is when it examines the original drummer Kate Schellenbach, who was eventually phased out of the group for being a girl. This shows the attitude towards women in an era that viewed females more as a sex objects. At the time, their egos couldnt allow a girl to be in a group with Boys in their name. They also criticize and regret writing the song Girls," which certainly holds chauvinist attitudes. This is how the Beastie Boys make reconciliation for their sexism.

The Beastie Boys broke apart in 2012 after the death of its founding member Yauch. In the film, Diamond and Horovitz pay great respect to Yauch, who they admit was the driving force of who and what they are today, both spiritually and artistically. The Beastie Boys ended up making amends with their art, in which the documentary points out Yauch was confronted for being a hypocrite after he stands up for women in the 1994 Sure Shot." Yauch refuted, I would rather be a hypocrite than the same person I was before.

The Beastie Boys ended up growing wiser over the years as they drifted away from hedonism and more towards advocating for progressing humanity forward.Yauchconverted to Buddhism and developed a friendship with the Dalai Lama, which led to him becoming an activist for peace over bloodshed during Chinas rule over Tibet, elevating the bands public image in the 90s. The third act of the film becomes an outright tribute to Yauch to his role as a great activist, collaborator, and most importantly a friend. The film becomes mournful and therapeutic as Diamond and Horovitz open up and reveal their repressed emotions and grief.

Though Jonze defies conventional shot composition and blocking, with a few reaction shots from the crowd, inter-cut with archival footage, there is a sense of space and timing in the film that unravels well with the way it flows and connects together. Between Jonze, Diamond, and Horovitz examine the healing power of art and the relationship between music and friendship. The end result is very absorbing and undeniably moving.

Rating: 3 of 4 stars

Robert Butler is an award-winning filmmaker from Ortonville whose most recent feature length movie, "Love Immortal," won Best Horror Feature Film at the 24th annual Indie Gathering International Film Festival. For more of his reviews, visitdefactofilmreviews.com.

Read more here:

Review: 'Beastie Boys Story' on Apple TV+ examines the growth of the iconic band - The Oakland Press

Giving in to occasional temptation leads to a happier life – Brinkwire

Giving in to temptation every now and again leads to a happier, more successful and more satisfied life, a study has concluded.

Psychologists from Switzerland concluded that a little hedonism might not be the same as fulfilling a long-term life goal, but it does make life more fulfilling and fun.

In fact, the team concluded, it is wrong to think that the only route to a happy life is years of self control in order to, for example, stay healthy or make money.

This isbecause the capacity to experience pleasure and enjoyment is a sign of leading a satisfied and happy life overall, the experts said.

For example,splurging on a good meal, or painting the town red might not make you live longer or become richer but it can make you happier.

Its time for a rethink. Of course self-control is important, but research on self-regulation should pay just as much attention to hedonism or short term pleasure, said paper author Katharina Bernecker of the University of Zurich.

Dr Bernecker and her colleague used a psychological questionnaire to test volunteers on how they respond to the temptations of hedonism and whether or not this distracts them from their long term goals as well as their overall wellbeing.

The duo found that some people set out to lose weight, do more sport or improve their mind but when relaxing they end up worrying about whether they should be doing those things instead.

Moreover, their sense of wellbeing was lower than those who managed to switch off and enjoy themselves without thinking about what they should be doing instead.

The findings suggest that people who can enjoy lifes little pleasures are less likely to suffer from depression and anxiety, because they can have fun without worrying about the consequences.

The solution, the team said, is to achieve a balance being able to work towards long term goals while also being able to not feel guilty when taking time out to go for a drink, have a slap up meal or simply sit in front of the TV with a takeaway pizza.

The pursuit of hedonistic and long-term goals neednt be in conflict with one another, Dr Bernecker said.

Both are important and can complement each other in achieving well-being and good health. It is important to find the right balance in everyday life.

It was always thought that hedonism, as opposed to self-control, was the easier option, but really enjoying ones hedonic choice isnt actually that simple for everybody because of those distracting thoughts.

The team said their findings also apply to worrying about work when trying to relax a common issue in this high tech age where it has become harder to switch off.

The answer,Dr Bernecker added, is to plan downtime and set limits on the amount of time spent working, having fun or advancing longer term goals.

The full findings of the study were published in the journal Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin.

Go here to see the original:

Giving in to occasional temptation leads to a happier life - Brinkwire

Soft white wines that pack a punch – The Guardian

Alain Geoffroy Petit-Chablis, France 2018 (14.99, oxfordwine.co.uk) Wines dont have to be showy to be good. The strongly scented rose garden gewrztraminer, gooseberry bush sauvignon blanc may be beautiful in their way and in the right moment, but there are times when you want something a little quieter, a little more accommodating, a little less likely to shout over the food. Chablis is a prime example of this. The wines of this chardonnay enclave in the northern limits of Burgundy may have become perceptibly fuller and richer as the climate emergency has raised temperatures in recent years. But theyre still judged on their ability to provide a steel pulse of quicksilver refreshment rather than on the power of their aromas. Two to refresh and accompany fish on a hot summer evening from the generous 2018 vintage: Alain Geoffroys tingling, mineral, lemony use of the supposedly lesser-quality vines of the Petit-Chablis appellation; and the almost electrically charged but exquisitely polished Domaine des Htes Chablis 2018 (20.95, leaandsandeman.co.uk).

Heretat Montrub HMR White Xarel.lo, Peneds, Spain 2019 (13.95, jeroboams.co.uk) Chablis isnt the only French dry white wine style where the emphasis is on texture and feel rather than on any bountiful, leap-out-glass flavour. In their different ways, the subtly saline and yeasty, bone-dry wines of Muscadet from out west in the Loire estuary (look out for Domaine de lEcu or Domaine Luneau-Papin), and the delicately floral spring meltwater freshness of the wines made from jacqure in Savoie (Domaine lIdylle and Gilles Berlioz) are also both capable of playing the discreet accompanying role to, respectively, classic moules marinires and sushi. A certain subtlety of aroma mixed with a truly distinctive texture of chalk and minerals also marks out the increasingly excellent still white wines made from xarel.lo in Catalan cava country, in Peneds. Celler Credos luminously lipsmacking Miranius 2018 (from 8.21, winebuyers.com; lescaves.co.uk) is a modern classic from the excellent fizz producers Recaredo, while HMR brings a whisper of white flowers, dill and pears to its super-refreshing palate.

Pikes Hills & Valleys Riesling, Clare Valley, Australia 2019 (from 12.45, frontierfinewines.co.uk; mumblesfinewines.co.uk; oxfordwine.co.uk) Australia is still associated with exuberant fruitiness in the minds of many wine drinkers. And in the case of a wine such as Pikes Hills & Valleys Riesling thats entirely justified: theres a good squeeze of the lime that is characteristic of the riesling made in South Australias Clare Valley, plus a dose of sweet peachiness and a dash of some more exotic fruit. Still, whats really appealing (and food-friendly) about that wine is its swishing, flashing-blade steely spine, a quality even more in evidence in the wines of top Clare Riesling producer Jeffrey Grosset. Grosset Polish Hill, one of Grossets two great single-vineyard Rieslings, has an almost austere quality when its just released, but the energy and tension in each mouthful makes it so compelling. You can find a bottle of the latest, 2019, release for just north of 30 (bbr.com; hedonism.co.uk).

Follow David on Twitter @Daveydaibach

Continue reading here:

Soft white wines that pack a punch - The Guardian

Closer to success: scientists surprised by unexpected statement Hedonists – The Saxon

Than useful sometimes to be lazy

A lot of people think that a weekend in the couch is in vain spent time. But in fact, such hedonism has its significant advantages.

Researchers from the universities of Zurich and Nijmegen found a wonderful argument in defense of all fans of spending time with pleasure and not with benefits. It turned out that not everyone is able to relax, and this hedonism allows people to feel happy and makes them more productive. Of course, within reason.

A new experiment has confirmed that a small rest breaks without works is help to get rid of anxiety and feel better. But opinions about certain achievements during this holiday does not bring any benefit.

For example, when youre lying on the couch and think about sport, which is now not doing. These thoughts about long-term goals cannot meet the current need for rest the scientists explain.

It is therefore important to be able to combine and hedonism, and self-control and not abuse Prolegomena free time or stresemannia at a time when you do nothing.

Read the rest here:

Closer to success: scientists surprised by unexpected statement Hedonists - The Saxon

Experts Have Found The Key To Happiness | WOMX – RADIO.COM

Have you ever had the urge to blow off absolutely everyone and everythingbecause youwant to drink an entire bottle of wine while you eat Cheez-Its and binge watch Netflix? Yeah, me too! Well, maybe we should!

According to a new study out of the University of Zurich in Switzerland, the key to being really happy is sometimes just saying "Forgetit" and giving in to your impulse to do something fun without thinking about the consequences.

The researchers say, "Of course self-control is important, but research on self-regulation should pay just as much attention to hedonism, or short-term pleasure." They found that you need to be able to mentally put aside your responsibilities, your hang-ups, and even your long-term goals once in a while in order to just relax and enjoy your life.

The story on Study Finds says that people who can do that have a better sense of well-being and they're less likely to suffer from depression, anxiety, and other mental health issues.

Cant get enough of the Mix? Ask Alexa to Play Mix 105.1 to listen to all your favorites from Y2K and today andJay and Danas Morning Mix!

Continue reading here:

Experts Have Found The Key To Happiness | WOMX - RADIO.COM

Netflix, Amazon, Stan, Foxtel, Binge and more: Everything new to streaming in August | Australia – NEWS.com.au

What a difference a month makes.

Many of us thought wed be spending less time at home by now and then, bam, life hits you square in the jaw.

So, lets make the best of it. Heres what new to the streaming services in August, including some cracking films and intriguing series.

Lovecraft Country (Foxtel Now /Binge*, August 9): Based on Matt Ruffs 2016 novel, Lovecraft Country follows a black familys journey through 1950s segregation-era southern US to find their missing father. But theyre stalked not just by the literal Lovecraftian monsters but the equally damning horrors of racist hate.

Ted Lasso (Apple TV+, August 14): From Jason Sudeikis and Scrubs creator Bill Lawrence, this new show is a fish-out-of-water comedy about an American football coach hired to lead a professional soccer team in England. He, of course, has no idea what hes doing.

Little Birds S1 (Stan, August 5): Inspired by Anais Nins collection of erotic short stories, Little Birds balances political intrigue with hedonism and drama. Set in colonial Tangiers in 1955, it follows the story of debutante Lucy Savage (Juno Temple) who arrives on a boat, expecting to meet her husband. But its not the welcome she had imagined, thrusting her into the bowels of the exotic city, chancing upon experiences she never thought possible.

Binge is Australias new streaming service offering the best drama, entertainment and movies from the worlds best creators. New to Binge? Get your two-week free trial, sign up at binge.com.au

Ill Be Gone In The Dark (Foxtel Now/Binge, August 9): Comedian Patton Oswalts late wife Michelle McNamara left a formidable legacy when she unexpectedly died some years ago, which is the subject of this true crime doco. An internet sleuth, she had been obsessively investigating the Golden State Killer, trying to unearth the serial murderers identity.

Dirty John: The Betty Broderick Story (Netflix, August 14): Moving on from Eric Banas manipulative and charismatic con-man, the second season of now anthology series Dirty John pivots to the true crime story of Betty Broderick, who is currently serving her sentence for killing her husband and his lover. Stars Amanda Peet, Christian Slater and Rachel Keller.

Cobra Kai S1-2 (Netflix, August 28): The well-reviewed Karate Kid sequel series, Cobra Kai, was one of those shows many people wanted to watch but maybe not enough to pay for a YouTube Premium (formerly YouTube Red) account. Now, YouTube said its getting out the scripted game, which means the first two seasons of Cobra Kai, and the upcoming third season, is moving to Netflix. It stars original cast members Ralph Macchio and William Zabka.

About Time (Foxtel Now, August 13): This delightful, under-appreciated romantic comedy is a fresh and winning entry in a beloved genre. It stars Rachel McAdams, Domhnall Gleeson and was written and directed by Richard Curtis. Theres a standard boy meets girl framework but the twist is the boy (Gleeson) comes from a family where the men can time travel. While that sounds like a gimmick, About Time makes it work like a charm, and sneaks in an emotional story about fatherhood too.

Brabham (Stan, August 7): Australian F1 driver Jack Brabham is a legend in the sport and remains to this day the only person to win a championship in a car he created. This doco looks into his life and legacy, and the effect his determination and drive had on his family, and features archival footage and exclusive interviews.

Battlestar Galactica S1-4 (Stan, August 14): While its political allegories are not as searingly relevant as it was when it first came out in the post-9/11 era, this reimagining of a cheesy space opera is still really smart storytelling. Centred on a group of human refugees in space after an apocalyptic event set off by artificial intelligent machines, its the intersection of human perseverance and the question of destiny.

Hungry Ghosts (SBS On Demand, August 24): Literal and emotional ghosts abound in SBSs Australian miniseries, which will stream (and be broadcast) over four nights. Set among the Vietnamese-Australian community, the past is dredged up in a haunted story about generational trauma. Stars Catherine Van-Davies, Bryan Brown and Gareth Yuen.

Portrait Of A Lady On Fire (Stan, August 22): A charged love story, writer and director Celine Sciammas drama is so far from a corsetted period piece. Rather, this intimate story of an 18th century painter and her reticent subject is alive with passion and beauty. You wont have seen anything quite like this before.

I Am Woman (Stan, August 28): Premiering at Toronto International Film Festival last year, this biopic of Australian singer Helen Reddy was supposed to have been released in cinemas, but is among the many movies that moved to streaming instead. It stars Tilda Cobham-Hervey as the feminist icon, charting her story as she moves to the US as a 24-year-old with a kid and $230.

Orphan Black S1-5 (Amazon Prime, August 1): Packed with conspiracies involving secret eugenics experiments, this gripping sci-fi series will keep you guessing all the way to the end. But the real draw is lead actor and chameleon Tatiana Maslany who played a dozen clones over the course of the series, all with their own distinct personalities and quirks. And shes never stronger than whens playing against herself in a scene what a marvel.

Knives Out (Amazon Prime, August 26): Intricately plotted and extremely compelling, Rian Johnsons cracking murder mystery involves the death of a family patriarch and a pool of suspects with motives. Its a fresh take on a classic whodunnit with an absolutely stacked cast including Toni Collette, Chris Evans, Jamie Lee Curtis, Daniel Craig, LaKeith Stanfield, Christopher Plummer, Don Johnson, Michael Shannon and Ana de Armas.

Worlds Toughest Race: Eco-Challenge Fiji (Amazon Prime, August 14): Spanning challenges across mountains, rivers, oceans and jungle thickets, Bear Grylls claims this adventure race is his most intense yet. The 10-episode docuseries features 66 teams from 30 countries race non-stop for 11 days in Fiji a real test of human endurance.

Short Term 12 (SBS On Demand, August 1): Just Mercy director Destin Daniel Cretton is currently riding out the pandemic in Sydney, waiting for production for Marvel movie Shang Chi to restart. But before you get to see that spectacle, familiarise yourself with Crettons well-received breakout film about a young woman working at a group home for troubled youths. It features Brie Larson in her first big role and was notable for casting a slate of young, then-little-known actors who would go on to be stars, including Rami Malek, LaKeith Stanfield and Kaitlyn Dever.

Cold War (SBS On Demand, August 2): Polish director Pawel Pawlikowskis (Ida) haunting, epic post-war love story is a seductive, beguiling dance between two lovers who meet in a Stalinist musical propaganda group, selling some wholesome folkloric version of national identity that doesnt exist. But political oppression doesnt make love simple, and this visually striking black-and-white film follows the lovers across countries and over decades. Heart-wrenching.

Burning (SBS On Demand, August 10): Perhaps Oscar winner Parasitewas your first foray into Korean cinema. Well, dont stop there. Lee Chang-dongs 2019 film Burning is a handsome, haunting masterpiece of trauma, an evocative slow-burn movie that conjures up a feeling of unease all the way through. Its the story of a poor, rural, aspiring writer in a love triangle with a former classmate and her rich, urban boyfriend.

The One And Only Ivan (Disney+, August 21): Adapted from a beloved childrens novel about a silverback gorilla and the baby elephant he takes care of in a Big Top troupe, its a CGI live action movie featuring the voices of Sam Rockwell, Brooklynn Prince, Danny DeVito, Phillipa Soo and Angelina Jolie, plus performances from Bryan Cranston and Ramon Rodriguez. Looks to be a tear-jerking family flick.

Ding Dong Im Gay (YouTube, now): Brash and unapologetic, this six-part short-format series is a fun and winning Australian production. Cameron is a gay man trying to be his best self in the city when his rural, nave, newly out cousin Toby arrives, all smiles and libido revving. When Toby has more luck bedding new paramours, it makes Cameron confront his own insecurities.

*Foxtel and Binge is majority owned by News Corp, the publisher of this website

See the article here:

Netflix, Amazon, Stan, Foxtel, Binge and more: Everything new to streaming in August | Australia - NEWS.com.au

Multifaceted approach necessary to overcome domestic violence in Turkey | Daily Sabah – Daily Sabah

Nothing can bring back the thousands of Turkish women ruthlessly killed by men and no amount of apologizing will put their families and loved ones minds at ease, but government action in conjunction with societal support may save the lives of thousands of others.

Turkey has actively been trying to address the thorny issue of gender-based violence by pursuing an equal and violence-free environment for all genders through laws, regulations, conventions and awareness campaigns, but it seems laws and enforcement alone may not be the only solution to the countrys bleeding wound as women from all ages and backgrounds are exposed to domestic violence on a nationwide basis. While there has been a significant decline in femicides in the past year, experts argue that the problem, which is directly linked to social dynamics, perception of gender and mindset, can only be solved through a multifaceted approach, including societal consciousness and education in addition to laws, regulations and enforcement.

The controversy surrounding neverending violence against women makes headlines on a regular basis, and the atrocious murder of university student Pnar Gltekin by her ex-boyfriend reignited the debate on femicides.

There was a 34% decline in the rate of femicides in Turkey in the first six months of 2020, according to the Interior Ministry. While 173 women were killed in femicides from January through June in 2019, this number dropped to 115 in the same period in 2020.

Our goal is to completely end domestic violence and violence against women, the ministry said in the statement in early July. It noted that one of the reasons behind the decline could be attributed to the 66% surge in preventive measures taken by law enforcement officers under the scope of Turkeys Law No. 6284 to protect families and prevent violence against women. The law was passed by the ruling Justice and Development Party (AK Party) in 2012 as part of a comprehensive action plan to fight domestic violence and covers everything from the prevention of violence to the protection of victims. It aims to provide women a range of legal options and protection against domestic violence through expanded social service networks to monitor cases, anger management programs and family consultation services. Around 320,322 preventative measures were taken in the first six months of 2020, a whopping 66% increase compared with the previous year.

Some 111,062 law enforcement officers received training on countering domestic violence, and they have continued to receive lessons through distance learning during the pandemic.

Turkey also increased the number of police departments responsible for following domestic violence cases from 81 to 1,005.

The life-saving app Women Emergency Assistance Notification System (KADES) developed by Turkish police in 2018 has been downloaded by over 463,000 people, and 33,097 emergency calls have been made through the app, according to official figures.

Sadly, domestic violence is not unique to Turkey or a particular class but affects women and infests societies throughout the world and costs governments billions of dollars besides the irreparable psycho-social costs. For instance, one in four women in Europe experience domestic violence at some point in their life, according to the Council of Europe, and the numbers are the same in the United States, according to statistics. However, figures on domestic violence are not always 100% accurate because the issue is so personal and private that it is often hidden at home, experts say.

Domestic violence is not specific to Turkey or a societal class; it is a serious problem in the worlds most developed and underdeveloped countries, Fatmanur Altun, a sociologist and the chairwoman of the Turkish Youth and Education Service Foundation (TRGEV), told Daily Sabah.

Noting that the main problem behind domestic violence lies deep within society, Altun said it is mostly caused by factors leading to societal degradation. These factors include the lack of mercy, the spread of hedonism and the lack of recreational time to allow individuals to spiritually and materialistically enhance themselves; instead, people spend long hours commuting, sever their ties with nature and spend their free time either in front of the television or technological devices.

But as humans, we need to invest in things that can mentally and spiritually boost us because this is the only way we can enhance our compassion, Altun said, as she noted that domestic violence is only one of the reflections of the lost spiritual connection in society, which has had a substantial impact on almost all forms of relationships, including those with friends, parents, colleagues and neighbors. It is like everyone almost sees each other as a hurdle to be crossed, even though our culture prioritizes establishing good relations, she said.

On a different note, the dynamics of relations between men and women shape the results as the mutual love, compassion and faithfulness of partners are reflected on their family, children and society, Altun said, calling it an aura of compassion and love. However, when such relations are based on profit and exploitation, violence replaces this aura, and children brought up in such environments, unfortunately, fail to experience feelings of love and compassion and mirror violence they experience at home on others.

For Altun, discussing violence against women solely as it is, is not enough to determine its causes or find solutions.

Its like trying to comprehend the reason behind a decayed tree solely by looking at its broken branch. You need to take into consideration all aspects, including its roots, its water, climate conditions and if the people taking care of it did their job properly so you can solve the matter, Altun said, noting that a philosophical sense of effort needs to be made so that people and society can face each other, and there is no single solution.

We want immediate results, and we want to identify an enemy, but the issue is deeper than that, Altun said, adding that the issue is not just about women or families but a societal problem.

Derya Yank, a lawyer and board member of the Women and Democracy Association (KADEM), agrees that domestic violence cannot be eliminated through laws alone.

We need to raise societal awareness and fix the approach, Yank told Daily Sabah, adding that laws need to be supported by education and solid mental transformation.

Recent research shows slow progress in the societal perception about the issue of domestic violence, as more people recognize it as a major problem. For instance, according to a survey by Kadir Has University published in March, 66% of the male and female participants said they see violence as the main threat to women in Turkey, while this figure was 60% in the previous year. Likewise, 79% of participants said they see violence as a sufficient reason to file for divorce, also up from 74% in 2019. Only 4% of the participants saw violence as an option for men to maintain the order in the family, down from 14% in 2016. There has also been an increase in the contributions by fathers to take care of children, as 51% said the responsibility of taking care of children should be shared between partners on a regular basis, up from 42% in 2019. Some Turkish stay-at-home fathers have even made headlines and share their experience on popular social media outlets as they remind everyone that parenting is not limited to women and equality at home is the way to go. The number of female lawmakers in the Turkish Parliament has also increased in the past few decades, according to the Turkish Statistical Institute (TurkStat). For instance, the percentage of deputies was 9.1% in 2007, and this number increased to 17.3% in 2019 with 102 women out of 589 lawmakers.

Turkey has been carefully drafting legislation as it tries to fight the causes behind domestic violence, but transforming society and making them forget the mistakes is not as easy as making laws, Yank said.

Article 9 of Turkeys Constitution says men and women have equal rights, and the state is obliged to ensure this equality exists in practice and measures taken in this regard shall not be interpreted as contrary to the principle of equality. The paragraph on men and women was added in 2004, while the proceeding paragraphs were added in 2010 as part of the governments efforts to eliminate domestic violence.

Meanwhile, recent remarks on the Istanbul Convention have sparked a new debate, as one side defends the convention and argues that it eliminates domestic violence, while the other side argues that it is ineffective and aims to destroy the idea of gender by creating a third gender and promotes LGBT activism, which they claim contradicts the countrys morals and values. Turkey was the first country to ratify it, while some Eastern European states like Bulgaria and Slovakia refused to sign it.

Earlier in July, AK Party Deputy Chairman Numan Kurtulmu criticized the convention, saying that domestic violence would increase without the Istanbul Convention is nothing but a myth.

We need to evaluate these claims in a calm manner, Kurtulmu said, adding that almost all political parties expect a revision of the convention as some articles of the pact damage the concept of family in the country.

The Istanbul Convention is not a penal code. It provides a road map for signatory countries to establish the basic framework when dealing with domestic violence, Yank said, adding that these include making necessary legal reforms, providing financial support to victims of domestic violence and more. She noted that Turkey had already planned a similar road map before it signed the convention, as Turkish law outlines how victims of domestic violence need shelters and economic support.

However, the convention should not be seen as a magic wand to eliminate the deeply entrenched problem, according to Yank.

According to a report presented to President Recep Tayyip Erdoan at an executive party meeting, there has been a significant increase in the number of divorce cases, which jumped from 202,017 in 2014 to 248,640 in 2019. While some lawmakers claimed the Istanbul Convention has enabled women to defend themselves and file divorce cases, while others saw it as a negative development that shook the foundations of the family. While no official statement has been issued yet, the party is planning to discuss the matter in their upcoming central executive board meeting on Aug. 5. They aim to present a two-option road map and create a report on the effects of the Istanbul Convention on womens rights, as well as its compatibility with the Turkish family structure.

On a different note, recently on Thursday, Parliament listened to the testimony of a woman who was allegedly raped by Peoples Democratic Party (HDP) Mardin deputy Tuma elik, whose immunity was lifted shortly after the victim, identified as D.K., filed a criminal complaint. It was the first time a victim had the chance to directly express her concerns before the peoples representatives, making Parliament a new communication channel for victims of domestic violence.

The past few decades in Turkey have shown that progress is possible when corrective measures are embraced and enforced by the government. Although the country and others have yet to eliminate domestic violence and femicides, developments show there may be a light at the end of the tunnel for future generations.

Originally posted here:

Multifaceted approach necessary to overcome domestic violence in Turkey | Daily Sabah - Daily Sabah

COMMENTARY || Tough-on-crime anti-drug moralizing does a disservice to Canadians – Folio – University of Alberta

If the idea of decriminalizing possession of small amounts of illicit drugs once sounded radical, the coalition of people who now espouse the idea would certainly seem to be strange bedfellows.

On July 9, the Canadian Association of Chiefs of Police called on the federal government to decriminalize possession of small amounts of illicit drugs; B.C. Premier John Horgan asked Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to do the same in a July20 letter. Benjamin Perrin, the top criminal justice adviser in Stephen Harpers tough-on-crime administration, recentlywrote a bookin support of decriminalization, and major publications, including The Globe and Mail, have published editorials urging the same.

Despite this, there is still political hesitation on this issue, because decriminalizing even small quantities of hard drugs runs counter to decades of misinformation and partisan posturing.

However, there is one group we never hear from in this discussion: imprisoned drug users. So over the past four years, we spent extensive time working in and around prisons as researchers, asking questions and hearing stories about drug use. To date, our research team has interviewed more than 800 incarcerated men and women and more than 170 correctional officers as part of the University of Alberta Prison Project. Our participants work or are housed in sentenced and remand facilities in six federal and provincial prisons across Western Canada. Although they are a complex group for many reasons, prisoners perspectives on drug use provide important insights into wider discussion about decriminalizing hard drugs.

To start, we must recognize that Canadian prisons are full of men and women who are incarcerated because they use drugs. In interviews, our prisoner participants estimate that between 85 and 90 per cent of the people on their prison units have substance abuse issues that directly contributed to their incarceration. The continued criminalization of drugs ensures that an unending stream of men and women are incarcerated for drug possession and drug sales, and also influences a much wider group of prisoners who commit crimes to pay for their drugs or use violence as part of the illicit drug market.

While officials have long sought to keep illicit drugs out of prison, they remain prevalent. In prison, drug sales are lucrative and provide the financial lifeblood of prison gangs. When drugs are circulating in a unit, they contribute to volatility, violence and the exploitation of vulnerable inmates. This in-prison drug situation has become much more disturbing in recent years with the emergence of stronger and more lethal street drugs like fentanyl. As such opioids are illegal, prisoners who use them do so in a clandestine fashion, something that increases the risks of infection, diseaseand inadvertent overdoses. We have interviewed prisoners who have overdosed multiple times in a single week while incarcerated, and in some institutions, correctional officers describe being overwhelmed by constant emergency calls, where they work to resuscitate overdosing prisoners on the edge of death.

Tough-on-crime political rhetoric portrays hard drug use as a form of moral decay, associated with a lack of self-control. The prison situation we describe above is a direct result of this outlook, as such policies promote harsh prison sentences which are assumedwronglyto scare people away from drug use. However, our participants add a unique and crucial insight to the conversation. The great majority of our participants describe experiencing acute or recurrent trauma throughout their lives. Ninety-fiveper cent of all the men we interviewed in federal prisons and 97 per cent of all the women have been sexually or physically victimized before ever being charged with a crime. A disproportionate number have backgrounds defined by a string of traumatic events, such as suicides, lethal overdoses or the murder of a parent, child, partner or friend, or a major assault that leaves them with lifelong PTSD. For a disproportionate number of prisoners, using hard drugs is not a sign of rampant hedonism; it is a means to deal with the physical, emotionaland psychological legacies of abuse, victimizationand trauma.

These conversations shed new light on the benefits of drug decriminalization. Decriminalization would allow police to concentrate on more serious issues, by reallocating resources away from the Sisyphean task of preventing drug use. It would also halt the revolving door of incarcerated drug users and allow for greater investment in services designed to assist people who want to address their substance use. Most crucially, it would allow us to reframe Canadas drug problem, and understand it as a public health and public education problem, rather than a moral failing. Decades of experience have demonstrated that the criminal justice system cannot solve public health issues, and prisons are probably the worst imaginable option for addressing the social challenges posed by substance misuse.

The time is right to decriminalize the possession of personal amounts of drugs. Our research leads us to believe that such a change would result in a more logical and fair approach to substance useand, best yet, provide the prospect of improving the lives of thousands of Canadians.

William J. Schultz is a Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation and Vanier Canada doctoral scholar in the Faculty of Arts, as well as a former correctional officer. Sandra M. Bucerius is the director of the Centre for Criminological Research,associate professor of sociology and criminology in the Faculty of Artsanddirector of theUniversity of Alberta Prison Project. Kevin D. Haggerty is Canada Research Chair in Surveillance Ecologiesand professor of sociology and criminology in the Faculty of Arts.

This opinion-editorial originally appeared July 25in The Globe and Mail.

Read more from the original source:

COMMENTARY || Tough-on-crime anti-drug moralizing does a disservice to Canadians - Folio - University of Alberta

1920: The Year Broadway Learned To Syncopate | The Syncopated Times – The Syncopated Times

A playlist providing discographical information on all linked sample tracks is found following the article.

The arrival of George Gershwin on the Broadway scene, heralded by his hit song Swanee, marks 1920 as a critical year in the development of American musical theater and the integration of syncopation into the mainstream of American popular song.

Earlier this year, I contributed an article focusing on the recording of Crazy Blues by Mamie Smith and her Jazz Hounds, a significant event in the history of syncopated music that reached its centennial anniversary in 2020. I then hatched the idea of delving further into what the year 1920 had to tell us about the historical development of syncopation. At first glance, this inquiry seemed to reveal comparatively few landmark events from the 1920 season. Arguably, the prior year and the succeeding year contained more memorable moments for devotees of popular records and musical theater.

Looking more broadly, though, what stands out is how Americans in those years were living through a staggering amount of social and cultural change, a period of upheaval that rivals the boatload of troubles we are experiencing in 2020. The trends in music and entertainment reflected this tumult and provided a provocative soundtrack for a rapidly changing society. The music itself was also changing and evolving at great speed. (Seventy-eight revolutions per minute!)

Specifically, one can make the case that in 1920or, so as not to pinpoint, between 1919 and 1921New Yorks popular music scene and the music heard on the Broadway stage took a decisive turn toward syncopated rhythm and melody, as well as an increasing sophistication in words and music. The combination of those two elements forms the essence of what we think of today as the American popular songbook. Reflecting on the early careers of Irving Berlin, Jerome Kern, and Gershwin, three great songwriters and native New Yorkers, may serve to capture what this kind of change sounded and felt like.

The story of the syncopated musical properly begins during the ragtime era. In the summer of 1898, Clorindy, or The Origin of the Cakewalk, with music by Will Marion Cook, lyrics and libretto by Paul Laurence Dunbar, opened in the Casino Theaters roof garden to become the first African American production on New Yorks legitimate stage. Cook and Dunbar then created several more musical comedies, including the Africa-themed In Dahomey (1903) and Bandanna Land (1908). The company headed by comedians Bert Williams and George Walker performed both these works in Broadway theaters.

After this strong start, syncopations promise went largely unredeemed for some time. The star of Clorindy, Ernest Hogan, died in 1909, the same year in which the dapper George Walker was stricken with syphilis and quit performing, passing away early in 1911. A drought of black talent lasting about a decade then descended on the New York theater, lifting only in 1921 when Eubie Blake and Noble Sissles Shuffle Along was that seasons greatest triumph.

Bert Williams, undoubtedly the nations first black entertainment celebrity, was the sole African American performer who remained known to the theater-going public in the 1910s. Without Walker, however, Williams was no longer so much a ragtime song-and-dance man as a comic vocalist, a solo act who headlined the Ziegfeld Follies throughout the decade. Since the Follies consistently had the most opulent production values of any New York entertainment, though, Williams remained highly visible.

The other most prominent African American music man of the period was the bandleader James Reese Europe, founder of the Clef Club, a highly successful fraternal organization for musicians. In February 1919, Lieutenant Europe brought his Harlem Hell Fighters, the 369th InfantryBand back from overseas action in a victory parade. Three months later, Europe was shockingly murdered by a fellow musician. This tragedy undercut the Clef Clubs dominance in New Yorks syncopated music scene.

Even in the absence of African American representation in elite theatrical venues, syncopated music made major strides between 1915 and 1920. Ragtime was reaching the end of its era of greatest popularity, while younger performers such as New Yorks stride piano professors and Gus Haenschen of St. Louis were giving syncopated music a hotter kind of rhythmic drive.

These were also the years in which both jazz and blues issued forth as distinct styles and began spreading beyond black communities. For example, a group of pale-skinned musicians from New Orleans made some of 1917s biggest hit records under the name the Original Dixieland Jass Band. Jazz was evolving from a salacious slang word into a recognizable, raucous musical idiom.

Meanwhile, tunes such as W.C. Handys St. Louis Blues, Hesitation Blues, and Yellow Dog Blues were recorded by multiple, non-African American dance bands and vocalists before 1920. Jazz and blues were still in their infancy, of course, but their moment had arrived.

Apart from their inherent musical appeal and energy, what made the broader public so immediately receptive to jazz and, somewhat more gradually, to blues, was the way their frenetic beat seemed to match the new pulse of modern life. Its worth dwelling on this point. It can be difficult to hold in mind the sheer degree of social turbulence and the whirlwind of radical change with which Americans, especially those in the burgeoning big cities, were contending in the second half of the 1910s.

Among many destabilizing events during those years, one whose significance we are now in a position to appreciate was the deadly influenza pandemic of 1918-19. Also, after two decades of extremely high immigration levels, the nations ethnic composition had shifted radically. The Great Migration of some six million African Americans from the states of the former Confederacy to the northeast and midwest was in full swing.

The friction occasioned by these population shifts brought about episodes of racially motivated violence in dozens of U.S. cities, provoked by a revived Ku Klux Klan and peaking in the Red Summer of 1919. The victory of the Bolshevik reds in Russia two years earlier unnerved elites in every industrial society, raising the stakes for strikes in a period of intense labor conflict.

Modernization and technology were transforming the basic conditions of daily experience. The streets were suddenly teeming with motorcars, the skies streaked with aeroplanes. Speed was in vogue. The telephone had begun to alter longstanding norms of communication and social interaction. Electric lighting transformed the urban landscape by night, turning Manhattans theater district into the Great White Way, a playground in the new world. The rise of motion pictures, maturing from a novelty into an art form, posed a threat to the cultural primacy of live theater and vaudeville entertainment.

An even greater shift in the patterns of urban night life came in January 1920, when the Volstead Act came into effect. Prohibition had a major impact on the conditions of live music performance and attendance. More broadly, U.S. life under the Eighteenth Amendment turned masses of ordinary citizens into outlaws, sparked an explosion of organized crime, and appeared to signal that the rule of law was subject to erosion. Gangsters had corrupted the baseball World Series the prior fall.

Syncopated, African-derived hot music seemed to speak to these trends, particularly the decadence and illicit hedonism of the speakeasy. Gender relations were in flux as the triumphant womens suffrage movement indicated the growing confidence of what some were calling the new woman. Many perceived these changes as a loosening of sexual mores and a weakening of antiquated Victorian social and moral restrictions.

Probably the single greatest agent of change in this period was the Great War in Europe. Even before the United States entered the war in 1917, wartime conditions were accelerating African American migration toward jobs in the northern industrial centers. Among the many developments ushered in by World War I was the origination of modern propaganda methods in the governments campaign to secure enlistment and public support for the war. Think of the famous I Want You Uncle Sam poster from 1917, for example, part of an overt effort to manufacture popular support for the martial cause.

African Americans enlisted in their tens of thousands. Like them, many immigrants saw and took advantage of a chance to contribute to the country in its time of need and thus, hopefully, accrue a greater stake in the democratic enterprise. Many thousands of black servicemen returned home after serving in segregated units, only to find the Klan and lynchings still on the rise. For them, the reality of a stratified society put the lie to the national myth of unity amidst diversity.

That myth, however, would not be dislodged, for it served a valuable purpose in the perennial task of constructing an impression of a national spirit and a collective American identity. Music was an essential tool in this persuasive effort, and no individual devoted himself more assiduously or productively to erecting this national mythology through music than a Russian-born Jewish immigrant named Israel Beilin, who drew upstraight from the melting potthe monicker Irving Berlin.

Berlins first songs, stemming from about 1907, fell in step with the flag-waving sentiments of George M. Cohan, Broadways leading song-and-dance man of the time. They sought to advance a modern American style of popular song, overflowing with twentieth-century pep. Many of these early efforts were, in essence, musical ethnic jokes, so-called coon songs, wop songs, and yid songs, such as Yiddle on Your Fiddle, Play Some Ragtimeall in fun, as it were, and intended to spice up the gumbo simmering on the melting pot.

A more blatant attempt to appropriate the popularity of syncopation was Alexanders Ragtime Band, which invoked the name of ragtime while partaking only lightly of its musical features. Alexander was, in fact, a fine Tin Pan Alley march in the Cohan mode, interpolating the musical clichs of the bugle call and Stephen Fosters Swanee River. It became a mega-hit on stages across the country and in sheet music sales in 1911.

Largely on the strength of this tune, Berlin became closely associated with the revival and further diffusion (or, some would say, commercial dilution) of ragtime in the 1910s. He swiftly produced a sheaf of songs to take advantage of his growing reputation as the ragtime king, with titles such as Ragtime Soldier Man, The Syncopated Walk, Syncopated Cocktail, etc.

Around 1913, he boasted to an interviewer that he had established the syncopated ballad. This prescient comment implies a conscious intent to use syncopation to create a fusion of what were considered two quite distinct song forms, the ballad and the up-tempo rhythm number. Such an amalgamation is a key ingredient of the jazz-age American popular songbook.

It would be inaccurate to say Berlin wrote rags; in fact, he readily confessed that he never truly understood what ragtime precisely was. But he did master and employ several deft tricks of syncopation in his melodies, usually accentuated by the simple yet pungent syntax of his lyrics. You can hear it in the way the rush of sixteenth notes in the middle of The International Rag (1913) illustrate the point made in the lyrics: all hands are dancing to a raggedy melody full of originality.

The listener cant miss the tricky triplets in the opening bars of Everybody Step, the signature jazzy production number from Berlins 1921 Music Box Revue. The A section of Puttin on the Ritz (1930) may contain the most recognizable use of syncopation among Berlins well-known standards. Other examples are easy to find. More generally, the slangy urban lexicon in Berlins lyrics, his aggressive use of assonance, inner rhyme, and other lively verbal effects, constantly reinforce the infectious, catchy quality of the rhythmic pulse with which all his work is stamped.

Equally as important as Berlins association with ragtime was his association with the United States of America and its national culture. This was true as early as Alexanders Ragtime Band and remained so throughout his six-decade career. Jeffrey Magee argues in his superb book Irving Berlins American Musical Theater (2012) that the songwriter viewed ragtime as the musical and linguistic passport to his adopted country. Not only did syncopation comprise the irresistible formula for concocting e pluribus unum, it could even be said to have conquered the globe on behalf of this American ideal: the world goes round to the sound of The International Rag.

The Great Wars arrival gave Berlin the chance to test the mettle of his Tin Pan Alley patriotism. While his idol Cohan hit the bulls eye in April 1917 with the hit march Over There, Berlin contributed at least two popular numbers that year attempting to channel ethnic pluralism into wartime patriotism: For Your Country and My Country and Lets All Be Americans Now.

Berlin was naturalized, then (naturally) drafted in early 1918, and while in uniform managed to produce and perform in a revue that made it to Broadway, entitled Yip, Yip, Yaphank. When the Second World War came around, Berlin adapted this material into the musical This Is the Army (1942). Jerome Kern was not exaggerating when he said, around 1925, that Irving Berlin has no place in American musiche IS American music. (And this is not to speak of God Bless America, written originally for Yaphank but shelved until 1938, when its emergence proclaimed a new chapter in American myth-making.)

By 1919, ragtimes value on the cultural marketplace had diminished, increasingly supplanted by the terms jazz and blues and the new musical developments they signified. All the social tumult described above may help us comprehend just why African American music made such notable strides from 1919 to 1921, with more authentically indigenous artistic forms surpassing the popularity of the now-commercialized ragtime. Equally important, Americans of pale hue had also begun responding more deeply to syncopated African American musicresponding, that is, from the waist down.

Another crucial factor to include in examining the spread of syncopation is the revolution in dance that accompanied and helped drive it. The most well-known ragtime dance, the cakewalk, was deeply associated with minstrelsy, thoroughly pre-modern in its aesthetic, and embraced by few dancers who werent black. The color line in dance grew fainter in the 1910s, however, as the animal dance fad played out, and the turkey trot, grizzly bear, bunny hug, etc., evolved into a keeper, the fox trot.

We can understand this progression as the frantic, so-called primitive movements arising from early attempts to adapt European American dance styles to musics rooted in African American syncopated rhythm, gradually leading to a genteel, so-called civilized accommodation.

Leading the way in this genuinely heroic cross-cultural enterprise of taming the animal steps was the decades reigning dance couple, Mr. and Mrs. Vernon and Irene Castle. Along with their musical director James Reese Europe and Europes Society Orchestra, the Castles showed that heterosexual couples could dance together gracefully to the new syncopated music, in public social settings and in the theater.

The Castles played starring roles in a 1914 revue, Watch Your Step, that was Irving Berlins breakthrough in writing for the stage. In a huge, perhaps unprecedented move for a songwriter, Berlin had ascended from Tin Pan Alley to Broadway, penning his first full theatrical score in a hit show that was hyped as the first syncopated musical.

Before 1920, Berlin appears to have viewed jazz as little more than a new, faddish word he could add to his lyrical lingo, as in the Berlin song Mr. Jazz Himself (1917). For a brief period in the early 1920s, however, some critics considered Berlin to be not only a jazz composer but one of the premier ones, thanks to tunes such as Everybody Step.

By the end of the 1910s, Berlin had already accumulated as much success as any previous U.S. composer. Increasingly, he sought to shift away from writing for the popular song market and concentrate on theatrical work, which brought greater prestige. In all likelihood, he was inspired in this direction by the success his contemporary Kern was enjoying in the field of musical comedy. Born in Manhattan in 1885, Jerome David Kern got his start as a songwriter a few years earlier than Berlin; in 1904, a pair of his melodies were interpolated into the Broadway run of a British play. Soon he was contributing numerous songs to imported British musicals.

Syncopation was never a strong element in Kerns compositions. Nevertheless, he made a pivotal contribution to the eventual triumph of syncopated music in the American theater. To properly understand his importance in this history, a glance at the variety of types of musical theater on offer in these years is worthwhile.

Numerous sub-genres of staged musical entertainment existed, with somewhat fluid distinctions between them. To some extent, this range reflected gradations in social class among segments of the theatrical audiencea serious matter, especially as regards New York society.

On one end of this spectrum lay operetta, the most prevalent and well-established of the popular musical genres, yet indisputably a European import. At the other end were found variety presentations packaged in different forms, rooted culturally both in European music-hall fare and, on the U.S. side, in the minstrel tradition.

Vaudeville, and its somewhat less respectable cousin, burlesque, were popular formats for presenting a number of diverse traveling performers and acts on a single evenings bill. Revues constituted the most glamorous iteration of the variety show on Broadway stages, exemplified by the Ziegfeld Follies (which was modeled on the floor shows at the Folies Bergre in Paris). Berlins staged work of the 1910s was virtually all in the revue format.

The book musical dwelled somewhere in the middle of this taxonomy, descending from traditions such as comedy and farce. Most book musicals of the early twentieth century had very thinly plotted narratives and made little to no effort to connect musical numbers to their settings, characters, and stories in a naturalistic manner.

Kerns talents as a melodist placed him very near the most well-reputed of the operetta composers, such as Victor Herbert and Franz Lehr. The best of his compositions exude a sophistication and a type of musical grace and purity: Kerns music leaves one feeling not just good but noble, writes Wilfrid Sheed in his book The House That George Built. This exalted quality seemed to distinguish his work from the popular dross churned out in profusion by the Tin Pan Alley publishers. Indeed, Kern was hired by New Yorks most prestigious publisher of popular music, the T.B. Harms company.

A key example of Kernian sophistication is the beautiful song They Didnt Believe Me, first heard on Broadway in The Girl From Utah (1914). That tune and another placed in the same show, Youre Here and Im Here, left the young prodigy George Gershwin thunderstruck when he heard them played at a wedding in 1915. Gershwin later said this experience persuaded him that the songs of superior quality and harmonic complexity were the ones coming from musical comedies.

The body of work Kern produced in the 1910s aimed to advance the book musical genre while Americanizing itor at least Anglo-Americanizing it, for he continued working on both sides of the pond and his work retained traces of an English accent for many years. Still, more than anyone, Kern built the bridge leading from the operetta to the modern American musical, retaining a few operetta conventions but updating its plots and settings.

Kern shares the credit for elevating the book musical with his colleagues Guy Bolton and the British novelist P.G. Wodehouse. This team was responsible for seven musical productions mounted in a small Broadway house, the Princess Theatre, between 1915 and 1918. The Princess shows, such as Very Good Eddie and Oh, Boy!, were the first U.S. musicals to aim at a tight integration of dialogue, music, and lyrics, bringing them closer to non-musical comedy and drama. This model reached fruition in 1927 with Kerns Show Boat, whose landmark score, written with Oscar Hammerstein II, embraces some syncopation and blues elements, plus a nod to the Negro spiritual with Ol Man River.

One important Kern work along the road to Show Boat, the hit musical Sally, opened in late 1920. Sally resembled the Princess shows in its plot and structure but was mounted on a grander scale. Florenz Ziegfeld produced the musical as a vehicle for his Follies star Marilyn Miller, who sang the shows most memorable song, Look For the Silver Lining.

As an aside, the songwriting partners Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart, who contributed immensely to the elevated sophistication and syncopation of American theater music, made their professional debut in 1920 with six songs in the musical comedy Poor Little Ritz Girl. In the same year, Rodgers and Hart scored the Columbia University Varsity Show along with a third collaborator, Hammerstein, who would reunite with Rodgers in the 1940s and 50s to create a few shows you might be familiar with.

Despite the progress in musical comedy (not forgetting the aforementioned Shuffle Along, the surprise hit of the 1921 season), the revues were still setting the pace for theatrical music in the 1919-1921 period. These were the peak years for the Broadway revues, which ranged from intimate affairs to glitzy extravaganzas. The 1919 edition of the Ziegfeld Follies, with Berlin as principal composer, was widely viewed as the producers greatest achievement. In that production, Berlin introduced the song that perfectly captured Ziegfelds zeal for glorifying the American girl: A Pretty Girl Is Like a Melody.

Instead of trying to top this success working for Ziegfeld in 1920, Berlin took a different tack. With business partner Sam H. Harris, George M. Cohans former producer, Berlin bought a piece of midtown Manhattan real estate and began building the Music Box, the first New York theater expressly designed to stage the work of a single composer. By 1921, Berlin and Harris were ready to mount the first of four annual Music Box Revues, giving the tunesmith his first taste of exercising creative control over a professional production and greatly burnishing Berlins star power. The shows running theme song, Say It With Music, and the heavily syncopated Everybody Step were its most memorable compositions.

Ziegfeld acquired a rival in the high-class revue category in 1919; this was the year that former Ziegfeld dancer George White put on the first of his annual Scandals shows. White made headlines the following year by hiring a young composer to furnish the entire score for the 1920 Scandals. That composer, the 21-year-old George Gershwin, was undoubtedly a rising star. A sought-after accompanist, rehearsal pianist, piano roll recording artist (he had already made rolls of several Berlin and Kern tunes), and former office pianist at the Remick music company, he was now on the payroll of T.B. Harms.

Perhaps the one quality that most set the young Gershwin apart from Berlin and Kern was his familiarity with and appreciation for African American music and musicians. In his teenage years he lived in upper Manhattan and visited Harlem frequently. Both before and after he began making piano rolls for the Standard and Aeolian companies, he met and fraternized with several of New Yorks best piano ticklers, such as Eubie Blake, James P. Johnson, and Luckey Roberts. Furthermore, these men regarded him as a musician of their caliber in his improvisation skills as well as composition abilities. The message of syncopation flowed naturally and unmistakably from Gershwins fingers. He knew intrinsically what he and brother Ira proclaimed in the first song they ever wrote together, in 1918: the real American folk song is a rag.

Another black musician Gershwin befriended in his youth was Will Vodery, a prominent composer and conductor and chief orchestral arranger for the Ziegfeld Follies. Their relationship was close enough that when Gershwin needed work in 1917, Vodery helped him land his first position in the theatrical milieu as rehearsal pianist for an upcoming Ziegfeld revue, Miss 1917. This big-budget production featured tunes by Victor Herbert as well as the composer Gershwin idolized, Kern, and a Bolton-Wodehouse libretto.

Gershwin and Berlin met a little later, in 1919, when Berlin offered his composition That Revolutionary Rag to T.B. Harms for publication; Gershwin sat down to play the brand new tune and immediately improvised an improvement on its chord progression. Introducing himself, he offered his services for the position of Berlins musical secretary, to which Berlin, to his everlasting credit, reportedly replied, What the hell do you want to work for anybody else for? Work for yourself!

Gershwin told Vodery he wanted to work on production musicthe kind Jerome Kern was writing. The theater, he understood, not only had greater prestige than other outlets for popular music, it also had the richest artistic possibilities. He had a few songs interpolated into shows and was invited by a young producer to score what would be marketed as the New Up-to-the-Minute Musical Comedy of Class and Distinction. La La Lucille opened on Broadway in May 1919 and topped 100 performances, a modest success, though none of its songs made much of a hit.

Not to worry, for the youth born under the name Jacob Gershovitz was about to ride the wave of the biggest number-one hit hed ever write. It was a somewhat uncharacteristic effort for Gershwin, a one-step, conceived by him and lyricist Irving Caesar in an attempt to pen an American version of an exotica piece such as one of that moments passing hits, Hindustan. The result of this exercise, Swanee, found its way into one revue before it reached the ears of Al Jolson, who grabbed it for his own show Sinbad and recorded it on January 8, 1920, a few days before the Volstead Act went into effect. All of a sudden the name young Gershovitz had adopted, and his song, were in big letters on the cover of Variety. Like Irving Berlin had in Alexanders Ragtime Band, Swanee struck gold by trading cleverly on a reference to, and syncopated update of, one of the biggest pop hits of the prior century.

Gershwin, in other words, had made a forceful entrance into the world of Broadway by 1920, even before his first George Whites Scandals score reached audiences ears. He didnt produce another notable hit until his third effort for White, a big production number for the 1922 Scandals, Ill Build A Stairway to Paradise. A number of critics consider this song, progressing dramatically up the scale in the verse and landing heavily on blue notes in the chorus, one of the earliest to be imprinted with Gershwins identifiable stylistic traits.

Gershwin wrote many elegant melodies in a mode reminiscent of Kern: one clear example, I submit, would be He Loves and She Loves from 1927s Funny Face. He also did a few self-consciously ultra-syncopated pieces la Berlin, such as Fascinating Rhythm (from Lady Be Good, 1924). His own, utterly unique style, both as a pianist and a composer, expresses a majestic synthesis of Kerns gifts for melody and harmony, Berlins gifts for vitality, simplicity, and popular appeal, and the unleashed power of syncopation as found in jazz and the black music traditions.

Gershwin wrote another notable piece for the 1922 Scandals: the Blue Monday suite, his first endeavor toward writing a vaudeville opera in a Negro idiom, a full decade before he and DuBose Heyward began work on Porgy and Bess.

George White removed the 20-minute sketch, with a cast of singers backed by Paul Whitemans orchestra, from the revue right after its opening night in New York, on the grounds that its somber storyline left the audience too downcast to enjoy the other acts. Working together on Blue Monday led directly to Whiteman requesting an instrumental piece from Gershwin for his experimental February 1924 Aeolian Hall concert, the Rhapsody in Blue.

In sum, the contributions of Berlin, Kern, and Gershwin were all necessary to usher in the turn toward classic, syncopated Broadway show tunes beginning right around 1920. Berlin introduced an early, ersatz form of syncopation, one unmoored from its African American derivation. He successfully deployed this new form of musical verve in an abstractly (or mythologically) American contexta context that was more or less consciously in service to the construction of a positive or idealized self-image for the nation. In that sense, we may say Berlin Americanized, and/or co-opted or diluted or subverted or commercialized, ragtime while popularizing it.

No quotation marks are needed to say Kern Americanized the narrative-based musical, blazing a path from the musical aesthetics of operetta and the British music hall to American popular song and setting the template for artistically successful musical comedies.

Gershwin capitalized upon and extended both of these achievements. He infused the electricity of true syncopation and jazz and blues feeling into musical theater, as well as into popular song and even serious music. The era of Gershwin represents a giant step toward enshrining syncopation at the heart of authentic American music.

The files linked below are hosted at either The Library of Congress National Jukebox Project, The UC Santa Barbara Cylinder Record Archive, Wikipedia, or Jazz-on-line.com. They are in order of first mention in the article.

Compare to:

And:

Compare to:

More:

1920: The Year Broadway Learned To Syncopate | The Syncopated Times - The Syncopated Times

Keep the dist-dance – techtoday19

With the sour tang of dry ice, pounding dance music and more strobe lights in one room than are normally on the main stage of Glastonbury it may finally be an opportunity for some hedonism. With strict social distancing and hand sanitisation, of course.

Its not for the faint-hearted, designer Adam Smith said of the sensory Chemical Brothers experience he has created with his studio partner Marcus Lyall. We were trying to bring some of the visceral feeling you get from a live show into a different setting.

The duo have created the explosive final room of an exhibition exploring the history of electronic music, opening at the Design Museum in London on Friday.

The show was due to open in the spring but lockdown meant exhibits have been sitting in boxes for five months, waiting to be unleashed on the British public.

To begin with, 60 people an hour will be allowed in after booking time slots. A one-way system has been introduced, there is enhanced cleaning and face coverings are compulsory. Signs on the floor urge visitors to keep the dist-dance.

Some reopened museums have abandoned audio guides but Design Museum curators said visitors need headphones to get the full experience.

Number

Read More

Read more:

Keep the dist-dance - techtoday19

5 extraordinary submerged sites that will make you believe Atlantis is real – BreakingNews.ie

Theres something uniquely appealing about the prospect of a lost city at the bottom of the sea. We know nearly as much about the moon as we do the depths of our own oceans, and tall tales about the kraken and sea monsters survive because we dont know enough to fully disprove them.

But you neednt rely on your imagination for the mysteries of the deep, because theres enough reality beneath the waves to boggle most minds. These submerged settlements arent Atlantis, but they might as well be

1. Port Royal, Jamaica

Once nicknamed the Sodom of the New World, Port Royal was as close as there has ever been to a genuine pirate city. Awash with privateers and prostitutes and an infamously potent strain of rum the citys reputation for wickedness was known throughout the Caribbean, and notorious buccaneer Henry Morgan called Port Royal his home.

The debauchery continued unchecked until 1692, when, as if by divine justice, an earthquake levelled the city, plunging its brothels and taverns beneath the waves. Today Port Royal is one of the worlds most important underwater sites, and the ruins have sat undisturbed for centuries beneath the sea.

2. The Sunken City of Baia, Italy

Another famous den of hedonism, Baia was a playground for urban aristocrats in ancient Roman times. The city was described by philosopher Seneca as a harbour of vice, and entertained its clientele with free-flowing alcohol, limitless beach parties, and venues devoted to earthly pleasures, all with the understanding that the scandal would never reach Rome.

Eventually the city went the same way as Port Royal, though its fate was much less abrupt. Volcanic activity deep below ground saw the lower part of the city sink into the sea, and today divers can peruse crumbling columns, intricate statues, and elegant mosaics.

3. Reschensee, Italy(iStock/PA)

Reschensee differs from our other entrants in two important ways first, it was submerged deliberately, and second, its around 200 kilometres inland.

Known as the Atlantis of the Mountains, the Italian village of Reschen was flooded in 1950 to unify three lakes behind a large dam, despite the protestations of residents. Today only the church steeple remains, proudly protruding from the water like it was the most normal thing in the world. In winter the lake freezes over, and visitors can walk right up to the spire.

4. Ancient Alexandria, Egypt

Once one of the gems of civilisation, complete with a library said to contain hundreds of thousands of scrolls, the city founded by Alexander the Great remains one of the largest in North Africa, but its archaeological treasures were long thought lost to time.

In the last few decades wet-suited researchers have proved otherwise by meticulously probing the harbour floor. Since mapping began in the early-Nineties scientists have tagged dozens of columns, more than 30 sphinxes and five obelisks, as well as the submerged sister city of Heracleion. Best of all, French marine archaeologist Franck Goddio discovered a submerged palace with marble floors, which may well once have housed Cleopatra.

5. Pavlopetri, Greece

Pavlopetri is not among the worlds most visually impressive sites, but thats because its very, veryvery old. Dating back 5,000 years, this Mycenaean, Minoan, and late Bronze Age settlement is thought to have decayed beneath the waves since around 1000BC, and was only rediscovered in 1967.

Though heavily eroded, the town layout is exactly as it was, and researchers are using it as a guinea pig for 3D modelling techniques that should yield a digital reconstruction.

See the article here:

5 extraordinary submerged sites that will make you believe Atlantis is real - BreakingNews.ie

Kylie Minogue Fans Have Broken The Internet At "Say Something" – Wonderland Magazine

Stans have broken the internet at the singers disco-infused new drop.

The morale has been low. Spirits have been dampened. And dancefloors have remained bitterly empty and untrampled. But beloved queen Kylie Minogue is here to remind us that a time is coming a time of hedonism and body-shaking debauchery a less socially distanced future, when we will dance blissfully until the AM again.

Yes, Kylie has returned, and we have been blessed with a new album DISCO, which she put finishing touches to during lockdown slated for a 6 November release as well as pulsating lead track Say Something, out today. In honour of the new release, Kylie also joined TikTok. Our hearts!

There is no music video in sight yet, but we wait, entranced and not so patiently. The internet has obviously lost its mind at the euphoric news here are the best reactions.

Double Disco = Kylie Minogue + Jessie Ware albums

We live for an Eastenders crossover

Visit link:

Kylie Minogue Fans Have Broken The Internet At "Say Something" - Wonderland Magazine

Purdue prof attracts cult following as expert on ‘The Black Death’ – Purdue Exponent

Before COVID-19, Purdue University English professor Dorsey Armstrong was well known in a way that only other enthusiasts of medieval literature and culture might appreciate.

That is to say, she once got a discount on a replica of an Anglo-Saxon drinking horn - made from an actual cattle horn - because a guy at a conference recognized her.

"That's the only time I felt famous," said Armstrong, an expert in medieval studies who heads the English department at Purdue. "I got a really cool drinking horn. And whenever I teach 'Beowulf,' I bring it out and I pass it around."

But since the start of the pandemic, Armstrong, 49, has gained a whole new level of acclaim for her Old World expertise. She's the narrator of "The Black Death: The World's Most Devastating Plague," a video series that became must-see TV this spring when it aired on Amazon Prime, just as stuck-at-home 21st-century humans were reeling from the coronavirus crisis.

In 24 episodes, Armstrong introduced the devastation of the mid-14th century to doom-obsessed modern viewers. The flea-driven plague, also known as the "Great Mortality," overran Eurasia and North Africa from 1347 to 1353, killing tens of millions of people and wiping out half of Europe's population.

The series was filmed before the coronavirus pandemic, in 2016, as part of The Great Courses, a compendium of college-level audio and video lectures. But "The Black Death" has spurred a broad cult following for Armstrong, even as it underscores the dismaying parallels between the great plague and the deadly disease now circling the globe.

"I just wish that the course were not quite so relevant at the moment," said Armstrong, whose parents and siblings are among those who have contracted COVID-19 and recovered.

Since March, she has received a stream of daily emails from people who binge-watched "The Black Death," all wanting to know whether things are as bad now as they were back then.

The answer, thankfully, is no, Armstrong said. Though COVID-19 has infected more than 14.5 million people and killed at least 600,000 worldwide, the proportion of deaths doesn't compare with the devastation caused by the "Great Mortality."

The ferocious pandemic was dubbed the bubonic plague, reflecting the painful and (at the time) mysterious swellings, known as buboes, that developed in the lymph nodes of the neck, armpits and groin of those infected. The swellings oozed blood and pus, even as the unfortunate patients suffered other terrible symptoms: fever, chills, body aches, vomiting and diarrhea - often followed quickly by death.

As Armstrong notes, the disease could take other grisly forms: pneumonic plague, which infects the lungs, and septicemic plague, where the infection spreads to the blood, often causing skin on the fingers, toes and nose to blacken and die.

The Black Death originated in China and spread along trade routes, turning the Silk Road into a superhighway of infection. It arrived in many places via trading ships, long believed to be carried by the fleas on rats that coexisted closely with humans. A more recent theory contends that fleas and lice on humans themselves helped spread the disease widely. As deaths mounted, populations in region after region struggled vainly to understand its cause or cure.

"The good news is that, all things considered, we are in a much better position than those poor people who had to survive the Black Death," Armstrong said. "The mortality rate for the Black Death, for those who contracted it, was something like 80%. And we're still in single digits."

The modern world also has the advantage of seven centuries of scientific discovery that can root the current pandemic in a rogue coronavirus and target a treatment - and ultimately a cure - based on that understanding.

By contrast, humans suffering through the Black Death blamed an unfavorable conjunction of planets, "bad air," earthquakes and God's wrath. It wasn't until 1894 that Swiss scientist Alexandre Yersin discovered the bacillus that caused the plague: Yersinia pestis, named in his honor.

"During the Black Death, what was really terrifying about that is they really had no idea at all what it was," Armstrong said. "They had no good science to help them figure out how to cope with it."

Still, there are some unsettling similarities between societal responses to the plague and COVID-19. In both cases, some officials tried to downplay the severity of the outbreak and the far-reaching economic and social effects. In Florence, Italy, for instance, members of the elite ruling class, decimated by the plague, faced a rebellion from the newly powerful working class, Armstrong said.

Many people, from ordinary peasants to local religious leaders, took the plague seriously and tried to carry out their normal duties. Clergy members were called to the homes of the ill to provide last rites, often contracting the disease in the process. Others, however, ignored the calamity, turning to hedonism and debauchery, "figuring that if they were going to die, they might as well enjoy themselves," Armstrong said.

"What I would say is that people are the same then as now," Armstrong observed. "Humans, when they're together in a large group, often do dumb things. And it's frustrating that so many people don't seem to be learning lessons from the past."

It has been "particularly horrifying," Armstrong said, to see Asian Americans targeted as the presumed cause of the COVID-19 crisis. During the plague, Jews were scapegoated - and killed - as the possible source of the scourge.

"To think that anyone thinks you can call it 'kung flu,' which is so racist," Armstrong said, referring to President Donald Trump's characterization of COVID-19. "It's really distressing. We have international travel. Wherever it originated, it would have spread around the globe."

Amazon Prime officials wouldn't say how many people have viewed the series since March. But Cale Pritchett, vice president of marketing for The Great Courses, said tens of thousands of viewers have watched the show each month for the past four years. "It has been a constant in our top 10," he said. "For a while, it was No. 1."

Armstrong's clear mastery of the subject - her doctorate is in medieval literature - and her easygoing teaching style make for engaging TV. The show is set in an office decorated with replicas of skulls, bones and a distinctive beaked doctor's mask that was filled with sweet-smelling flowers to ward off the plague. Prop rats migrate around the set.

Armstrong, who favors brightly colored blazers, stands to talk through the 12 hours of lectures, striding back and forth across an ornate woven rug. She leavens the often-grisly subject matter with dark humor, reminding viewers, for instance, that the bodies of plague victims have been described as being layered in mass graves the way cheese is layered in lasagna.

In the more than 300 reviews of the series online, viewers note her approachable style. "She doesn't come across as an intellectual snob," one wrote. "I wish I would have had her as a professor when I was in college."

Because of her familiarity with the plague, Armstrong was alarmed this year when early reports emerged of an unknown virus spreading through China.

"I'm always worried about pandemic," said Armstrong, the mother of 13-year-old twin daughters. "I have peanut butter and toilet paper and water in a cabinet in the basement, even when there is no threat of a pandemic, because that is the situation that is the scariest. Especially if it's a novel virus, which is what this is."

In recent months, Armstrong's fears were realized as four family members - her parents in Seattle, her brother in New York and her sister in the San Francisco Bay area - contracted COVID-19. They've all since recovered, though her mother was hospitalized and received the antiviral drug remdesivir to aid her healing.

If there's one strong parallel between the Black Death and the current pandemic, it's the social upheaval spurred by both, Armstrong said. The 14th-century plague upended the rigid social structure of the era, which had confined people to narrow roles of clergy, nobility and peasant.

"Humanity came back after that," Armstrong said. "And some people would argue that it was that external pressure that changed society so radically that gave us eventually things like the Renaissance and the Protestant Reformation that all have their roots in that major event."

Perhaps current protests and calls for political, economic and social change may also have lasting impact.

"My hope is that we get something good out of this," Armstrong said.

View original post here:

Purdue prof attracts cult following as expert on 'The Black Death' - Purdue Exponent

Is The West Repeating India’s Mistakes? Interview (Part II) – Eurasia Review

Claudio Grass (CG): In such a vast and incredibly diverse country like India, can top-down measures and centralized policies like affirmative action or caste-based economic incentives effectively force social change and economic equality? Or can they be seen as merely symbolic moves, or perhaps just political maneuvers?(Note: Click here to read Part I of this interview)

Jayant Bhandari (JB):The government should get completely out of the business of social engineering. Even under a purely meritocratic system, India would be desperately short of leaders and competent bureaucrats. For example, India needs good doctors. Today, the best doctors emigrate, the second-best work for the Indian private sector, and those who knownothing, who usually get a certificate because of affirmative action policies, work for the public health system. This predicament is the reason why even the most impoverished Indians prefer to go to private hospitals, where their treatment costs might end up being more than what they earn in a year. Those who make, say, $50 a month, still find a way to send their children to private schools. The same dynamics are reflected in all institutions and all sectors. These policies have caused unimaginable destruction in the economy and in society at large.

You cannot elevate people, make them proud, self-respecting, and honorable by giving them free stuff and handouts. That way, you merely normalize begging and make it socially acceptable, thereby disincentivizing work and creating a permanent underclass. Decades of these policies have proven that you cannot force change from above, nor can you dismantle the caste system with a top-down approach. You can, however, make it lot worse and create new problems on top of the old ones, which is what the Indian government actually achieved. Today, free food, free electricity, and affirmative action in jobs, promotions, and university admissions have become such an integral part of the Indian state that they cannot be scaled back under Indias democratic setup.

So, what can be done about the caste system? As I said, tribalism afflicts the whole of Indian society, of which the caste system is only a part. Tribalism can go away only through an awakening in society. And that brings us to an extremely uncomfortable question: how to awaken people?

I returned to India in the early 90s, after my studies in the UK, hoping to participate in the Indian growth story. While I had a very successful career financially, and I contributed to bringing some well-paying jobs, I must admit that I failed to change the thinking of any Indian. How do you change people who are entrenched in materialism and hedonism? They have no interest in philosophy, in improving themselves, and in becoming a better member of society.

In this regard, the British were a blessing for India. Christian missionaries worked very hard, in challenging circumstances, to help awaken Indians, who were wallowing in magical thinking, superstition, the deeply entrenched caste system, and extremely backward social norms and customs, including the savage treatment of women in following the sati practice, i.e. the ceremonial burning of widows in the funeral pyre of their husbands.

A massive social shift happened in India under British guidance, mainly what is known as the Bengal Renaissance, which managed to make the sati system illegal, challenged the caste system, and encouraged great cultural, intellectual and artistic growth. Today, unfortunately, Bengal has erased all this progress and reverted to being a backwater, stagnant and regressive, mostly run by Marxist ideology.

Without the values the British brought and the work of the missionaries, the budding enlightenment fizzled out. I guess, even if the British had stayed put in India, there was a limit to which India could have been enlightened. Enlightening a society is not an easy job. It cannot be done in a couple of generations or even a couple of centuries. Europeans achieved very little cultural change in more than 300 years of their stay in India.

There is no moral and rational force present in the country today that can get rid of its tribalism. The vilest elements of India now run its institutions. It is this no wonder that tribalism is getting worse and all signs point to continuing degradation, eventually dragging India all the way back to its pre-British tribal dark ages.

If I had to make a recommendation, it would be to end all state-driven affirmative action policies in India altogether. The job of the government is to ensure law and order, not to force top-down social changes. The moral and legal boundaries set by a rational state, as was the case during the British times, would provide the right incentives and the structure for social awakening. But this is a utopian expectation, for how can you find good people and how can they reach positions of power, in a country where everyone votes on a tribal basis?

CG: In the Western world, were currently facing an extremely charged political climate, with protests, riots, and demands for change. Many of these demands are focused on the idea of different social and economic policies for different groups and on dividing society based on race, gender and other characteristics that one is simply born with and had no power over. Do you see a parallel there with the caste system?

JB:There certainly are a lot of parallels, except that the caste system in India is real, whereas racism in the US is very different from what it is made out to be. We simply cannot realistically compare the problems and the lack of opportunity one faces in US, no matter what the color of their skin might be, with the challenges that the majority of Indians face on a daily basis. BLM, Antifa and their ilk are idiotic movements run by losers who have no purpose in life, no skills, and who seek the thrill of destruction and abuse of others. Unable to build anything themselves, they derive a feeling of accomplishment by destroying civilization and its accumulated capital.

The radical Left has massively restricted freedom of speech in the US and the rest of the West. Anyone who does not go along with them is branded as racist and can expect to lose his job and social relationships. As a result, reasonable, sane people are afraid to speak up, to express their views or even to explore the validity of the claims made by BLM and similar groups, for they immediately risk getting doxxed, ostracized, and becoming a victim of cancel culture.

BLM, Antifa, and the radical Left are simply anti-civilization. Their members, by themselves, would have been ignored as nobodies and their ideas dismissed as lunatic. However, collectively, they managed to instill a climate of fear and intimidation and get tacit support from a sizeable part of the US population.

America is the greatest country on the planet. Life there is not perfect, but people who move to the US still see it as the land of opportunity. And it is. It is the most generous and open-minded country. Regardless of your skin color or your gender, you are very likely to get equal, or even preferential, treatment everywhere in the West, and particularly in the US. I have benefited hugely from this, and so have many people of color I have known.

The West is as good as it gets. I wasted many years of my life planning, and sometimes scheming, to get to the West. I can hardly think of anyone from Africa, Latin America, or the Indian sub-continent who would not sell himself into slavery or sell a kidney or two (if the latter were possible) just to get to the US.

Having lived in many different parts of the West over the last thirty years, I still cannot shake off the feeling of how much I could have achieved in life had I been born in the West. I feel sad for those who were extraordinarily lucky to have been born in the West, but still wasted their youth whining and fixating on its real or imagined failures to achieve total, utopian perfection, as if that is a realistic expectation.

As I mentioned earlier, affirmative action policies in India have achieved precisely the opposite of their stated goals. We see a parallel here with the situation in the US. The destruction of black families and incarceration among blacks has increased very significantly since the same sort of policies took hold there too, and since the adoption of a culture of low expectations from blacks and other people of color. Indeed, the worst kind of racism I have ever experienced is precisely this deeply offensive prejudice and this condescending assumption that I could not and should not be held to the same standards as everyone else. I find this attitude truly repulsive and I consider those who adopt it as hypocrites of the lowest order, as they like to cloak their racism in good intentions.

Finally, it is worth pointing out that there is likely no European today whose parents or grandparents did not suffer during the two great wars. Japanese-Americans and Japanese-Canadians were interned during WW-II. Japan, as a country, was flattened by the US at the same time. So was Germany. How many Japanese do you know who live in the US or Japan who still blame the US for what they did? Proud people move on, develop competencies, outgrow limitations set by other people, and emerge victorious. They certainly dont blame their failures on the real or imagined sufferings of their ancestors.

CG: You are in the rare position to have experienced the reality on the ground and the problems in both the Indian and western society. In your estimation, what are the biggest problems facing the US, Canadian or European society? Is it inequity and discrimination, or do we have other challenges that are perhaps being ignored?

JB:41% of Canadians and 49% of Australians are first- or second-generation immigrants. 46% of Americans are of non-European origin. A vast majority of ethnically non-Europeans tend to vote for the Left and for the nanny state, with its promises of free stuff and control over the lives of other people. Many simply fail to understand in their hearts what western civilization is. They are merely interested in the fruits of western prosperity. But without the roots, the tree that bears the fruit will eventually disappear.

I cannot see how the US can avoid a civil war once Trump is gone. In fact, it might have already started. What is, even today, the best country in the world will take a sharp turn to the Left once Trump is gone. The best-case scenario would be that the red states will revolt and secede. This will, of course, not be the end of the problem, as the blue states, being non-productive and dependent, will still ask for reparations and tributes. As for Canada, I cannot see how it can stand on its own feet without the support of the US.

Over in Europe, there is still some hope that people may wake up and realize the political and economic implications of the disastrous immigration policy of the last few years. Of course, I am not suggesting that they should not help out refugees, but this must be done rationally, with a realistic plan and with an understanding that even refugees who have suffered hugely from oppressive regimes can still bring that same virus of totalitarianism and intolerance with them. Once these toxic ideas enter the body politic and achieve a critical mass in a democratic system, they can present a very serious threat to the western culture, its values and its moral foundations.

CG: In our last conversation, you mentioned that youre more optimistic about East Asia, rather than the West, in your long-term view. What is the reasoning behind this position and what are the advantages you see there, especially from an investment point of view?

JB:East Asians have the highest average IQ in the world, they have an impressively strong work ethic, while civility and respect for others are ingrained in the culture and this is very clearly seen in everyday life. In Korea, Japan, Singapore, Hong Kong, and Taiwan, if your child is out by himself late at night, it is not a problem. Crime is virtually non-existent. In Singapore, for example, women leave their purses on the food court table to reserve their places while they go to pick up their order. These societies are incredibly polite, safe and respectful.

Social conformism is a part of their culture, but then, they are not busy-bodies. Their governments, quite in contrast to a wrongly held belief in the West, are largely non-intrusive. Overall, people there want to avoid confrontation and picking a fight as much as they can. No wonder I often feel freer in East Asia than I do in the West.

Also, technologically, East Asia is more advanced than the West. Hard work is a virtue, which is strongly encouraged, while begging is looked down upon. Complaining and expecting free stuff is seen as a sign of a lower culture, as it should be.

Although East Asians havent necessarily imported the philosophical values of the West, a lot of whats good in the region, especially in a more practical sense, is a direct import from the classical western civilization. Ideas around work, productivity, personal responsibility, law and order, respect for other people and their property, all formed a solid foundation that has produced healthy societies and economies, and this is why I consider East Asia to be the safest and most productive home for my money.

Read more from the original source:

Is The West Repeating India's Mistakes? Interview (Part II) - Eurasia Review

Revelations Of Heist And Hedonism Of Youngsters – The Nigerian Voice

Two scenarios are unfolding simultaneously in Nigeria which have occupied much of our media space and national conversations. These are the currently running Big Brother Naija and the investigation of the spate of corrupt practices at the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) by the National Assembly. The reactions of Nigerians to the two incidents tells you why Nigeria is in cesspools of corruption and the quandary of gross underdevelopment. The responses of Nigerians to these two matters explains why Nigerian political elites are emboldened to ensure that the vicious circle of mass poverty, political instability and wanton destruction of the opportunities of advancements by the youths are maintained without let or hindrance. Ironically, the younger generation of Nigerians have embraced the hedonistic lifestyle of watching irrelevant television soap of Big brother Naija that teaches them nothing but nudity and debauchery.

These twin events are at the same time related and unrelated and by so doing have defied the logical law that states that nothing can both be and not be at the same time. Nigeria it would seem defies all natural laws. For instance, the natural law that goes to show that natural resources are to be harnessed for the greatest good of the greatest percentage of the people has been twisted to mean that the bulk of the natural resources of Nigeria are to be deployed to service the HEDONISM of the ruling class.

I make the above assertion bearing in mind that both of those scenarios have become the major talking points in both the orthodox and unorthodox or rather main and online media as a result of the aforementioned scenarios playing out on the television and from the National Assembly.

However, one thing that strikes me most is that the clear majority of the young Nigerians are in no way moved by the stench of filth and corruption oozing out of the green chambers of the National Assembly and so the youths are not moved to stage any protest to demand comprehensive accountability and transparency.

The apathy and lack of interest amongst the youth is symbolized by their inclination to stay glued to their paid television and watch the nudity that is the Big Brother Naija show than to find time to stage street demonstrations and clearly, the timing of the television programme that coincided with this investigation of the National Assembly's lower chamber, is harmful to our national interests.

There is the suspicion that the ruling party may have organised the charade of a show by the South African satellite TV owners known as Multichoice so as to serve as perfect distractions from the groundswell of mismanagement of the National wealth of Nigeria by the government at all levels.

The Youth of Nigeria are missing an opportunity of a life time to regain control of the political governance of Nigeria by not minding how the current holders and wielders of political powers carry on with their duties.

This is because, if you look at a place like the United States of America and much of Europe, whereby there have been massive street protests in support of the Black Lives Matter, the clear majority of these demonstrators are young people.

The spate of street protests over the killing by the police of a black man George Floyd have been understandably led to revolutionary changes and the entire globe is right now recognising the need for the black populations of the world to be treated with dignity and honour like all other members of the global community of humanity.

it was to the credit of the persistent protests on the streets of the United States of America that made the Prosecutors to file charges of first degree murder against the police officers that killed the black man.

In Nigeria, the youths are busy watching the soap opera known as Big Brother Naija whilst right before our faces, there are revelations of mind blowing corruption by the political elites who ought to set the standards of good governance. These members of the thieving political elites are progressively robbing the nation of the resources that ought to be used to fix the broken down infrastructures to train the manpower of the younger generation of Nigerians.

Watching the appearances before the Federal House of Representatives Investigative Committee on Niger Delta Development of Commission of the minister of Niger Delta Affairs Mr. Godswill Akpabio and the acting Managing Director, have thrown up a lot of issues that can be situated on the urgency of the now for the younger population of Nigeria to give more energetic attention to what goes on in government to avoid a collapse of Nigeria.

The dramatic scenes that played out at that public hearing in the Federal House of Representatives, reminded me of the book Straight to hell which is the true tales of deviance, debauchery and billion dollar illicit deals. The book written by John Lefevre was described by a British tabloid the Daily Mail as a book which makes the Wolf of Wall Street look like a pussycat.

This is same way that the emerging spiralling evidence of widespread corruption within the NDDC has made politicians look like thieves who should be jailed.

These disclosures of how a set of Nigerian political office holders who ought to clean up the mess within the system of governance of the Niger Delta Development Commission was also implicated in a widespread theft of the resources that ought to be deployed to fix the decadent infrastructures of the crude oil rich but criminally neglected and marginalized Niger Delta Region.

To borrow from the book aforementioned, Nigerians witnessed the felonious mentality of Nigerias current political class and should serve as a clarion call for all good Nigerians to work hard to ensure that we achieve a 'letting the bad political eggs out' of Nigerias political space so we do not stand by and see the eventual collapse of Nigeria.

This house looks like something that could fall at any time if no remedial and revolutionary actions are put in place to effectively bring about good governance standards. The way to go about it is for the young people to embrace governance monitoring duties and to mount social pressures for the right steps to be taken to follow due process in the discharge of official duties by all and sundry.

Unfortunately, it looks like those who currently occupy political offices, especially those species running the affairs of the NDDC have mastered the art of fraud described in the book aforementioned as follows: if you can only be good at one thing, be good at lying... because if you are good at lying, you are good at everything.

The above dubious and ridiculously illogical Mantra contained in the book 'straight to hell' by John Lefevre, is the working document of much of the members of the ruling political class today. This attitude must change. Who then stand in the vantage position to change the bad situation for good if not the youth who constitute the clear majority of the population of Nigeria? This monster of corruption has become like a hydra headed creature which must be clinically crushed.

Can we recall with a law professor that the promulgation of the Anti-Corruption Act 2004, is no doubt a turning point on the history of criminal law administration.

This he argues is because, the law not only created all manner of conceivable offences, just to catch a prospective corrupt person, but also created an independent body the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC) whose responsibilities include investigation and prosecution of offences under the Act. It is now about ten years (it's actually over a dozen years) since the Act came into being and we are yet to see the impact of the law given the Presidents enthusiasm on the date of the signing of same into law. This perspective of the law teacher included in his book written years back is about the same kind of impression most people have about the ICPC and the second institution created by then President Olusegun Obasanjo.

Relatedly, the author added that apart from the above legislation, the Obasanjo administration also promulgated the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission Act, 2004 to help other existing statutes to fight corruption in the country.

This according to the University Don, is notwithstanding constitutional provisions against corruption that are often overlooked such as the Code of Conduct for Public Officers; power of the legislature to conduct investigations into actions of public officers; the Auditor-Generals powers to audit public accounts; power of the electorate to recall erring legislators; and impeachment provisions against corrupt chief executives, to mention but these.

Like Nostradamus who saw tomorrow, this author of the book we will name soon stated that notwithstanding these laws, the problem of corruption continued with its crushing effects on the countrys image, her development and growth as a nation-State.

His words: "For the year 2000, Transparency International (TI), ranked Nigeria as the 1st out of 89 countries that were studied by the anti-corruption NGO. Since 2001, we have maintained second position until 2004 when the country was placed on the overall 2rd position as the third most corrupt nation on earth. On October 26, 2009, Chief Olabode George (former PDP National Vice Chairman, South West Nigeria) was convicted with five others by Federal High Court, Lagos for corruption. Also in the same 2009, five Chief Executives of five major banks in Nigeria namely: Intercontinental Bank Plc (Erastus Akingbola), Oceanic Bank (Mrs. Cecilia Ibru), Union Bank Plc (Bartholomew Ebong), Afri Bank (Sebastine Adigwe) and Fin Bank. The Crime of Corruption in Nigeria: Laws, Issues and Solutions (Ben O. Igwenyi, MON).

This book was written some half a dozen years back and as we can see the challenges posed to our development by the high levels of corruption amongst top federal government officials are significant.

Tope Ajeigbe wrote that even the Devil will tremble. He then asked- Do you really understand this NDDC matter? He responded by stating that an Interim Management Committee of the NDDC Spent N81.5 billion as sundry expenses, including graduation ceremonies in the United Kingdom during lockdown?; Spent N3.14 billion for COVID-19 palliatives for staff; Spent N1.3 billion on community relations; Spent N85.6million for travels during lockdown between February and May 2020; Spent N122.9 million on condolences between February May 2020.; Spent N23.8million on consultancy; Spent N2.6 billion on medicals; Spent N790.9million as imprest; Spent N1.9 billion on Laser fever; Spent N706 million on legal services; Spent N1.121billion on public communication. Then he significantly observed that: "In all these spending, nothing was "spent" for the common man for whose purpose the Commission was set up."

This is interesting. Hearing the minister of Niger Delta Affairs making the unbelievable claim that the interim management committee blew away billions of Naira around the issues of covid-19 because the 60% of the mandates of the commission revolves around health, make me weep for Nigeria. How can an agency set up to bridge the infrastructures gaps in the crude oil producing communities be said to be exclusively set up for health care? Is NDDC a specialist hospital? This is ridiculous. The minister also claimed that over 60% of the contracts in NDDC were awarded to legislators so he can keep his job. If we may ask, is the oath of office he swore not supposed to direct him to comply by the due process of the law and not to be governed by his selfish interests to retain his job by all means? In a sane society, the Minister of Niger Delta Affairs would have been invited by the Police or EFCC to clarify that statement which amounts to admittance of wrongdoings.

The circus show has continued today with the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Femi Gbajabiamila, giving the Minister of Niger Delta Affairs, Godswill Akpabio, 48 hours to name the lawmakers who received contracts from the Niger Delta Development Commission.

Akpabio as we have stated times without number had said before a House committee on Monday that 60 per cent of the contracts awarded by the NDDC was given to lawmakers.

The ministers claim had generated controversy and questioned the integrity of the committee set up to probe the alleged N81bn fraud perpetrated by the NDDC.

Addressing the House on Tuesday, however, Gbajabiamila, who has been a federal lawmaker since 2003, said he had never received any NDDC contract before.

He subsequently gave Akpabio 24 to 48 hours to reveal the identities of the lawmakers that received the contracts or face severe sanction.

The Speaker said, This is my 5th term here and I have never for once collected anything from the National Assembly and I know I speak for a great majority of members of this House, a great majority. And because of that, I will take this allegation and accusation very seriously.

And I will give the minister (Akpabio) 24 to 48 hours. Clerk, I want you to back this up with a letter from this House. Give the minister 24 to 48 hours to publish the names, the contracts so given, the dates because obviously these things will be documented; unveil the companies of the 60 per cent projects that were given to members of the National Assembly.

Gbajabiamilas ultimatum received applause from a large section of the lawmakers.

These are grandstanding that won't take us far.

What should be done is for the Federal Government to constitute a JUDICIAL COMMISSION OF INQUIRY into the management of the Niger Delta Development Commission and for all the officials named in the heist of the resources of the people of the Niger Delta Region to be rounded up and prosecuted for theft.

A stitch in time they say saves nine.President Muhammadu Buhari should be quick to rescue his collapsing anti corruption crusade which is believed to be a huge gamble and a monumental fraud.

Emmanuel Onwubiko is the Head of the Human Rights Writers Association of Nigeria [emailprotected] ; http://www.emmanuelonwubikocom; http://www.thenigerianinsidernews.com ; [emailprotected]

Disclaimer: "The views/contents expressed in this article are the sole responsibility of Emmanuel Onwubiko and do not necessarily reflect those of The Nigerian Voice. The Nigerian Voice will not be responsible or liable for any inaccurate or incorrect statements contained in this article."

Read the original:

Revelations Of Heist And Hedonism Of Youngsters - The Nigerian Voice

An epic year of misbehaviour, hedonism and havoc behind the scenes of ‘Ryan’s Daughter’ – Independent.ie

It is one of the greats paradoxes of remote landscapes that they can imbue a sense of confinement. Ask any of the crew of Ryan's Daughter, the hulking production that embedded itself in the Dingle Peninsula fora year in the late 1960s, and they'd probably agree.

avid Lean's romantic epic was the original Waterworld, a film so swollen, expensive and problematic that the scars of its burden would always show through over its sprawling three hours-plus running time. A flawed Oscar-winning classic or a swollen mess, depending on your viewpoint, by the time Ryan's Daughter was released in 1970, the production had run 135 days over schedule and gone $3.5m over-budget.

This added expense that accounted for a quarter of the final $13m cost was down to paying cast members overtime. In those 12 months when Kerry became a movie set, there was an ever-present factor that put paid to any notions of a streamlined shooting schedule - the Atlantic weather. The concept of a call sheet, an agenda drafted before filming setting out a timetable for scenes, locations and cast, was impossible as the Atlantic threw five seasons a day at the filmmakers.

Add to this the demanding attitude of Lean and the result was countless days of inertia. Throw in the then-47 pubs of Dingle and customary showbiz attitudes of the era and Ryan's Daughter became a sodden knees-up where resentments festered among the under-stimulated Hollywood egos trapped there.

A gift from the non-fiction gods, then, for Paul Rowan, the award-winning sports writer who first heard about the film from his parents during one of countless childhood holidays in the area. This expertly-researched romp is the result of 15 years of interviews with those on set or looking on at the time, and arrives right on cue for the film's 50th anniversary this year.

Reading though the book, you wonder might the filming of Ryan's Daughter make a better story than the actual movie itself. Between its end-of-the-world location, the injection of cash and glitz into the frugal rural community, and the clashing colour schemes of preening film stars and reserved locals, it has the hallmarks of some brand of hair-raising Ealing comedy.

With a catalogue that included The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957),Lawrence of Arabia(1962),and Doctor Zhivago(1965), Lean was the golden goose of a financially unsound Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. When he and scriptwriting foil Robert Bolt had set out to retell Flaubert's Madame Bovary against the backdrop of post-Rising Ireland, he had carte blanche. The studio needed this to bail them out of the red.

Lean, meanwhile, waschasinghis biggest hit to date and pushed the throttle too far. He insisted on shooting in 70mm, which, while giving the film a majestic sweep, requires bigger technical specs. This gets interesting when trying to shoot a currach scene in the wind-lashed surf. If the Kerry light and weather was misbehaving - which was all it did - he would cut and postpone filming. Self-important cast members waited in bars for calls that never came, sozzled and embittered about Lean's unyielding, joyless style of helmsmanship.

Robert Mitchum, as the cuckolded schoolmaster Charles, was at the peak of his devil-may-care years, and decided that he wasn't going to play ball with Lean. Relations got so sour between the two prize bulls that they couldn't stand to be in the same room as one another.

Mitchum didn't lose sleep over it. HeturnedMilltown House, the hotel he rented in its entirety, into a notorious party den where booze and broads were flown in and a marijuana greenhouse was cultivated around the back. When Mitchum's long-suffering wife Dorothy paid a visit, apause button was pressed.

In the title role of the sexually unfulfilled Rosy was Bolt's wife, Sarah Miles. She admitted to an affair with Mitchum occurringin the aftermath of the production, but other sources here are not so sure. Lean quickly took a disliking to the brattish ingenue, but far more problematic was a rift that emerged between her and Christopher Jones, who would play her love interest, Major Doryan.

Jones, a Tennessee pretty-boy who sleep-walked into movies, infuriated Lean with the woodenness of his acting. Sohopeless was he at accents that a voiceover had to be recorded in post-production using anotheractor.

When the time came to film what would become one of the most scandalous cinemasex scenes of that era, Jones' refusal to co-operate with Lean and Miles heldup production for days. To make him more malleable, Mitchum and Miles spiked his breakfast with a sedative.

Despite the hell-raising and juicy gossip, Rowanreminds us that this was ultimately an unhappy film, one that ruined marriages, shortened lifespans, and sent careers into decline. Ryan's Daughter met a critical mauling on its release, anddespite a decent box officeand two Oscar gongs (for supporting actor John Mills and cinematographer Freddie Young), the film has not aged well.

But as a tale from a bygone era when filmmakers couldn't just "CGI-in" the world at will, Rowan's book is a lively and perceptiveaddition to Irish cinema literature.

He achieves a real intimacy as he charts Kerry's ownFitzcarraldo, an endurance test of a production wherethe best screen performance was given by the one element that caused the most grief- the location itself.

Sunday Indo Living

See the original post:

An epic year of misbehaviour, hedonism and havoc behind the scenes of 'Ryan's Daughter' - Independent.ie

Tough-on-crime anti-drug moralizing does a disservice to Canadians – The Globe and Mail

William J. Schultz is a Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation and Vanier Canada doctoral scholar at the University of Alberta, as well as a former correctional officer. Dr. Sandra M. Bucerius is the director of the Centre for Criminological Research and an associate professor of sociology and criminology at the University of Alberta as well as the director of the University of Alberta Prison Project. Dr. Kevin D. Haggerty is Canada Research Chair and professor of sociology and criminology at the University of Alberta.

If the idea of decriminalizing possession of small amounts of illicit drugs once sounded radical, the coalition of people who now espouse the idea would certainly seem to be strange bedfellows.

On July 9, the Canadian Association of Chiefs of Police called on the federal government to decriminalize possession of small amounts of illicit drugs; B.C. Premier John Horgan asked Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to do the same in a Jul. 20 letter. Benjamin Perrin, the top criminal justice adviser in Stephen Harpers tough-on-crime administration, recently wrote a book in support of decriminalization, and major publications, including The Globe and Mail, have published editorials urging the same.

Story continues below advertisement

Despite this, there is still political hesitation on this issue, because decriminalizing even small quantities of hard drugs runs counter to decades of misinformation and partisan posturing.

However, there is one group we never hear from in this discussion: imprisoned drug users. So over the past four years, we spent extensive time working in and around prisons as researchers, asking questions and hearing stories about drug use. To date, our research team has interviewed more than 800 incarcerated men and women and more than 170 correctional officers as part of the University of Alberta Prison Project. Our participants work or are housed in sentenced and remand facilities in six federal and provincial prisons across Western Canada. Although they are a complex group for many reasons, prisoners perspectives on drug use provide important insights into wider discussion about decriminalizing hard drugs.

To start, we must recognize that Canadian prisons are full of men and women who are incarcerated because they use drugs. In interviews, our prisoner participants estimate that between 85 and 90 per cent of the people on their prison units have substance-abuse issues that directly contributed to their incarceration. The continued criminalization of drugs ensures that an unending stream of men and women are incarcerated for drug possession and drug sales, and also influences a much wider group of prisoners who commit crimes to pay for their drugs or use violence as part of the illicit drug market.

While officials have long sought to keep illicit drugs out of prison, they remain prevalent. In prison, drug sales are lucrative and provide the financial life-blood of prison gangs. When drugs are circulating in a unit, they contribute to volatility, violence and the exploitation of vulnerable inmates. This in-prison drug situation has become much more disturbing in recent years with the emergence of stronger and more lethal street drugs like fentanyl. As such opioids are illegal, prisoners who use them do so in a clandestine fashion, something that increases the risks of infection, disease, and inadvertent overdoses. We have interviewed prisoners who have overdosed multiple times in a single week while incarcerated, and in some institutions, correctional officers describe being overwhelmed by constant emergency calls, where they work to resuscitate overdosing prisoners on the edge of death.

Tough-on-crime political rhetoric portrays hard drug use as a form of moral decay, associated with a lack of self-control. The prison situation we describe above is a direct result of this outlook, as such policies promote harsh prison sentences which are assumed wrongly to scare people away from drug use. However, our participants add a unique and crucial insight to the conversation. The great majority of our participants describe experiencing acute and/or recurrent trauma throughout their lives. 95 per cent of all the men we interviewed in federal prisons and 97 per cent of all the women have been sexually or physically victimized before ever being charged with a crime. A disproportionate number have backgrounds defined by a string of traumatic events, such as suicides, lethal overdoses, or the murder of a parent, child, partner or friend, or a major assault that leaves them with life-long PTSD. For a disproportionate number of prisoners, using hard drugs is not a sign of rampant hedonism; it is a means to deal with the physical, emotional, and psychological legacies of abuse, victimization, and trauma.

These conversations shed new light on the benefits of drug decriminalization. Decriminalization would allow police to concentrate on more serious issues, by reallocating resources away from the Sisyphean task of preventing drug use. It would also halt the revolving door of incarcerated drug users and allow for greater investment in services designed to assist people who want to address their substance use. Most crucially, it would allow us to reframe Canadas drug problem, and understand it as a public health and public education problem, rather than a moral failing. Decades of experience have demonstrated that the criminal justice system cannot solve public health issues, and prisons are probably the worst imaginable option for addressing the social challenges posed by substance misuse.

The time is right to decriminalize the possession of personal amounts of drugs. Our research leads us to believe that such a change would result in a more logical and fair approach to substance use and, best yet, provide the prospect of improving the lives of thousands of Canadians.

Story continues below advertisement

Keep your Opinions sharp and informed. Get the Opinion newsletter. Sign up today.

See more here:

Tough-on-crime anti-drug moralizing does a disservice to Canadians - The Globe and Mail