US Coercive Measures Against Iran Hurting Women – IDN InDepthNews | Analysis That Matters

Viewpoint by Azadeh Moaveni and Ali Vaez

The two writers are affiliated to the Crisis Group: Azadeh Moaveni is Project Director, Gender; and Ali Vaez is Iran Project Director. This commentary is being republished by courtesy of the Brussels-based Crisis Group which first carried it on 6 March 2020.

BRUSELS (IDN) On 21 May 2018, less than two weeks after the U.S. withdrew from the 2015 nuclear deal with Iran, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo launched Washingtons New Iran Strategy before an audience at the Heritage Foundation. In his remarks, he insisted that Iranian womens long struggle for inclusion and equality matters dearly to Washington.

As if to prove the point, the U.S. State Departments social media feeds since that day have interspersed announcements of new choking sanctions with twinkling reminders of Iranian womens potential (Congratulations to Iranian-American and new #NASA Astronaut Jasmin Moghbeli!).

In January 2020, the State Department released a two-minute video on the history of Iranian womens rights. To a melody of maudlin piano and soaring strings, the video sweeps viewers past scenes of bare-headed women in silk blouses, wistfully recalling an era when Irans women purportedly enjoyed freedom and equal opportunity, before shifting to dark footage from after the 1979 revolution, when womens rights in #Iranregressed. No Iranian woman from either era actually speaks in the video, about either the Shahs regime or the Islamic Republic. But the final caption promises nevertheless: The women of the U.S. will stand with the women of Iran.

Washingtons evocation of Iranian women and their aspirations has become a feature of its marketing for maximum pressure the campaign of economic coercion aimed at precipitating Iranian capitulation to U.S. demands or regime collapse. The marketing is stunning for its hypocrisy, focused as it is on the plight of Iranian women even as it says nothing about the injustices women face at the hands of Middle Eastern governments allied with the U.S. Moreover, as Washington has widened its claim that the Islamic Republic disallows any space for women, it has grown more detached from reality.

One tweet this past December maintained that the Iranian regime denies women the opportunity to participate in public life during a month when Iranian female directors and actors were shining at the Tehran film festival. Women have long been engaged in almost every aspect of Iranian public life from politics to political activism and from diplomacy to flying planes and driving heavy trucks. But perhaps the most regrettable feature of this U.S. policy spotlighting the suppression of Iranian womens rights is that it has damaged the activism and independence of the very women it claims to support.

Of course, and despite womens prominence in public life, the Islamic Republic has a long and dismal record of keeping Iranian women second-class citizens in terms of civil and personal rights. The surge of women into higher education and the work force that accompanied the 1979 revolution galvanised women to demand more legal and social equality, not less. Yet the state has, for decades, defended a status quo of discriminatory laws like mandatory hijab. It was only in December 2019, under international pressure, that Irans Football Federation committed to allowing women to attend matches in the domestic club league.

Restrictions on womens public conduct and appearance have sown increasing resentment and alienation, especially among millennial women and girls, who are less inclined than their elders to view the relaxation of rules as sufficient progress. As one 19-year-old sports champion put it: My generation wants [dress codes] removed. We compare ourselves to the rest of the world, where everyone is modernising and evolving, and we find this strictness ridiculous.

For much of the past two decades, the Iranian womens movement has encompassed diverse strands of activism: there have been radical and gradualist wings, single-issue campaigns seeking an end to mandatory hijab or access to sports stadiums, drives to reform divorce and domestic violence laws, and grassroots efforts aimed at mobilising rural and working-class women behind such legal changes.

On occasion, these different currents have brought their particular struggles into the streets and endured crackdowns, before shifting course. The authorities have never smiled upon womens activism, and every subset of the womens movement, from state-affiliated religious feminists to secular-minded organisers, has encountered some level of official hostility and obstruction.

The authorities intolerance for womens organising has grown so severe in recent years that most of the movements luminaries are now in prison, in exile abroad or in a self-imposed state of quiescence. But the states response has not been limited to repression. At times, it has grudgingly tolerated and even conceded to womens demands as a reality with powerful electoral implications. Womens turnout has been critical to presidential wins by more moderate candidates since the late 1990s, and politicians now regularly emphasise womens concerns when courting voters.

The Trump administration is trying to appropriate the Iranian womens cause. Whether they are skirmishing with authorities in anti-hijab street confrontations, joining labour protests, such as last years May Day demonstrations, or agitating against the governments November hike in fuel prices, women have been active in airing specific grievances.

Most demonstrators have pointedly demanded an end to hijab laws, but they have received loud support whether solicited or not from anti-regime voices in Washington and among certain Iranian opposition figures outside the country, whose objective is toppling the regime.

If this external pressure was supposed to help, there is little evidence that it achieved its goal. Irans security apparatus, under siege and suspicious of citizens real or imagined links with the outside world, hasover the past year doled out some of theseverestsentencesfor women activists in recent memory.

In the 2000s and 2010s, Iranian women waged sophisticated and far-ranging battles against both discriminatory laws and the patriarchal culture, shared by men and women alike, from which those laws partly emanate. But in recent months, all those intense and public rows among women, between generations of activists with varying priorities, over whether the most suitable terrain was the family living room, ones personal relationship or the public street corner, have fallen eerily silent. Internal debate among women activists in Iran now is largely about the frightening, pervasive threats to the countrys security and well-being.

A sanctions campaign as broad and blunt as that which the U.S. has built up is bound to have inadvertent consequences for the target population. As the economy reels from sanctions, women entrepreneurs, particularly those in cash-based or service industries, have been particularly hard-hit.

The 2010s saw a flourishing of women-owned businesses, with successes piling up in sectors women found themselves able to enter from online clothing sales to cafs and restaurants. Those sectors might have appealed to women because they could better control their hours and workload, sidestep workplace exploitation or harassment, or discover opportunities for real economic advancement.

But as the Iranian currency began to sink in value in the summer of 2018, first in response to the Trump administration withdrawing from the nuclear deal, and then more precipitously, in anticipation of increasingly severe sanctions, sometimes falling by double digits in a single day, families coped by cutting back on leisure spending, on everything from clothes to hair salons to eating out. Small shops and retailers saw their revenue drop, while their rents skyrocketed.

Many women I know, often younger women who used to be activists or journalists and had turned to running cafs, are now going out of business, said Sussan Tahmasebi, a long-time civil society activist who retains close ties with women counterparts in Iran. Theyre not just losing economically, but losing that liberating force of being able to be financially independent.

Sanctions have also forced tens of foreign firms to close shop and lay off Iranian workers. These companies tended to offer forward-thinking and empowering workspaces for women, setting high standards everything from attractive salaries to more professional management and expected conduct that Iranian companies would have to match. Some organised anti-sexual harassment training for employees, to bring them in line with minimal codes of conduct in European firms. Sanctions halted that progress.

The record thus appears clear: by imposing stifling sanctions, the Trump administration has deprived Iranian women of economic empowerment and the social independence that can accompany it; by politicising the womens movement in the service of its own goals, it has exposed them to graver danger; and by zeroing in on womens rights in Iran while it ignores them elsewhere in the Middle East, it has highlighted its own insincerity.

The monumental challenges that Iranian women face in fighting their governments discriminatory laws and repressive policies are difficult enough without the debilitating impact of sanctions. If they could collectively send a message to Washington, they might draw from the words of the thirteenth-century Persian poet, Saadi, who said: I do not expect any favours from you. Just do no harm. [IDN-InDepthNews 02 May 2020]

Photo source: The Crisis Group.

IDN is flagship agency of the International Press Syndicate.

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US Coercive Measures Against Iran Hurting Women - IDN InDepthNews | Analysis That Matters

Hundreds of thousands will be at risk if COVID-19 spreads in northeast Syria – International Rescue Committee

New York, NY, April 30, 2020 With two more cases of COVID-19 confirmed in northeast Syria, the International Rescue Committee (IRC) is warning that hundreds of thousands of people will be at risk if the disease starts to spread.

With only 28* beds currently available in Intensive Care Units across the northeast, and only 10* ventilators, the organization is concerned that the regions weak health system will quickly become overwhelmed if the disease takes hold.

Although the IRC will be bringing 30 more ventilators and ICU beds online in the coming weeks - and other humanitarian agencies and local health authorities are working hard to also bolster their responses - huge gaps still remain in the regions ability to respond.

Christine Petrie, Country Director for the IRC in northeast Syria, said:

Now that COVID-19 has reached northeast Syria, were going to see how truly virulent this disease can be. There are 160,000 extremely vulnerable people living in camps and communal shelters across the region and they have limited ability to protect themselves.

In Al Hol, the population density is 37,570 people per square kilometer and there are over 65,000 people living in extremely close proximity. There is absolutely no way for people to practice social distancing in this camp, and many are already living with chronic diseases such as diabetes, hypertension and asthma, which means they will be particularly badly affected by this disease if it spreads.

Although we have been raising awareness of COVID-19 prevention and containment measuresin Al Hol, it has been difficult to do so in the area where foreign women and children live. We provide health care through one of our mobile medical units in that area, but the camp authorities do not allow home visits, which means that agencies can only raise awareness among those who come for treatment and many people are therefore not provided with accurate information to be able to properly protect themselves. This underscores the urgency for countries to repatriate these women and children who have been languishing with no prospects for far too long and are now at very high risk.

Outside the camps, the situation is not much better as Dr Mohammed Adbalgadir - Health Coordinator for the IRC in northeast Syria - explains:

In addition to the camps in northeast Syria being overcrowded, the towns and cities are congested too and there is a large elderly population in the region - one of the groups most at-risk. In Hassakeh, hundreds of people who fled during the military offensive in October last year are living crammed together in schools. In Raqqa too, there are thousands of people living in informal camps and dilapidated buildings, with poor sanitation and limited access to health care.

People have been through so much already. The additional burden of this pandemic is going to take its toll and they are in as great a need as ever. Our health teams are continuing to do their vital work providing healthcare to displaced people through health clinics and mobile medical units, and we have been working hard to raise awareness of the disease among those we support so that they are as prepared as they can be.

One of our top priorities is ensuring that our health staff are able to safely continue their life-saving work. All of our health clinics remain open and are prepared to transport suspected cases to the designated hospitals, but at the moment we only have enough personal protective equipment to last for one month. We are sourcing additional supplies, but it has been proving a challenge for us, as for all humanitarian agencies. In January, the delivery of aid was severely compromised when the UN Security Council stripped the Yaroubiyeh border crossing point from Resolution 2504, preventing the UN from providing medical supplies, pharma and other critical COVID related aid across the border into northeast Syria. The Council must urgently address this, particularly given the need to scale-up the response to fight COVID-19. We need unfettered and direct access to those in need as well as urgently needed funding, more supplies and more medical equipment so that we can avert a disaster.

ENDS

*Figures taken from the WHO Emergency Readiness & Response Plan for COVID-19 in Northeast Syria

The IRC has been delivering aid in Syria since 2012, and last year - along with partners - the organisation delivered services to almost a million people in the country. The IRC is the largest provider of health care in northeast Syria and is the only international NGO providing mental health services and emotional support across all its medical facilities. The IRC runs womens empowerment programmes in a number of camps and cities across the region, and provides legal support to IDPs and refugees as well.

About the IRC

The International Rescue Committee responds to the worlds worst humanitarian crises, helping to restore health, safety, education, economic wellbeing, and power to people devastated by conflict and disaster. Founded in 1933 at the call of Albert Einstein, the IRC is at work in over 40 countries and over 20 U.S. citieshelping people to survive, reclaim control of their future, and strengthen their communities.Learn more at http://www.rescue.org and follow the IRC on Twitter & Facebook.

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Hundreds of thousands will be at risk if COVID-19 spreads in northeast Syria - International Rescue Committee

New York Based Fitness Expert Larry Greenfield Announces the Launch of His New Personal Website – LatestLY

Larry Greenfield, a New York-based fitness coach announces the launch of his website, featuring a blog section where he can share his know-how in the evolving fitness and nutrition space.

New York, NY - Fitness coaching expert from New York, Larry Greenfield, magnifies his reach online, giving valuable perspectives on fitness and nutrition for people over 40 years old. Mr. Greenfield announced the launch of his website today and stated, Its what Im passionate about: staying healthy and helping people get into the shape of their life.

Larry Greenfield will use his website to share the lessons learned over a fitness career that has lasted more than two decades, offering personal training routines specifically for people over 40. Larrys philosophy of empowerment is built on a simple process where he considers his clients energy levels, preferences, body composition, availability of equipment, and lifestyle.

It is estimated that for every decade after 40, caloric intake should decrease by 1%. A persons body at 40 doesnt burn fat or build muscles as it did back in their 20s.

Likewise, when the body is subjected to increased physical activity at this age, the results show a significant risk reduction of cardiovascular disease, cancer, and other terminal illnesses. An average weekly total of 75 minutes of vigorous activity, such as running, fast-paced walking, swimming, among other activities, are usually recommended. One of the best ways to ease into a weekly routine is to attach exercise goals to an underlying motivation.

This positive association keeps people going as theres a need to stay healthy in order to fulfill their ambitions. At 40, it is crucial to have a physical evaluation prior to starting a fitness routine. Start low and go slow is a common phrase used among people in this age group.

Mr. Greenfield further explained, Its very important to build healthy habits gradually without making any drastic changes in lifestyle that are not sustainable in the end. Many of my clients have tried dieting and got no results, so we often have to work with mindset blocks and overriding those old patterns of thinking. You have to eat in order to lose weight. It sounds like a no brainer, but many people still dont believe it.

In addition to his extensive success as a certified fitness coach, Larry Greenfield is also an art lover and a huge supporter of the New York Foundation for the Arts.

Contact Details

Larry Greenfield

Larry Greenfield New York Training

(738) 245-6125

info@larrygreenfieldny.com

https://www.larrygreenfieldny.com/

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New York Based Fitness Expert Larry Greenfield Announces the Launch of His New Personal Website - LatestLY

Lockdown: Apply new strategy, technology in distribution of palliatives, Emejuru tells FG, state govts – Latest News in Nigeria & Breaking Naija…

- Former presidential candidate, Chris Emejuru, is not happy with the distribution process of palliatives nationwide

- Emejuru has called on government at all levels to employ a new strategy in reaching the vulnerable

-The U.S-based Nigerian lamented the fact that some of the palliatives so far shared did not get to those who deserve it

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Founder of Chris Emejuru Foundation and a United States of America based Nigerian, Chris Emejuru, has called on government at all levels to employ new strategy, especially technology in sharing of palliative measures to the real vulnerable Nigerians across the country.

Emejuru lamented the fact that some of the palliatives so far shared did not get to those who deserve it, hence the need to change the approach.

Speaking to journalists via a teleconference interview on Sunday, May 3, Emejuru stated that the right approach and logistics in achieving the purpose of reaching the poor were still lacking.

Emejuru spoke to some journalists via a teleconference interview on Sunday, May 3Source: Original

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His words: I believe that they have been proactive in their response but they havent addressed the underlying issues.

For example, funds have been created to provide palliatives for Nigerian citizens but logistics is the challenge. How do you get these food items to the most vulnerable? This requires a strategy and technological approach that is not currently present within the system.

There is cash transfers that have been implemented but how does that deal with the overall issue of poverty? The lockdown is helping in stopping the spread of COVID-19, but then how do you deal with the issue of hunger, lack of money, leading to kidnapping, armed robbery and other security issues.

There have been some approaches through the deployment of resources, but the overall strategy at the government level is lacking.

Reacting to what he described as conspiracy theories concerning the coronavirus, Wuhan China and Bill Gates, Emejuru urged Nigerians to disregard some of the speculations.

While narrating his personal experience about Bill Gates, Emejuru described the richest man in the world as a good man.

His words: I first became an aspirant for the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria in 2017 in preparations for the 2019 general elections. I had created some awareness in the political space and gained some attention although limited.

As I began to push my social media campaign, fighting for a better Nigeria, it was Bill Gates who messaged me, although indirectly, encouraging me never to give up and continue my move for the presidency.

Although I withdrew my ambition for personal reasons, I will never forget his kindness and sincerity. He is a humanitarian. And as a humanitarian, you care about the welfare of everyone. That is something that should not be forgotten. That is Bill Gates.

Speaking on his foundation (Chris Emejuru Foundation), Emejuru said the goal was and still to alleviate poverty throughout the six geo-political zones of the country.

This will be achieved through youth Empowerment in education and training, woman engagement and by delivering palliatives (Food items, sponsorships, etc) to those most vulnerable.

Obviously, the coronavirus pandemic will allow for adjustment in the implementation of our operations but we are confident we will succeed in our goal of creating a better future for Nigerians.

Recall that anti-corruption group, Say No Campaign, recently complained about the distribution of palliatives in Kuje area council of the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja.

The group lamented that the process by officials of the Federal Capital Territory Authority failed at ensuring equal distribution, either in the number of items given to each household or in determining the beneficiaries of the palliatives.

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Lockdown: Apply new strategy, technology in distribution of palliatives, Emejuru tells FG, state govts - Latest News in Nigeria & Breaking Naija...

A robust survival plan, ingenuity and creativity is important in this trying time, says Medusa head Sonal Jind – YourStory

Sonal Jindal, Founder-Director, MEDUSA (a B2C exhibition platform), and Managing Partner at Medusa Source, is an inspiration for budding designers in India.

Known for her impeccable personal style and her no-nonsense approach to business, Sonal took the world of fashion business by storm.

In a tete-a-tete with YourStory, Sonal discusses the world of fashion and the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the industry

Q. What brought you into the fashion business? Who has been an inspiration behind your choice of career?

A. My in-depth research got me into the fashion business which helped me find the gap between the seller and the buyer. I identified this lack of connect and a real B2C platform, which is an important link in the experience of shopping. My grandmother is the inspiration behind me choosing this career. When I was just 11 year old, she asked me what I wanted to become and that question inspired me to be a working woman. Though she was a homemaker, her journey of winning many awards in her life for her home-made pickles inspired me. At 16, I made a business plan with her to start my own Pickle and Jam business. However, that plan never flourished since my father told me to get professional education to start another business.

Q. What has been your main focus as an entrepreneur money or experience or both? What does Medusa do ?

A. To be straightforward, both were my main focus since Medusa was created out of zero investment with in-depth R&D. In this context, it was equally important for us to explore more opportunities and to evolve money. Medusa functions as the fertile ground on which creative designers of fashion, jewellery and footwear get the right environment to flourish. We take care of promoting their talent, making the world aware about their unique qualities and help monetize creativity. This leaves them to focus on what they do best creation. We do this through exhibitions and shows at select venues, handling entire logistics and marketing. Each show, each event, is marked by a unique theme and presence of leaders in respective segments. Event support includes security transportation and catering at the back end. The result is seamless flow of an event that impresses and achieves desired objectives.

Q. What was your eureka moment as a businesswoman? Would you like to share the credit with anyone?

A. My Eureka moment came when I saw a lot of women entrepreneurs being born out and alongside Medusa. It gave me a new sense of social responsibility as a businesswoman and since that day, my focus has been on women empowerment. The credit for this also goes to my mother. Since childhood, she has rooted in me a sense of social responsibility.

Q. Do you think even in the 21st Century, a glass ceiling exists in the business world, especially for women?

A. Yes, definitely there is a glass ceiling which exists in the business world, especially for women leaders. I would say gender inequality is the biggest challenge I have faced so far in my professional journey. This is the reason behind my initiative to work towards women empowerment and building a strong sustainability on gender equality in my organisation. Despite substantial rise in the number of women joining the workforce in India, gender parity continues to suffer, especially at senior positions. In fact, 16 percent of organisations have no women on their boards. Even as a businesswoman, it has been tough for me as well since our world is not yet ready to see women in the role of serious business.

Q. Do you think in comparison to men, women find it more difficult to maintain a balance between professional & personal lives?

A. I think women are way ahead in their skill sets because we can multitask. We are emotional as well as practical. We can balance the work life and family very efficiently. The most important thing I figured out is that we women are very strong. Being strong is all about multitasking. Males and females alike recognise that women in positions of power must be strong to survive the pressure of power. . I feel the five major areas that women can multitask in are -

1. Self-awareness

2. Self-Assurance

3. Connection

4. Resilience

5. Patience

Women are self-aware. They are adept at leading well and seeking out feedback that alerts us to our blind spots and helps us identify areas of growth and development.

Q. What are the major concerns for the Indian fashion industry arising out of COVID-19?

A. The major concerns are loss of business and job cuts. The industry forecast says that it will take large and small companies anywhere between 6-12 months to recover and revive. With the apparel manufacturing industry employing about 12 million people, seven million in just the domestic sector, job losses and salary cuts are going to have a severe impact on the sector.

Q. How can Indian fashion industry review its sales and sustain its future post-COVID-19?

A. A robust survival plan is the need of the hour. I believe that it will be the ingenuity and creativity that the manufacturers as well as the retailers will show at this juncture, which will see us through. I would say the businesses need to look after the workers safety and sustenance. Out-of-the-box thinking is required to move forward during and post-COVID-19 era, just like the world gathered itself and survived the World Wars, Spanish Flu, The Great Famine, etc.

Q. The Medusa Sources vendor network is spread through India, Nepal and Sri Lanka. What problems are you facing with respect to COVID-19?

A. Our problems are the same as the rest of the world. We are concerned about the future of our business interests as well as the well-being of our employees and workers. We have taken suitable measures to take care of our staff and we have ensured that our facilities follow all the guidelines prescribed to fight this disease.

Q. What is the best thing about being an entrepreneur?

A. The best thing about being an entrepreneur is that you get to call the shots and make the decisions that ultimately determine the success or failure of your business. Nobody can get in the way of your vision, of creating something out of nothing. Every business starts as an idea. You get to create it from the ground up. As an entrepreneur, people will look up to you. You have the ability to be a role model for family, friends, employees and community members. Your success serves as a motivation and inspiration. It is a great feeling to be able to step back and say, This is my company, while holding your head high. Being an entrepreneur takes an incredible amount of work and those few words feel so good coming out of your mouth. There is no age barrier, I want to keep working till the last day of my life.

Q. Your inherent sense of style is the talk of the town. How do you look at that? Do you consider it a burden or your strength?

A. As per the Merriam Webster dictionary, inherent literally refers to something that is "stuck in something else so firmly that they can't be separated. A plan may have an inherent flaw that will cause it to fail; a person may have inherent virtues that everyone admires. Since the flaw and the virtues can't be removed, the plan may simply have to be thrown out and the person will remain virtuous forever. So I consider my inherent sense of style an inherent virtue and it is a part of me. It is one of my strengths.

Q. What message would you like to give to women who want to become an entrepreneur?

A. For all the women out there, just remember you are strong and you can multitask. If somebody tells you otherwise, they are scared of your strength. To be an entrepreneur, getting yourself educated is vital, as professional education does help one in their entrepreneurial journey. I have learned a lot and have acquired skills during my MBA days. This has helped me a lot. So, for any aspiring entrepreneur, I would recommend them to enrol in a suitable professional course. By doing so, they can navigate well through their journey as an entrepreneur.

How has the coronavirus outbreak disrupted your life? And how are you dealing with it? Write to us or send us a video with subject line 'Coronavirus Disruption' to editorial@yourstory.com

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A robust survival plan, ingenuity and creativity is important in this trying time, says Medusa head Sonal Jind - YourStory

Artemisia Gentileschi was a feminist ahead of her time – Varsity Online

"There's little doubt about the paintings' messages of female empowerment"YouTube/The National Gallery

Content Note: This article contains discussion of sexual abuse

The feminist art movement of the 1970s was monumental for kickstarting a new and much-needed approach to the history of art, by criticising the dominant ideology of the western patriarchal canon. As explained by Dr Alyce Mahon in Eroticism and Art (2005), there was a new focus on identity politics, extending from Marxist socialist theory, in which issues of gender, as well as race and class, were interrogated.

Many people will be familiar with the daring and often vulgar images of 70s art in which female artists sought to reclaim their own bodies as artistic subject; artists such as Carolee Schneemann and Lynda Benglis spring to mind. This was the decade in which Linda Nochlin posed the monumental question: Why have there been no great women artists?

Of course, she was not implying that female artists, or even feminist artists, had not existed before the 70s, but was emphasising the fact that female artists simply had not been represented in the canon. In a now-postponed exhibition at the National Gallery, a phenomenal example of a female artist obscured by the canon for centuries was supposed to be finally given the credit she deserves. Artemisia Gentileschi was a feminist artist ahead of her time.

Without overtly referencing the female body or sexuality, she asserts that they are both the possession of the individual.

Born in Rome in 1593, Artemisia was the daughter of artist Orazio Gentileschi, who taught her how to paint at a young age. In a period when female artists were not socially accepted, her paintings were displayed under her fathers name and only due to her fathers enthusiasm for her talent was she able to paint at all.

In 1611, Orazio hired a fellow painter, Agostino Tassi, as a private tutor for his daughter. Tassi, however, raped Artimesia and continued to have sexual relations with her under the guise that, having taken her virginity, he would marry her. Eventually realising that this was not the case, Orazio pressed charges and a seven-month trial ensued in which Artemisia was tortured using thumbscrews and, at the end of which, Tassi was exiled but his sentence was never actually carried out. Today, there remains many misconceptions surrounding the attribution of Artemisias paintings, although theres little doubt about the messages of female empowerment they hold.

Artemisias most famous work, Judith Slaying Holofernes (1610), of which there are two versions differing only in the colour of the protagonists dress, depicts an Old Testament tale. A widow named Judith, having discovered plans for the destruction of her home tome, beheads the Assyrian general, Holofernes, when he invites her to his room on account of his desire for her.

Typically, Judiths maid accompanies her and carries the victims head away, but in Artemisias depiction, both women are active in attacking Holofernes. The maid presses his chest down and tries to control his flailing arms while Judith holds his head down with one hand and saws his throat with the other. Blood spurts and trickles down the side of the bed with gruesome clarity.

The parallel between Judith and Artemisias stories is undoubtable, as they are both victims of male desire and domination, and their lives are shaped by their experience of sexual perversion. The brutality of Artemisias painting signifies her retaliation to Tassis actions and supports female independence, and cleverly adopts a Biblical tale which ensured it would be well-received and publicly displayed. Without overtly referencing the female body or sexuality, she asserts that they are both the possession of the individual.

In 2016, the Guardian published an article about the piece titled More savage than Caravaggio, comparing Artemisia to Caravaggio, who is understood to be the primary stylistic influence on her and her father. Although acknowledging the symbolic significance of the paintings feminist subject, this comparison overlooks the fact that Artemisia lived a unique artistic life, and almost demonises her feminist motive with the negative connotations of savagery.

The critical theories of the feminist movement progressed in the 1980s, and one of the most significant was Laura Mulveys analysis of the Gaze within culture and art in her Visual and Other Pleasures of 1989. Extending from Freudian theory, she asserted that imagery of women has been constructed in a way that makes them vulnerable to the objectifying gaze of men, and in a way that welcomed, or even invited, scopophilia. Put simply, female bodies were objectified by male artists for the pleasure of male spectators.

Artemisias depiction of another religious tale and a popular Renaissance subject, Susanna and the Elders, was thought to be by her father until relatively recently, and objects against the gender balance constructed by the Gaze long before the theory of the power of looking was formulated. Comparing Artemisias version with Tintorettos, in which Susanna is oblivious to the perverted gazes of the elders who subsequently threaten to rape her, Artemisia depicts the young innocent protesting against their prepositions. She twists her body away from the two men, pulling a face of disgust and raising her hand to shield herself from their gazes.

By simply making Susanna conscious of the voyeurs, the artist raises her from victim to heroine. Through this character, Artemisia expresses not only her personal experience of victimisation, but highlights the rights of all womankind and projects a female war-cry that demands respect.

The National Gallerys Artemisia exhibition was supposed to be open now. No doubt visitors would have been marvelling at the empowering narratives found in every painting, in addition to the incredible painterly skills. It is certainly time to tell and celebrate the story of this heroine of art history. We can only hope that once the National reopens, it will do her justice.

Varsity is the independent newspaper for the University of Cambridge, established in its current form in 1947. In order to maintain our editorial independence, our newspaper and news website receives no funding from the University of Cambridge or its constituent Colleges.

We are therefore almost entirely reliant on advertising for funding, and during this unprecedented global crisis, we have a tough few weeks and months ahead.

In spite of this situation, we are going to look at inventive ways to look at serving our readership with digital content for the time being.

Therefore we are asking our readers, if they wish, to make a donation from as little as 1, to help with our running cost at least until we hopefully return to print on 2nd October 2020.

Many thanks, all of us here at Varsity would like to wish you, your friends, families and all of your loved ones a safe and healthy few months ahead.

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Artemisia Gentileschi was a feminist ahead of her time - Varsity Online

Double Lives by Helen McCarthy a history of working mothers – The Guardian

Three generations of working mothers. My grandmother, at home with 10 children between the wars, took in sailors washing to make ends meet. She had no schooling after the age of 12 and remained a housewife, dependent on my grandfather. In the 1950s my mother, a school-leaver at 14, worked part-time while her three kids were small, then full-time in the accounts office of a big department store. In the 1970s my older sister left home, trained as a teacher, married and also had three children. She retired a headteacher on a professional pension; her life was poles apart from my grandmothers.

Yet all three women led double lives, fitting their paid jobs around housework and childcare. Their labour was also typically female. Laundry work such as charing or cleaning has been a perennial standby for the poorest women in society. Girls like my mother, with some schooling, turned to the factory, shop or office work; those with more qualifications have been ushered into the caring professions such as nursing and, above all, teaching. There are no typical lives, Helen McCarthy writes in her impressive and nuanced study. Each is unique. But the best history writing, like hers, shows how representative the individual life is.

Double Lives begins in the mid-19th century, but its vantage point is very much that of the present. Three quarters of British mothers now work, an astonishing shift from the Victorian era. And a mothers desire to earn independently is largely viewed as legitimate. Yet despite this cultural sea change, and despite inroads made into all the professions, the majority of working mothers are in low-paid, insecure jobs with rigid hours and no childcare. Just as their Victorian predecessors finished garments or glued matchboxes, todays home-workers make baby slipper-socks or attach crystals to greetings cards.

Well into the 20th century the majority of British men and women, including most feminists and womens organisations, argued that motherhood was a womans prime vocation. Women entering the professions felt they must choose between mothering or a career. The good mother only worked because she had to. A deserted wife, a widow or a lone parent was to be pitied. The bad mother worked because she wanted to. How much, McCarthy asks, has changed? The ideal of the male breadwinner, always able to earn enough to keep wife and children at home, no longer holds sway. But todays employers and policymakers still mostly assume the worker to be male. Social welfare provision all too often merges the needs of the mother and child and sees the wife as dependent on her husband. The home is still imagined to be the mothers not the fathers place.

McCarthys is an economic and social history, but she also wants to give shade and texture to what has been thought and said about working mothers. In this she succeeds magnificently. She is as much at home with popular novels and journalism as she is with cabinet memos, parliamentary commissions, employment law, or sociological reports. She never treats her sources as gospel, neatly characterising much early social investigation into the lives of the poor as a genre-crossing blend of statistics and sentiment, empiricism and emotionalism. And always the voices of working mothers are raised above the cacophony of official and unofficial commentary.

The worst-off women were never simply victims. While the majority certainly worked from economic necessity, they could also enjoy their jobs. Home-workers were often proud of their skills. Industrial employees relished the camaraderie and the taste of freedom. One young mother in a Midlands jam factory met with disapproval from a female inspector when she confessed she would hate to stay at ome all dye to mind the blessed byby it ud give me the bloomin ump! She spoke for many in the decades to come.

Part-timers often found themselves without any chance of promotion, refused sick pay and holiday entitlement

Double Lives sometimes reads haltingly as it hedges its arguments. The early 20th century saw droves of women take up clerical work, but new marriage bars limited their prospects. Wartime administrations called up mothers for their reserve army of labour, focusing on their needs and even providing workplace nurseries, but only for the duration. Part-time work expanded enormously after the second world war, thanks to a consumer boom, but employers used its temporary nature to justify unequal pay. Treated as a stopgap between matrimony and childbearing, or as extra housekeeping for the older mother returning to work, part-timers often found themselves without any chance of promotion, refused sick pay and holiday entitlement. Two steps forward, one step back. In the long run, though, the figure of the working mother became more ordinary and acceptable.

McCarthy writes with calm authority. But she is not neutral. The narrowly conformist 50s come in for particular criticism. Yet in that decade far more mothers, like my own, found satisfaction in working outside the home. Double Lives is dubious about theories of maternal deprivation, such as John Bowlbys or Donald Winnicotts, which have so often been used as a stick to beat working mothers. A history of childhood experience would obviously be a different book; McCarthys few retrospective testimonies leave the issue wide open.

In the postwar decades a second income became a source of pride and prosperity. Higher aspirations were inextricably linked to consumerism, on spending for the home and on leisure. Todays two income families have inherited the assumption that personal fulfilment is linked to buying and having more. Families have shrunk in size since reliable contraception and abortion have gradually become available a seismic shift for many women, who are no longer subject to endless childbearing. Double Lives says little about new forms of peer pressure to have children, or the burgeoning commodification of motherhood (Mothercare, founded in 1972 and now defunct, would be a case in point).

McCarthys final chapters chronicle recent advances in employment law, pay battles, and anti-discrimination policies. More working mothers than ever find self-esteem and economic independence in many more walks of life. They speak out more in public and they are listened to. But still they are guilt-ridden and often exhausted. While the media has amplified and distorted debates about the selfish mother, the women who work too hard, and those who want to have it all, the competitive individualism of many professional workplaces is hardly feminist, let alone enjoyable. The language of professionalisation gives women status but reproduces male corporate models of marketisation (McCarthy, a historian at Cambridge, briefly refers to her line-manager). So-called empowerment comes at the expense of an underclass of other women doing the housework, the majority of them black or from ethnic minorities. Men havent shifted that much into domesticity or childcare. And in some communities husbands still prefer their wives not to work.

At different times both Labour and Conservative administrations after 1945 invested in maternity services and nursery education. McCarthy argues that despite ideological differences, governments have gone on viewing the interests of women and families as one and the same thing. In the 70s feminists critiqued the family for shoring up the housewifes role and for enshrining children as possessions. Fewer of us now live in conventional families, but the rhetoric of the family, preferably hard-working, is still constantly deployed. As the cornerstone of conservative visions of social life, the family remains idealised. During the current pandemic, as so often in past crises, women, and especially mothers, are being asked to shore up this fantasy while working twice as hard.

Alison Lights A Radical Romance is published by Fig Tree. Double Lives: A History of Working Motherhood is published by Bloomsbury (RRP 30).

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Double Lives by Helen McCarthy a history of working mothers - The Guardian

The Decline of the Nation-State – Slate

A construction crew works on a section of privately built border wall on December 11, 2019 near Mission, Texas.

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California Gov. Gavin Newsom issued something very close to a declaration of independence for the largest U.S. state while speaking on MSNBC earlier this month. Noting that California has been forced in a position of competing against other states, other nations, against our own government for badly needed personal protective equipment to fight the coronavirus, Newsom vowed to use the purchasing power of the state of California as a nation-state to acquire the needed supplies.

California is often compared to other countriesit would have the worlds fifth largest GDP if it were independentbut Newsoms statement took on new meaning in the context of the escalating tensions between state governments and the Trump administration over the response to COVID-19. States have been forced to work around the federal government to access supplies and coordinate plans. Some states are reopening their economies ahead of schedule, also in defiance of the White House, while others are banding together into regional alliances to coordinate their eventual reopening. President Donald Trump may claim that he has absolute authority when it comes to U.S. pandemic response, but right now the country looks more like a patchwork of occasionally overlapping regional responses.

Trump has also encouraged protesters to liberate states with governors that plan to extend stay-at-home orders. In the case of Virginia, he came close to encouraging armed insurrection by invoking the Second Amendment. He has accused governors who defy his directives of mutiny. The president has often sounded more like a medieval monarch inveighing against rebellious noblemen than the president of a centralized bureaucracy. The question may be less whether California is acting like a nation-state than whether the United States is acting like one.

Its telling to see which groups take the lead in acrisis.

Similar dynamics are playing out elsewhere. In Brazil, Mexico, the United Kingdom, and India, state and regional governments are also charting their own paths in responding to the crisis, sometimes openly defying national governments. Some of the most consequential political actionspositive and negativehave been carried out at the local level. The virus may well leave behind a world where power is more diffused from the national to the regional level, and where the international political order is a lot messier.

This might seem counterintuitive, as the virus is also creating boom times for centralized state bureaucracies and traditional views of sovereignty. The quarantine, testing, and surveillance measures required to slow the viruss spread have necessitated an extraordinary degree of state intervention in citizens lives in the worlds democracies, and allowed authoritarians to entrench their power. Globalization has ground to a halt as international borders have closed and hardened into the impenetrable walls of nativist dreams. Multilateral institutions have never looked less relevant: The U.N. Security Council is ineffectual; the EU may have been dealt a death blow; even the World Health Organization has become a political punching bag. Rather than cooperating to fight a virus that has no respect for national boundaries, nation-states are too often competing over valuable supplies.

In parts of the world where central governments legitimacy was already weaker, alternative actors are also stepping into the fray. As the Washington Post noted recently, armed insurgents and terrorist groups and drug cartels and gangs have formed a parallel underworld of public health policy and strategic messaging. Examples include the infamous gang MS-13 enforcing curfews in El Salvador; drug cartels distributing economic aid packages in Mexico; and Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, the group once known as al-Qaida in Syria, taking the lead on public health education within the areas it controls. Taliban personnel in medical gear have reportedly been quarantining people whove recently returned from virus hot spot Iran, something the Afghan central government has been notably unable to enforce.

In the absence of leadership from the top, its becoming clear which institutions, formal or not, are trusted by their communities. Even groups that are (for good reason) international pariahs can enjoy more local legitimacy than formal governments. Its telling to see which groups take the lead in a crisis; in many parts of the world, its not the central governments.

If we think of the current international political order in terms of the familiar world map, with national governments enjoying complete and non-overlapping power over their own territories, the virus has exposed this view as woefully incomplete. Even the map itself is questionable: Its worth noting that the country that has arguably been the most effective at controlling its COVID-19 outbreakTaiwanis one that officially doesnt exist according to most other governments and international organizations, including the WHO. The notion that international politics is defined by the interactions of the 193 governments with placards at the United Nations has never looked shakier.

In short, rather than a world of strengthened states contained within ever more impermeable borders, the pandemic could leave behind a much more complicated and messier political world, where power is contested in new waysor perhaps in very old ones.

In an influential 1998 article, the Wharton School professor Stephen J. Kobrin wrote that thanks to emerging threats to the authority of nation-statesmultinational corporations, transnational terrorist groups, nongovernmental organizationsthe world could be entering a neomedieval period in which global politics is more complex, with more diffuse sources of power, than the modern system of fixed, mutually exclusive, geographically defined jurisdictions known as nation-states. He meant medieval in the sense that medieval European borders were diffuse, shifting and permeable; it is anachronistic to see them as modern jurisdictional limits. It was a world in which political power was based more on family ties or religious authority than geographic territory, one in which the King of France might have sent letters to the count of Flanders, who was clearly his vassal; the count of Luxembourg, a prince of the Empire and the king of Sicily, who while a ruler of [a] sovereign state, was also a prince of the French royal house.

As late as the 17th century, the king of Spain was also the king of Portugal, Naples, and Sicily as well as the duke of Milan and Burgundy. The historian Derek Croxton has likened this arrangement to the EU in reverse, in that all these countries shared an absolute ruler and foreign policies but had their own protectionist trade policies. A traveler from Lisbon to Barcelona at that time would need a separate passport for each kingdom they passed through along the way, even though they technically never left the dominion of the king of Spain.

To put this in modern terms, one could imagine a scenario not far off where a road tripper driving across the United States would pass through a series of quarantine-induced border controls defining open states and locked-down states, with different rules and cultural norms (mask on, mask off) depending on the region.

Kobrins essay predicting the end of an era where the sovereign nation-state is the defining unit of international politics is very much a product of its time: The postCold War era was a boom time for predictions of the decline of the nation-state, from John Perry Barlows Declaration of the Independence of Cyberspace to Robert D. Kaplans The Coming Anarchy. As Kelsey Atherton recently noted for Slate, the speculative fiction of this period depicts a world in which governments have withered away to insignificance. Neal Stephensons 1992 cyberpunk classic Snow Crash depicts a future in which people live in neighborhood-size, politically autonomous, usually ethnically homogenous burbclaves with their own laws and security forces.

It didnt quite work out that way. Nation-states responded to the threat from nonstate actorssymbolized most vividly by the 9/11 attackswith a massive expansion of the security state and surveillance capabilities. Information and capital may move rapidly across borders, but peoples political rights and their ability to travel are still organized by the country on their passport.

Ive reported on a number of alternatives to a world dominated by nation-states over the years, from the quasi-anarchist confederacy concept favored by Syrian Kurdish leaders, to digital citizenship programs, to ex-situ nationhood arrangements for islands lost to climate change, to the seasteading dreams of Silicon Valley.

This would be a more chaotic world, but it would also be a world rife withpossibilities.

Ive always found ideas like these to be fun thought experiments, but not particularly realistic. As the philosopher of nationalism Ernest Gellner wrote, we live in a world where a man must have a nationality as he must have a nose and two earsthe current political order seems so entrenched that its hard to even imagine an alternative.

Id always assumed it would take a global disruption on the order of a world war to make any sort of alternative arrangements plausible. Could a pandemic be that sort of disruption?

Perhaps. These are clearly exceptional times. Depending on how long the current state of emergency lasts, we could soon live in a world where a number of previously extraordinary things are normalized. Maybe well see interstate checkpoints within the United States, international organizations working with sanctioned terrorist organizations to deliver medical aid, or the right to travel and work being determined not by governments but by an app developed by Google and Facebook.

This would be a more chaotic world, to be sure, but it would also be a world rife with possibilities. Already, some voices on the left have been arguing that were entering a municipalist moment, one in which progressive movements will be looking to the local as a place to build power, as a recent article in Dissent put it. This new municipalism has manifested itself in the mutual aid groups that have sprouted from London to Washington to deliver aid to front-line workers and economically vulnerable people who have been failed by the government.

Mutual aid is not just a local phenomenon; people are also collaborating across borders. As the New York Times recently noted in an article on scientific cooperation, while political leaders have locked their borders, scientists have been shattering theirs, creating a global collaboration unlike any in history. Never before, researchers say, have so many experts in so many countries focused simultaneously on a single topic and with such urgency.

Its not just the scientists. Around 2.6 billion people, or more than a third of the worlds population, are currently under some form of lockdown to slow the spread of the virus. This is more people than were alive during World War II, and this time theyre in every region of the world. This many people around the world have never been involved in a common project like this before in history. A neomedieval world of more fluid borders and political organization is not necessarily a more antagonistic one.

None of this is inevitable. There are powerful actors that are already using this crisis to build stronger states and harden borders. But the moment of crisis is also opening up the possibility of transformative change that lingers even after the quarantine orders lift.

For more of Slates coronavirus coverage, listen to a recent episode of one of our news podcasts.

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The Decline of the Nation-State - Slate

What is My Brother’s Life Worth? – tulsakids.com

Its a question I never dreamed I would even have to think about, but the Covid-19 health crisis has created a level of concern I didnt expect. Will my brother and others with disabilities be considered expendable lives in this war on Covid-19? My brother has intellectual disabilities, but does that make his life less valuable? Is the price of a life pro-rated according to IQ?

I made a last visit to see my brother right before the care facility where he lives went into lockdown mode. I seriously considered bringing him to live with me until the risk passed, but based on many factors, I decided he was better off at his home. He loves to visit me, but after a night at my house, he is always more than ready to go back to his home. Home is the key term here. He loves the home where he lives, and he needs the structure, routine, and familiarity it provides. The fact there is nursing care 247 is an essential issue also.

Despite knowing he is in the best place to ride out a pandemic, I have lost many hours of sleep worrying about him. People in care facilities and nursing homes are at high risk for the Covid-19. My brother is 57 and has been hospitalized twice for pneumonia, two factors that increase his risk. Ive worried about whether they would allow me into the hospital to be with him if he does become ill. He doesnt understand anything about the virus, and he has a limited ability to communicate. The thought of him being alone, sick, confused, and scared in an ICU unit has caused more than a few anxious, sleepless nights for me. Having the responsibility of making end of life decisions for him is a heavy responsibility. But never once in all these wild thoughts did it enter my mind my brother would not be given the same level of care as any other person.

Hitler euthanized at least 200,000 people with disabilities during WW2, an atrocity that shocked the world. The United States also has a shameful record of eugenics through forced sterilization. As recent as 1977, North Carolina had forcible sterilization for anyone with an IQ of 70 or below. I thought we had made progress in the way we viewed people with disabilities, but a pandemic tends to bring out peoples true colors, both good and bad. Unbelievably, it seems the inherent value of people with intellectual disabilities is once again a topic open for debate.

The Federal Americans with Disabilities Act prevents discrimination based on disabilities, but weve never tested it against a pandemic like Covid-19. Many advocacy groups are concerned the pandemic will push the medical system past its limits and the Americans With Disabilities Act will not be respected when it comes to rationing equipment. Already, more than 400 organizations have asked the U.S Department of Health and Human Services to specifically address how the federal anti-discriminatory laws will be enforced in case of rationing.

At this point, we are assured Oklahoma has plenty of hospital beds and ventilators to take care of everyone, but weve discovered uncertainties are the norm in these stressful times. What if medical personnel are forced to make choices? In Italy, doctors were in the horrifying position of choosing who would live and die based on the available supply of medical equipment. There were too many people dying and not enough equipment to save them all, so heartbreaking choices had to be made. Medical staff are stretched to their absolute physical and mental limits responding to the pandemic. Being asked to play God, choosing who will live and who will die, would be further traumatizing.

One of my favorite quotes is attributed to Mahatma Gandhi, The true measure of any society can be found in how it treats its most vulnerable members. Every night I pray my brother will survive this crisis, and I also pray for each and every vulnerable member of our society. People with disabilities are valuable members of our society deserving of our respect, our care, and a ventilator.

Im hoping my brother has many more happy birthdays ahead of him!

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What is My Brother's Life Worth? - tulsakids.com

New Zealand Claims to Have Eliminated COVID-19 – Futurism

On Monday, the Prime Minister of New Zealand declared that the country had successfully eliminated the coronavirus among its residents.

If the claim holds up, that would be a remarkable success story though, in reality, there are several technicalities about what it means to have eliminated the countrys outbreak.

Chief among them is that there are still new cases of COVID-19 being identified and reported in New Zealand, health officials said at a press conference attended by CNN. But because those new cases remain in the single digits, the countrys leaders are still calling it a job well done.

Ashley Bloomfield, New Zealands Director General of Health, said at the conference that the small number of new infections does give us confidence that weve achieved our goal of elimination, which that never meant zero but it does mean we know where our cases are coming from.

Our goal is elimination, Bloomfield added. And again, that doesnt mean eradication but it means we get down to a small number of cases so that we are able to stamp out any cases and any outbreak that might come out.

Of course, that could change, as experts suggest that countries that previously got a handle on their coronavirus outbreaks could expect a second wave in the future.

So as we have said elimination means we may well reach zero but we may well then have small numbers of cases coming up again, that doesnt mean we have failed, New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said at the conference. It just means that we are in the position to have that zero-tolerance approach to have a very aggressive management of those cases and keep those numbers low and fading out again.

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New Zealand Claims to Have Eliminated COVID-19 - Futurism

The Laws of Physics May Break Down at the Edge of the Universe – Futurism

Bending Rules

A controversial new study suggests that it may be possible to bend the laws of the universe but just a little bit.

Scientists at the University of New South Wales found what seem to be discrepancies in whats called the fine structure constant, a number thats thought to remain perfectly unchanging and describes how subatomic particles interact with each other. Its a bold claim, but if it holds up it would fundamentally alter our understanding of the universe.

The fine structure constant describes the force that influences subatomic particles with electrical charge, like how protons and electrons within an atom are drawn to one another. The study, published Friday in the journal Science Advances, found that the number seemed to change when they analyzed extremely distant quasars but only when they looked in certain directions, meaning that the laws of physics may break down at the edges of the universe.

And it seems to be supporting this idea that there could be a directionality in the universe, University of New South Wales physicist John Webb said in a press release, which is very weird indeed.

As it stands right now, our models for the universe assume that it expands outward in all directions like an ever-growing blob of galaxies and other starstuff. If this new study is correct, however, it instead presents a universe with a dipole structure, not unlike the North and South poles of a magnet.

Because its such a bold finding, even Webb himself isnt convinced by his own work but argues that its definitely worth exploring with more and better measurements.

READ MORE: New findings suggest laws of nature downright weird, not as constant as previously thought [University of New South Wales]

More on physics: New Theory Could Solve Universes Biggest Paradox

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The Laws of Physics May Break Down at the Edge of the Universe - Futurism

Free DNA Test Claims to Warn Whether COVID Is Likely to Kill You – Futurism

You know that file you got from Ancestry or 23andMe that contains a digital copy of your entire genetic code? Imagine that you upload it to a site, and five minutes later it spits out a report. Bad news it says your risk from the coronavirus is a glaring red HIGHER, meaning that according to a potpourri of genetic markers, youre more likely to have a severe, potentially deadly case of COVID-19.

Thats the idea behind a free genetic analysis offered by Sequencing.com, a genetic testing company thats offering personalized, DNA-based coronavirus warnings.

A person who looks to be low risk on a non-genetic level or seems like they could be pretty okay if they get COVID-19, we know that their genes are putting them on the path to a more severe disease, Sequencing CEO and clinical geneticist Brandon Colby told Futurism.

One of the major challenges of the coronavirus pandemic has been identifying whos at a greater risk for a disease that remains difficult to treat. At first, the outbreak seemed to be most dangerous for the elderly or people with underlying health conditions. But over time, more reports emerged of younger, healthier people coming down with severe and sometimes fatal cases.

Colbys goal is to personalize coronavirus testing by providing reports catered specifically to a individuals genetic code. With that, the screenings could bring to light warnings signs that might have previously flown under the radar for patients who otherwise seem healthy.

Colby told Futurism that he hopes the reports will convince people with high genetic risk factors to exercise greater caution. And if they do start to feel sick, he says, the report could spur them to seek treatment immediately.

That person may have genes that put them at high risk, and thats really the power of this report, Colby told Futurism. Without this report, that would have been a major question.

While clinical trials about how to best treat COVID-19 are only beginning to emerge, geneticists have already learned much about the structure, genetic code, and biological mechanisms of the virus that causes it, SARS-CoV-2. Colby and his team used that research to develop their predictive reports.

Because SARS-CoV-2 is so genetically similar to SARS-CoV-1, the coronavirus that causes SARS, the Sequencing team also pulled from the far more expansive body of research on that virus as well, since the same genes seem to be linked to a greater risk of infection and more severe symptoms of both diseases.

This research is still preliminary and this analysis is based on preliminary genetic associations, Colby said. If the pandemic was not such a crisis, then this would be something that we would want more research to come out upon. We would probably put this up there in a beta format, and that would be very clear.

But due to the crisis, the urgency, we are utilizing these preliminary studies and making sure that people understand that these are preliminary, he added. Were utilizing what information we currently have available to make it useful at a time when its needed.

Supplementing their research with existing studies on the SARS virus may make for a more robust tool, but genetic experts werent entirely convinced by the idea of an online genetic test for COVID risk.

I think the key here is that there are both genetic and environmental factors that contribute to an individuals personal susceptibility, Boston University geneticist Shoumita Dasgupta, whos unaffiliated with Sequencing, told Futurism. We know this from other pathogens as well. Neither one alone will be enough to be completely protective, but the combination of public health measures and biomedical research on genetic risk factors can together help us navigate our way out of this situation.

Genetics rarely gives you a 100 percent foolproof predictive ability, Dasgupta added.

Certainly, comparative genomics can give insight from how genes work in other systems, but since viruses evolve quickly, its possible that those components may work together slightly differently in the novel coronavirus, Dasgupta added.

Because genes cant possibly tell the whole story, Sequencings report also weighs non-genetic risk factors, like age, smoking habits, and existing medical conditions, which Dasgupta described as a good start. Colby told Futurism that even more environmental factors, like stress, will be included in a major update to the reports expected to go live on Friday.

Colby said that his team will add new findings as they encounter them, making the reports more accurate and robust. Anyone who got a genetic profile from Sequencing might get a notification in the future that their report has changed as new research comes in, especially after that new update.

Even with the knowledge that these reports are based on preliminary findings and could change just as the pandemic continues to change and surprise us, Colby hopes that the personalized reports and warnings will inspire people to better protect themselves.

If you dont know that youre at very high risk, you think, Hey Im 30 years old, I dont have any health problems, I dont smoke, Im gonna go shopping today. Im gonna go outside and potentially expose myself, that decision may be altered once you go and see these reports, Colby said.

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Free DNA Test Claims to Warn Whether COVID Is Likely to Kill You - Futurism

The White House Is Trying to Shut Down NASA’s Last Mars Rover – Futurism

Pack It Up

U.S. President Trumps proposed 2021 budget could spell doom for the countrys Mars exploration missions, including its last Mars rover.

Its an unusual move for a President who has repeatedly urged NASA to send a crewed mission to Mars and even offered the space agency unlimited funding to do so.

But the proposed budget cuts would debilitate several ongoing missions, Scientific American reports, and would even mean shutting down the iconic rover Curiosity, which has been exploring Mars since 2012.

Many scientists responded to the budget with dismay. NASA Planetary Science Division director Lori Glaze,however, took a pragmatic view.

Last year required many difficult decisions: invest in the future, continue what weve been doing or find some balance in between, Glaze told SciAm. All strong organizations do this. Mars exploration is no different.

But other experts are more cynical. George Washington University space historian and policy researcher John Logsdon told SciAm that the budget cuts were meant to punish NASA for going over budget on its Perseverence mission, which will attempt to land a new rover on Mars in 2021 and eventually return soil samples to Earth.

It would be really shortsighted if that penalty undercut the growing momentum toward finally moving forward on a Mars Sample Return effort, Logsdon told SciAm. There has to be a better way of enforcing cost control on NASAs science efforts without jeopardizing their reason for existence.

READ MORE: Mars Needs Money: White House Budget Could Prompt Retreat from Red Planet [Scientific American]

More on Trump and Mars: Trump Offered NASA an Unlimited Budget it it Sent Humans to Mars

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The White House Is Trying to Shut Down NASA's Last Mars Rover - Futurism

Astronomers Warn That Our Sun Is Having a "Midlife Crisis" – Futurism

Coping Mechanism

The Sun is behaving oddly compared to its cosmic peers, making astronomers think that it may be in the middle of some sort of transition period.

In a survey of the Sun and 369 other stars that share its properties, Max Planck Institute astronomers found that the Sun is far less active than the others, Inverse reports. And the leading explanation is that the Sun may be in the middle of a sort of midlife crisis.

Over the last four years, the brightness of the other stars fluctuated wildly, whereas the Sun stayed relatively constant, according to research published Friday in the journal Science. In fact, the difference between the Suns brightest and dimmest moments is a fifth the size of other stars.

We wanted to see if the Sun is somehow different, Max Planck Institute researcher Timo Reinhold told Inverse. People have claimed that its more quiet than other stars, while others have claimed that its similarly active so we wanted to really boil it down to this very solar-like sample that is very similar to the Sun.

Its possible that the Sun is merely at a different stage of some sort of cyclic pattern than the other stars. But because its also halfway through its expected nine billion-year lifespan, its possible that our Sun is in the middle of a particularly tranquil mid-way point of its life.

Another explanation is the Sun is in its midlife crisis, Reinhold told Inverse.

READ MORE: THE SUNS MIDLIFE CRISIS COULD BE MAKING IT STAND OUT IN THE UNIVERSE [Inverse]

More on the Sun: Scientists Mystified: Suns Magnetic Field Appears to be Flipping

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Astronomers Warn That Our Sun Is Having a "Midlife Crisis" - Futurism

This COVID-19 Vaccine Could Be Ready by September – Futurism

As various teams race to develop a vaccine for the coronavirus, one group at Oxford University says that if everything goes perfectly theirs could be available as soon as September.

The vaccine was demonstrated to be effective in macaques, primates often used in biomedical research because theyre similar to humans, but has yet to be tested in people, The New York Times reports. But with scheduled clinical trials involving 6,000 participants, it will soon become clear whether the vaccine is actually as promising as it currently seems.

The scientists at Oxfords Jenner Institute for vaccine research had a bit of a head start, the NYT reports. Theyre working on an accelerated timeline because they had previously shown that a vaccine similar to the one theyre now developing that inoculated against a different coronavirus was safe for use in humans.

Thats the first crucial benchmark for regulatory approval, but not by any means a guarantee that the new vaccine will work.

It is a very, very fast clinical program, Emilio Emini, a vaccine program director at the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, told the NYT.

Even on top of accelerated testing, the group would need to get an emergency approval from the U.K. government if it wants to hit that September target.

But if everything goes to exactly as planned, the NYT reports that the group would be able to send out millions of vaccines by then allowing the start of inoculation programs several months ahead of current timelines.

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This COVID-19 Vaccine Could Be Ready by September - Futurism

Do you know the volcanoes of the Caribbean? – Loop News Barbados

Volcanoes are the building blocks for many Caribbean islands.

There are 19 active volcanoes in the Caribbean, according to the University of the West Indies (UWI) Seismic Centre.

These towering natural wonders can be found on islands as far north as Hispanola to Grenada in the south.

Here is a list of the most popular volcanoes in the Caribbean:

Soufrire Hills Volcano, Monserrat

(Photo: iStock)

Soufrire Hills is one of the most active and studied volcanoes in the Caribbean. The volcano is 1050 metres (m) tall and is located on the islands south-western region. Volcanic activity at Soufrire Hills has been ongoing since 1995. An eruption on June 25, 1997, claimed 19 lives and resulted in two-thirds of the island being uninhabitable. Entry into the volcanos exclusion zone is heavily regulated. Soufrire Hills Volcano is the 19 tallest mountain in the Caribbean.

Mount Pele, Martinique

(Photo: iStock/stevegeer)

Mount Pele is 1,397 m tall and is located on the northern tip of Martinique, near the town of Saint-Pierre. It is the tenth tallest mountain peak in the Caribbean. In 1902, a cluster of eruptions claimed more than 28,000 lives.

La Grande Soufrire, Guadeloupe

La Grande Soufrire has been dormant since the 1970s when seismic activity forced authorities to completely evacuate the island. The volcano is 1,467 m tall and can be found on the southern region of Basse-Terre. La Grande Soufrire is the eighth tallest peak in the Caribbean.

La Soufrire, St Vincent and the Grenadines

La Soufrire is 1,234 m tall and is located on the northern section of the island of St Vincent. The volcano last erupted in April 1979 and no lives were lost during the event. La Soufrire is the 13 tallest peak in the Caribbean.

Mount Liamuiga, St Kitts

(Photo: iStock/mtcurado)

Mount Liamuiga has been dormant for over 1,000 years. The volcano is the 14 tallest mountain in the Caribbean measuring 1,156 m. Mount Liamuiga is a popular tourist site and can be hiked. From atop the volcano, hikers can see the islands of Nevis, Saba, Saint Barthlemy, St Eustatius, St. Martin and Antigua.

Nevis Peak, Nevis

This volcano does not have any recorded eruptions but researchers noted that it has the potential to erupt. There are hot springs and fumaroles around the volcano which is 985 m. Its the 16 tallest mountain in the Caribbean.

Mount Scenery, Saba

(Photo: Public Entity Saba)

Mount Scenery is the most prominent feature on the island of Saba. The volcano has not erupted since 1640. The volcano is Sabas main tourist attraction and was made into a national park. At 887 m tall, Mount Scenery is also the highest point of the Kingdom of the Netherlands.

The Quill, Sint Eustatius

(Photo: iStock/Stephan Kogelman)

The Quills summit is 601 m making it the second-tallest mountain in the Netherlands. It is part of the Sint Eustatius National Parks Foundation and is popular with hikers. The Quill has not erupted in over 1,000 years.

Morne Diablotins, Dominica

Morne Diablotins is located in the northern region of Dominica. Morne Diablotins is the ninth tallest mountain in the Caribbean at 1447 m. It has not erupted in over 1,000 years. The volcano is popular with hikers and bird watchers who seek to glimpse the endemic Imperial amazon (sisserou parrot).

Morne Trois Pitons, Dominica

Morne Trois Pitons are three volcanoes (Morne Watt, Morne aux Diables and Morne Plat Pays) located in the southern region of the country. Morne Watt is the only volcano in the group to have a recent eruption which occurred in 1997. The area is a popular eco-tourism spot with hikes and sightseeing trips available.

Mount Saint Catherine, Grenada

Mount Saint Catherine is a dormant volcano located in the northern region of Grenada. The summit of Mount Saint Catherine is 840 m tall. There have not been any recorded eruptions of Mount Saint Catherine. The volcano is also a popular hiking spot.

Kick 'em Jenny

Kick 'em Jenny is a highly active submarine volcano north of Grenada. The last seismic activity recorded at the site was in July 2015. Ships are banned from sailing close to Kick 'em Jenny due to a sinking hazard caused by the gases it releases.

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Do you know the volcanoes of the Caribbean? - Loop News Barbados

Hurricanes Are Reshaping Evolution Across the Caribbean – The New York Times

Two years ago, Colin Donihue, a biologist, released a sober scientific paper along with a series of endlessly GIF-able videos. They showed Caribbean anole lizards flailing in the wind from a leaf blower, holding on to a stick for dear life, not unlike the kitten in the classic Hang In There, Baby poster.

No anoles were harmed. But by proving how a lizard would try to grit its way through hurricane-force winds with sheer grip strength, those whimsical experiments led Dr. Donihue, now at Washington University in St. Louis, and a team of other researchers to a profound suggestion: Extreme weather events may bend the evolutionary course of hundreds of species. A paper published Monday in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences offers deeper evidence of their earlier finding.

Across Central and South America and the Caribbean islands, scientists found that lizards with larger toe pads seem to be more common in areas that have been hit by storm after storm in the last 70 years. That suggests that severe but fleeting cataclysms dont just leave lasting scars on people and places. They also reshape entire species.

We racked our brains for alternate explanations for this pattern, said Dr. Donihue. Could it be temperature? Precipitation? Taller or shorter trees in different locations? Nothing we tried explains that variation as strongly as hurricane history.

Not long after Dr. Donihue had been lassoing Anolis scriptus lizards with a loop of string at the end of a fishing rod on a pair of small islands in Turks and Caicos for what was supposed to be just a local conservation project, the same islands were blasted by a one-two punch of extreme weather.

First came Hurricane Irma, a screaming maelstrom of 160-mile-per-hour winds. Two weeks later came Hurricane Maria. When Dr. Donihue returned, trees were down and lizards were scarce. On average, he found the surviving anoles seemed to have much bigger, grippier toe pads than the population had averaged before, as if those with less sticky feet had been carried away by the storms.

That initial finding came out with the leaf blower videos. But the team kept digging. Eighteen months after the storm, Dr. Donihue went back to Turks and Caicos a third time to find a new generation of lizards scampering across new plant growth. Those carefree children of the survivors had kept their parents generations bigger toe pads.

Dr. Donihue and his colleagues then zoomed out, using high-resolution photos from natural history collections to perform the digital equivalent of a sneaker-fitting for 188 different anole species.

Then they compared those measurements to seven decades of historical hurricane data. The same pattern holds: On average, lizards on Caribbean islands slammed by two, three or even four recent direct hits have bigger toe pads than those dwelling on the mainland and other locations that have dodged storms.

Before this, the strongest evidence for how evolution can be shaped by the gauntlet of extreme climate events came from watching Darwins finches bounce back after droughts. But that work focused on a single island in the Galpagos.

Studies like this are still rare, wrote Peter and Rosemary Grant, the pioneering husband-and-wife research team from Princeton behind that Galpagos research in an email, praising it as well done.

Craig Benkman, an ecologist at the University of Wyoming who was involved in peer review of the paper for the journal, said he was confident in the conclusions. And given that climate change is fueling ever stronger storms, he said, more evidence might not be too hard to find. We need more such studies, he said. And unfortunately, we are likely to be overwhelmed with opportunities in the coming decades.

Now that his team has unveiled the fuller pattern in anoles, Dr. Donihue said hes hoping other biologists will chase down leads in organisms they study.

It could also be in plants, trees, snails, who knows? he said. I think well see more and more that there are other species whose evolutionary histories, and evolutionary futures, are impacted by survival of hurricanes.

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Hurricanes Are Reshaping Evolution Across the Caribbean - The New York Times

From The Bahamas to St Thomas, the Caribbean’s Most Famous Cocktails – Caribbean Journal

Some of the most famous cocktails in the world originated in the Caribbean, and while they come in a variety of tastes and traditions, they all share one common ingredient: rum. Here are some of our favorite Caribbean cocktails and how you can make them at home.

Pia Colada, Caribe Hilton

The Pia Colada is a midcentury classic that matches perfectly with its birthplace,San Juans Caribe Hilton hotel. Bartender Ramn Monchito Marrero invented the popular tropical drink in 1954, originallya non-alcoholic refresher blended in a shaker glass (it was years later thatMarrero began adding rum to the mix (the frozen variety arrived even later).The government of Puerto Rico declared the Pina Colada the commonwealthsofficial drink in 1978.

CaribeHilton Pia Colada:

Directions: Mix rum, cream of coconut, heavy cream and pineapple juice in a blender. Add ice and mix for 15 seconds. Serve in a 12 oz glass and garnish with fresh pineapple and a cherry.

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From The Bahamas to St Thomas, the Caribbean's Most Famous Cocktails - Caribbean Journal

The Perfect Sun Shirts for the Caribbean – Caribbean Journal

As any frequent Caribbean traveler knows, a high-functioningsun shirt is a necessity.

In fact, the Caribbean Journal team travels with several sun shirts on every trip.

A good sun shirt is lightweight, fast-drying and easy to wash out in a sink and hang up to dry quickly.

Most importantly, though, it protects from the the sun.

Understandably, we are constantly looking for the best in sun-protection clothing and were delighted to discover Vapor Apparel and its Altered Latitudes brand of clothing, the makers of a full range of purpose built clothing ranging from sun shirts to board shorts, face and neck gaiters, leggings and hoodies.

But what really caught our eye was the companys diverse collection of Caribbean-inspired clothing, with a multitude of destinations for travelers to represent, from St Croix to Harbour Island and everywhere in between.

To learn more, we caught up with Vapor Apparels Ashley Prin.

Tell us about Vapor Apparel andAlteredLatitudes. What makes your company and clothing different?

Our clothing is extremely comfortable. It delivers superior UPF 50+ sun protection and amazing graphics that really pop. We are a small, self-funded, 16-year-old company focused on making a quality product at a very fair price. Originally we have sold to the trade but are now bringing our brand straight to you.

Tell us about UPF 50+ what does that mean and why is it important?

UPF stands for Ultraviolet Protection Factor and it is measuring the shirts ability to protect your skin. 50+ is the gold standard. Our gear not only meets UPF50+ standards it is also recognized by the Skin Cancer Foundation. Our UPF rating actually increases with every wash, offering you a shirt you can trust.

Some of yourshirts are made with recycledproducts. Whats that all about?

We make garments out of recycled water bottles. 16 water bottles are removed from the waterways or landfills with every one of our Repreve sustainable long-sleeve shirts. We are working on adding more and more recycled options in 2020. Everyone can be doing a little bit more to be kind to mother nature and we want that option for our customers. Youuse a zinc-based technologythat defends against bacteria. How does that work?

Zinc is an odorless element that is often added to apparel and textiles in production. Zinc eliminates odor by killing the bacteria that cause it. The technology we use meets all international textile standards and has a lower Co2 impact than others on the market. It is great technology. We are killing odors not the ozone layer.

For more, visit Altered Latitudes.

CJ

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The Perfect Sun Shirts for the Caribbean - Caribbean Journal

Caribbean Hotels Advised to Replace Buffet Dinners and Minibars – Travel Agent

Caribbean hotels may have to scrap conveniences, such as buffets and drinks stations, and reduce the sitting capacity of la carte restaurants in order to attract post-COVID-19 guests, suggest two hospitality experts. Instead, they will have to find creative ways to attend to customers, like serving dinner in secluded areas on the beach, say Emile Gourieux and Rico Louw, senior managers at STR, a Tennessee-based firm that tracks supply and demand data for multiple market sectors, including the global hotel industry.

We may never return to travel as normal, as we understood it before. Things like buffet breakfast may never be seen again. So, there's a lot of things that we need to rethink, says Gourieux, STRs hotel sector business development executive in Canada, Mexico and the Caribbean. At least at the very beginning of recovery when people are coming back, people are going to be very leery about close contact. So, the hotels that succeed and thrive are going to be the ones that find a way to address that anxiety.

Louw, the senior account manager and client liaison at STR, adds that buffets and minibars may be totally out of the question moving forward.

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Both emphasize the enormity of the challenge ahead for the regions hospitality sector, which recorded occupancy of under 6 percent during the week of April 12 and a fall in revenue of over 80 percent. They say its difficult to predict when arrivals will return to pre-pandemic levels, noting that based on several factors, including airlift, it could be up to three years before parity is achieved.

Gourieux and Louw are guests on the latest episode of a podcast series produced by the Caribbean Tourism Organization (CTO), entitled,COVID-19: The Unwanted Visitor, where they addressed what the Caribbean hospitality sector could look like in the aftermath of the coronavirus crisis, which has brought tourism to a virtual standstill. The podcast is available on several platforms, including Anchor and Spotify, as well on the CTOs Facebook page.

To listen, visithttps://anchor.fm/onecaribbean.

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Caribbean Hotels Advised to Replace Buffet Dinners and Minibars - Travel Agent