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Monthly Archives: May 2017
TMS market to reach $30 billion by 2025, report says – DC Velocity
Posted: May 23, 2017 at 11:00 pm
Home > Technology > TMS market to reach $30 billion by 2025, report says
Technology May 22, 2017
Growth driven by the rise of mobile computing platforms, intermodal transportation, and cloud-based solutions.
By DC Velocity Staff
The global market for transportation management system (TMS) software is on track to reach $30.04 billion by the end of 2025, driven by the rise of mobile computing platforms, intermodal transportation, and cloud-based solutions, a report released Monday shows.
Worldwide revenue in the TMS sector is poised to surge from $9.6 billion in 2016 to a forecast $30.04 billion by the end of 2025, marking a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 13.6 percent, according to the research firm Transparency Market Research (TMR).
Three trends currently driving that growth are:
However, future growth will be generated by three different factors, TMR found. First, many existing TMS users are looking to upgrade their systems to accommodate mobile computing platforms, since a majority of TMS solutions now running were deployed prior to the proliferation of smartphones and tablets. Other factors driving TMS market expansion are the rise in intermodal transportation and the growing popularity of software-as-a-service (SaaS)-based solutions, the report found.
Despite those beneficial market forces, TMS vendors face several hurdles to continued expansion, including high deployment costs and a lack of awareness by end users about the benefits of upgrading their software capabilities, TMR said.
The global TMS market is dominated by large providers such as SAP SE, Oracle Corp., Descartes Systems Group Inc., JDA Software Group Inc., and Manhattan Associates Inc., TMR said. But the report also identified fast growth of emerging firms, including BluJay Solutions, 3GTMS Inc., One Network Enterprise, Precision Software Inc., and CargoSmart Ltd.
The top end-use application for TMS software was for the dedicated transportation and logistics segment, which generated 67.5 percent of revenue in 2016 and finished above vertical applications in electrical and electronics, industrial, food and beverage, and retail sectors, according to the report, titled "Transportation Management System Market (ApplicationElectrical and Electronics, Industrial, Food and Beverage, Retail, and Transportation and Logistics; Software DeploymentOn-Premise and On-Demand)Global Industry Analysis, Size, Share, Growth, Trends and Forecast 20172025."
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Bob’s guide to TMS: About to invest in a new system? Read this first – Bobsguide (press release)
Posted: at 11:00 pm
Last month, we launched a survey among bobsguide readers who are in the process of procuring a TMS, or have worked with vendors to implement one. Nearly 200 of you responded thank you again for your time giving us illuminating insight into your experiences with treasury management systems and the evolving challenges you face as a treasurer.
Over the next five weeks well be sharing the findings from the survey, and exploring the issues it has uncovered to create a series of articles aimed at helping you with the TMS procurement process, including how to select the right system for your organisation and what you should consider before making your decision.
The series will form the foundation for a comprehensive guide to procuring a new TMS which will be available next month register your interest in receiving the full report at news@bobsguide.com. To whet your appetite, here are three of the surveys most significant findings.
Respondents to the survey included corporate and banking treasurers, though we also received responses from many consultants, analysts, and vendors. The findings that follow reflect the attitudes of the entire sample. On occasion in this article, we have referred to respondents as a whole as treasurers for simplicity.
Being a treasurer today
The majority of respondents to the survey have a TMS. Of the remaining 40% who have not invested, slightly more than half (21%) plan to in the next 12 months, but 19% have no plans at all.
Larger companies are more likely to use a TMS: while less than half (45%) of smaller companies (those with an annual revenue of up to $500m) have a TMS, 79% of larger organisations (taking more than $5bn a year) do. Smaller companies are also, unsurprisingly, far more likely to say that they have no plans to implement a TMS than their larger counterparts; 28% and 4% respectively.
As regulatory pressures and shifting economic conditions promise greater volatility in the near future, and TMS providers develop offering that are perhaps more suited to the pared down needs of smaller organisations, well be interested to see which way the needle moves in coming years.
Overall, satisfaction with treasury management systems is high. 82% of respondents to the survey said that they are at least somewhat satisfied with their TMS, while the remaining 18% say they are either not very satisfied, or not at all satisfied with theirs.
Meanwhile, unsuitable functionality, difficulty of operation and need of an upgrade are some of the most common reasons for dissatisfaction with a TMS. Treasurers also cited systems not being fully utilised, limited capabilities, and difficulty learning to use as reasons for their dissatisfaction.
Treasurers concerns
When it comes to buying a new TMS, treasurers worry most about the potential difficulty of integrating their new solution with existing systems. Of the four options we presented, this was selected most frequently by nearly two-thirds (62%) of respondents. However, treasurers are almost equally worried about the cost of adopting a new system 58% of respondents selected this as one of their premier concern.
In fact, cost was by far the most cited reason among those who have not invested in a TMS for not doing so. 67% of non-TMS owners said that investing in a system would be too expensive, while the next most common reason for not investing, 30 points behind, was finding spreadsheets are sufficient for the needs of the organisation, selected by 37% of respondents.
Other concerns the survey identified included perceived complexity of the treasury management system. One respondent said that their greatest concern was being able to use all of the systems capabilities if your organisation is investing a lot of time and money into a solution, its important that you can take advantage of everything it offers.
Treasurers are also concerned about possible disruption to their everyday business processes during the process of implementation, how long the implementation might take, and not having the adequate and appropriate resources to do so.
We asked respondents to select up to three of their greatest concerns, and found that not far behind lack of cash visibility (cited by 51% of respondents), and FX risk/exposure (41%) was regulatory compliance, cited by 39% of respondents.
With PSD2 and GDPR on the horizon, ensuring compliance with these regulations and avoiding fines will be high on treasurers agendas over the coming months. In the next article of this series, well explore what organisations need to comply with different regulations, and how a treasury management system might help weather the changes.
What do you think of the survey findings so far? Does anything resonate with your experiences? Did you find anything to be unexpected? We invite you to share your comments with us at news@bobsguide.com
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Bob's guide to TMS: About to invest in a new system? Read this first - Bobsguide (press release)
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$20000 ONtrepreneurs Pitch Challenge Winner Announced – Canada NewsWire (press release)
Posted: at 10:59 pm
TORONTO, May 17, 2017 /CNW/ -Yesterday Mark Elias (Steadiwear Inc.) was awarded the winner of the Ontario Brain Institute's (OBI) ONtrepreneurs Pitch Challenge held at the Discovery 2017 conference, hosted by the Ontario Centres of Excellence.
Mark Elias was joined on Discovery's main stage at the Metro Toronto Convention Centre by The Honourable Reza Moridi, Minister of Research, Innovation and Science and Tom Mikkelsen, President and Scientific Director of OBI, who together presented the award, which includes $20,000 to be used towards business and product development.
"This challenge is a great example of how entrepreneurship can manifest in any sector, including neuroscience. Our government is proud to support the important work of the OBI, and congratulates each competitor as they strive to make Ontario a world leader in brain research and commercialization." Reza Moridi, Minister of Research, Innovation and Science.
The five finalists, named below, had three minutes to use their pitching skills to showcase their innovative technologies and impress the panel of judges. The judges included Genevive Lavertu, Senior Director of Medtronic Care Management Services Canada; Jung-Kay Chiu, Partner, Patent Agent, Lawyer, Trade-mark Agent of Norton Rose Fulbright; Alison Fenney, Executive Director of the Neurotechnology Industry Organization; and Jonathan Rezek, Business Development Executive for Innovation of IBM Canada.
The finalists are participants from the OBI ONtrepreneurs (Ontario Neurotech Entrepreneurs) Program, a program that supports Ontario's next generation of entrepreneurs in accessing funding to help launch or grow their neurotechnology start-up company. The 12-month program awards $50,000 cash and includes mentorship, training, and a number of value-added opportunities to fuel the entrepreneurial spirit in commercializing neurotechnologies.
The finalists also participated in Discovery's first NeuroTech Ontario Zone, which showcased over 12 companies with leading-edge neurotechnologies ranging from medical devices to help prevent concussions, to sophisticated software that can predict, with high accuracy, cognitive impairment through speech.
"Ontario has a fast growing neurotechnology cluster that is contributing to our economy and the well-being of our citizens. The participants inthis pitch challenge are evidence of the talent and innovation being fostered throughout the province. We are proud to work with OCE, the Ministry of Research, Innovation, and Science and other partners to support the development of entrepreneurs and their neurotechnologies toward collective impact." Dr. Tom Mikkelsen, President and Scientific Director, Ontario Brain Institute.
"This year the ONtrepreneurs Pitch Competition brought some incredible innovations in the neurotechnology sector to the OCE Discovery conference. All of the companies that participated in the NeuroTech Ontario Zone should be proud of their accomplishments as they look to improve the lives of many using emerging and existing technical and computational tools." - Dr. Tom Corr, President and CEO, OCE.
Named Canada's Best Trade Show in 2010, 2011, and 2016, and celebrating 12 years of bold, new ideas, OCE's Discovery is Canada's premier innovation showcase. It brings together the best and brightest minds in industry, academia, investment and government to showcase leading-edge technologies, best practices and research in the areas of energy, fintech, cleantech, the environment, advanced health, digital media, information and communication technologies and advanced manufacturing. The annual conference and showcase attracts more than 3,500 attendees and 500 exhibitors.
For more on Discovery, visit http://www.ocediscovery.com.
ONtrepreneurs Pitch Challenge 2017 Finalists (listed alphabetically by company name):
About the Ontario Brain Institute:
The Ontario Brain Institute is a provincially-funded, not-for-profit research centre seeking to maximize the impact of neuroscience and establish Ontario as a world leader in brain research, commercialization and care. We create convergent partnerships between researchers, clinicians, industry, patients, and their advocates to foster discovery and deliver innovative products and services that improve the lives of those living with brain disorders.
For more info on the ONtrepreneurs Program, visit http://www.braininstitute.ca/ontrepreneurs-ontario-neurotech-entrepreneurs-program
About Ontario Centres of Excellence (OCE) Inc.
OCE drives the commercialization of cutting-edge research across key market sectors to build the economy of tomorrow and secure Ontario's global competitiveness. In doing this, OCE fosters the training and development of the next generation of innovators and entrepreneurs and is a key partner with Ontario's industry, universities, colleges, research hospitals, investors and governments. A champion of leading-edge technologies, best practices and research, OCE invests in sectors such as advanced health, digital media and information communications, advanced manufacturing and materials, and cleantech including energy, environment and water. OCE is a key partner in delivering Ontario's Innovation Agenda as a member of the province's Ontario Network of Entrepreneurs (ONE). Funded by the Government of Ontario, the ONE is made up of regional and sector-focused organizations and helps Ontario-based entrepreneurs rapidly grow their company and create jobs.
SOURCE Ontario Brain Institute
For further information: Media Contact: Jordan Antflick, Manager, Knowledge Translation, t: 647.872.1210, jantflick@braininstitute.ca; Andrew Robertson, Manager, Media Relations, t: 416.861.1092 x 1092, andrew.robertson@oce-ontario.org
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$20000 ONtrepreneurs Pitch Challenge Winner Announced - Canada NewsWire (press release)
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CF Choral Program Academic Achievement Award winners – Camden News
Posted: at 10:58 pm
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C.F. Choral Program Academic Achievement Award winners Thirty-seven members of the Camden Fairview High School Choral Program were presented Academic Achievement Awards for having 3.0 GPAs or above by the Arkansas Choral Directors Association following their spring concert earlier this month. Receiving recognition were, front row, from left, Maggie Smith, Bailey Passmore, Melanie King, Elijah McCarver, Mallory Jeffus, Summer Shipp, Ariel Williams, and Gabrielle Williams. Second row, Trinity Thompson, Alexia Easter, Hope Hesterly, Kyla Frazier, Ayana Bigby, Mya Arnold, Sierra Leconte, Jasmine Davis, Beyonce Rogers, Peyton Ruch and AnnaLisa VanAssche. Back row, Alexis Carrol, Madison Jeffus, Emily D'mitruchina, Atlanta Brown, Tianna Johnson, Callie Blair, Darnisha Tooks, Jaqualen Williams, Maurice Jackson, Dustin Mills, Treyveon Pace, Knorjia Tooks, DJ Sherman. Not pictured are Kaylin Browning, AJ Rogers and Kealeigh Shelton. Cynthia Outlaw is the director of choral department.
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Detroit Tigers ex-CF Anthony Gose hits 99 m.p.h. in pro pitching … – Detroit Free Press
Posted: at 10:58 pm
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Gose threw an inning for the Flying Tigers against Class A Palm Beach, allowing one run on one hit with one strikeout and one walk.
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Free Press sports writer Anthony Fenech, reporting from his hotel in Houston, examines the Tigers as they prepare for their 11-game, 10-day road trip.
Detroit Tigers outfielder Anthony Gose takes part in drills during spring training Monday, Feb. 20, 2017, in Lakeland, Fla.(Photo: Kirthmon F. Dozier, Detroit Free Press)
HOUSTON Anthony Gose was assigned to Class A Lakeland on Monday.
He was listed as a left-handed pitcher, not a centerfielder, and made his professional baseball debut as a pitcher later in the night.
Gose threw an inning for the Flying Tigers against Class A Palm Beach, allowing one run on one hit with one strikeout and one walk.
After pitching for the first two months of the season in extended spring training, Gose finally got his first taste of game action. According to a tweet from Lakeland assistant general manager Dan Lauer, Gose hit 99 m.p.h.
The Tigers are very optimistic with Goses progress throughout extended spring training, according to vice president of player development Dave Littlefield.
Gose is not playing centerfield any longer, Littlefield said.
Gose, 26, is a lifetime .240 hitter in parts of five big-league seasons. He was acquired in a trade with the Blue Jays for second baseman Devon Travis prior to the 2015 season.
Contact Anthony Fenech: afenech@freepress.com. Follow him on Twitter @anthonyfenech.
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Why Investors remained confident on Washington Prime Group Inc. (WPG), CF Industries Holdings, Inc. (CF)? – StockNewsJournal
Posted: at 10:58 pm
Markets Daily | Why Investors remained confident on Washington Prime Group Inc. (WPG), CF Industries Holdings, Inc. (CF)? StockNewsJournal CF Industries Holdings, Inc. (NYSE:CF), maintained return on investment for the last twelve months at -1.91, higher than what Reuters data shows regarding industry's average. The average of this ratio is 9.43 for the industry and sector's best figure ... Why Should Investors Reconsider Washington Prime Group Inc. (WPG) And CF Industries Holdings, Inc. (CF)? |
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Blow by blow: CF Mounana vs SuperSport United | The Citizen – Citizen
Posted: at 10:58 pm
referee blows his whistle for full-time. Full-time score: CF Mounana 3-5 SuperSport United
90+3 GOAAAL! Brockie grabs his brace and makes it 5-3 for SuperSport!
90+2 GOAAAL! Autchanga grabs another one for Mounana with a cool finish!
3 minutes of added time to be played
89 corner kick for SuperSport
85 corner kick for Mounana
83 free kick for SuperSport and a yellow card for Kemba
82 corner kick for Mounana
80 GOAAAL! Sinayoko makes pulls another one back for Mounana from the penalty spot!
79 PENALTY for Mounana after Ritchie is adjudged to have handled the ball inside the penalty area
76 corner kick for Mounana
75 Lakay beats his marker, but his shot goes wide of goals
68 Substitution for Mounana: Nic Sanda Zamble Yavo comes on for Makuntima
66 corner kick for Mounana and it leads to another one
64 GOAAAL! Brockie makes it 4-1 for SuperSport with a tap in from Lakay cross!
59 Substitution for SuperSport: Phala makes way for Mandla Masango
58 Guedegbes header goes over the crossbar
55 Pieterse pulls off another good save to deny Ondo
51 offside call goes against Mounana
49 Autchangas shot is saved by Pieterse from the penalty spot
48 PENALTY for Mounana after Daniels was judged to have handled the ball inside the penalty area
Mounana get the second half underway
Double substitution for SuperSport: Morgan Gould and Jeremy Gould come on for Mashamaite and Grobler respectively
Substitution for Mounana: Mazowa makes way for Corbin Guedegbe
referee blows his whistle for the half-time break. Half-time score: CF Mounana 1-3 SuperSport United
1 minute of added time to be played
44 corner kick for Mounana
41 GOAAAL! Mnyamane grabs his brace with a powerful shot!
40 free kick for SuperSport in a good area
39 offside call goes against Mounana
34 GOAAAL! Mnyamane retains SuperSports lead with a brilliant solo run!
30 Lakays shot is saved by Bitseki Moto
26 GOAAAL! Atchabao grabs the equaliser for Mounana with a tap in!
24 free kick for Mounana and a yellow card for Kekana
23 Ondo Biyoghe unleashes a powerful shot, but it goes wide of goals
20 corner kick for Mounana
19 Autchangas shot is saved by Pieterse
15 offside call goes against Mounana
11 corner kick for Mounana
9 Kekana shoots wide of goals from long range
5 GOAAAL! Poor defending by Mounana and Kekana punishes them!
4 another corner kick for SuperSport
3 corner kick for SuperSport
SuperSport get the game underway
kickoff
Starting XI:
CF Mounana XI: Moto, Makuntima, Coulibaly, Kemba, Biyoghe, Mazowa, Bamba, Biyeme, Atchabao, Autchanga, Mboudou SuperSport United XI: Pieterse, Kekana, Daniels, Mashamaite, Ritchie, Morton, Modiba, Phala, Mnyamane, Grobler, Lakay
Hello and welcome to Phakaaathis live reporting of the Caf Confederation Cup group match between CF Mounana and SuperSport United at Stade DAngondje in Libreville.
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CF Industries Holdings, Inc. (CF) Can’t Hide When Its Chart Setup Can’t Lie – NY Stock News
Posted: at 10:58 pm
Markets Daily | CF Industries Holdings, Inc. (CF) Can't Hide When Its Chart Setup Can't Lie NY Stock News CF Industries Holdings, Inc. (CF) is looking very interesting as a trading opportunity right now. The technical setup offers the best window into what traders can expect whether they are bullish on the play or bearish. We're therefore exploring these ... Cognizant Technology Solutions Corporation - CTSH - Stock Price Today - Zacks |
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How People Decide Whether to Have Children – The Atlantic
Posted: at 10:57 pm
Isabel Caliva and her husband, Frank, had already kicked the can down the road. The can, in their case, was the kid conversation; the road was Calivas fertile years. Frank had always said he wanted lots of kids. Caliva, who was in her early 30s, thought maybe one or two would be nice, but she was mostly undecided. They had a nice life, with plenty of free time that allowed for trips to Portugal, Paris, and Hawaii.
I wasnt feeling the pull the same way my friends were describing, she told me recently. I thought, maybe this isnt gonna be the thing for me. Maybe its just going to be the two of us.
At times, she wondered if her lack of baby fever should be cause for concern. She took her worries to the Internet, where she came across a post on the Rumpus Dear Sugar advice column titled, The Ghost Ship that Didnt Carry Us. The letter was from a 41-year-old man who was also on the fence about kids: Things like quiet, free time, spontaneous travel, pockets of non-obligation, he wrote. I really value them.
Cheryl Strayed, the author of the column, wrote back that each person has a life and a sister life theyll never knowthe ghost ship of the title. The clear desire for a baby isnt an accurate gauge for you, she wrote. Instead, she recommended thinking deeply about your choices and actions from the stance of your future self. In other words, think about what youll regret later.
The Rumpus post helped me understand that no matter what I chose, there was going to be a loss, Caliva said. Her ghost ship would either be a carefree life or the experience of parenthood. That was freeing. It changed my perspective from having to make the right choice to just deciding.
Caliva liked the column so much she sent it to several of her friends.
* * *
The question of whether to have kids has puzzled me my entire adult life, in part because my reflexive reaction to the thought is not again.
There is a large age gap between me and my younger brother, and I was put in charge of minding him during many school breaks and holidays.
My brother was an easy-going preschooler. He pronounced Ls as Ws and wore a blanket like a Batman capethe full adorable kid experience. Still, I was struck by how difficult it was to keep him entertained. I dont possess the goofy sense of humor that charms the under-five crowd. I didnt understand how to infuse excitement into otherwise boring activities like coloring or baking. We ended up watching a lot of TV, separately. I was so miserable that, one summer, I jumped at the chance to take a job filing papers in an office.
The experience of my teens left me feeling like parenting is, at worst, pure drudgery, and at best, feigning enthusiasm for someone who lacks a theory of mind. The problem is, I cant tell if this is because 14-year-olds aren't meant to be full-time nannies or because I'm just not a kid person. And having one seems like a high-stakes way to find out.
Last fall, I posed the questionWhy did you choose to have children?on our reader blog, and the responses rolled in. In all my colleague Rosa Inocencio Smith and I collected and analyzed the emails from 42 readers, who were about evenly split between deciding to have kids and not to. (Caliva was one of them; she gave us permission to use her name and story.) To spoil the big takeaway, there doesnt appear to be one maternal instinct, and not just because half of all pregnancies are unplanned. For some, parenthood is a hard-boiled belief; for others, its a switch that flips after a crisis. Other times, its just a feeling you get.
People whove never had children seem really uptight about things that people with kids just roll with. Like, a little mess, or a muddy dog, or crumbs on the furniture, wrote one mom named Mary. A little softness in one's dealings is a pleasant aspiration. Kids do that to you.
I was relieved to find that several people in the no camp described feeling perplexed by their peers drive to have babies: It's like listening to people describe a color that I just can't see, wrote Shanna.
The voluntarily childless do seem over-represented in our sample. Most American womenabout 67 percent, according to a 2009 study by Ohio State University sociologist Sarah Hayforddecide as teenagers to have two children, and they roughly stick with that plan. Another, smaller group starts out wanting three or more kids and ends up having more than the average two; yet another segment starts out wanting two, but they wind up with fewer. Those like me are statistical freaks, making up just 4 percent of the population: We start out wanting kids we guess? Maybe one? Our expectations decline with age, and, Hayford writes, by their early 30s, these women expect to have no children. (Her study was of women who were 18 in the 1980s; its not clear if the views of todays women would evolve differently.)
Childlessness rose steeply from the 1970s to about 2005it has since declined againand Hayford found that a decline in marriage rates contributed most to that rise. Getting married can change peoples minds about having kids, she says. To some, marriage means having children, so Im entering this married world and taking on other things that go along with it, Hayford said. (As one reader put it to us: Ive always said that I never knew I wanted children, until I knew that I wanted children with him.)
Today, about 15 percent of women never have kids, but most of us start out agnostic. There are not that many people who, early on, say, I definitely dont want kids, said Amy Blackstone, a sociologist at the University of Maine. Even the childless are more likely to start out unsure or assuming they will have kids. Its only over time that they decide against it.
What is it that turns them against child-rearing? Freedom, according to the research. The childfree mostly cite either the freedom from child-care responsibilities, as one meta-analysis from 1987 found, or the freedom to travel, according to a 1995 book. A 2014 study that relied on 20 in-depth interviews with childfree women found that they overwhelmingly focused on the benefits of their freedom and autonomy:
Women desired a get up and go lifestyle so they could travel, hang with family and friends, and learn new things. They cited obtaining a higher education, focusing on careers, and retaining other adult freedoms. When women compared the benefits of a childfree life to socially prescribed benefits, they chose not to mother.
Freedom is a factor for both men and women, but the research suggests women are more concerned than men are that childbearing will hamper their careers. In a 2005 study, women were more likely to see parenting as conflicting with work, while men were more likely to say they didnt want to make personal sacrifices. Childfree women are more likely to enter male-dominated professions and to focus on achievement, according to one study, and they they are more likely to earn more.
Women who dont have kids, write Italian researchers Christian Agrillo and Cristian Nelini, tend to understand motherhood as all-encompassing and overwhelming responsibilityone that might interfere with their next promotion. Childless men and women might all be seeking freedom, but as Agrillo and Nelini quipped in their 2008 review paper, the choice to be childfree gave women freedom to work and men freedom from work.
Childless women end up just as satisfied with their lives in the end. (Its teen moms who seem to struggle most.) However, one studyalbeit an older onefound that those wanting to be childless ... rated life as less optimistic and less loving, and also as currently somewhat less satisfying. Just as I suspected, having a cheery disposition helps when youre spending lots of time with people who wish barn animals could be their best friends.
Though the literature doesnt address the issue as much, many of our readers feared not being mentally or emotionally equipped for parenthood. Some felt their anxieties or depressive episodes were incompatible with childlike bliss; others didnt want to pass on their serious mental-health issues, such as bipolar disorder. A kid isnt like a potted plant that you can give to somebody else because it appears that youre just going to kill it, one woman wrote. (Another wrote that, precisely because she fears passing on her medical conditions, shes considering adoption.)
Why Women Choose Not to Have Children
A bad childhood can make a person less eager to relive it, even vicariously. A 1999 academic book about childfree men found those who had distant or abusive fathers were less interested in becoming fathers themselves. It can be hard to create a childlike utopia for someone else without a vision in your mind to work from: I was not very happy as a child, and thinking back on childhood rarely brings me joy, a woman named Farah wrote to us.
The reverse is also true, though: What sweeter payback is there than being a better parent than your own? You ever wish things wouldve gone in a certain way in your past life to make you better in the now? wrote Brandon, a father of two. This is your chance to put in all the good you have and try to take away the bad.
Society still judges people, especially women, who choose to remain childless. Even recent studies show that childfree people are viewed more negatively than those who have childrenor are at least planning to have them.
But Blackstone, the Maine sociologist, said parents and the childfree are driven by similar desires. For instance, they both seek stronger relationships: For people with kids, its the parent-child bond, but for people without, one of the very common reasons they cite is they value their relationship with their partner, and having a child will shift that relationship.
Indeed, it was the desire to preserve a happy relationship that nudged some of our readers to decide against children. My husband and I are happily married almost 10 years now, one woman wrote. I know for a fact that the happiness and huge love are due to the fact that we have the time, energy and desire to put each other first. To throw that away for a kid would be nuts.
Others, though, saw parenthood as a way to honor either past or future relationships. We had a good life, wrote one mother of an adopted daughter. Then my husband's brother died. We started to question what life was truly about, and realized that for us it could include raising a child. One woman, who admitted to not being much of a little kid person, looked forward to befriending her children as adults. Another dreaded the deaths of her parents and, subsequently, the prospect of life without unconditional love.
* * *
According to Blackstone, the childfree and the childless both emphasized creating meaning.
For Isabel Caliva, the woman who unearthed the Rumpus column, that desire for meaning came in an unexpected way.
She first met her husband, Frank, at their colleges freshman orientation, when she was locked out of her dorm room one night. They stayed up all night talking, then dated for all four years. Post-college life took them to different cities, and they broke up. Years later, in 2010, Caliva called him out of the blue, saying Id love to try again.
Ive been waiting for this call, he responded. They got engaged the following year.
She had always been open with Frank about her kid-indecision, and he patiently waited as she mulled. One perfect spring day in 2014, Caliva was driving home from work near Washington, D.C., where she lives. She rolled down her windows, turned on the radio, and gazed out at the clear sky. A wave of contentment and joy washed over her.
But the elation was cut with boredom. This is so awesome, but its also fleeting, she remembers thinking. Tomorrow I might have a hard day at work. I am always going to be chasing happiness, its always ephemeral.
Some readers recalled a similar feeling of encroaching ennui: I had a small inkling that if I did not have children, I might be self-absorbed my whole life, wrote a woman named Virginia. Too much self-reflection is boring after years of it, I suspected.
Caliva likens it to the same feeling that inspires people to run marathonsa desire to know, once and for all, that youve done something really big and really great.
I need to do something thats bigger than me and outside myself, she decided. I need to take care of somebody else, and be completely selfless.
She drove home and told Frank about her epiphany. Their son, Jack, will be two years old this year.
For childless women, though, meaning comes about in other ways. You would think that women who didnt want children would have been bred out of the gene pool by now, since natural selection favors people who enjoy sex and, often as a result of that enjoyment, create progeny. But as Lonnie Aarssen and Stephanie Altman, two researchers at Queens University in Ontario, have written, modern life provides other ways for women to leave their mark, without necessarily having children.
Humans are anxious about their own deaths. To manage that anxiety, they seek to leave a legacyoften in the form of children, Aarssen explained to me recently,
Our distant ancestors would have said, I have these little people here, and I can influence the way they think, Aarssen said. I can make a mini-me copy of myself, and convince them to have the same kinds of personality and drives.
But there are other types of legaciessuch as art, science, or religionand historically, the money and influence necessary to create them belonged solely to men. Men also controlled womens reproduction, thanks to a lack of good birth control. Thus, for millennia, women often had only one choice for making a lasting impact: reproduction. Whats more, most had to reproduce, even if they didnt want to.
Those women might have passed down a weak parenting drive that essentially laid dormant until the modern age, Altman and Aarssen argue. Now that women have more rights and opportunities, the descendants of these reluctant mothers are foregoing making babies in order to make art, write books, start nonprofits and businesses, and pursue other non-kid accomplishments. Indeed, in a 2012 study they found that women who wanted fewer kids had a greater interest in a rewarding career, fame, and generating new ideas and discoveries.
As Altman and Aarssen write, some of todays women inherited genes from female ancestors who were not attracted to a life goal involving motherhood, but were nevertheless forced to endure it. Their descendants thenmany women alive todaycan now freely realize the lifestyle and life course goals that their maternal ancestors wished for, but were denied because of patriarchal subjugation.
That might be why the college-educated today are more likely to be childless than those with high-school degrees or less. In 1992, researchers from the University of Pennsylvania asked the universitys graduating students if they planned to have or adopt kids, and 79 percent gave an unequivocal yes. In 2012, just 41 percent did. The number who said probably not grew from one to 20 percent.
Young women today, one reason why they are less likely to plan to have or adopt kids than their forbears is that their engagement in friendship networks and professional networks is a kind of substitute for the need to create a family of ones own, said Stewart Friedman, an author of that study and director of the Work/Life Integration Project at the University of Pennsylvania. Engagement in social and political networks, and work that has a positive impact on societyboth of those factors are substituting for the creation of a family of ones own.
Aarssen said its possible that, if childlessness really is genetic, in coming decades the childfree movement will fizzle. Childless women simply wont pass their genes along.
Of course, some of the works they have created along the wayincluding books about their childfree existenceswill survive. In that way, they might pass their quirky legacies along after all, helping future couples as they kick their own cans down the road.
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Clint Eastwood Takes on Political Correctness … – Fox Nation – Fox News
Posted: at 10:57 pm
By Cortney O'Brien, Townhall.com
Conservative Hollywood icon Clint Eastwood has no problem voicing his political opinions, something we learned from his infamous empty chair skit during the 2012 Republican National Convention.
He is still boldly speaking his mind as of this week, this time at Frances prestigious Cannes Film Festival.
It was far-out at that time, so I brought it to [director] Don [Siegel], and he liked it, Eastwood recalled Sunday during a visit to the Cannes Film Festival. A lot of people thought it was politically incorrect. That was at the beginning of the era that were in now with political correctness. We are killing ourselves, weve lost our sense of humor. But I thought it was interesting and it was daring.
If critics thought "Dirty Harry" was politically incorrect, I'd love to know what they thought of his 2008 film "Gran Torino."
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Clint Eastwood Takes on Political Correctness ... - Fox Nation - Fox News
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