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Daily Archives: September 16, 2021
NATO Turkey and proxies bomb and cleanse Christians and other minorities in Syria – Modern Tokyo Times
Posted: September 16, 2021 at 6:39 am
NATO Turkey and proxies bomb and cleanse Christians and other minorities in Syria
Murad Makhmudov and Lee Jay Walker
Modern Tokyo Times
NATO Turkey is continuing to violate the territory of Syria along with Sunni Islamist proxies and mercenaries for hire. Henceforth, the recent bombing of Tel Tamer, a majority Christian populated town, and other outlying villages is a further reminder that NATO Turkey believes it can break international law at random. After all, apart from France, the majority of NATO powers remain largely mute.
The Hill reports, In Syria, Turkey hit multiple cities: Qamishli, Ain Issa, and Tel Tamer, which is part of the Assyrian Christian region along the Khabur River. Four members of the SDF were killed by Turkish strikes in Syria including a prominent Kurdish commander of the Womens Protection Units, Sosin Ahmed.
Seven years ago, ISIS (Islamic State IS) massacred thousands of Yazidis in Iraq after attacking Sinjar. By the following year, ISIS attacked many Christian Assyrian villages. Indeed, from the start of the crisis in Syria, various Sunni Islamist terrorist groups targeted the Alawites and other minorities long before ISIS. Therefore, Yazidi women were enslaved, killed, and converted to Islam while Alawite women were mocked in cages and many were brutally killed by forces supported by Turkey.
Concerning recent bombing attacks by NATO Turkey, Voice of America reports, Bassam Ishak, president of the Syriac National Council, one of the largest Christian political groups in Syria, said the Turkish bombing of areas on the Syria-Turkey border has led to the displacement of a large number of residents, including many Assyrian Christians.
According to the United Nations Commission of Inquiry, various Turkish proxies have committed horrendous massacres against Christians, Kurds, Yazidis, and other minorities in various parts of northern Syria. Alawites have also been targeted by sectarian terrorists backed by NATO Turkey.
Another policy of Turkey and the proxies it supports is to cleanse ethnic and religious minorities. Henceforth, the role of NATO Turkey is leading to demographic changes on the ground.
Sadly, Elias Antar Elias (Assyrian Peoples Assembly in northeast Syria) uttered, The recent attacks on our villages brought back to our memory Safar Barlik in 1915 when the Ottoman Empire targeted us Now, here in Syria, history is repeating itself.
Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), the Syriac Military Council, and others must all be worried by the recent action of America in Afghanistan and past historical betrayals.
https://www.voanews.com/middle-east/christians-concerned-about-turkish-attacks-northeast-syria
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NATO Turkey and proxies bomb and cleanse Christians and other minorities in Syria - Modern Tokyo Times
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Europe Still Doesn’t Have a Realistic Alternative to NATO – World Politics Review
Posted: at 6:39 am
Editors Note: This is the web version of our subscriber-only weekly newsletter, Europe Decoder, which includes a look at the weeks top stories and best reads from and about Europe. Subscribe to receive it by emailevery Thursday. If youre already a subscriber, adjust your newsletter settingsto receive it directly to your email inbox.
Europes inability to prevent or alleviate the chaos of the departureor even to have some influence over the withdrawal timeline and logisticsdespite European NATO members 20-year involvement in Afghanistan has been felt as a deep humiliation here. In an interview Tuesday, European Council President Charles Michel offered some scathing criticism of the U.S., noting that Washingtons NATO allies showed solidarity by invoking the alliances Article 5 mutual defense clause after 9/11, while the U.S. made very few if any consultations with their European partners on withdrawal from Afghanistan. But Michel was no less scathing in his criticism of Europes dependence on the United States. Europes humiliation in Afghanistan, he added, must prompt us Europeans to look in the mirror and ask ourselves: How can we have more influence in the geopolitical sphere in the future than we do today? ...
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Europe Still Doesn't Have a Realistic Alternative to NATO - World Politics Review
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Meet the crew of the USS New York, a ship that commemorates 9/11 – NATO HQ
Posted: at 6:39 am
The USS New York is a ship like no other: part amphibious transport dock that supports US Navy operations around the world, part living museum that commemorates the victims of the 9/11 attacks. It contains dozens of small memorials from a firefighters helmet to a New York City subway sign and 7.5 tons of steel recovered from the World Trade Center forged into its bow.
The crew of this remarkable vessel are reminded every day of the legacy that they carry on board with them and the solemn commitment, as the ships motto says, to Never Forget.
Lieutenant Clay Edinger serves as the USS New Yorks chaplain, offering spiritual support to the sailors and Marines aboard. A typical day for him involves talking with leaders around the ship and hearing their concerns, as well as finding sailors in their workspaces and checking on them. When the ship is at sea, he also carries on a daily tradition where he commemorates one of the victims of 9/11 during the evening prayer over the ships public address system.
As far as I know, the first chaplain of the USS New York began the tradition, says Edinger. We have a book that includes a short biography or obituary of each victim, so we follow it in order. The details I share are those that I hope will give the crew something to reflect on whether it is the faithfulness of someone who was part of a team, the grace of a mother or father, or, there are some funny notes to remind us that its okay to laugh. I try to incorporate some of that into my prayer that follows as well.
The tradition only takes place when the ship is underway, so they are about a third of the way through the book (the USS New York has been sailing since 2008). The stories of peoples lives which contain not just their biographical details, but their hobbies and passions and loves often resonate with the crew and help remind them why theyre serving.
Ive had quite a few sailors tell me that something that I shared was meaningful to them personally, the chaplain says. I really appreciate having this opportunity to honour the fallen, and as we say, Never Forget.
Lieutenant Edinger or Chaps as the crew call him remembers his own experience on 9/11, when he was in his senior year of college and found out about the attacks between classes.
I remember stopping in my dorm and hearing someone mention bomb and World Trade Center, he recalls. I got on my computer to try to find out what was happening, but all the news sites were experiencing heavy traffic, so I couldnt find anything out. When we went to one of the common areas to see what was on TV, we were all in disbelief I remember walking into my Middle Eastern History class later that week and suddenly discussing Middle Eastern Current Events.
He was already under contract in the US Marine Corps to be commissioned after graduation (originally as a Combat Engineer Officer). But the events of September 11 and the days that followed and especially the heroic acts of the countless individuals who sacrificed themselves to save others only reaffirmed his conviction to serve.
The one that is most meaningful to me is Father Mychal Judge, says Edinger. He was a priest and a chaplain for the New York City Fire Department. He is listed as the very first casualty of the terrorist attacks. After the first airliner struck, Father Judge rushed to the lobby of the North Tower, praying over those whose bodies lay in the streets as he walked. He was struck down by a flying piece of debris when the South Tower collapsed. We have his picture in our chapel aboard the USS New York.
Lieutenant Edinger carries on this same spirit of service as he ministers to sailors and Marines in the chapel, or anywhere else on the USS New York whether he is visiting the night watch on the ships bridge and observing the vast empty darkness of the open sea, or spending a (very cold) winter alongside NATO Allies in Norway.
Given the USS New Yorks distinct history, it comes as no surprise that many New Yorkers have served aboard the ship that bears their states name. Among them is Seaman Gianna Curcio, a Staten Islander with a personal connection to the ships 9/11 legacy.
I was not born yet, says the 18-year-old Curcio, recalling the attacks. However, my mother was working on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange when the towers fell on her building, crushing her and resulting in her losing her first set of twins two months later.
Despite living through this horrible experience, her mother made a full recovery and gave birth to a second set of twins just over a year later Curcio and her brother.
It shows me just how strong my mother was, says Curcio. Some mothers could give up after losing a child but my mother kept going after losing two. You would think she wouldn't want to go back to the city but she does and she still works there today.1
Inspired by both her mother and her father who Curcio describes as the bravest people I know she joined the US Navy shortly after her 18th birthday.
Serving in the navy means a lot to me, she says. It means that I am a part of the one per cent of people who choose to join the military, serve our country and fight for our people.
Whether shes standing security watch or conducting maintenance to keep the ship fully operational, Seaman Curcio is proud of the hard work she puts in to support the USS New Yorks mission and grateful for her role in carrying on its traditions.
It makes me feel humble that I am serving on board a ship that bears the state flag and represents a symbol of strength.
NATO is commemorating the 20th anniversary of the 9/11 terrorist attacks. Following the attacks, NATO invoked Article 5 of the North Atlantic Treaty for the first time in its history, expressing solidarity with the United States and subsequently providing operational support to the United States. Learn more about collective defence and Article 5 following the 9/11 attacks.
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Meet the crew of the USS New York, a ship that commemorates 9/11 - NATO HQ
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NATO advances next-generation helicopter project as NGRC team grows to seven nations – Flightglobal
Posted: at 6:39 am
A group of NATO member countries has thrashed out the wording of an agreement to allow the start of early work on a clean-sheet medium-class military helicopter to arrive in the mid-2030s.
But the number of nations interested in the project has now increased to seven, up from the initial five-member grouping.
Negotiations covering the text of the legally binding memorandum of understanding for the concept phase of the Next Generation Rotorcraft Capability (NGRC) project were concluded on 8 September, NATO says.
Participants in the two-day process included NATO staff as well as legal advisors and experts from seven nations, the alliance adds.
We are looking to have the document signed during the first half of 2022 in order to kick off the concept phase, NATO adds.
In November 2020 five countries France, Germany, Greece, Italy and the UK signed a letter of intent signaling their participation in the project. They have now been joined by the Netherlands and Spain.
NATO analysis shows there are almost 1,000 helicopters in the 11-15t maximum take-off weight range operated by non-US NATO members which will need replacing by 2050.
That number could be very much higher if helicopters in the category below are also included, even if technological advances mean there is unlikely to be a one-for-one replacement, Pat Collins, joint chair of the NATO vertical lift capability group, told the Royal Aeronautical Societys annual European Rotorcraft Forum on 8 September.
NATO earlier this year released details of the required attributes for the NGRC, which include a common baseline airframe for a variety of missions.
We would like to get away from multiple variants of the same basic airframe as far as possible, says Collins.
In addition, the NGRC should be much more cost-effective than current fleets, says Collins, achieving a fly-away cost of no more than 35 million ($41.3 million) and an operating cost no greater than 10,000 per flight hour. Availability also needs to improve over current-generation types, with a target of 75% for the operational/forward fleet.
Although he does not name it directly, the most recent NATO helicopter programme the NH Industries NH90 has suffered from cost and complexity issues caused by a plethora of variants. Low levels of availability have also been an issue cited by several operators.
Speed is also a priority. NATO is seeking a cruise speed of 220kt (407km/h), which would need to be achieved through an advanced configuration.
However, it has also set a minimum speed threshold of 180kt. Collins says this could allow more conventional designs to be offered. This [threshold] is probably achievable but would require a fairly slippery airframe with conformal sensors it is quite different to what we have at the moment.
Earlier at the same conference, Tomasz Krysinski, vice-president of research and innovation at Airbus Helicopters, touted the potential of a design based on its Racer high-speed demonstrator to meet the requirement.
As part of his presentation, Krysinki displayed an image of the compound rotorcraft, which is due to fly next year, in a military configuration, adding: I really see a very good application for military use.
Around 50 companies with an interest in the NGRC project are due to attend industry days to be held in Luxembourg on 21-22 September.
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FAA says it’s keeping tabs on SpaceX over environmental concerns in South Texas – Border Report
Posted: at 6:38 am
McALLEN, Texas (Border Report) The Federal Aviation Administration says it is tracking SpaceX and environmental concerns regarding the companys desire to launch its massive Starship Spacecraft from its launch facility on the southern tip of Texas.
SpaceX cannot launch the Starship/Super Heavy vehicle until the FAA completes its licensing process, which includes the ongoing environmental review and other safety and financial responsibility requirements, an FAA official wrote in an email Tuesday to Border Report.
As part of this process, analyses are being conducted that determine collective risk, individual risk and hazard areas on the ground, sea and in the air. SpaceX would not receive a license if it cannot meet FAA safety regulations, the FAA wrote.
The statements came in response to an article by Border Report on Thursday in which local environmentalists sent the federal agency a letter demanding data and information on the risks to border communities and wildlife from ongoing rocket testing and launches at SpaceXs facility near Boca Chica Beach, Texas.
The nonprofit organization Save RGV on Aug. 30 wrote the agency saying the massive Starship Spacecraft poses an unacceptable risk of harm to the nearby communities as well as wildlife, parks and surrounding fragile tidal wetlands that are home to many endangered species, such as sea turtles. And they want more oversight since this spacecraft is far bigger and more powerful from what SpaceX initially had proposed and gotten approval from the FAA to test and launch when it first built the launch facility in 2014.
SpaceX wants to launch the the Starship to Mars, and on the companys website says Starship will be the worlds most powerful launch vehicle ever developed.
Jim Chapman, a board member with Save RGV and president of Friends of the Wildlife Corridor, reacted with optimism upon hearing that the FAA had issued a response to Border Report. But he said they, as a group, still have received no formal reaction from the federal agency to their Aug. 30 letter.
Its nice to see that in writing, Chapman said. At least now they put that on paper to essentially to the public that they are taking responsibility and laying out the requirements so I would term that as a positive response.
Chapman still wants to know, however, when the FAA will release information from the safety studies to the public.
The FAA in January briefly grounded SpaceX from launching in South Texas after the private company launched its SN8 rocket prototype in December without the FAAs permission. However, the company in February was allowed to begin tests launches again after the FAA determined it had met safety and related federal regulations in accordance with its launch license, the FAA said in an email to Border Report.
Chapmans group says given several fiery test launch explosions at the Boca Chica Beach site, the FAA should be tougher on SpaceX in order to safeguard border communities and border wildlife.
He also criticized the recent construction by SpaceX of a 480-foot launch tower, and he says until the company gets permission to launch the Starship, the launch tower that was built in June should be ordered taken down.
The FAA in July warned SpaceX that its environmental review of the new rocket assembly integration tower was incomplete and the federal agency could order it to be removed.
The FAA chided them for doing that without FAA approval and even mentioned its possible that they would make them take it down but no one believes they will make them take it down. Its basically there to launch Starship Super Heavy, Chapman said.
An FAA spokesman told Reuters the company is building the tower at its own risk.
SpaceX CEO Elon Musk has criticized the FAA via social media and in May the company told the FAA they did not believe an environmental review was necessary because the tower is to be used for production, research, and development purposes and not for FAA-licensed or permitted launches, Reuters reports.
Sandra Sanchez can be reached at Ssanchez@borderreport.com.
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Sex-ed in the US is a lesson in the complex legacy of religion – aeon.co
Posted: at 6:36 am
The state of sex education in the United States is dismal. Shaped by divergent state policies and local school board decisions, programmes are uneven in their content and coverage. There is confusion about what is being taught where. Most programmes are limited in scope, some are even harmful. Proponents of comprehensive sexuality education urge the teaching of reproductive development, contraception and sexually transmitted infections (STIs) but, far from these goals, they have fought and failed to ensure the bare minimum standard in more than half of the states: that lessons in sex education be medically accurate. Meanwhile, comprehensive programmes are attacked as too revealing and immoral by supporters of abstinence-only sex education, recently re-branded as sexual risk avoidance education, which tends to dissuade students from engaging in any sexual activity at all. Both factions argue that the country will continue to fail its youth unless schools embrace their version of sex education.
At the national level, the debate over sex education has generally followed culture war divides, with liberals supporting comprehensive sexuality education, and conservatives leading calls for sexual risk avoidance education. Long aligned with the latter has been white conservative Protestantism, the religious group most vocal in public debates about sex education since the late 1960s. But it would be wrong to think of the sex education debate as simply religious versus secular. In fact, religions are not one-sided on this issue, and cannot be separated from these discussions. A look at the history of sex education in the US shows that religions especially Protestant denominations have deeply influenced many aspects of sex education, both progressive and conservative. This is not surprising given the symbolic value of sexuality, as well as the transmission of moral values through sex education, both of which make it a key battleground in the culture wars. Sex education is attached to the control of young bodies through lessons about sexual diseases, reproduction and romantic pairings, as well as the control of young minds through the classroom. In formative ways, Christian involvement in the history of sex education laid the groundwork for both sides of the debate today.
Sex education began with 19th-century Protestant anti-prostitution reformers. These reformers led the social purity movement (social was then a euphemism for sexual). They paired their primary work of stamping out red-light districts with educational lectures about the physical and moral dangers of sex outside marriage. Social purity overlapped with other female-dominated reforms such as the temperance movement; alcohol and prostitutes were twin evils that lured men away from their Christian households. Social purity advocates such as Frances Willard, the leader of the Womans Christian Temperance Union, preached against the sexual standard that condoned men visiting prostitutes, while those such as John Harvey Kellogg, the inventor of cornflakes, emphasised premarital abstinence and marital monogamy as essential to a healthy Christian lifestyle. Ironically, social purity reformers supported obscenity laws to protect youth again lewd sexual publications, even as they challenged the prevailing conspiracy of silence around public discussions of sexuality.
Whereas sex education was secondary to anti-prostitution reforms, it became a primary focus of doctors who began advocating for social hygiene (ie, sexual hygiene) in the early 20th century. The father of social hygiene and the founder of US sex education was a man named Prince Albert Morrow, a Kentucky-born dermatologist inspired by the advanced studies of venereal diseases in France. In the US, he promoted social hygiene education in order to protect innocent wives and offspring from the ravages of syphilis and gonorrhoea introduced into the family by husbands and fathers. He showed a flair for publicity by disseminating stomach-turning images of syphilitic children suffering from blindness and skin deformities. Morrow soon began to organise his campaign among fellow doctors, but progress was slow. Despite some being passionate about fighting venereal disease, many were nervous about treating syphilis and gonorrhoea since these diseases were popularly seen as fit punishments for sexual sins. Easing symptoms supposedly encouraged patients to continue their sinful behaviour not a position doctors were keen on defending.
So Morrow moved outside his professional scientific circle and engaged with Protestant social purity reformers as well. They had already developed publicly acceptable Christian rhetoric for talking about sexuality in a time when obscenity laws stifled other public discussions. Those who accepted Morrows invitation to join scientific professionals in creating the sex education movement made up the more progressive branch of purity reform. Influenced by liberal Protestantisms embrace of scientific authority to reveal Gods truths about creation, they sought to cooperate across religious and secular divisions as part of their Christian mission to mitigate social problems. Now Morrows movement took off in earnest.
Morrow had learned a lesson that recurs throughout the history of sex education: adding religious frameworks and spokespeople into medical campaigns is necessary for success. Facts and data are often not enough to convince the US public to take scientific lessons about sex seriously; religious persuasion is needed too. So, since the early 20th century, the sex education movement has treated Christianity as a fount of ample resources: live audiences (church attendees and auxiliary networks), free advertising (religious pulpits and publications), reputable leadership to guide and promote sensitive campaigns (ministers and other respected church people), an ethical system to motivate people to behave, and ideologies that safeguarded the topic from censorship by connecting it to well-accepted ideas of love, family and Christian respectability. Morrows work helped to create a coalition between social hygiene and social purity or, as he would later put it, between the medical man and the moralist. This eventually led to the creation in 1914 of the American Social Hygiene Association (now the American Sexual Health Association), an organisation that would guide the national sex education movement for decades to come.
The coalition that Morrow helped to create was particularly significant at a time of scientific professionalisation. Confidence was high in science, especially medicine, to solve societys problems. As scientific authority had become largely independent of religious authority by the early 20th century, some physicians accused conservative Christian reformers of spreading inaccurate medical information in their religious enthusiasm to curb vices. Doctors feared that religious approaches would always advocate for conversion and prayer over scientific education and medical intervention, even though liberal Protestant purity reformers who joined them also eschewed these more conservative evangelical reform methods.
Most early sex educators supported beliefs related to social Darwinism
For their part, purity reformers had reasons to distrust doctors, as some had stymied anti-prostitution reforms with their advocacy for medical regulation of prostitution, which would have amounted to legalising it anathema to those who wanted its abolition. But where there was overlap, there was success. Christian doctors and leaders such as Morrow advocated for a balance of religion and medicine within both groups, and helped to bridge tensions. Both agreed on the connection between prostitution, STIs and weak morals. They decided on sex education for children as the best way to address these problems so that boys would learn the dangers of visiting prostitutes, and girls would choose husbands who upheld a higher sexual standard. Early sex-education leaders made careful negotiations to keep a balance of approaches.
Elevating religious concerns also provided a reason to keep the sex education movement separate from the birth control movement. Endorsing birth control would have ostracised prominent Catholic sex educators such as John Montgomery Cooper. An anthropologist and priest, Cooper was well aware of the Roman Catholic position against artificial birth control methods but saw great value in sex education to discourage sin, strengthen character, and support reproduction within nuclear families. The decision by the American Social Hygiene Association to remain neutral on birth control viewed as a more radical, feminist cause further protected the movement from censorship and public outcry in its early years. At a time before most public schools were ready to incorporate lessons about sexuality, religious groups provided direct access to parents who would help to decide whether to let sex education into schools; they also offered experimental locations for developing and trying out these programmes.
The movements goals aligned with progressive education trends that sought to use public education to strengthen moral character and, ultimately, the nation. Sex educators of both religious and medical varieties shared concern for growing problems of the cities, which was often code for white peoples fears about an influx of immigrants and Black people to urban areas, a trend they believed fuelled vice and spread diseases. Like many progressive white elites of the time, most early sex educators supported beliefs related to social Darwinism, using middle-class Anglo-Saxons as a common benchmark for depicting ideals within sexual hygiene campaigns. Many sex educators came to support popular aspects of so-called positive eugenics, including the idea that keeping sexuality contained within a well-matched marriage (ie, same race, class, religion, etc) would advance each race, although some sex educators notably denounced the eugenics movement for promoting sterilisation and other negative eugenic measures.
After early experiments with public school sex education in Chicago, sex educators temporarily shifted to the immediate challenge of educating young soldiers about sexual temptations during the First World War. The military had a bad reputation for letting soldiers sow their wild oats; in response to parental uproar, the US government enlisted sex educators of the American Social Hygiene Association and the Young Mens Christian Association (YMCA) to build a military sex-education programme. The sex educators focused on the moral side of sex, while military doctors lectured on STI symptoms and how to use a prophylactic kit when moral restraint failed. YMCA sex educators connected these lectures to their physical programmes to keep men morally, mentally and physically fit, with the goal of preventing men from visiting prostitutes or engaging in the largely unspoken option of same-sex intercourse.
YMCA lecturers such as James Naismith, the inventor of basketball and sex educator to the American Expeditionary Forces, used Christianity as a powerful motivator to encourage soldiers to stay morally and physically clean while overseas. Along with lectures and counselling sessions, Naismith considered sports a wholesome way to expel sexual energy and distract soldiers from sexual temptations. Chaplains, mostly Protestant, supported YMCA sex educators in urging soldiers to strengthen their Christian character and stay away from prostitutes. Moral education about sex was one piece of a larger American plan to stop the spread of STIs, which included policing red-light districts. Incarceration and forced medical examinations followed racist, classist and sexist assumptions, as they targeted women deemed problematic by those in power.
Religious institutions convinced parents that sex education was not smut and could serve godly goals
After the war, attention shifted back home. Religious leaders within the American Social Hygiene Association steered away from STI education and toward family life education. The liberal Protestant sex educator Anna Garlin Spencer led this shift, arguing that sexuality education was intimately connected to raising morally responsible children. As a pathbreaking female minister the first woman to be ordained in Rhode Island and a leader in social purity, suffrage and pacifism as well as a sociology professor, Spencer believed that religious groups had an obligation to support sex education, which would strengthen the family unit as the building block of each religion and of the nation. Her argument corresponded with broader concerns about the perils facing the modern family, primarily divorce, and overlapped with social scientific trends for domestic sciences, home economics, social work and marital counselling. Family life education echoed racial and cultural ideals of the eugenics movement about the importance of finding an ideal partner with whom to marry and reproduce. It further reflected liberal Protestant efforts to be on the cutting edge of academic trends and a desire to find common ground across religious groups, since they believed all could agree on the religious and national importance of strengthening the social institution of the family (read: the heterosexual, nuclear family).
Spencer created a partnership between the American Social Hygiene Association and the Federal Council of Churches (now the National Council of Churches), which represented many mainline Protestant denominations and provided a voice for the moderate centre of liberal Protestantism. The Federal Council of Churches committed itself to preserving Judeo-Christian family life as the cornerstone of the nation, adding Reform Jewish and progressive Catholic sex educators to their liberal Protestant agenda. With the new focus on family life, the sex education movement used the Federal Council of Churches to reach churches and synagogues, convincing them to include family life education in their youth programmes. Religious institutions provided important testing grounds at a time when sex education was slow to catch on in school curricula, and they served as trustworthy avenues for convincing parents that sex education was not smut and could serve godly goals, paving the way for school programmes.
These religiously affiliated efforts pushed sex education forward through the mid-20th century, providing further infrastructure for the movement and making the platform more publicly acceptable. They chipped away at the conspiracy of silence and found ways of educating parents, young soldiers and some children, overcoming concerns that any discussion would incite sexual curiosity and depravity. Despite progress, the specific frameworks and decisions had consequences, shackling sex education to a certain ideal of family (as heterosexual, white, middle-class, and nuclear) and to morals (of a specifically white liberal Protestant variety). The overarching belief that the proper domain for sexuality was within monogamous, heterosexual marriages forged the sex education consensus in the first half of the 20th century. It didnt last much longer.
These progressive coalitions and agendas brought about their own downfall, laying the groundwork for the tumultuous sex education battles of the 1960s. Progressive religion wanted to invite everyone to the table, though still on progressive and usually Protestant terms. One perennial challenge of this liberal impulse is the question of how to be inclusive of those who dont accept the same terms of inclusiveness. Not everyone wants a spot at the table, and some exclusive worldviews feel compromised when certain groups are allowed to join the conversation on equal footing.
The Protestant brand of liberal theology that came to influence sex educators centred around the new morality, also known as situation ethics. Popularised by Joseph Fletcher, an Episcopalian professor of social ethics, it advanced the idea that to value inclusiveness and individualism meant acknowledging that morality is not the same for everyone in every situation. In place of absolute morality, the new morality advocated a Christian view of love as a common denominator to guide individuals in their unique contexts. Despite critiques that this was a slippery slope into moral bankruptcy, proponents argued that teaching individual decision-making guided by love would lead to higher standards. Fletcher advocated situation ethics for people to choose like people, not submit like sheep, suggesting that legalistic tactics produced reluctant virgins and technical chastity, with people acting as they were told to, rather than according to their own determinations.
As the new morality became the central religious framework of comprehensive sexuality education, it opened the door to discussions of previously taboo topics. Even though many comprehensive sexuality educators including Mary Calderone, the founder of the Sex Information and Education Council of the United States believed that sex belonged within monogamous, heterosexual marriages, the new morality opened up the possibility that any sexual act could be moral, given the right contexts and motivations. Calderone also had a personal interest in education about the naturalness of masturbation, recalling her own trauma at being forced to wear aluminium mitts as a child to prevent her from touching herself. Informed by her progressive Quaker faith, Calderone advocated for the new morality to empower individuals to follow their own conscience and to denounce judging others sexual behaviour, since she believed that God could speak privately to individuals and that only God could judge how people responded to those intimate messages. She viewed education about sexual topics of all varieties to be part of the search for God-given truths, as well as vital to improving public health.
In 1996, abstinence-only sex education received an enormous boost of federal funding of $50 million a year
Acknowledgement of sexual diversity was significant for those rendered invisible or deviant by traditional frameworks. It was the liberal straw that broke the camels back, as conservative Christians relied upon absolute morality to support their ethical foundation: some things are always wrong, regardless of reason or context, a view tied to the belief that the Bible conveys unchanging, universal truths from God. The sex education battles of the late 1960s erupted when conservative Christian groups such as Christian Crusade launched public campaigns against comprehensive sexuality education, accusing it of promoting an anything-goes, anti-God morality that would lead to sexual chaos and the downfall of Christian America. Christian Crusades pamphlet Is the School House the Proper Place to Teach Raw Sex? (1968) inflamed opposition to sex education as it reached households across the country.
By making sure that moral behaviour was a central concern of sex education, liberal Protestants had convinced Americans that sex education was important for raising children and building strong families. But after the 1960s, they lost control over whose morals guided the lessons. When the mainstream Judeo-Protestant consensus that had been used to justify family life education gave way to a rejection of universal morality, conservative Christians stepped in to put their morals at the centre of sex education. After spending years on defence against comprehensive sexuality education, evangelicals such as Tim LaHaye went on the offensive in the 1980s with abstinence-only education. LaHaye and his wife had reached bestseller status with their sex manual, The Act of Marriage (1976). Building on that success, he sought to prove that sex education could also be sanctified for conservative Christian purposes. Others followed, making abstinence-only education an integral part of the Christian Rights pro-family movement and evangelical purity culture, known for its silver rings and virginity pledges.
In 1996, abstinence-only received an enormous boost of federal funding ($50 million a year), supporting the message that a mutually faithful monogamous relationship in the context of marriage is the expected standard of human sexual activity. Christian abstinence-only campaigners worked to remove the most explicit religious language to fit their curricula within public schools. Abstinence-only federal funding has remained fairly consistent, with only a brief lull for less than a year under the Barack Obama administration, during which time a separate funding stream was made available to comprehensive sexuality education.
Even the liberal Protestant trend of embracing science as a method for revealing Gods truth came back around, as conservative Christians borrowed scientific language to argue that their version of sex education was representative of Gods will. Medically accurate sexual terminology that evangelicals had initially labelled pornographic now became part of their arsenal, within a framework of Just say no. Abstinence-only advocates took the same statistics that comprehensive sexuality educators used to demonstrate the need for more expansive programmes, and argued the opposite: that high rates of STIs and unintended pregnancies indicated the failure of comprehensive sexuality education, therefore demonstrating the need for restrictive programmes that exclude lessons on the effectiveness of contraceptives and the diversity of sexual and gender identities.
Peer-reviewed scientific studies have largely rejected the abstinence-only rationale, demonstrating that comprehensive approaches are more effective across multiple types of measurements. While some abstinence-only programmes have proven effective on specific behavioural outcomes, scholars and some policymakers have further critiqued such programmes for medical inaccuracies and harmful messages against LGBTQI youth and students who have been sexually active, either voluntarily or involuntarily. Adding to confused public discourse over the effectiveness and ineffectiveness of programmes is a tangled mess of policies that vary dramatically across states. The politicised nature of sex education also leads to teachers and textbook creators self-censoring for fear of parental complaints or school board retaliation, much as narrow anti-evolution laws in the early 20th century had the broader effect of inclining teachers to downplay the topic.
Sex education battles form the roots of the Christian Right, and they became entangled with later developments of evangelical resistance to racial integration in their schools and an alignment with the Republican Party in the 1970s. Protests against comprehensive sexuality education provided an opportunity to use sexuality to represent other political issues, showing the symbolic potency of sexuality as a carrier for moral values. The subsequent growth of abstinence-only programmes further strengthened their pro-family platform. These developments helped the Christian Right forge its Christian nationalist ideology.
Looking back on this history prompts the question of why scientific professionals needed religion in the sex-ed movement in the first place. Besides the resources and experience that Protestant reformers brought to the table, in the words of the scientists themselves, science was not enough. Early sex educators knew that data and facts were insufficient for changing sexual behaviours. One pointed out that doctors still contracted STIs, even though they knew the most about them, so something more than information must be needed to convince and motivate people to follow sexual health guidelines.
The realisation that scientific information alone was ineffective for the goals of sex education should resonate, as there are still many cases in which the US public remains resistant to scientific findings on controversial topics. Many Americans resistance to the overwhelming consensus on the basics of human evolution is one case in point, and one in which Protestantism has similarly played complex roles, with liberal Protestantism championing mainstream scientific authority, conservative Protestantism developing alternative rationales for creationism, and many individual beliefs falling somewhere along the spectrum between these national talking points. Religious responses to COVID-19 have revealed some similar divisions. A 2020 study found that those who held a Christian nationalist ideology supported mostly by politically conservative Christians who believe the Bible should be interpreted literally were most likely to reject scientific findings about the efficacy of masking, social distancing, and vaccination while other highly religious Americans were supportive of these same measures. Religious and political orientations, of course, are not the only factors influencing public reception of scientific data and discourses.
If we evaluated maths classes by how many people could complete their tax forms, wed also have cause for alarm
Religious affiliations, of course, are not the only factors influencing the public reception of scientific data and discourses. Common distrust of science (as if it were just one thing) can stem from the overuse of scientific jargon, the nonlinear process of scientific discovery, and real scientific mistakes, including corruption of individual researchers and classist, sexist and racist projects in the past and present. However, as the history of sex education demonstrates, religions have complex influences on secular issues and on public receptions, and scientists and science educators would benefit from pedagogical approaches that take seriously religious resistance to scientific authority. More broadly, scientists and educators of all varieties need new ways to teach scientific knowledge effectively to the public.
Another lesson that can be gleaned from this history is the need to re-examine the behaviour-oriented goals of sex education. If we evaluated the success of school mathematics classes by how many people could complete their own tax forms, we would also have much cause for alarm. Obviously, there are important differences between the topics of mathematics and sex, but instrumentalist assessments can put an unfair burden on education programmes: there are many other reasons that people engage in sexual activity (or fail to ace their taxes), completely unrelated to the type or quality of education programmes they previously encountered or the extent of their learning within those programmes. This calls for critical conversations about why we desire to control what happens beyond the classroom, whether such control is possible, and in what ways it impedes other educational objectives that we have stronger chances of achieving through sex education: concluding programmes with students who are well-informed and have the critical skills to ask good questions and find reliable answers after class is out.
The legacies of religious involvement on the history of sex education in the US will continue to be felt, and examining them will help us better understand our countrys messy and ambivalent approaches to sex today. Those influenced by comprehensive sexuality education might be able to recognise traces of past progressive Protestant influences, including the embrace of science as a way to learn about creation, the interfaith desire to find common ground, and the situation ethics of the new morality. Liberal Protestants also continue to generate some of the most comprehensive sexuality education programmes for religious education and private schools. Those familiar with abstinence-only/sexual-risk reduction programmes might recognise aspects of earlier Protestant purity reforms and midcentury family life education, along with the more direct influence of evangelical pro-family politics. Previous religious sex educators sought to move the conversation forward while also holding on to the reins as best they could. They set the boundaries of what should be considered acceptable in public sex education that would later break into our current divisions.
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Sex-ed in the US is a lesson in the complex legacy of religion - aeon.co
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Former Olympic gymnast Dominique Dawes on Nassar hearing: USA Gymnastics is about ‘medals and money’ – The Week Magazine
Posted: at 6:35 am
Former Olympic gymnast Dominique Dawes spoke to MSNBC Wednesday regarding the Senate hearing on the FBI's botched investigation into abuse allegations against former USA Gymnastics doctor Larry Nassar.
"The sport of gymnastics, USAgymnastics has all been about medals and money," said Dawes. She added that her Olympic team's win in 1996 made the organization "extremely wealthy," and inspired many gyms and parents looking for an Olympian or college gymnast of their own.
But be cautious, she warned. "I want to plead to these parents and have them open their eyes and see that there is a great deal of toxicity in these private clubs. It's not solely USA Gymnastics," Dawes said. "It's also the clubs that are within and under USA Gymnastics, it's those private coaches" that are out there "verbally, emotionally, physically, and psychologically abusing these young girls."
Earlier, Dawes also told NBC News of "the very toxic culture" in the sport of gymnastics, and discussed how it related to Nassar's abuse. "What this predator did is he saw the vulnerability in these young athletes, and he preyed on them and he took advantage of them," she said.
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Which Bruins could play at the 2022 Beijing Olympics? – NBC Sports Boston
Posted: at 6:33 am
The NHL is heading back to the Olympic Games, after it was announced earlier this month that the NHL and NHLPA came to an agreement to send NHL players to the 2022 Beijing Olympics.
That means the best hockey players in the world will be coming together to represent their home countries and compete for a gold medal. It will be the first time since 2014 that NHL players have competed on the international Olympic stage.
With that, lets take a look at some of those players that could be participating in the Beijing Olympics.
There will be 12 countries competing in mens ice hockey for the gold medal in Beijing. The 12 will be split into three groups of four to kick off the preliminary round.
Group A will consist of the United States, Canada, Germany and China, who automatically got a bid as the host country. Group B will have the Russian Olympic Committee, Czech Republic, Switzerland and Denmark. Group C will be Sweden, Finland, Slovakia and Latvia.
For the first time in five Winter Olympic Games, the NHL did not send its players to the Olympics in 2018.
Previously, the IOC covered travel, insurance, accommodations and other costs for NHL players. However, the IOC decided against it for 2018. When that was announced, the NHL decided to pull its players from going to the Olympics, also citing injury concerns that would affect the rest of the NHL season.
As a result, countries were forced to look elsewhere to fill out their rosters. Players were pulled from the AHL, European professional leagues and the NCAA level to participate in the Olympics.
Part of the reason for the NHLs return in 2022 is because the IOC will cover those costs that they did not in 2018.
The Boston Bruins have quite the number of candidates to play in Beijing.
The pair of Patrice Bergeron and Brad Marchand should be representing Canada on the Olympic stage. It will be Bergerons third Olympic Games, with two gold medals under his belt already, and with three points in 13 Olympic games played. Hes still looking for his first Olympic goal, which could come in Beijing.
It will be the first Olympics for Marchand, who didnt make the cut in 2014. Hes vastly improved since then, becoming one of the top scoring wingers in the NHL. His 2016 World Cup of Hockey performance further proved he belongs on Team Canadas squad. Marchand led the tournament with five goals and three assists, as he, Bergeron and Pittsburghs Sidney Crosby combined for 25 points in six games. The Bruin winger scored a shorthanded goal to clinch a gold medal for Canada in the event. The line of Bergeron, Marchand and Crosby could make their return in Beijing.
Taylor Hall, who re-signed this offseason, has an outside shot at making Team Canada, but needs to go on a tear to begin the season to work his way onto a loaded Canada squad.
Speaking of dominant lines, the third member of the Bruins top line will also likely be in Beijing. David Pastrnak will be at his first Olympic Games, leading the way for Czech Republic. Pastrnak has plenty of experience playing for the Czechs, as hes been donning his home countrys jersey since 2012, playing at World Juniors and World Championships. A brief reunion with former Bruin David Krejci is likely in store for Pastrnak in Beijing, as Krejci could be playing in his third Olympics.
Given the Czechs lack of depth on defense, Jakub Zboril could find himself as one of the eight defensemen to make the roster, especially if he sees more NHL time in Boston. Newcomer Tomas Nosek is likely on the bubble for the Czech forward group.
As Charlie McAvoy continues to blossom into an elite NHL defenseman, he likely will get a nod to play for Team USA at the Olympics. A native of Long Beach, N.Y., McAvoy will join a defense core that will probably sport a number of other young stars like New York Rangers' Adam Fox, Chicagos Seth Jones and Columbus Zach Werenski. McAvoy is coming off his best season yet, finishing fifth in Norris Trophy voting.
New goaltender Linus Ullmark looks to be in line to be one of the goalies selected for Sweden. There are only three goalies right now from Sweden in the NHL who have seen significant playing time -- Ullmark, Vegas Robin Lehner and Calgarys Jacob Markstrom. Lehner most likely will be the starter, but a strong enough start in Boston for Ullmark could see him pass Markstrom for the backup spot.
Another new face in Boston, Erik Haula will be fighting for one of the 14 forward spots on Finland. Theres a number of young Finnish forwards like New York Rangers Kaapo Kakko, Carolinas Jesperi Kotkaniemi and Nashvilles Eeli Tolvanen who could earn a place on the roster ahead of Haula. Hell need a strong beginning of the season to lock his spot in.
Depending on his health, former Bruins goalie Tuukka Rask could be on the roster for Finland. Hes expected to be ready by January or February,coming off surgery for a torn labrum. However, it may make the most sense for Rask to skip the Olympics if he is planning a return to the NHL.
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Which Bruins could play at the 2022 Beijing Olympics? - NBC Sports Boston
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From the Basement | US should boycott 2022 Olympic Games – Tulane Hullabaloo
Posted: at 6:33 am
Balancing the relationship between sports and politics is often challenging. (Matthew Tate)
In the wake of continued human rights violations and outcries from advocacy groups and other organizations to boycott the Olympics, democracies like the United States have an important matter to settle: whether or not it should send its athletes to the upcoming 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics.
The relationship between sports and politics is uniquely challenging and rarely presents a clear-cut moral direction. In the Olympics, the most international sports stage, there is a pressure imposed on democratic nations like the U.S. to balance obligations to athletes seeking to participate on the highest stage and sending a clear message to authoritarian nations like China. The Chinese government stands accused of various human rights abuses, including a genocidal campaign against the Uyghurs of Xinjiang.
Many recall triumphant images of Jesse Owens taking the gold in the heart of Nazi Germany, winning a victory not just against Hitlers perverted sense of German superiority but race supremacy in general. However, like other feel good moments in sports, this tends to gloss over the dark reality that was the 1936 Olympics.
While Hitler promised to eliminate all suggestions of Jewish persecution from the Berlin Olympics, his actual rhetoric and policy towards the Jewish people and other minorities both before and after the games is more than known. The hosting of the games in the Reichs capital city was in reality an opportunity for Germany to put its tyrannical and oppressive regime in the international spotlight. There is a real concern that the spotlight and revenue that China will receive by hosting the Olympics could be used to promote propaganda and further human rights violations throughout the nation.
The question to boycott an Olympics in China is not a novel one; the 2008 Olympics were also held in Beijing, and likewise many international entities voiced concerns over participating. While China pledged full transparency for news outlets and journalists, the International Olympic Committee admits to allowing the Chinese government to censor certain internet sites and media coverage throughout the 17 days of competition. At the time, the Chinese government received criticism due to excessive pollution and riots across Tibet.
Olympic boycotts are not uncommon either; notable examples besides 1936 including the 1976, 1980 and 1984 games. The 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow were famously boycotted by more than 60 countries as a response against the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. While the boycott was a clear message of intolerance from the international community towards the USSRs international agenda, it did little to abate the actual conflict it was seeking to protest, which would not conclude until 1989, albeit in a tactical disaster for the Soviets.
The case of the 2022 Beijing Games provides an opportunity for democracies around the world to finally send a clear message to the Communist Party of China that it will no longer reward genocide, espionage and other illiberal activities with international spotlight and prestige.
The U.S. should lead the charge in pressuring Olympic sponsors and the International Olympic Committee to relocate the games to a different country. By pushing for relocation as opposed to pure boycott, countries will be firm in their messaging against China without affecting the already narrow window of time that Olympic athletes have to compete in the games. Simply choosing to not participate will do little, if nothing at all. China will win more medals as more countries refuse to compete, which will only further fuel state propaganda and messaging.
Sports have never existed free from political and social factors. The opportunity for nations of the world to join together to set a clear and firm international precedent while still holding the Olympics in its full form is one that cannot be missed.
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From the Basement | US should boycott 2022 Olympic Games - Tulane Hullabaloo
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Simone Biles details how Nassar’s abuse impacted Tokyo Olympics: ‘I never should have been left alone’ – Fox News
Posted: at 6:33 am
Simon Biles revealed Wednesday that the sexual abuse she was subjected to by disgraced former USA Gymnastics team doctor Larry Nassar had a direct impact on her mental health at the 2020 Tokyo Olympic Games, from where she unexpectedly withdrew from several events.
Biles and several other members of Team USA Gymnastics spoke before the Senate Judiciary Committee over the FBIs failed investigation into Nassar. Biles' impactful statement touched on a range of issues related to the investigation and went on to detail the lasting impacts the abuse has had on her and many other athletes years after allegations were first made in 2015.
US OLYMPICS GYMNASTS SLAM NASSAR INVESTIGATION, ALLEGE FBI TURNED A BLIND EYE, FALSIFIED REPORT
"I will close with one final thought. The scars of this horrific abuse continue to live with all of us," she said. "As the lone competitor at the recent Tokyo Games who was a survivor of this horror, I can assure you that the impacts of this man's abuse are not ever over or forgotten."
Nassar was charged in 2016 with federal child pornography offenses and sexual abuse charges in Michigan. He is now serving decades in prison after hundreds of girls and women said he sexually abused them under the guise of medical treatment when he worked for Michigan State and Indiana-based USA Gymnastics, which trains Olympians. (Graeme Jennings/Pool via AP)
"The announcement in the spring of 2020 that the Tokyo Games were to be postponed for a year meant that I would be going to the gym, to training, to therapy, living daily, among the reminders of this story for another 365 days. As I have stated in the past, one thing that helped me push each and every day was the goal of not allowing this crisis to be ignored. I worked incredibly hard to make sure that my presence could maintain a connection between the failures and the competition at Tokyo 2020."
She continued: "That has proven to be an exceptionally difficult burden for me to carry, particularly when required to travel to Tokyo without the support of any of my family. I am a strong individual and I will persevere, but I never should have been left alone to suffer the abuse of Larry Nassar. And the only reason I did was because of the failures that lie at the heart of the abuse that you are now asked to investigate."
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Biles competed at the all-around team event in Tokyo before withdrawing from the vault, individual all-around and two other apparatus events citing her mental health struggles. She would eventually return to close out the Games with a bronze medal in the womens balance beam final.
The four-time gold medalist made no mistake in placing the blame on Nassar but also looked for accountability from USA Gymnastics and the United States Olympic and Paralympic Committee that she said was aware of the abuse.
"I blame Larry Nassar and I also blame an entire system that enabled and perpetrated his abuse," she said. "If you allow a predator to harm children, the consequences will be swift and severe. Enough is enough."
United States gymnasts from left, Simone Biles, McKayla Maroney, Aly Raisman and Maggie Nichols arrive for a Senate Judiciary hearing about the Inspector General's report on the FBI's handling of the Larry Nassar investigation on Capitol Hill, Wednesday, Sept. 15, 2021, in Washington. (Graeme Jennings/Pool via AP)
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The hearing is part of a congressional effort to hold the FBI accountable after multiple missteps in investigating the case, including the delays that allowed the now-imprisoned Nassar to abuse other young gymnasts.
At least 40 girls and women said they were molested after the FBI had been made aware of the problem.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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