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Category Archives: Post Human
Carter fears global effect of new US human rights policies – CT Post
Posted: May 9, 2017 at 2:54 pm
Kathleen Foody, Associated Press
ATLANTA (AP) As the Trump administration signals a de-emphasis of human rights in U.S. foreign policy decisions, former U.S. President Jimmy Carter said Tuesday that he's concerned America's approach will erode support for such rights in other countries.
The 92-year-old Carter spoke with The Associated Press amid a two-day meeting of dozens of human rights activists at The Carter Center in Atlanta.
Carter cited a portion of President Donald Trump's inaugural address promising that his administration does "not seek to impose our way of life on anyone, but rather to let it shine as an example for everyone to follow." Secretary of State Rex Tillerson expanded on that slightly last week when he told State Department employees that some national security efforts can't always be conditioned on "our values."
"The president made this clear in his inaugural address I was there when he said that no longer would we try to force American standards on other countries," Carter said. "And I assumed that meant the standards of peace and human rights and freedom and justice and that sort of thing. Our standards that we've always claimed to be American standards are really the implementation of a universal declaration of human rights, plus peace."
Carter also challenged the idea that a commitment to human rights can't coexist with national security, calling it a "false premise."
Carter fears global effect of new US human rights policies
"The best way for a nation to guarantee security, absence from fear and absence from violence, is to promote human rights and freedom," he said.
Carter has worked on various human rights issues, from fair elections to health care, since leaving the White House and forming the nonprofit. This year's forum on human rights is the 10th held since 2003, bringing together activists from around the globe.
"They come to tell their stories collectively and also to form an alliance with people around the world who are joined with them in a collective effort to promote the standards of human rights," Carter said. "And to make sure the world doesn't forget that the basic moral values and ethical standards of human beings are being abandoned or ignored in many societies."
The participants share strategies and stories with one another, interspersed with spirited musical performances or videos featuring participants' work. The event also gives The Carter Center and other organizations "a fairly good picture of what's going on in the entire world," Carter said.
Maryam Al-Khawaja, a Bahraini activist who has been imprisoned for her work, said repressive governments learn from each other, and activists need to make connections and work across borders. If there's muted international backlash to a policy in one country limiting human rights work, others will adopt it without fear of consequences, she said.
"We need to put up a challenge and do the same," she said.
Beyond the opportunity to share ideas and make connections, the event provides emotional support for people whose work puts them in constant danger, said Rubina Bhatti, an activist focused on the rights of women and religious minorities in Pakistan. Her organization was shut down by authorities last year.
"When we come to these points, we find a lot of struggle but also strength, solidarity, passion, compassion, love," Bhatti said. "I am not alone in this ocean; we all are trying to swim."
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Tillerson should listen to McCain on human rights – Washington Post (blog)
Posted: at 2:54 pm
In a brutally direct piece in the New York Times on Monday, Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) let Secretary of State Rex Tillerson have it for a speech he gave to the State Department in which he argued that national security must take precedence over human rights.
McCain, who grudgingly voted to confirm Tillerson, explained:
Secretary Tillerson sent a message to oppressed people everywhere: Dont look to the United States for hope. Our values make us sympathetic to your plight, and, when its convenient, we might officially express that sympathy. But we make policy to serve our interests, which are not related to our values. So, if you happen to be in the way of our forging relationships with your oppressors that could serve our security and economic interests, good luck to you. Youre on your own.
McCain made a primarily a philosophic argument against Tillersons view. America didnt invent human rights. Those rights are common to all people: nations, cultures and religions cannot choose to simply opt out of them, he wrote. He continued: We are a country with a conscience. We have long believed moral concerns must be an essential part of our foreign policy, not a departure from it. We are the chief architect and defender of an international order governed by rules derived from our political and economic values. We have grown vastly wealthier and more powerful under those rules. More of humanity than ever before lives in freedom and out of poverty because of those rules.
McCain suggested that far from being realists, those who dismiss human rights put U.S. national security at risk. (To view foreign policy as simply transactional is more dangerous than its proponents realize. Depriving the oppressed of a beacon of hope could lose us the world we have built and thrived in. It could cost our reputation in history as the nation distinct from all others in our achievements, our identity and our enduring influence on mankind. Our values are central to all three.)
In more concrete terms, Tillerson and apparently President Trump is giving up a huge advantage on the international stage (our commitment to universal human rights) and handing our enemies a free pass. Didnt Republicans excoriate President Barack Obama for failing to seize the initiative during Irans Green Revolution an effort that might have damaged the regimes credibility and claim to be just another normal nation-state pursuing its own interests? Didnt Republicans blame Obama for failing to stand up for human rights in China, thereby giving up a critical aspect of soft power?
Rex Tillerson on Feb. 1 pledged to "represent the interest of all of the American people" shortly after being sworn in as secretary of state. (The Washington Post)
Frequent Trump critic and former State Department official Eliot A. Cohen provides a guide for Tillerson and others, writing:
One can accept that Egypt will not adopt New England town meetings, but still persistently call out corruption; one can work with Recep Tayyip Erdogan while making clear American abhorrence of what he has done to freedom of the press in a country drifting into Islamist authoritarianism. Indeed, the case of Turkey helps illustrate why the United States should pressprudently but persistentlyfor open and law-abiding societies. They make infinitely better allies in the long run than thugs sitting on powder kegs. . . .
It was an intellectually shallow performance. In many respects, Tillerson said, the Cold War was a lot easier than the world of today. No it was notnot if you worried about nuclear war, were involved in two hot wars that cost an order of magnitude more casualties than the United States suffered in Iraq and Afghanistan, or had to cope with decolonization, local communist movements, and the cultural upheaval of the 1960s.
We won the Cold War, Tillerson should recall, with human rights as a main pillar of our strategy in containing and eventually bringing down the Evil Empire. Human rights was a banner used to rally dissidents and Warsaw Pact countries under the Soviets thumb. We were stronger and the Soviet Union was weaker because of the fundamental difference in outlook with regard to human liberty.
As Cohen warns, support for human rights, In the absence of historical perspective and understanding, foreign policy degenerates into crisis management; in the absence of values-informed and in some cases values-driven policy it can easily slip into short-sighted tactical accommodations, the equivalent of playing chess one move at a time, which is a good way to get mated. He added that it is not any more reassuring that the secretary thanked those sending him one-page memoranda because Im not a fast reader. That is becomingly modest, but the truth is, it is no great qualification for an office that demands intellectual depth.
McCain and Cohen should keep up the tutorials for the benefit of the administration, but its also just as important for the voters and Congress, who must in the absence of presidential leadership continue to defend the United States commitment to universal human rights.
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Beer made from human urine being brewed in Denmark – Jakarta Post
Posted: at 2:54 pm
According to CBS news, local corporation Norrebro Bryghus is using the unconventional liquid in their malting process by fertilizing the traditional barley grain with human urine. (Shutterstock/*)
Due to its yellowish color and strong odor, beer has oftentimes been likened in jest to urine.
However, one brewery in Denmark, has been taking the comparisons way too literally, as it is making beer using the said human waste.
According to CBS news, local corporation Norrebro Bryghus is using the unconventional liquid in their malting process by fertilizing the traditional barley grain with human urine.
The cleverly named Pisner pilsner, which comes from a wordplay between the type of beer and local slang, was made from contents of urinals at the largest music festival in Northern Europe.
All in all, over 50,000 liters of human urine was used as an alternative to traditional animal manure or factory-made fertilizer products, the report said.
Read also: Beer company to pay interns $12K to get drunk and travel
The reason why we make this Pisner beer is because we are a craft brewery out of Copenhagen and about four years ago we converted into organic, so all our beers are organic today, Henrik Vang, chief executive of Norrebro Bryghus, explained their seemingly bizarre product to the news outlet.
We thought it would be a great idea also to go into recyclable beer. So we want to test our brewers and test our opportunities to make recyclable beer, he added.
Although the idea of turning urine into one of the worlds most beloved beverages seems extremely peculiar, Denmarks agriculture and food council claimed that thebeercycling technique could become a trend in the future.
Furthermore, subjects who have tasted the unlikely concoction have raved over its fresh and filling taste.
The company, meanwhile, is expecting to come up with 60,000 bottles of beer from the collected batch of urine from the festival.
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The Parmelee Post: Civil Engineers Mystified by Presence of Human Life Within Winooski Traffic Circle – Seven Days
Posted: May 7, 2017 at 11:18 pm
In my 30-plus years of designing roads and bridges, I can assure you Ive never seen anything remotely like this, exclaimed veteran civil engineer and sidewalk advocate, Charles Enfarsi. Everything I thought I knew about urban engineering fails to explain what lies before my very eyes.
The bewildered and bespectacled engineer stood motionless on the sidewalk at the bottom of the Winooski traffic circle. It wasnt the elliptical flow of traffic or even the freshly paved asphalt that caught his attention. Rather, it was the presence of human life gathered on the space inside of the circle.
Whoever designed this 'rotary' clearly had one goal in mind: To keep pedestrians out of the public space it surrounds, opined Enfarsi. Any schmuck can design a keep off grass sign. It takes a real passive-aggressive genius to instead surround that grass with two lanes of traffic and a confusing array of yield signs that are apparently open to interpretation.
I have no idea how this crowd of people made it safely into the center," he continued. "But I hope they realize how lucky there are to be a part of something so remarkable.
The human activity also gained the attention of bridge builder and doomsday bunker enthusiast, Todd Reglund.
For years I tried to warn the city that this traffic circle wasnt quite dangerous enough," he said. "I told them that unless they installed a fiery moat, or an elaborate series of booby traps, people could and would still find a way to get into the park at the center. Maybe now theyll take me more seriously!
Drivers seemed equally impressed that dozens of pedestrians had somehow safely crossed the speedway.
Honestly, anytime I drive through that circle without hitting another car it feels like a tiny miracle, said frequent commuter and occasionally religious-while-driving mother, Anne Randly.
Im so focused on trying to figure out whos yielding or whos merging that its never even occurred to me to also be on the look out for pedestrians," she added. "Or to figure out what those blinking yellow lights are supposed to mean.
Randly said she was so hypnotized by the bravery of the individuals inside the circle that she completed an estimated 14 laps around the speedway before remembering to change lanes without looking in order to exit.
Witnesses close to the circle told the Parmelee Post that a group of neon-vest-clad volunteers holding makeshift stop signs made the dangerous trek into the center possible.
It truly was a community effort to get these individuals safely inside the circle, said longtime Winooski resident, Eleanor McCradle. It sure takes a lot of flashing lights and hand waving to fool traffic into thinking that the lives of individuals trying to cross the road are more important than getting to their destination as quickly as possible."
McCradle paused, clearly swelling with civic pride before continuing.
I think Winooski showed itself and the world today that there is no limit to what we can accomplish if we work together," she said. "There is no wall high enough or speedway speedy enough to divide us. It just takes a lot of organized and selfless work to make great things happen.
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Scientists Record Deer Gnawing On Human Remains For The First … – Huffington post (press release) (blog)
Posted: at 11:18 pm
Deer are nothing if not symbols of wide-eyed innocence surely youve heard the term doe-eyed or have seen the film Bambi?
Turns out,weve underestimated deer.
A study published in the Journal of Forensic Sciences this week reveals that deer yes, those pictures of guileless natural beauty have been caught chowing down on human remains.
Herein, we report on the first known photographic evidence of deer gnawing human remains, write scientists from Texas Forensic Anthropology Research Facility in the paper, published Tuesday.
Popular Science reports that researchers left a human body out in the woods in 2014 set up a motion-sensitive camera so that they could study how what scavenging species would do to the corpse.
It wasnt for a few months that the camera caught our antlered suspect a white-tailed deer with a human rib bone in its mouth. A few days later, a deer unclear if it was the same one was spotted again with a rib bone in its mouth like a cigar, according to Popular Science.
Erin Cadigan via Getty Images
Studying the effects of wild animals on corpses can potentially help investigators figure out crucial information about found human bodies, like the length of time a person has been dead.
Were glad they found useful information, but we wish someone had warned us deer were running around with human-bone cigars a little earlier. A Google search for deer attack nets a lot of results. Waymore results than you might think.
And sure, these include situations where a deer has fought back against a hunter or attacked a driver after being struck. But they also include deer whose motives are less clear. For instance, a stag that reportedly attacked a visitor at a national park in Australia, or one that jumped a man who had just freed the animal from a coyote trap.
Listen, deer. Were not all bad. Though honestly, with the destruction that humans have wrought against the natural world, its not that surprising you want to smoke our bones like cigars.
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Scientists Record Deer Gnawing On Human Remains For The First ... - Huffington post (press release) (blog)
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Stephen Hawking just moved up humanity’s deadline for escaping Earth – Washington Post
Posted: May 6, 2017 at 3:06 am
In a July 2015 speech, Stephen Hawking explained "Breakthrough Listen," an initiative aimed at discovering intelligent extraterrestrial life. (Breakthrough Initiatives)
In November, Stephen Hawking and his bulging computer brain gave humanity what we thought was an intimidating deadline for finding a new planet to call home: 1,000 years.
Ten centuries is a blip in the grand arc of the universe, but in human terms it was the apocalyptic equivalent of getting a few weeks' notice before our collective landlord (Mother Earth) kicks us to the curb.
Even so, we took a collective breath and steeled our nerves.
So what if there's no interplanetary Craigslist for new astronomical sublets, we told ourselves, we're human the Bear Grylls of the natural order. We've already survived the ice age, the plague, a bunch of scary volcanoes and earthquakes, and the 2016 election cycle.
We got this, right? Not so fast.
[The Doomsday Clock just advanced, thanks to Trump: Its now just 2 minutes to midnight.]
Now Hawking, the renowned theoretical physicist turned apocalypse warning system, is back with a revised deadline.In "Expedition New Earth" a documentary that debuts this summer as part of the BBCs "Tomorrows World" science season Hawking claims that Mother Earth would greatly appreciate it if we could gather our belongings and get out not in 1,000 years, but in the next century or so.
You heard the man a single human lifetime. Is this nerd serious?
Thanks, Steve.
Professor Stephen Hawking thinks the human species will have to populate a new planet within 100 years if it is to survive, the BBC said with a notable absence of punctuation marks in a statement posted online. With climate change, overdue asteroid strikes, epidemics and population growth, our own planet is increasingly precarious.
In this landmark series, Expedition New Earth, he enlists engineering expert Danielle George and his own former student, Christophe Galfard, to find out if and how humans can reach for the stars and move to different planets.
The BBC program gives Hawking a chance to wade into the evolving science and technology that may become crucial if humans hatch a plan to escape Earth and find a way to survive on another planet from questions about biology and astronomy to rocket technology and human hibernation, the BBC notes.
The cosmologistlives with themotor neuron disease amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), or Lou Gehrig's Disease.As the disease has progressed, he has become almost entirely paralyzed. And in 1985, after contracting pneumonia, Hawking underwent a tracheotomy that left him unable to speak. He communicates using the assistance of a voice-producing computer.
In recent months, Hawking has been explicit about humanity's need to find a "Planet B." In the past, he has also called for humans to colonize the moon and find a way to settle Mars a locale he referred to as the obvious next target in 2008, according to New Scientist.
Remaining on Earth any longer, Hawking claims, places humanity at great risk of encountering another mass extinction.
We must continue to go into space for the future of humanity, the 74-year-old Cambridge professor said during a November speech at Oxford University Union, according to the Daily Express.
I dont think we will survive another 1,000 years without escaping beyond our fragile planet, he added.
[Why Stephen Hawking believes the next 100 years may be humanitys toughest test]
During the hour-long speech, Hawking told the audience that Earth's cataclysmic end may be hastened by humankind, which will continue to devour the planets resources at unsustainable rates, the Express reported.
His wide-ranging talk touched upon the origins of the universe and Einstein's theory of relativity, as well as humanity's creation myths and God. Hawking also discussed M-theory, which Leron Borsten of PhysicsWorld.com explains as proposal for a unified quantum theory of the fundamental constituents and forces of nature.
Though the challenges ahead are immense, Hawking said, it is aglorious time to be alive and doing research into theoretical physics.
Our picture of the universe has changed a great deal in the last 50 years, and I am happy if I have made a small contribution, he added.
Some of Hawking's most explicit warnings have revolved around the potential threat posed by artificial intelligence. That means in Hawking's analysis humanity's daunting challenge is twofold: develop the technology that will enable us to leave the planet and start a colony elsewhere, while avoiding the frightening perils that may be unleashed by said technology.
[We would need 1.7 Earths to make our consumption sustainable]
When it comes to discussing that threat, Hawking is unmistakably blunt.
I think the development of full artificial intelligence could spell the end of the human race, Hawkingtold the BBCin a 2014 interview that touched upon everything from online privacy to his affinity for his robotic-sounding voice.
Despite its current usefulness, he cautioned, further developing A.I. could prove a fatal mistake.
Once humans develop artificial intelligence, it will take off on its own and redesign itself at an ever-increasing rate, Hawking warned in recent months. Humans, who are limited by slow biological evolution, couldn't compete and would be superseded.
Thanks again, Steve.
MORE READING:
Unchecked fake news gave rise to an evil empire in Star Wars
A scientist who studies protest says the resistance isnt slowing down
The tea plant has a whopper genome, four times that of coffee, scientists find
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Human noise pollution is everywhere, even in the national parks – Washington Post
Posted: at 3:06 am
In wintertime, the soundsof nature are so subtle they're almost imperceptible: The whistling of the wind thoughcraggy mountaintops, the whispering branches of the trees; the soft, delicate patter of an unseen animal's paws across snowy ground.
It's a really quiet experience, saidRachel Buxton, recalling a recent winter hike in southwest Colorado's La Garita Wilderness. You're almost hearing your own heartbeat.
But every 30 minutes, a jet flew overhead, shattering the fragile calm. It's shocking, right? she said. Youre in the middle of nowhere, yet you still cant escape the sounds of humans.
That's the trouble with noise pollution, continued Buxton, an acoustic ecologist at Colorado State University: It really doesnt have any boundaries. Theres no way of holding it in.
This problem pervades wilderness areas across the United States, Buxton and her colleagues reported Thursday in the journal Science. Using a modelbased on sound measurements taken by the National Park Service, they found that human noisesat least double the background sound levels at the majority of protected areas in the country. This noise pollution doesn't just disrupt hikers; it can also frighten, distract or harmanimals that inhabit the wilderness, setting off changes that cascade through the entire ecosystem.
When we think about wilderness, we think about dark skies, going to see outstanding scenery, said Megan McKenna, a scientist with the National Park Service's Natural Sounds and Night Skies division and a co-author on the report. We really should think about soundscapes, too.
Measuring noise pollution is a tricky task. Unlike smog or light, sound can't be detected from a satellite. To take stock of the soundscape of a specific site, Park Service scientists need to hike into the wilderness and set up a listening station by hand.
Each station includes a sound level meter and a recorder that runs for 30 days, collecting every birdsong, thunderclap and rumble of cars on the road. The Park Service has taken these measurements at hundreds of sites ranging from the remote Hoh Rain Forest of Olympic National Park to thecrowded running trails of Washington's Rock Creek Park.
The resulting recordings werethen analyzed by acoustic specialists, who can pick out each sound in an audio clip and categorize its source. McKenna said that some of her colleagues are perceptive enough to distinguish between different types of jet engines.
[These pesky caterpillars seem to digest plastic bags]
Using data from more than 400 sites across the country, the researchers figured out which sounds are associated with a range of geographic features elevation,annual rainfall, proximity to cities, highways and flight paths. These associations were then built intoa model that can predict noise levels at anygiven spot in the country. By subtracting out the natural sound sources at sites, the scientists found the expected amount of noise pollution for the wilderness areas they studied.
The findings were mixed. Buxton said that protected areas had much lower levels of human-caused sound than the adjacent"buffer zones of unprotected land suggesting that these buffer zones really do insulate parks from unnatural sounds.
But 63 percent of protected areas experienced at least a three-decibel increase in sound levels caused by noise pollution(because decibels are logarithmic, this has the effect of doubling the level of background noise).
More than afifth of protected areas experienced 10 extra decibels of human noise a tenfold increase in the level of sound. The majorityof areas considered critical habitat for endangered species were among the regions that dealt with at least an extra three decibels of sound, and 14 percent of critical habitats were in the 10-decibel category.
The noise can come from a wide array of sources visitor center HVAC systems, air traffic overhead, growlingcar engines, children shrieking nearby, mining and drilling taking place miles away.
Andthe effects of this racketcan be far reaching, Buxton said. Animals rely heavily on their ability to hear minute natural noises the movement of predators, the trickle of a stream. Noise pollution may cover up those sounds, putting wild creatures at risk. Noise from human activity is also frightening and distracting; it can change animals' behavior with consequences for the entire ecosystem. A recent paper in the Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B found that noise pollution makes it more difficult for plants to reproduce because human sounds scares away the birds that help distribute seeds and increase the activity of seed-eating rodents.
Even life that lacks ears may be affected. Spiders don't hear sound,but they can feel its vibrations, and research suggests that they act differently when bombarded withhuman noise.Likewise, plants have been found toextend their roots in the direction of acoustic vibrations from running water. Though a recent study found that garden peas can distinguish between real nature sounds and a recording, scientists don't know whether plants may be confused by therumble of a passing car.
We're realizing more and more just how delicate sound is, and how essential it is to things you wouldn't expect, Buxton said.
[The pediatrician who exposed lead in Flint, Mich., water will march for science]
McKenna said that parks are taking steps to alleviatethe impact of human sounds. Some implement shuttle systems to reduce the number of cars within their boundaries. Muir Woods National Monument, a forest of cathedral-like old-growth redwoods on the California coast, took the simple step of posting library-style quiet signs and reported a dramatic reduction in noise pollution.
The most problematic type of noise pollution traffic sounds from cars and planes is not so easily mitigated. But Buxton said that parks can look intoquiet pavement, which muffles the sounds of tires rolling down a road, and establish noise corridors that align flight paths with highways on the ground.
These efforts aren'tjust for the animals' sake, the researchers say. We have all this research about how important it is to our human health and well-being, Buxton said, referencing studies thatlink listening tonature soundswith reductions in stress, improvements in mood and other markers of good health.
Also it enhances our experiences in protected areas, Buxton continued. Imagine walking in Yellowstone, seeing beautiful vistas.Youve got bird songs filling the landscape. You might hear a pack of wolves howling on your way home at night.All these things are really magnificent. That's something that deserves protection.
Correction:A previous version of this article misstated recent findings about the effect of noise pollution on plants. Noise pollutionmakes it more difficult for plants to reproduce byfrightening away birds that distribute seeds and increasing the activity of rodents that eat seeds.
Read more:
Unchecked fake news gave rise to an evil empire in Star Wars
Science funding spared under congressional budget deal, but more battles ahead
Why this zoo is putting gigantic, slimy 'snot otters' back in streams
Archaeology shocker: Study claims humans reached the Americas 130,000 years ago
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The Human Rights Council Can’t Handle Sri Lanka – Huffington post (press release) (blog)
Posted: at 3:06 am
During the 34th session of the UN Human Rights Council (which ended in late March), a cosponsored resolution on Sri Lanka was passed. The resolution which deals largely with human rights and transitional justice is the fifth country-specific Sri Lanka resolution since 2012.
Leading up to, during and after the session a range of commentary has been published on this topic and one thing really stands out. Many have referred to Sri Lanka being granted more time to move ahead with its transitional justice process. We have been told that Colombo has been given more time or been allowed to proceed.
Its true that the Council will monitor Sri Lankas transitional justice process for another two years. However, something truly odd is going on here. Why are people intimating that there was some other (more drastic) option looming during the Councils 34th session?
The passage of another resolution on Sri Lanka was basically staged theater, a foregone conclusion before the session had begun. More resolute action simply wasnt on the table.
In a recent Washington Examiner piece, I looked at Sri Lankas relationship with the Council in more detail. Heres a paragraph from the article:
Sri Lanka has basically been disregarding Council resolutions for the past five years. The current administration is more than happy to keep this dance at the Geneva-based body going, because its ensures that they can at least for an international audience remain publicly committed to a lot of reforms that they have virtually no intention of ever implementing.
The inescapable reality is that the international community, particularly the U.S. and its allies, have completely caved. Colombos promises have not been met with significant tangible action and the smart money says things wont look that different in the coming years.
The current state of affairs in Sri Lanka is being manipulated for various reasons: including the desire for a success story, perceived geopolitical exigencies and fundamental misunderstandings about the country.
So, lets be clear and candid about whats happening.
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The Human Rights Council Can't Handle Sri Lanka - Huffington post (press release) (blog)
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Human Trafficking Forum Draws Capacity Crowd – Malibu Times
Posted: at 3:06 am
Malibu is ready to take a stand against human trafficking.
I think this is the hottest ticket in town! said emcee and event organizer Lori Lerner Gray as she kicked off a free community forum on human trafficking to a capacity crowd of about 220 people last week.
The event, co-hosted by the Malibu Jewish Centers Sisterhood group and the Malibu Film Society, featured special guest speaker State Senator Henry Stern, representatives from New Light India Anchal project, Courageous Girls India and Nepal project, and a showing of the feature film Sold.
The purpose of the forum was to educate residents about what human trafficking is, and the fact that it happens all over the world, including Southern California.
When you think of human trafficking or sex slaves, you tend to think of places like India or Thailand, but no country is immune to this growing epidemic, Gray said, introducing the subject. Its now the second biggest criminal activity in the world drugs are number one and in the U.S., California is No. 1 in terms of the number of criminals and victims.
She explained that her Sisterhood group is dedicated to tikkun olam, Hebrew words for repairing the world, which they carry out through social actions and the pursuit of social justice.
Im especially inspired by my daughter Rachel, who made two trips to India through the New Light organization, Gray continued. She came home with stories of women and children living in a world where they can still be sold.
State Senator Henry Stern, who represents Malibu in Sacramento, talked about the updated Human Trafficking bill SB 225 he introduced in the wake of a major human trafficking sweep in California a couple of months ago that yielded 474 arrests and identified at least 55 survivors.
If Sterns bill passes, all state hotels, motels, inns, B&Bs and transient lodgings (other than personal residences) will be required to post human trafficking hotline numbers that the public or victims can call or text to seek help or report unlawful activity. He says the ability to text would help empower millennials and Generation Z, because hotlines dont work for those age groups.
Ever since I arrived in the State Senate, Ive found that battling issues like this is a lonely business, Stern said. The people who live in the shadows dont have lobbyists and super PACs behind them ... Each of us has a role to play with an issue like human trafficking, because these issues are right under our nose, not just in India. Its very easy to not notice, but if you happen to be in a hotel lobby in a place like Canoga Park and see two people go off to a room together and it looks suspicious, do something.
California is the conscience of this nation, and we have to say were not going to be a culture based on misogyny and our baser instincts, Stern added. The victims in California tend to be [girls] ages 12 to 14.
The feature-length 2014 film Sold was based on the critically acclaimed and fact-based eponymous novel by Patricia McCormick. It was executive produced by Emma Thompson, stars Gillian Anderson and David Arquette, and directed/written by Oscar winner Jeffrey Brown. Screenings of the film help support the nonprofit Courageous Girls, and tell the story of a young girl from a mountain village in Nepal who is sold by her father and ends up in a nightmarish and brutal brothel-prison in Kolkata, India.
We set out to make a movie to change the world, Samantha Kinkaid, a local representative of that organization said. We wanted every person who saw it to feel compelled to do something. She said the global average age of trafficked children is 12, and that most come out of it with tremendous PTSD issues. Her organization helps them to re-enter society, overcome stigma and find employment.
Malibu native Rachel Gray, who inspired her mother to organize this program, has been to India several times first in a study abroad program, and later to make a documentary as part of a traveling for social change program for the nonprofit New Light.
New Light fosters children whose parents are sex workers and creates opportunities for women who have been sex trafficked, Rachel said. Traveling to India completely changed my world view... It planted a seed for me about doing meaningful work and being involved.
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Severed human foot discovered inside shoe on Charleston City Marina dock – Charleston Post Courier
Posted: at 3:06 am
Police are investigating after a severed human foot was found an the Charleston City Marina this week.
Officers were called at 1:35 p.m. Monday to 17 Lockwood Drive between docks J20 and J22, according to an incident report.
"The complainant notified employees at the marina that a shoe has been sitting on the dock for approximately six days with possible remains of a human foot inside of it," the report said.
The shoe a teal size 9 Adidas sneaker had a black sock inside of it, the report said. An object believed to be a human bone was seen inside the shoe and sticking out of the top.
A Marina official declined to comment.
Charleston County Coroner Rae Wooten said the foot was brought back to her office and examined by a forensic anthropologist.
Investigators believe the shoe and foot inside were floating amid some debris in the marina for some time, Wooten said. Someone cleaning the debris threw the shoe onto the dock where it sat for six days.
At this point, investigators have not been able to determine the individual's age, sex, ethnicity or pin down how long the foot has been severed from its body, Wooten said.
The foot has not been matched to any missing persons reports.Authorities have also reached out to the S.C. Department of Natural Resources for information on boating accidents in the area.
"It's determined to be human," she said. "We know so little. Without (an identification) we're pretty limited."
Wooten urged anyone who might have information about the foot to call the Charleston Police Department at 843-743-7200, Crime Stoppers of the Lowcountry at 843-554-1111 or the Charleston County Coroner's Office at 843-746-4030.
Reach Gregory Yee at 843-937-5908. Follow him on Twitter @GregoryYYee.
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Severed human foot discovered inside shoe on Charleston City Marina dock - Charleston Post Courier
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