Thursday, January 09, 2020

Australia's Devastating Wildfires Seen from Space

MILLENNIAL ROYALS QUIT -- CROWN IN CRISIS

RUMOR HAS IT THEY WANT TO MOVE TO CANADA AFTER A VACATION THIS MONTH IN VICTORIA, BC THE MOST ENGLISH CITY IN NORTH AMERICA
I STOLE THE HEADER FROM CTV'S POWER PANEL THE JOURNALISTS
WHERE ONE OF THE JOURNALISTS QUIPPED HOW THE ROYALS QUITTING WAS THE MILLENNIAL THING TO DO 1/9/2020





Prince Harry And Meghan Markle Release Statement Amid RumoursThey’re Thinking Of Moving To Canada

Could British Columbia become Meghan and Harry’s part time home?

Would Canadians welcome Harry and Meghan?  WELL OF COURSE WE WOULD


Hollywood LifePrince Harry & Meghan Markle: How They Lived ‘Like Locals’ & Dodged Press On Private Christmas Break Prince Harry and Meghan Markle lived like locals during Christmas in Canada, we've learned exclusively! 

Sean O'Grady Harry and Meghan’s move to Canada could save the Royal Family

The institution enjoys its privileges through the conditional consent of the people. By redefining how it functions, the Duke and Duchess of Sussex would be keeping it alive

Sean O'Grady






Wednesday, January 08, 2020

FOX HUNTING IN THE UK
‘Your worst nightmare has just turned up’: Masked pro-hunt gang on quad bikes chase protesters trying to protect foxes


Men filmed screaming abuse and beating on hunt saboteurs’ window as they chase them along road


Chris Baynes
1 day ago



A gang of masked hunt supporters on quad bikes have been filmed “threatening” and chasing animal rights activists as they monitored riders and hounds in Wiltshire.

Footage filmed by Bath Hunt Saboteurs shows two men wearing balaclavas and scarves screaming abuse at the group as they watched the Avon Vale Hunt.

In the latest in a string of confrontations linked to the controversial British countryside sport, the hunt supporters are seen banging on the windows on the saboteurs’ Land Rover before pursuing them at speed after they drive off.

Bath Hunt Saboteurs said the video was filmed near the village of Atworth, Wiltshire, on Saturday afternoon.

The group said the men seen in the footage “verbally abused and threatened us”.

“They tried to open the doors of our vehicle and smash the windows,” a spokesperson for the hunt saboteurs added.

“They told one of the male sabs to get out of the vehicle. He did not.

“We felt unsafe, so once we saw the hounds being packed up the decision was made to leave the area.”

The group had initially travelled to disrupt a pheasant shoot seven miles away at Colerne airfield, near Chippenham, on Saturday morning.

As they drove back towards Bath, Somerset, they spotted the Avon Vale Hunt and stopped to monitor the meet.

Read more

‘Hunt supporter’ filmed hitting saboteurs’ van with dead fox

Footage filmed from inside the group’s Land Rover shows two activists watching the hunt as a red-coated huntsman on horseback approaches and tells them: “Your worst nightmare has just turned up.” The rider then smiles and rides off.

Moments later, a red quad bike pulls up alongside the activists’ 4x4. Two masked men climb off and begin thumping on vehicle’s windows, yelling “f**k off” and “come on, get out”.

As hunt saboteurs begin to drive off, the masked men jump back on their quad bike and pursue them. At one point, they drive alongside the Land Rover and thump on its windows as the vehicles’ move along the road.

The animal rights activists’ said the chase continued for nearly two minutes before but the quad bike stopped.

The group have not reported the incident to police, saying: “The police never do anything about this type of behaviour.”

An Avon and Somerset Police spokesperson said: “If a crime was reported it would be looked into, assessed, and dealt with accordingly – but it would need to be reported first.”

The Independent has contacted Avon Vale Hunt for a comment.

Hunting wild animals with dogs was banned in England and Wales in 2005, but meets still continue legally with hounds following an artificial scent.

However, opponents say hunts regularly flout the law and saboteur groups across the county seek to disrupt activities and document cases of foxes being killed.

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Shamanism in Nepal: Inside the practices and spiritual world of Jhakri

Photos reveal the rituals and tests that aspiring shamans must complete

Narendra Shrestha
In photos: Shamanism in Nepal

Show all 15





“Jhakri” is the Nepalese word for shaman; in Nepal it refers to practitioners of the ethnic groups of the Tamang, Magar, Rai, Limbu and Gurung people.

Chet Bahadur Thing, 26, a renowned shaman, felt a connection with the spiritual world, and learning from his grandfather, he started practising shamanism at the age of 11. He is now considered a guru in his community. He says: “During ancient times, when there was no medical science or hospitals, shamans used to treat the patients in our village. Even now, people with spiritual problems or body pain visit us for healing or treatment or when doctors cannot heal them.”

Eighteen-year-old Sheela Lamichhane is a student of management in Kathmandu and a practising shaman. Ever since her older sister got severely ill and then was treated by a shaman she has been fascinated by those who practice it.

She even became possessed herself: “I used to run in the middle of the road barefoot like some crazy girl,” she recalls. Her parents took her to Thing, who, after purging the evil spirit, began her shaman training. She passed several tests, including the most important, a seven-day fasting ritual called gufa and a “holy river meditation”.

Gufa typically refers to a cave where aspiring shamans attend fasting and classes over the course of a week. They have to perform puja, a Hindu act of worship, chant mantras, play drums and dance in the middle of the night over burning ashes or coals.
Read more

Hallucinogenic drugs found in 1,000-year-old shamanic pouch

Shamans believe that they will gain power or energy from God if they are able to dance barefoot over the burning coals. After the completion of this first test, shaman practitioners must go to a holy river for meditation. Half submerged in the river waters, they have to chant mantras and meditate for more than three hours. This ritual is meant to build confidence and provide energy to become a shaman, but not everyone can pass this test.

Lamichhane attends her regular classes at college, before treating patients at home with her parents’ assistance during the afternoon. She will need to pass more tests to get fully certified as a shaman, which should take about two more years.

“I had a dream to be a doctor when I was 10 years old and today people know me as a witch doctor. I feel like I was destined,” she says.

EPA



SEX EDUCATION’S EMMA MACKEY SAYS MEN LIKE PRINCE ANDREW HAVE ‘ARCHAIC’ WAYS OF THINKING ABOUT SEX
'It makes my skin crawl', says actor

Olivia Petter
@oliviapetter1


Sex Education star Emma Mackey has criticised "men like [the Duke of York]" for having outdated views on sex.

Speaking to Stylist, the actor was asked to respond to a quote by Prince Andrew from his BBC Newsnight interview.

In the interview, with Emily Maitlis, the royal addressed his relationship with sex offender Jeffrey Epstein by saying: “If you’re a man, it is a positive act to have sex with somebody."

"It makes my skin crawl," Mackey said. "These men – men like him – are part of a generation who have inherited archaic ways of being and thinking that have always been associated with the male instinct.

"The idea that male sexuality is something very animalistic, that it’s out of their control. But that’s not an excuse any more. We’re not animals!"

Mackey also discussed how men and women should be taught about consent from a young age.

"The way it was when I was at school was so sterile and clinical and scary – there’s no real connection or emotion, which almost leads to people forgetting their partners are thinking, feeling humans," she said.

"I had one sex education lesson at school when I was 12 and it was literally like a biology class, all anatomy and reproductive organs," she explained.

"So for me and a lot of my peers the real education came from discussion with friends over time."


Mackey also credited art and photography for expanding her sexual education horizons, noting Belgian photographer called Charlotte Abramow, whose work champions sexual autonomy and the female experience.