Tuesday, July 25, 2023

Congressional Democrats call on Biden for workplace heat safety steps

Excessive heat warning in Las Vegas

Mon, July 24, 2023 at 2:18 PM MDT
By Josephine Walker

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A group of 112 Democratic members of Congress on Monday called on U.S. President Joe Biden's administration to establish heat safety regulations for indoor and outdoor workplaces as a persistent and deadly heatwave spreads across the country.

The group asked the Occupational Safety and Health Administration to issue new standards on adequate water and sheltered rest breaks, medical training to identify heat-related illness and a plan for workplaces to adjust their operations during times of dangerously high heat.

The move comes as the U.S. experiences a summer of record-breaking heat in some cities. Lawmakers cited the recent heat-related deaths of two Texans, a U.S. Postal Service employee who died on his route in 115 degree Fahrenheit (46°C) heat and a 35-year-old electrical lineman restoring power who likely died from heat exhaustion.

"These heat waves are dangerous, they are life-threatening, and – with the devastating effects of climate change – they are only getting worse," Senator Bernie Sanders, one of the lawmakers who signed the letter, said in a statement. "I urge the administration to move quickly to create this national heat standard to protect workers on the job.

The lawmaker asked OSHA to model the new standards after a 2022 bill that Congress never took up, the Asuncion Valdivia Heat Illness and Fatalities Prevention Act, named after the death of a California farm worker who died after picking grapes for ten hours in 105 F (41°C) temperatures in 2004.

(Reporting by Josephine Walker; Editing by Scott Malone and Marguerita Choy)


US House Democrat holds thirst strike to protest Texas water break law

Greg Casar
American politician

Tue, July 25, 2023 
By Moira Warburton and Josephine Walker

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Democratic U.S. Representative Greg Casar of Texas held a thirst strike at Congress on Tuesday to protest a new law signed by Republican Texas Governor Greg Abbott blocking local ordinances that mandate water breaks for workers.

Casar, whose district includes parts of Austin and San Antonio, Texas, said would not drink water for eight hours while standing on the steps of the U.S. Capitol building, as temperatures in Washington rise to almost 90 degrees Fahrenheit (32°C).

A day earlier, over 100 Democrats signed a letter to President Joe Biden's administration, asking for federal workplace heat safety regulations.

"It's challenging and it's hot, but it's not as hot as it is in Texas," said Casar, who was sweating in the sweltering humidity. Temperatures in Casar's district were expected to top 100°F (38°C) on Tuesday.

Top House Democrat Hakeem Jeffries called Abbott's bill "unreasonable, unconscionable and un-American."

Abbott's office did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The legislation blocks cities from writing local rules that go further than state laws, an attempt by Texas Republicans to limit the ability of local Democratic lawmakers to enact their policies.

The cities of Houston and Austin have sued the Texas government over the bill set to take effect in September.

Jasmine Granillo, whose family successfully pressured the city of Dallas to implement mandatory water breaks in 2015 after her brother died of heat stroke while working a residential construction job, said Abbott's bill "is chipping away what my family has fought for."

(Reporting by Moira Warburton and Josephine Walker; Editing by Scott Malone and Bill Berkrot)
Canada hailed for focusing foreign aid on women's rights amid global backslide

OTTAWA — Canada is being hailed for funding initiatives in developing countries that aim to keep women who care for children or elders from being excluded from the economy.

Ottawa announced projects to support people working in the caring economy at a major foreign-aid conference focused on women's advancement.

International Development Minister Harjit Sajjan also offered details at the Women Deliver conference in Rwanda about how $200 million in previously announced funding would be allocated.

The managing director of the Equality Fund, an organization that helps administer government cash for projects in developing countries, said Canada is holding the line amid a backsliding in gender equality.

Katharine Im-Jenkins says the funding will support women's sexual health and reproductive rights, even as other countries pull funding away from voluntary abortions, contraception and family planning.

The announcement comes after Canada joined some of its Western peers in cutting back on foreign aid, with this year's federal budget showing a 15 per cent drop in funding.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 24, 2023.



The gap is closing at the Women's World Cup as the underdogs rise up
TODAY PHILLIPINES SCORED THEIR FIRST GOAL EVER IN THE WORLD CUP, WINNING THEIR MATCH



SYDNEY (AP) — The underdogs are rising up at the Women's World Cup.

Jamaica's 0-0 draw with one of the tournament favorites France on Sunday was the latest evidence the gap is closing in international soccer.

There were enough examples of that during the men's World Cup in Qatar last year with Saudi Arabia beating eventual champion Argentina, while Morocco became the first African team to advance to the semifinals.

“Smaller countries are getting that understanding. We might not have the resources the bigger countries do in terms of equipment and traveling and games, but I think there’s an understanding there with coaches and technical staff and everything that our preparation is a little bit better all around,” said Jamaica coach Lorne Donaldson.

“Once upon a time the US by far was very, very dominant and you can just see the gap is closing. I think the smaller nations are jumping on the bandwagon and saying, ‘We can do this too.’”

France coach Hervé Renard, who led Saudi Arabia's men to that unforgettable win against Lionel Messi's Argentina, agrees.

"The French are used to having the upper hand during the opening games, but this is something that is going to change because things are getting a lot closer,” he said.

While that goalless draw was one of the most surprising results of the tournament so far, it followed a growing pattern at this World Cup, co-hosted by Australia and New Zealand.

New Zealand upset Ada Hegeberg’s Norway with a 1-0 win in the opening match, while Australia struggled to see off debutant Ireland and needed a penalty to seal a win by the same score.

European champion England beat another debutant Haiti 1-0 and again needed a penalty to break the deadlock.

Olympic champion Canada was held by 0-0 by Nigeria.

One reason why the traditionally smaller nations are providing such competition for their bigger rivals is the undoubted quality they now boast.

Khadija Shaw, the Manchester City forward, was outstanding for Jamaica and will be a big loss when her team faces Panama on Saturday, after picking up a red card late in the game against France.

Haiti's 19-year-old forward Melchie Dumornay looks set to become a global star.

“The players are developing,” said Donaldson. “They are getting a chance, some of these players, to go and play in the top leagues and they are taking it.”

While upsets are becoming more commonplace in international soccer, it remains to be seen if one of the underdogs can go all the way at a major tournament.

The men's World Cup final ended up with Messi's Argentina facing off against then-defending champion France with Kylian Mbappe leading its attack.

The US is aiming for a three-peat at the Women's World Cup and is favorite to become the first nation to do so.

England and Australia were pushed close, but are still well-placed to advance from the group stages after winning their opening games. Both will be expected to improve - especially Australia if star forward Sam Kerr can recover from a calf injury.

And Renard, who has won two Africa Cup of Nations tournaments, has no doubts about France's ability to build from a disappointing start.

“I'm satisfied with the mindset of my girls," he said. "They showed fighting spirit and this will be very useful for us in what comes next.

“I think we need to keep a cool head. I have full faith in my girls and this is how I tend to function. We are going to move forward all together and we are on the right track.”

___

James Robson is at https://twitter.com/jamesalanrobson

___

More AP Women’s World Cup coverage: https://apnews.com/hub/fifa-womens-world-cup

James Robson, The Associated Press
Biden says the U.S. would have to invent an Israel if it didn't exist. Why?

M. Muhannad Ayyash, Professor, Sociology, 
Mount Royal University, Calgary, Alberta
Mon, July 24, 2023

U.S. President Joe Biden meets with Israel's President Isaac Herzog in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington on July 18, 2023. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)

During his recent trip to the United States, Israeli President Isaac Herzog gave a speech before the United States Congress. Mainstream media coverage of his speech has focused on two points: the unbreakable “sacred” bond between Israel and the U.S., and the idea that calling Israel a racist state is antisemitic.


Rep. Pramila Jayapal labelled Israel a racist state before walking back her comments amid political pressure. (Mandel Ngan/Pool via AP)

These two points were on display recently when Congresswoman Pramila Jayapal, chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, called Israel a “racist state.”

After pressure from both Democrats and Republicans, who labelled her comments antisemitic, Jayapal walked back her remarks.

Further, the U.S. House of Representatives then overwhelmingly passed a resolution proclaiming that Israel is “not a racist or apartheid state” in a 412-to-9 vote.

What the coverage of these stories did not explain was why the U.S.-Israel relationship is considered unbreakable and why the charge of antisemitism is directed against those who call Israel an apartheid and racist state.

The harsh reaction to Jayapal’s comments and celebration of Herzog’s speech show that the U.S. government, whether Democrat or Republican, sees its interests as tightly aligned with Israel’s.

Regardless of which political party or coalition is in power in Israel, and regardless of where public opinion in the U.S. is moving, the U.S. government’s “commitment to Israel’s security is ironclad,” as Vice-President Kamala Harris put it.

The U.S. sees Israel as a critical “strategic ally” in the Middle East. During his recent meeting with Herzog, President Joe Biden repeated a line he famously said in 1986: “If there were not an Israel, we’d have to invent one.”
Shared values or naked self-interest?

Why would the U.S. need to invent an Israel? Biden has always seen Israel as an investment which produces the best returns for U.S. interests.

In 1986, when he was a member of the U.S. Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, he opposed the sale of weapons to Saudi Arabia because they were not able to become “agents of .U.S interests in the Persian Gulf region.”

He stressed that his opposition to the weapons sale was not about whether the Saudis were good guys or bad guys, but about the ability of the Saudis to help advance and secure U.S. interests.

He emphasized that the “naked self-interest of the U.S.” should always guide their Middle East policy, and that his support for Israel is situated within that self-interest. As he bluntly explained: “Were there not an Israel, the United States of America would have to invent an Israel to protect her interest in the region.”

Biden’s frank comments make clear that the U.S.-Israel “bond” is not about defending democracy. Rather, it has always been, and still is, about American imperial interests in the region.

So, if this bond is simply about naked self-interest, why all the fuss about whether Israel is labelled a democracy or an apartheid and racist state?
Hiding behind ‘democratic values’

Herzog and his many admirers in the U.S. Congress believe that Israel ought to be a Jewish and democratic state, meaning the majority of its population would have to be Jewish if it is to remain democratic.

The narrative the American public has been fed for decades is that the U.S. supports Israel because it is the only democracy in the Middle East. However, that narrative is increasingly difficult to support.

In addition to the decades-long illegal occupation of Palestinian land, recent judicial reforms passed by Israel’s far-right government undermine the integrity of its own legal system in relation to its Jewish citizens. Meanwhile, Palestinians have experienced firsthand for decades how arbitrary and brutal the Israeli legal system can be.

If the democratic narrative no longer holds, then the case for providing Israel with unquestioning support becomes more difficult to make to the American people.

Read more: On its 75th birthday, Israel still can't agree on what it means to be a Jewish state and a democracy

The case that Israel is a settler-colonial state that practises apartheid is well-established by scholarly experts and human rights organizations. These basic facts are difficult to refute and this is why the Israeli state uses accusations of antisemitism to silence and censor such critiques.


Palestinians walk by a damaged house in the Jenin refugee camp in the West Bank on July 5, 2023 after a two-day operation by the Israeli military that killed at least 13 Palestinians. (AP Photo/Nasser Nasser)

When you consider what the American public thinks about this issue, it becomes easier to understand why Biden and virtually all of the leading politicians in the U.S. and Israel are so afraid of the term apartheid. A recent poll by Ipsos found:

“[I]n the absence of a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, about three-quarters of Americans, including 80 per cent of Democrats and 64 per cent of Republicans, would choose a democratic Israel that’s no longer Jewish, over a Jewish Israel without full citizenship and equality for non-Jews living under its authority.”

In other words, most Americans understand that the only solution to apartheid is full equality for everyone who falls under the official and unofficial sovereignty of the Israeli state, as all Palestinians currently do. The number of Palestinians between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea is more or less equal to the number of Israeli Jews. Equal rights would mean the end of the Jewish state as a state for a Jewish majority.

And why is such an outcome seen as detrimental to U.S. interests by the American political class? For the same reason that Biden in 1986 did not think Saudi Arabia could become an agent of U.S. interests. Simply put, Israel would no longer be a U.S.-backed entity that serves U.S. interests against the interests of the people of the region.

Rather, a state with equal rights, which would of course include Israeli Jews, would finally become part of the region, and therefore not likely to serve U.S. naked self-interest.

When we see matters in this light, we begin to see that what these two governments fear is in fact a true democracy that is of and for all the people of Israel and Palestine. Though the U.S. political class may fear this outcome, American public opinion is beginning to shift towards it.

That shift must continue to grow and expand to the point where politicians do not have to walk back their accurate remarks about Israel being an apartheid and racist state. If not, the U.S.-Israel relationship will remain “ironclad” and Palestinians will continue to pay the price.

This article is republished from The Conversation, an independent nonprofit news site dedicated to sharing ideas from academic experts. 




New ‘disdrometers’ in Calgary will help forecast the next big hailstorm

Calgary's new optical devices will help shape forecasting in Canada

Connor O'Donovan
Mon, July 24, 2023 

New ‘disdrometers’ in Calgary will help forecast the next big hailstorm

Nineteen hail disdrometers are now in operation across the Calgary area, giving a research team from Western University nearly unparalleled access to weather data that will help them better understand and forecast dangerous hailstorms.

“It’s definitely the first in Canada and one of a handful around the globe,” said Northern Hail Project (NHP) executive director Julian Brimelow during a demonstration of the new system.

“It’s a very exciting time to be doing hail research. We’re a bit like kids at Christmas with all the technology we have at our disposal.”

Disdrometers come in the form of small round steel plates installed to face the sky and use acoustic sensing akin to a microphone to measure the number and size of hailstone strikes during a storm.

CONNOR O-DONOVAN - hail

A plastic model of the largest hailstone ever found in Canada sits beside a Samsung Galaxy S23 for scale. (Connor O'Donovan)

Alongside each disdrometer, the team has installed a weather station capable of tracking factors like temperature, wind speed and direction, precipitation, and humidity to help better understand conditions before and during hailstorms.

The data can then be transmitted autonomously to the NHP team over a cellular network. The team says the information gathered, which will also be released publicly, will shine light on a hazard that was, until now, considered understudied in Canada.

“The last dedicated research on hail in Canada was through the Alberta Hail Project that occurred from [1956] to the 1980s,” says NHP Research Meteorologist Simon Eng.

“Hail is a very high-cost hazard and we haven’t really been documenting it properly in the past few years.”

That information, which could help forecasters better predict the number and intensity of hailstorms in a region, will be particularly valuable for the insurance industry.

According to the Institute for Catastrophic Loss Reduction (ICLR), hailstorms have caused roughly $9.5 billion in insured damages since 2008.

“Hail is kind of a sleeper hazard. Not many people talk about it I think because only parts of the country have seen really big storms. But it causes a lot of damage,” says ICLR Managing Director Glenn McGillivry, who hopes the research can help guide ICLR’s push for more protective building code and construction practices.

“We’re going to determine if we can pull out any trends from this.”


connor o-donovan - sensor

This multispectral image sensor attached to a drone allows the NHP to capture visual and thermal imaging of hail swaths from the skies. (Connor O'Donovan)

The disdrometers are just the latest hail-tracking tool in the NHP’s arsenal.

The team also uses drones to capture visual and thermal imagery, an array of foam “hail pads” set up north of Calgary, teams of hail-chasing professionals who gather hailstones after a storm hits, as well as news and social media reports of hailstones and ensuing damage.

Related: See what large hail can do to a car
Click here to view the video


Header image: File photo (Pixabay/Laura Palner)

First Nation spends day in ceremony to launch dig for potential unmarked graves



MINEGOZIIBE ANISHINABE — Before the sun broke through the sky Monday morning, members of a Manitoba First Nation planned to start a critical month-long search in a good way.

Spiritual advisers were to lead a pipe ceremony in Minegoziibe Anishinabe while a sacred fire was to be lit near where potential graves of children forced to attend residential school may be.

The sacred fire is expected to burn for the entirety of the estimated four-week-long excavation of an area underneath the Catholic church where 14 anomalies were detected using ground-penetrating radar last year.

"This allows for a trauma-informed, spiritually and culturally sensitive approach to the work that we have to do in the community," Chief Derek Nepinak said before the ceremony.

Monday is about ensuring elders, survivors and intergenerational survivors of the former Pine Creek Residential School are provided support before ground is expected to be broken Tuesday.

The First Nation, northwest of Winnipeg, is working with archeologists and scientists from Brandon University to conduct the search. Nepinak said it's the same team that assists police when archeological digs and excavations are conducted in the province.

Before the excavation can start, the team has to "stage an area" where the dig will take place and where materials will be transported.

"It is a very meticulous and focused approach that they're using," said Nepinak.

He believes Minegoziibe Anishinabe is one of the first communities in Canada to begin excavating after detecting potential unmarked graves at former residential school sites.

An estimated 150,000 Indigenous children were forced to attend residential schools. More than 60 per cent of the schools were run by the Catholic Church.

Survivors of the schools have been speaking out for decades about the possibility of unmarked graves at the sites, prompting the Truth and Reconciliation Commission to release a report on missing children and unmarked burials in 2016.

But it wasn't until Tk'emlups te Secwepemc released it's findings of what is believed to be 215 unmarked burials at the former Kamloops Indian Residential School in British Columbia in 2021 that the country and the world took notice.

The federal government appointed Kimberly Murray as a special interlocutor on unmarked graves and committed to funding search efforts.

Murray's interim report last month outlined more than a dozen other First Nations that have begun ground searches, including one in Star Blanket Cree Nation in Saskatchewan where the partial remains of a child between the age of four and six were recovered.

Some communities are still grappling with next steps in their searching, with some elders expressing concerns about disturbing the ground where a child may lay in rest.

Nepinak said his community hosted multiple engagement sessions and questions came up that he and councillors were unable to answer.

As conversations continued, it became clear survivors needed to know the full truth of what happened.

"We hope that this process will bring some closure to some long-standing questions that people might have about what went on in our homeland and in our territory," said Nepinak.

The Pine Creek school was run by the Roman Catholic Church and operated from 1890 to 1969 in different buildings, including the church, on a large plot of land.

The National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation has a record of 21 child deaths at the school and survivors have long spoken about the abuse there.

The community's initial search also determined there were 57 additional anomalies found on the grounds around the church and old school site, but the First Nation is focusing its search on the church basement.

"Any human remains that are buried under the church don't belong buried under a church in our homelands," said Nepinak.

"We're doing this out of respect for human life and the dignity that humans are owed in their lifetime."

Minegoziibe Anishinabe has also been calling on the RCMP to investigate.

Mounties started an investigation last year with the aim of looking into any criminal activity that may be related to the 14 points of interest the community detected.

Police said Friday investigators were unable to uncover any evidence suggesting something criminal occurred.

They added officers would investigate anything potentially criminal that turns up in the dig.

If any remains are found, the community would work with the coroner's office on next steps, which may include DNA testing.

Whatever the turnout may be, Nepinak hopes the search will provide his nation with the "opportunity to heal and move forward in a better and stronger way."

The Indian Residential Schools Resolution Health Support Program has a hotline to help residential school survivors and their relatives suffering from trauma invoked by the recall of past abuse. The number is 1-866-925-4419.

— By Brittany Hobson in Winnipeg

This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 24, 2023.

The Canadian Press
Muslims protesting against LGBTQ+ pride are ignoring Islam's tradition of inclusion


Junaid B. Jahangir, Associate Professor, Economics, MacEwan University 
Kristopher Wells, Associate Professor, Faculty of Health and Community Studies, 
MacEwan University

Mon, July 24, 2023 

A woman gives a thumbs-down as she takes part in a protest against LGBTQ+ Pride in Ottawa, June 9, 2023. 
THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sean Kilpatrick

Each summer, Pride is celebrated across the world in support of LGBTQ+ inclusion, diversity and human rights. Given the recent backlash against LGBTQ+ communities in Canada and elsewhere, Pride is more important than ever to promote visibility and challenge discrimination.

In recent months, some Muslim communities in Canada and the United States have protested against LGBTQ+ inclusion. Socially conservative Muslims have criticized what they see as growing LGBTQ+ “indoctrination” in schools and society more broadly.

In Michigan, a Muslim majority city council banned Pride flags from being flown on city property. In Ottawa, young children at an anti-LGBTQ+ protest stomped on Pride flags.

Similar protests also took place in Calgary and Edmonton, where one teacher was surreptitiously recorded lecturing Muslim students about skipping school as part of a national protest movement against Pride month activities. The National Council of Canadian Muslims cited the teacher’s comments as Islamophobic.


Children step on Pride flags during a protest against Pride in Ottawa, June 9, 2023. 
THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sean Kilpatrick


Pride and protest

This year the Christian anti-abortion group Campaign Life Coalition, organized a National Pride Flag Walk-Out Day on June 1 designed to target Pride month celebrations in public schools. The walk-out protests were also supported by a series of “pray-ins” held at Catholic school boards and dioceses across Canada.

Given their vast financial resources and faith networks, Christian evangelicals have redoubled their efforts targeting LGBTQ+ communities, which have been buoyed by recent political lobbying successes in Uganda, which saw the government pass some of the harshest anti-LGBTQ+ laws in the world.

In Canada, conservative religious groups are also trying to take over school boards by having candidates run in elections under the guise of “parent voice” and anti-LGBTQ+ platforms.

Much of this rhetoric is couched within language about parental rights and protecting kids, which is inherently premised on the belief that teaching about LGBTQ+ identities is wrong.

These tactics are not new but harken back to the days of gay rights opponents like Anita Bryant. Her 1970s “Save Our Children” campaign sought to roll back anti-discrimination laws and prohibit gay and lesbian people from teaching in schools or working in public services.

These campaigns branded gay and lesbian communities as pedophiles who posed a direct threat to the moral fabric of society and helped launch the careers of noted homophobic televangelists such as Jerry Falwell, Pat Robertson, Jimmy Swaggart and others.

Today’s right-wing talk show pundits and politicians use similar language and tropes that link LGBTQ+ identities with odious terms like “groomer.” What’s old is new again, but with a twist in logic and strange new alliances.

Building new coalitions

Seeking to build new coalitions of support, far-right evangelicals have been courting conservative Muslims to jump on their homophobic bandwagon against LGBTQ+ rights and inclusion.

Sadly, some conservative Muslim leaders are now fanning the flames of hatred against sexual and gender minorities. For example, some conservative imams and Muslim think tanks have latched onto similar narratives about the moral decay of Western societies and the dangers of Pride movements. They warn against allying with the “progressive left” and against supporting LGBTQ+ equality.


A counter-protester carries a sign confronting a protest against Pride in Ottawa, June 9, 2023. 
THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sean Kilpatrick

Muslim accommodation of gender diversity


Muslim societies have historically accepted gender diversity. Even today, despite societal discrimination, there exists a variety of diverse gender identities like the hijras of South Asia and the khanith of the Middle East.

In South Asia, multiple gender identities such as the zenana, chava, kothi and so on exist. On the Sulawesi Island of Indonesia there is also recognition of multiple gender traditions.

There is also Islamic scholarship on the accommodation of gender and sexual minorities in Islam. This includes work by one of us (Junaid B. Jahangir) on the issue of Muslim same-sex relationships. This research offers an invitation to traditionally trained Muslim scholars to revisit the issue with a renewed perspective.

Moreover, this scholarly work builds on the seminal contributions of researchers like Islamic studies scholar Scott Kugle and writer Samar Habib.

In addition, gender identities are well recognized in Islamic jurisprudence. The mukhannathūn (effeminate men) of Medina inhabited the social space during the time of the Prophet. Muslim jurists derived laws of inheritance, funeral and prayer for the khuntha mushkil (indeterminate gender) individuals.

Traditional Islamic texts offered such individuals prayer space between the rows of men and women. The Encyclopedia of Islamic Jurisprudence documents rulings on the marriage of such persons.

In 2016, a group of clerics in Pakistan issued religious edicts permitting third-gender individuals to marry.

There have also been edicts permitting gender reassignment surgery issued from the highest bodies of both Sunni and Shia Islam.

However, allowance of gender reassignment surgery does not automatically translate into acceptance. For instance, while Iran is deemed as “the global leader for sex change,” it remains heavily opposed to LGBTQ+ rights.


Trans women attend a Quran reading class in Yogyakarta, Indonesia, Nov. 6, 2022. Muslim societies have historically accepted gender diversity.
 (AP Photo/Dita Alangkara)

Avoiding the anti-LGBTQ+ bandwagon

Nonetheless, when Muslim groups in Western democracies jump on the anti-LGBTQ+ bandwagon, they act against the longstanding accommodation of sexual and gender diversity in their own tradition.

Our main worry is for LGBTQ+ Muslim youth who may be isolated without support from their families and communities. Thankfully, there are Muslim community groups providing important sexual health education which embraces Islamic laws and traditions.

This community education is especially important when youth struggle with their sexuality and gender in an environment where they cannot be open about their identities. Muslim leaders like the late Maher Hathout acknowledged and offered a compassionate view on Muslims struggling to reconcile sexual and religious identities.

Islamic teachings on sexual and gender diversity are far more diverse than what many conservative groups would like us to believe. Discrimination based on religious dogma undermines and threatens the individual freedoms essential to secular and democratic societies. Building more inclusive societies means we must all challenge prejudice and hate from both within and outside our communities.

This article is republished from The Conversation, an independent nonprofit news site dedicated to sharing ideas from academic experts.

It was written by: Junaid B. Jahangir, MacEwan University and Kristopher Wells, MacEwan University.


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How the Incas designed Machu Picchu to accommodate the volatile environment


Randi Mann
Mon, July 24, 2023

How the Incas designed Machu Picchu to accommodate the volatile environment

This Day In Weather History is a daily podcast by Chris Mei from The Weather Network, featuring stories about people, communities and events and how weather impacted them.

Machu Picchu is a 15th-century Inca citadel located on a mountain range in Peru.


Within the archeologist community, many believe that Machu Picchu was built for the Inca emperor Pachacuti. The Incas constructed Machu Picchu around 1450 but then fled around 100 years later during the Spanish conquest.


Temple of the Sun or Torreon

Temple of the Sun or Torreon. Courtesy of Wikipedia

Machu Picchu was known locally, but on Monday, July 24, 1911, American historian Hiram Bingham brought it to international attention.

The estate was constructive classical Inca style, including polished dry-stone walls. Machu Picchu has three unique structures, the Temple of the Sun, the Intihuatana, and the Room of the Three Windows.

The Incas were faced with severe weather events when they were constructing Machu Picchu. One of the main issues is that the location is volatile to seismic activity. So the locals needed to find sturdy materials like stones.

1920px-MachuPicchu TerracedFields (pixinn.net)

The area was also subjected to heavy rainfall, so the structure required terraces to drain water and prevent mudslides and flooding. The terraces also had sand, dirt, and other material to absorb access water. A similar strategy was used to protect the city centre from flooding.

Considering the site is popular among tourists, many of the outer structures have been reconstructed. As of 1976, about 30 per cent of the estate had been restored.

To learn more about the discovery of Machu Picchu, listen to today's episode of "This Day In Weather History.

Thumbnail: Courtesy of Pixabay
Say goodbye to Bodypainting Day, New York City’s annual celebration of nudity and artistry



NEW YORK (AP) — If you've ever dreamed of standing naked in New York City with dozens of strangers while artists turn your skin into a work of art, you may have missed your chance.

Sunday’s Bodypainting Day will be the final edition after more than a decade of artists turning nude bodies into works of art.

Organizer Andy Golub expects more than 50 people will be painted over four hours in Manhattan’s Union Square. Golub decided this year’s event would be the last because it’s time to “move on and clear that plate.” He said he wants to find different ways of empowering and bringing people together, including a new event next spring.

After Sunday’s body painting is finished, the participating artists and models will march through Greenwich Village, pose for a photo in Washington Square Park, ride a double-decker bus over the Manhattan Bridge and end the day with a party in Brooklyn, Golub said.

Golub, an artist and free speech activist who's been painting on nude models since 2007, started the annual body painting extravaganza to underscore that nudity for artistic purposes is legal in New York City.

That hasn't stopped police from trying to halt the event. In 2011, Golub said, he and two models were arrested and detained for 24 hours, but the charges were dropped once authorities determined they were doing nothing illegal.

“You’ll find there’s a lot of people that have been really impacted positively,” Golub said. “Mostly models, but also artists, and feeling that they’ve come out of their skin. And it’s just been like a really positive experience of really celebrating freedom.”

Past iterations of the event have been held in Columbus Circle, Times Square and other landmark locations across the city.

All participants, models and painters must be age 18 or older, but Sunday's event was no longer accepting applications.

Sun, July 23, 2023 
Ayesha Mir, The Associated Press
They're the names you don't know. Hollywood's 'journeyman' actors explain why they are striking



NEW YORK (AP) — Jason Kravits gets a lot of this: People recognize him — they’re just not sure how. “I’m that guy who looks like the guy you went to high school with,” says Kravits. “People think they've just seen me somewhere.”

Actually, they have — on TV, usually as a lawyer or a doctor. “I’ve had enough roles that I’ve been in your living room on any given night,” the veteran actor says. “But mostly people don’t know my name.”

Kravits is one of those actors union leaders refer to as “journeymen” — who tend to work for scale pay, and spend at least as much time lining up work as working. They can have a great year, then a bad one, without much rhyme or reason. “We’re always on the verge of struggling,” says Kravits.

And they, not the big Hollywood names joining the picket lines, are the heart of the actors strike.

Many say they fear the general public thinks all actors get paid handsomely and are doing it for love of the craft, almost as a hobby. Yet in most cases it’s their only job, and they need to qualify for health insurance, pay rent or a mortgage, pay for school and college for their kids.

“All of us aren’t Tom Cruise,” says Amari Dejoie, 30, who studies acting, does background jobs (as an extra) and modeling to keep afloat, and is considering waitressing during the strike. "We have to pay rent and bills, and they’re due on the first. And your apartment does not care that your check wasn’t as high as you expected it to be.”

In interviews, a few journeyman actors at different stages of their careers discussed their lives and their reasons for striking.

THAT ONE-PENNY CHECK


Recently Jennifer Van Dyck got a couple residual checks in the mail — one for 60 cents, one for 72 cents. But she’s seen worse.

“The joke is when you get the one-cent check that cost 44 cents to be mailed to you,” says the veteran New York actor, referring to payments for reruns and other airings of a film or TV show after the initial release.

Still, Van Dyck counts herself lucky. With many appearances on network shows like “The Blacklist,” “Madam Secretary” and especially ”Law & Order," where she's appeared as a guest star 13 times, plus voiceover work, she's been able to make a living for more than 30 years without having to take a job outside the industry.

“You just keep jumping around,” she says. “When things get dry in one area you move to the next. It’s keeping all the balls in the air: theater, film, television, voiceover, audiobooks. Call us journeypeople: Half the job requirement is looking for work."

Van Dyck says the emergence of streaming has cut into an actor's income alarmingly, because streamers give tiny residuals, if that. And when it comes to negotiating a rate to appear on a show, the studios don't seem to care if you have 37 years of experience. "They say, “This is what we're offering, take it or leave it.'”

She’s still struck by the common misperception that actors must be rich and famous. “The majority of us aren’t,” she says. “But all those other parts (in a hit show), and all those other shows that get sidelined or disappear — that’s work, too. And those stories can’t be told without (us).”

“No one wants to strike,” Van Dyck adds. But she feels the industry is at an inflection point. And, "at a certain point you have to say, 'No Mas.’”

___

THIS IS NOT A HOBBY


Growing up in the Washington, D.C., area, Kravits was bitten by the theater bug early, performing in community theater by the time he was 10 or 11. He studied theater in college, and eventually made his way to New York and then Los Angeles.

In LA, he got lucky, winning a recurring role on David E. Kelley’s “The Practice."

Kravits quips he’d make a lot more money as an actual lawyer, but enjoys playing them. "I like to say I play a lot of lawyers, but never the same lawyer. I play a mean lawyer, a dumb lawyer, a funny lawyer, a hateful lawyer, an incompetent lawyer. Every role is different to me.” Most of the time, he's on a show for one or two episodes.

Kravits says there used to be room for negotiation on everything, including billing and dressing rooms, but no longer: “You’re negotiating with Wall Street. And Wall Street is all bottom line."

The toughest change has been with the all-important residuals. “I don’t think people realize outside the business how important residuals are to being able to afford being an actor,” he says.

And because of how meager streaming residuals are, Kravits says he has network shows he did 10, 15 even 20 years ago that still yield more residuals than buzzy shows he’s done for streamers the last few years — like HBO's “The Undoing” or Netflix's “Halston.”

"I didn’t get into this as a hobby,” Kravits says. “I can’t afford to do it as a hobby.”

___

PUTTING OUR MONEY WHERE OUR MOUTHS ARE


The series finale of the show that transformed actor Diany Rodriguez’s career — NBC’s “The Blacklist” — aired the same day Hollywood came to a standstill.

Rodriguez, who played Weecha, bodyguard of star James Spader’s character, would have loved to take to social media and celebrate her character’s final appearance, but the strike made that impossible. She had several new projects booked, but is now throwing herself into her duties as a strike captain.

She sees the strike as part of a larger labor movement in the country: “I’m so in favor of this because it feels overwhelmingly (like) we are ready to put our money where our mouths are for the greater good."

Rodriguez, 41, was born in Puerto Rico, grew up in Alabama, and moved from New York to Atlanta in 2009 for theater work. Around that time, Georgia lawmakers passed generous film tax credits — incentives that brought in business but ensured a lengthy strike would be acutely felt there.

“Atlanta’s economy is funded in large part based on the film and TV tax breaks,” she says.

Rodriguez feels financially secure, thanks largely to her two-season stint on “The Blacklist,” the network residuals and the roles the show has helped her book since then.

But she says she could easily have been in the same situation as so many of her fellow actors who are on the verge of losing their health coverage, unable to earn enough in recent months to be eligible for SAG-AFTRA insurance plans.

___

WHAT WILL THIS MEAN FOR ACTING?

Amari Dejoie’s father didn’t want her to follow him into the entertainment business. “They never do,” she quips.

But Dejoie, growing up in Los Angeles, got the bug, and started pursuing acting and modeling at 17. Now 30, she studies acting, paying $400 a month for classes, and takes whatever side jobs she can, including working as an extra on sets. She’s appeared in music videos, and at events as a booth model. She's considering a waitress job to tide her over during the strike.

“My dad was part of SAG back in the day and his residuals paid for a home," says Dejoie, who was manning the picket lines in Los Angeles last week. “It’s the same business, and (yet) it’s completely different now.”

Her father, Vincent Cook, was a boxing double for Will Smith on “Ali,” and had a role in “B.A.P.S.,” with Halle Berry. “He was not a main character, but his residuals were great and they still are,” Dejoie says, nothing that recently, after undergoing a medical issue, he discovered that SAG had a check waiting for him. "If it's up to the studio, they’re not going to hunt you down to pay you. SAG will,” Dejoie says.

Dejoie also is concerned about how artificial intelligence will affect the industry and her work as an extra, where she makes about $150 a day to be available for background shots. Actors fear studios want to scan their images and use them repeatedly after paying for just one day of work.

“Also, if I’m not present on the set, I’m not there making connections for other jobs,” Dejoie says.

More broadly, the idea of actors’ images being replicated artificially makes her afraid for the future of the industry she is just getting started in.

“What will this mean for acting?” she says. “Did I just spend all this time and money for a craft that will one day be obsolete?”

___

Rico reported from Atlanta. AP journalists Krysta Fauria and John Carucci contributed to this report.

Mon, July 24, 2023

Jocelyn Noveck And R.j. Rico, The Associated Press

Op-Ed: You want ‘realism’? How do you live on a check for a few cents?


By Paul Wallis
Published July 25, 2023

SAG-AFTRA President Fran Drescher was swarmed by fellow actors outside Netflix as the Hollywood actors' strike began - Copyright AFP VALERIE MACON

It’s hard to describe the sheer pettiness of Hollywood. Revelations are emerging of people receiving checks for a few cents. Some get nothing. Residuals are a type of royalties for reruns.

The wages aren’t too great, either. Orange is the New Black cast members had to work day jobs. This is the glitzy world of Hollywood? Looks more like Third World outworkers.

This is corporate culture incarnate – Pay nothing if you can get away with it. You can spend the rest of your life being famous or semi-famous, with the opportunity to be broke as well. It’s a lousy way to live. That’s what this strike is all about.

SAG-AFTRA President Fran Drescher feels ‘duped’ by the Hollywood studios over their failed contract talks – Copyright GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP/File Drew Angerer

For writers, the money has to stretch over maybe years, and until the next job. This is a gig economy by any standards, and it’s tough.

Human dignity is also expensive. Paying for food or anything else costs a lot more than a few cents. Busboys get paid more than these people get for their work which makes billions for the suits.
Actress Mandy Moored joins SAG-AFTRA and WGA members on the picket line at The Walt Disney studios. — © AFP

Bob Iger, Disney CEO, has been called out by just about everyone for his comment that the unions are being “unrealistic” in their demands.

Let’s try a bit of realism, shall we?

Movies, streams, and TV shows don’t make themselves. Doesn’t matter what sort of production you use, including AI, there are people involved at all levels.

Movies and all visual media are about watching new things and watching people. “Likenesses” are not people you can relate to.

Audiences don’t have to watch anything or buy merchandise. Somebody has to sell these movies to the audience. This entire sector can be turned off with a click.

The glitz and glamour are based on people. How glamorous is a non-existent person?

The creativity comes from people. No ideas equals no product.

The hard work comes from people. Bringing a movie to life needs strong characters, not cookie-cutter clones.

For an industry that would have gone bust without George Lucas, Stan Lee, and now Mattel and the nuclear weapons program, it’s an odd take on “reality”.

Actors swelled have the ranks of television and movie writers, who have been pounding the palm tree-lined sidewalks outside Paramount and other studios for over two months. — © AFP

If you’re depending on a plastic doll from 1959 for revenue, you need to take another look. Creative input is clearly not welcome in Hollywood. Wanna try a few more prequels? How about a prequel to The Flintstones, an animated cartoon based on the zany adventures of rocks? That’ll sell. Like a rock. It’s also what you’re paying these people with – rocks.

The money issue has another side. Let’s not talk about RICO laws. I’ll leave out the decades-old money laundering and budget accounting rumors. But… Where does all that money go? Billions of it? Does anyone really believe that people working in the sector for years don’t know how to cost their own work? I’m pretty sure someone would know where that money goes
.
Actors and writers are demanding significant wage hikes to counteract inflation, and a greater share of profits each time a film or series they starred in is re-watched — © POOL/AFP Jade GAO

Meanwhile back on the racket… I mean ranch, obviously… Has it occurred to the Hollywood branch of the Mensa Society that if they don’t need actors, they don’t need suits? AI can do it all. Just a thought.