Friday, May 29, 2026

Celebrate Our Namesake’s Birthday: The Brilliance of Randolph Bourne


'WAR IS THE HEALTH OF THE STATE'


by | May 29, 2026Antiwar.com



Saturday is the 140th anniversary of Randolph Bourne’s birthday. Antiwar.com named its parent institute for this early 20th century antiwar activist. Read Jeff Riggenbach’s biography of Bourne.

[Transcribed from the Libertarian Tradition podcast episode “Randolph Bourne (1886–1918)”]

Randolph Bourne was an American intellectual journalist who flourished for a few years in the second decade of the 20th century – in the Teens, the decade that ran from 1910 to 1920. Bourne wrote mostly for magazines during this period. His byline was particularly familiar to readers of The New Republic – until his radically antiwar views on the eve of the US government’s intervention in World War I got him fired.

He moved over to The Seven Arts, a newly launched magazine with a smaller circulation than The New Republic and one less well suited to Bourne’s particular talents and interests, since its primary focus was the arts, rather than social and political issues. He was able to publish only six antiwar articles in The Seven Arts before its doors were closed by an owner fearful of the Wilson administration and its Sedition Act of 1918, which made it a crime to criticize the Constitution, the government, the military, or the flag.

Only a few months after The Seven Arts ceased publication, Randolph Bourne died, a victim of the flu epidemic that killed more than 25 million people in 1918 and 1919, nearly a million of them in the United States. That was 1 percent of the population 90 years ago. One percent of the present US population would be more than 3 million Americans. Imagine what it would be like to live through a flu epidemic that killed more than 3 million people in the space of little more than a year. That’s what it was like for Americans living 90 years ago, at the end of World War I.

Most of the people that flu virus killed have long been forgotten – except, of course, by members of their own families. But Randolph Bourne has not been forgotten, not completely. People are still reading his work. They’re still talking about his ideas and about his memorable phrases. The most famous of these has gradually become so widely quoted in our culture that millions of people have heard it, even heard it repeatedly, without ever learning who originally wrote or said it: “War is the health of the State.”

Randolph Silliman Bourne first emerged into the light of day on May 30, 1886 in Bloomfield, New Jersey, a small town fewer than 20 miles from Manhattan. His family was comfortably middle-class, and he was the grandson of a respected Congregational minister. But he seems to have been born unlucky all the same. First, his head and face were deformed at birth in a bungled forceps delivery. Then, at the age of four, after a battle with spinal tuberculosis, he became a hunchback. Then, when he was seven, his parents lost everything in the Panic of 1893, and he and his mother were abandoned by his father and left to live in genteel poverty on the charity of his mother’s prosperous (if somewhat tightfisted) brother. Meanwhile, his growth had been permanently stunted by the spinal tuberculosis of a few years before, so that by the time he graduated from high school at the age of 17, in 1903, he had attained his full adult height of five feet.

Bourne was an exemplary student. His academic record in high school earned him a place in the class of 1907 at Princeton, but by the time he was supposed to appear on campus to register for classes in the fall of 1903, it was evident that he couldn’t afford to attend. He could barely afford books. He was flat broke. And his mother needed his financial help if she was going to go on living the decent, middle-class lifestyle to which she had become accustomed. So Bourne postponed college and went to work. He knew his way around a piano, so for the next six years he worked as a piano teacher, a piano tuner, and a piano player (accompanying singers in a recording studio in Carnegie Hall). He also cut piano rolls. On the side he freelanced for book publishers as a proofreader. Now and then, when musical work was harder to find, he did secretarial work.

By 1909, when he was 23 years old, Bourne had saved enough to cut back on his working hours and try to catch up on the college experience he’d been putting off. He enrolled at Columbia, where he fell under the sway of historian and political scientist Charles Beard and philosopher John Dewey, and began publishing essays in the Dial, the Atlantic Monthly, and other magazines. His first book, Youth and Life, a collection of his magazine essays, was published the year he graduated from Columbia, 1913. And that fall, the now 27-year-old Bourne set out for Europe. In his senior year he had been awarded the Gilder Fellowship for travel abroad, which the historian Louis Filler has called “Columbia’s most distinguished honor” during that period. Bourne spent a year travelling around Europe and pursuing such independent study as interested him.

Then, in August 1914, he returned to America, took up residence in Greenwich Village, and resumed writing for the Dial and the Atlantic Monthly, along with a new, upstart weekly called The New Republic. Actually, it might be more accurate to say that Bourne fled Europe in August 1914 than to say that he merely “returned to America” at that time. For it was in late July and early August of 1914 that Europe – virtually all of Europe – embarked upon the conflict we know today as World War I. Bourne opposed this conflict, and he was especially worried that his own country, the United States, would choose to enter it before long.

Bourne wrote about many subjects over the next four years; he wrote enough about education, for example, that he was able to fill two books with his magazine pieces on the subject – The Gary Schools in 1916 and Education and Living in 1917. But his main subject during the last four years of his life was the new world war and the urgent need that the United States stay out of it.

Bourne made few friends by adopting this stance. It brought him, as the journalist Ben Reiner later put it, “into sharp conflict with the rising pro-war hysteria that preceded America’s entry into World War I.” In the view of yet another journalistic commentator, Christopher Phelps,

few 20th-century American dissenters have… suffered the wrath of their targets as greatly as Bourne did. By 1917, The New Republic stopped publishing his political pieces. The Seven Arts … collapsed when its financial angel refused further support because of Bourne’s antiwar articles.

According to Reiner, the problem was that once Bourne’s “biting attacks on government repression began to appear in The Seven Arts,” this gave “birth to rumors that the publisher… was supporting a pro-German magazine. She… withdrew her support, which closed the magazine down.”

Nor was the demise of The Seven Arts the end of the punishment Bourne had to bear for speaking his mind. Phelps notes that “even at the Dial… he was stripped from editorial power in 1918 – the result of an uncharacteristically underhanded intervention by his former mentor John Dewey, one of the objects of Bourne’s disillusioned antiwar pen.” Phelps quotes a letter Bourne sent to a friend shortly thereafter, in which he laments that “I feel very much secluded from the world, very much out of touch with my times. … The magazines I write for die violent deaths, and all my thoughts are unprintable.” The historian Robert Westbrook put the matter as memorably and eloquently as anyone when he said in 2004 that “Bourne disturbed the peace of John Dewey and other intellectuals supporting Woodrow Wilson’s crusade to make the world safe for democracy, and they made him pay for it.”

Yet the ruination of his career was far from the only price he had to pay. Westbrook quotes John Dos Passos’s claim, from his novel 1919, that, in addition to his professional setbacks, “friends didn’t like to be seen with Bourne,” and that “his father” – who had walked out of his life a quarter-century before – “wrote him begging him not to disgrace the family name.” A few weeks later, he was dead. Several friends, going through his apartment after his death, found an unpublished manuscript in the wastebasket next to his desk. It was entitled “The State.”

“War is the health of the State,” Randolph Bourne wrote in that discarded essay, which he probably died believing would never see print, “and it is during war that one best understands the nature of that institution.” For

it cannot be too firmly realized that war is … the chief function of States. … War cannot exist without a military establishment, and a military establishment cannot exist without a State organization. War has an immemorial tradition and heredity only because the State has a long tradition and heredity. But they are inseparably and functionally joined.

Moreover, Bourne argued,

it is not too much to say that the normal relation of States is war. Diplomacy is a disguised war, in which States seek to gain by barter and intrigue, by the cleverness of wits, the objectives which they would have to gain more clumsily by means of war. Diplomacy is used while the States are recuperating from conflicts in which they have exhausted themselves. It is the wheedling and the bargaining of the worn-out bullies as they rise from the ground and slowly restore their strength to begin fighting again.

Randolph Bourne believed that informed citizens needed to realize the implications of what he was saying. For

if the State’s chief function is war, then the State must suck out of the nation a large part of its energy for its purely sterile purposes of defense and aggression. It devotes to waste or to actual destruction as much as it can of the vitality of the nation. No one will deny that war is a vast complex of life-destroying and life-crippling forces. If the State’s chief function is war, then it is chiefly concerned with coordinating and developing the powers and techniques which make for destruction. And this means not only the actual and potential destruction of the enemy, but of the nation at home as well. For the … calling away of energy into military pursuits means a crippling of the productive and life-enhancing processes of the national life.

Randolph Bourne believed that “we cannot crusade against war without crusading implicitly against the State. And we cannot expect … to end war, unless at the same time we take measures to end the State in its traditional form.” Bourne had reason to be wary when writing sentences like those in 1918. People were being imprisoned and, in some cases, deported for writing things like that. There was a particular prejudice against anarchists and against people who sounded as though they might be anarchists. Perhaps this is why Bourne added the following caveat to his call for ending the State: “The State is not the nation, and the State can be modified and even abolished in its present form, without harming the nation. On the contrary, with the passing of the dominance of the State, the genuine life-enhancing forces of the nation will be liberated.”

Randolph Bourne was an idealist. He hoped for a world free of war, a world in which what he called “the productive and life-enhancing processes” were the dominant processes in our national life. It is appropriate, then, that in the Internet age, he is perhaps best known to the general public, not only for his immortal phrase “War is the health of the State,” but also as the namesake of a nonprofit foundation that runs a popular website. The nonprofit foundation is the Randolph Bourne Institute. And the website is Antiwar.com. The folks who run Antiwar.com would have us believe that their site should not be construed as libertarian in its essence. As Executive Director Angela Keaton put it recently, “Antiwar.com is not a libertarian site. Antiwar.com is a foreign policy site operated by libertarians which seeks a broad based coalition in educating about the dangers of Empire.”

I’m inclined to think Randolph Bourne cut through to the heart of the matter more effectively, however, when he wrote that “we cannot crusade against war without crusading implicitly against the State.” In effect, you can’t be consistently and intelligently antiwar, unless you’re libertarian. The folks at Antiwar.com are, of course, aware of this. They quote that very same sentence of Bourne’s on the “Who We Are” page on their website and state further that their own “dedication to libertarian principles” is “inspired in large part by the works and example of the late Murray N. Rothbard.” The work that’s being done 24/7 at Antiwar.com not only honors Randolph Bourne’s contribution to the libertarian tradition; it also helps to assure that that tradition will continue and grow.

This article is transcribed from the Libertarian Tradition podcast episode “Randolph Bourne (1886–1918).”

Jeff Riggenbach (1947-2020) was a journalist, author, editor, broadcaster, and educator. A member of the Organization of American Historians and a senior fellow at the Randolph Bourne Institute, he wrote for such newspapers as the New York Times, USA Today, the Los Angeles Times, and the San Francisco Chronicle; such magazines as Reason, Inquiry, and Liberty; and such websites as LewRockwell.com, AntiWar.com, and RationalReview.com. His books include In Praise of Decadence (1998), Why American History Is Not What They Say: An Introduction to Revisionism (2009), and Persuaded by Reason: Joan Kennedy Taylor & the Rebirth of American Individualism (2014).

Trump’s Pottery Barn War

How a president elected to end endless wars found himself selling diplomacy as victory after stepping into a crisis he did not have to own.


by | May 27, 2026Antiwar.com

When Donald Trump wrote on Truth Social that any agreement with Iran must be “great and meaningful,” or there would be no agreement at all, he appeared to be drawing a wall between himself and Barack Obama’s nuclear deal. He wanted to make clear that even if negotiations were underway, they would be Trumpian negotiations: tougher, more forceful, and the “exact opposite” of an agreement he had spent years denouncing as a symbol of weakness. But that statement revealed less strength than contradiction. A president who once treated Obama’s diplomacy with Iran as appeasement now has to sell his own diplomacy as victory.

The issue is not how different Trump’s possible agreement would be from the JCPOA. The issue is why things reached the point where a president elected on an America First platform dragged the United States into a crisis from which he now needs the very tool he once called weakness: diplomacy. Trump was not supposed to pull America into other people’s wars. A large part of his political appeal was built on that promise: ending endless wars, not repeating the same road under new packaging. Yet the Iran war showed that even a president who came to power under the banner of America First can quickly fall into the same pit as his predecessors when he is trapped by Washington’s old logic, lobby pressure, neoconservative temptation, and Israel’s security agenda.

Exactly who placed what on Trump’s table behind closed doors cannot be proven with certainty until some members of his administration begin to speak openly. But politics is not made only behind closed doors. Outside those rooms, the signs are clear enough: hawkish senators, anti-Iran media commentators, figures close to pro-Israel networks, and the remnants of a worldview that sees every Middle Eastern crisis as an opportunity to display American power. We may not be able to say with certainty who pulled the trigger inside the administration’s mind, but we can see who helped create a political atmosphere in which any retreat from war looks like a betrayal of victory.

Ted Cruz’s behavior is a clear example of this pattern. The terms of a possible agreement have not even been made clear, yet he is already speaking of “deep concern,” as if the real issue were not the text of the agreement but Trump’s attempt to leave the path of war. Mark Levin and figures such as Laura Loomer reproduce the same psychological pressure through cheap media theatrics: either chase the enemy to some imaginary point of total defeat, or be accused of selling out victory. These are not merely political reactions; they are part of the same agenda-setting process trying to claim Trump’s movement for itself.

But the reality is simpler and more bitter. America entered a confrontation it had no vital need to enter directly. War with Iran was supposed to be a show of resolve. It was supposed to prove that Trump, unlike Obama and Biden, was not interested in appeasement. But now that same war has become a test of exit. Striking was easy; explaining the consequences is harder. Slogans were easy; managing energy markets, the Strait of Hormuz, allied reactions, divisions inside the Republican Party, and the political cost of continuing the crisis is not.

This is why Trump’s recent Truth Social post matters. He wants to say that his possible agreement with Iran will not be Obama’s agreement. He says that if there is to be a deal, it must be “great and meaningful.” But the central question is not how the text of his agreement would differ from the JCPOA. The central question is this: why does a president who treated Obama’s negotiations with Iran as weakness now need negotiations of his own to manage a crisis intensified by a military decision?

Trump wants to register the war as strength and the negotiations as victory. But foreign policy is not that generous. In the Middle East, whoever opens the door to crisis sooner or later owns the consequences. This is the famous Pottery Barn rule of American foreign policy: You break it, you own it. Trump wanted the military strike, but not ownership of the crisis. He wanted distance from the JCPOA, but now he faces the same truth: no major crisis ends with bombs alone. Eventually, someone has to return to the negotiating table.

The irony is that Trump, better than anyone, should have known this road. Did Obama’s mistakes during the Arab Spring not show that intervention in regional crises often produces new disorder instead of a new order? Did the Biden-Harris approach to Ukraine and endless support for foreign wars not show how the White House can become a spending office for taxpayers’ money in the name of other people’s security? So why did an administration that was supposed to move beyond this logic place itself back on the same pothole-ridden road?

This crisis is not only about Iran. It is about whether Trump’s movement can truly break from Washington’s old logic or whether it will ultimately be swallowed by the same forces that are always ready to drag any president into a new war in the name of security, freedom, deterrence, or defending allies. Today, that same network is telling Trump that if he fights, he is a strong leader; if he negotiates, he must prove he has not sold out victory.

But Trump has to decide whether he is the president of America First or the executive manager of someone else’s agenda. Negotiating with Iran is not inherently a defeat. The defeat comes when you first enter an unnecessary war and then have to sell negotiation not as rational statecraft, but as victory.

This is Trump’s Pottery Barn war. He did not inherit it; he stepped into it. And whatever agreement may eventually be signed, one truth will remain: the president who was supposed to pull America out of other people’s wars must now explain why he brought America so close to one of them.

Travis Lynch is an international relations graduate and independent journalist.

 A Nation of Suspects

by | May 29, 2026 Antiwar.com

Some of the recent legal challenges to the use of surveillance by the Department of Homeland Security upon Americans have resulted in the revelation of truly terrifying behavior by the government, in direct defiance of the Fourth Amendment to the Constitution. We now know that the federal government spies on innocent Americans without suspicion and without warrants.

The spying seems to fall into several categories. The National Security Agency, which is in the Department of Defense, employs about 60,000 domestic spies. These are the folks who want us to believe that they go through the trouble of making applications to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court for warrants to spy on foreigners.

Actually, from time to time they do go to this court, but their travels there — where judges are frisked upon entering and leaving the courthouse by the NSA agents who appear before them — serve as fig leaves for their massive warrantless spying on Americans. The FISA Court is unconstitutional because it issues warrants based on probable cause of communicating with a foreign person, rather than on probable cause of crime as the Fourth Amendment requires.

The courts have ruled consistently since the 1960s that spying — surveillance, as the feds call it — is a search, and the capture of data from a surveillance is a seizure.

The Fourth Amendment protects all persons in America — not just Americans — from warrantless searches and seizures of their “persons, houses, papers, and effects.” There are some well-recognized exceptions to this constitutional baseline, such as evidence that will quickly vanish or be seriously degraded, but those exceptions do not apply here as the NSA captures in real time all keystrokes on all digital devices and all fiber optic data transmitted into, out of and within the United States.

The judges of the FISA Court surely know that the Department of Justice lawyers and NSA agents who appear before them are going through a charade, and the court has been made a part of it. The charade is the pretense that all spying is done pursuant to the warrants that FISA Court judges issue. Former NSA agents have revealed publicly that this is hardly the case.

Nevertheless, the lowered standard from probable cause of crime to probable cause of communicating to a foreign person was crafted by Congress — in another of its many moments heedless of the Constitution. After a few years of this, the FISA Court began to issue warrants for spying on the Americans who communicate with foreigners, out to the sixth degree. A sixth grader can do the math, as this leads to hundreds of millions of Americans whose communications are captured.

A second category of spying is employed by the DHS. The DHS — now a 250,000-person strong federal police department nowhere countenanced by the Constitution — has sophisticated software that can read fingerprints at 15 feet and irises at 15 inches. So, if you wave goodbye or good riddance to an ICE agent, and he holds up his mobile phone, and you are in the federal system for any benign reason, he has captured your bank, health, legal and commercial records on the spot. If he talks to you in your car and is within 15 inches of your face, he can capture the same data.

As if all this were not enough, the feds and local police use a device called a Stingray, which mimics the signal sent to all mobile devices as if the device were being used to communicate. But the communication is just one way, as the Stingray will tell the government where the person possessing the mobile device is at any given moment. This, too, is a seizure of private personal information — the contents of the computer chip in your mobile device — which the Fourth Amendment characterizes as an “effect.”

And then there is the FBI, which now uses zero-click software. This permits agents without warrants or even approval of their superiors to engage in computer hacking without having to trick the hacked victim into clicking on a link. Computer hacking is a felony.

All of this surveillance is unconstitutional, dangerous and commonplace. It consists in the use of surveillance and law enforcement tools without articulable suspicion.

For 600 years, articulable suspicion — the lowest evidentiary standard we have — has been the baseline for all government behavior that targets an individual. Articulable suspicion is the fact-based ability to state why a person — not a group — should be targeted and for what crime. This is the same standard that must be met when police stop someone in public.

Anything less than articulable suspicion is a fishing expedition; stated differently, a general warrant. General warrants — which were used by British agents on American colonists — permitted the agents to stop anyone, to search anywhere and to seize anything without articulable suspicion. The Fourth Amendment outlawed them.

How did we get from a Constitution that assumes that the individual is sovereign, our rights are natural and inalienable, and the government may only legally do what the governed have affirmatively authorized it to do to where we are today? The answer is fear. Fear is the great tool for authoritarians — fear of foreigners, fear of war, fear of crime, fear of drugs, fear of terror. When people are afraid, they will allow the government to take liberty in return for a promise of safety.

Of course, liberty once surrendered is never returned. But liberty is individual, not collective. You can surrender your liberty and your neighbors can surrender theirs, but none of you can surrender mine. These values are what animated Thomas Jefferson in the Declaration and James Madison in the Bill of Rights. Those animations seem like ancient history today. On the eve of America’s 250th anniversary, the Founders would not recognize this country of no values where everyone is a suspect.

Andrew P. Napolitano, a former judge of the Superior Court of New Jersey, is the senior judicial analyst at Fox News Channel. Judge Napolitano has written seven books on the US Constitution. The most recent is Suicide Pact: The Radical Expansion of Presidential Powers and the Lethal Threat to American Liberty. To find out more about Judge Napolitano and to read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit www.creators.com. COPYRIGHT 2025 ANDREW P. NAPOLITANO – DISTRIBUTED BY CREATORS.COM







Thursday, May 28, 2026

 

Italians and Dutch share the same gestural instinct for teaching


Teaching with the hands




Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics






Nijmegen, The Netherlands, May 27, 2026 - Italians are famous for speaking with their hands. But a new international study suggests that when it comes to teaching children, adults everywhere instinctively become more expressive with their gestures — even in cultures known for gesturing less. This study by Emanuela Campisi (University of Catania) and Anita Slominska and Asli Ozyurek (Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics) reveals that Italian and Dutch adults adapt their hand gestures in remarkably similar ways when explaining new concepts to children.

When adults teach children something new, words are only part of the story. A new cross-cultural study shows that adults from different cultures instinctively modify their gestures in similar ways to help children learn, suggesting that spontaneous human teaching may rely on a shared, deeply rooted communicative strategy.

Researchers found that although Italian adults used more gestures overall than Dutch adults, both groups increased the use of visually rich, two-handed gestures when demonstrating unfamiliar logic puzzles to children. The findings highlight how humans naturally adapt communication to support young learners, regardless of cultural background.

 

Teaching with the hands

Human communication is fundamentally multimodal, combining speech with gestures, facial expressions, gaze, and body movements. Among these, representational gestures (gestures that visually depict meaning) play a crucial role in teaching and explanation.

These gestures can show how an action works, illustrate the shape of an object, or recreate a movement in space. For example, someone explaining how to crack an egg might mime the action with their hands while speaking. The new study explored how adults use these gestures when teaching children compared to adults, and whether those strategies differ across cultures.

[insert figure 1]

FIGURE 1. The figure shows an overview of the study design. After an initial introduction, the speaker interacts with the toys and then demonstrates their use to the two different audiences: an adult and a child.
 

Comparing Italian and Dutch communication styles

The researchers asked 16 Italian and 16 Dutch adults to demonstrate two novel logic puzzles to two different audiences: 9-10-year-old children and other adults. The two groups were chosen because previous research suggests Italians come from a more ‘gesture-rich’ culture, while Dutch speakers tend to use fewer representational gestures overall.

As expected, Italian participants produced more representational gestures than Dutch participants across the demonstrations. However, neither group simply increased the total number of gestures when speaking to children. Instead, both groups changed the type of gestures they used.


A shared strategy for helping children learn

Across both cultures, adults used significantly more two-handed representational gestures when teaching children. Researchers believe these gestures increase iconicity, making explanations more visually informative and easier for children to understand.

The findings suggest that adults instinctively adapt demonstrations to make abstract or unfamiliar information clearer for younger audiences. “Humans are natural teachers, and our bodies are part of the lesson,” researcher Emanuela Campisi notes. “Even when cultures differ in how much people gesture overall, adults seem to share intuitive strategies for making demonstrations clearer and more engaging for children.”

The study also examined ‘bracketed gestures’, in which one hand remains still while the other moves. Dutch adults used these gestures more frequently when explaining puzzles to other adults, possibly to help organize and anchor information during communication. Italians used them less often in adult-directed demonstrations.

However, when speaking to children, both groups converged on similar rates of bracketed gestures: another sign that adults across cultures may rely on common pedagogical instincts when teaching young learners.


Understanding folk pedagogy

The findings support theories of ‘folk pedagogy’, the idea that humans possess intuitive teaching strategies based on assumptions about what learners need to understand. Importantly, the study examined spontaneous, semi-naturalistic teaching interactions rather than formal classroom instruction. Participants were ordinary adults communicating with real, naïve listeners, allowing researchers to capture how teaching unfolds in everyday life.

The work also expands cross-cultural research in developmental psychology by moving beyond broad comparisons between Western and non-Western societies and examining subtle differences within Europe itself.


A window into human cultural transmission

Researchers say the findings help illuminate how humans pass knowledge across generations: a process considered central to cultural evolution. By combining speech with gestures and other visual signals, adults create what researchers describe as ‘multimodal scaffolding’, a flexible communication system tailored to learners’ needs.

The team hopes future studies will explore a wider range of cultures and teaching situations, while also examining how different gestural strategies affect children’s actual learning and comprehension. On top, the study suggests that while cultures may differ in how expressive people are, the instinct to physically shape communication for children may be something humans everywhere share.

 

 

Publication

Campisi E, Slonimska A, Ozyurek A. 2026 Showing how: adults across cultures use similar representational gestural strategies in demonstrations for children. R. Soc. Open Sci. 13: 251813. https://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.251813

 

‘Hook-up culture’ on dating apps harming men’s body image




Flinders University






Gay dating apps are exposing men to intense pressure to look sexually desirable, fuelling body dissatisfaction and low self-esteem, with some users describing the experience as feeling like they are “selling their body” rather than forming genuine connections.

With around 350 million people using dating apps globally, and more than half (51 per cent) of lesbian, gay and bisexual adults reporting they have used one compared to 28 per cent of straight adults, researchers say gay, bisexual and other sexual minority men are among the most active and potentially vulnerable users.

The Flinders University study, published in Body Image, explores how using both gay and mainstream dating apps shapes body image and wellbeing among Australian men.

Led by PhD candidate Zac Bowman, the research finds a clear divide between platforms. Apps such as Grindr are widely perceived as spaces for casual sex where appearance dominates, while Tinder and Hinge are more often associated with dating and relationships.

“Our findings show a clear divide in how different apps shape behaviour and body image, with gay dating apps encouraging users to focus heavily on their bodies, often at the expense of their wellbeing,” says Mr Bowman from the College of Human Sciences and Culture.

Participants report strong pressure to present themselves in highly sexualised ways on gay dating apps, often sharing revealing images and explicit personal details.

“For many men, this pressure becomes overwhelming, with some spending long periods trying to capture the ‘perfect’ image to share,” says Mr Bowman.

The study identifies key drivers behind these impacts. Men view different apps as serving distinct purposes, with gay dating apps seen as hook-up spaces and mainstream apps as relationship platforms. This, in turn, shapes how users present themselves, with more sexualised profiles common on gay apps.

At the same time, users frequently compare themselves to others, focusing heavily on physical attributes such as body shape, muscularity and overall appearance.

These comparisons are overwhelmingly upward, meaning men compare themselves to those they perceive as more attractive, contributing to negative self-talk and, in some cases, reluctance to engage with others.

The research also highlights how app design amplifies these pressures. Features such as grid-style layouts, image sharing and filters based on body type or sexual preferences can increase appearance-based judgement and competition.

Senior author and body image expert, Professor Murray Drummond, says the findings point to a broader cultural issue within digital dating spaces.

“The combination of app design and user behaviour can create a highly sexualised environment that amplifies existing pressures faced by gay and bisexual men,” says Professor Drummond.

The study adds to growing evidence that gay and bisexual men are already at higher risk of body image concerns than heterosexual men, with dating apps potentially compounding these challenges.

Importantly, participants report these pressures are far less common on mainstream dating apps, where profiles tend to focus more on personality, interests and shared values rather than appearance alone.

“There are practical steps that could help reduce harm, and app developers can play a key role by limiting features that encourage sexual objectification and introducing safeguards around explicit content,” says Mr Bowman.

With tens of millions of people using dating apps globally, including around 15 million on Grindr alone, researchers also say users themselves have a role to play in shifting culture on these platforms.

“Promoting more meaningful conversations and reducing the focus on sexualised imagery could significantly improve user experience,” says Mr Bowman.

“We don’t want to discourage people from using these apps, but we do need to create healthier online environments that don’t come at the cost of mental health and wellbeing.”

The paper, ‘“On Grindr you’re selling body”: Sexual objectification on gay dating apps and its relationship with Australian  men’s body image and wellbeing, by Zac Bowman, Murray Drummond, Ivanka Prichard and Jasmine M. Petersen, was published in Body Image. DOI: 10.1016/j.bodyim.2026.102108

PANDORA-seq – a new way to assess sperm quality



PANDORA-seq reveals sncRNA landscape in human sperm, facilitating sperm quality assessment




Compuscript Partner Journals

Characterization and comparison of human sperm sncRNA signatures between traditional sncRNA-seq and PANDORA-seq 

image: 

(A) Comparison of the relative ratio of clean reads to raw reads and reads aligned to the genome to clean reads between traditional sncRNA-seq and PANDORA-seq. (B) The scatter plots depicting the correlation of miRNA, tsRNA, and rsRNA expression profiles of paired traditional sncRNA-seq and PANDORA-seq. Spearman correlation coefficients and P-values are shown. (C) Comparison of the relative expression levels of four major sncRNA origins (miRNA, tsRNA, rsRNA, ysRNA, and piRNA) in healthy human sperm determined by the PANDORA-seq protocol. (D) Expression levels of miRNAs, tsRNAs, and rsRNAs in human sperm samples validated by northern blotting. (E) The radar plot showing the different relative expression proportions of each tsRNA subcategory with respect to the two protocols. (F) Northern blotting validation of tsRNALeu(TAG), tsRNALys(TTT), and tsRNAGly(GCC) in human sperm. (G) Visualization of the proportional distribution of cyto-tsRNAs and mt-tsRNAs in healthy human sperm determined by the PANDORA-seq protocol. (H) The radar plots illustrating the relative expression proportions of each tsRNA subcategory in relation to three distinct tsRNA origins (5′, inner′, and 3′). (I) Sequence mapping location (left), expression profile (middle), and reverse transcription PCR validation (right) of tsRNAAla(AGC), tsRNAArg(TCG), and tsRNAGlu(CTC) in human sperm. (J) Distribution of expression proportions for six nucleus-encoded rsRNAs and two mitochondria-encoded rsRNAs. (K) The boxplots showing the relative expression of five nucleus-encoded rsRNAs and two mitochondria-encoded rsRNA categories. (L) Visualization of expression signature and sequence mapping location of rsRNA-18S and rsRNA-28S in human sperm samples. (M) Northern blotting validation of rsRNA-5.8S, selected rsRNA-18S main peaks (peak #1, peak #2), and selected rsRNA-28S main peaks (peak #1, peak #2) in human sperm samples.

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Credit: Ruofan Huang, Yiting Yang, Wenlin Jiang, Zheng Cao, Junchao Shi, Xiao-Ou Zhang, Yunfang Zhang





The global fertility crisis is increasingly attributed to a steady decline in human semen quality, with conditions such as asthenozoospermia (reduced sperm motility) and teratozoospermia (abnormal sperm morphology) accounting for more than half of male subfertility cases.

While small noncoding RNAs (sncRNAs) are known to be abundant in mature sperm and essential for regulating spermatogenesis, traditional sequencing methods have predominantly focused on miRNAs, which represent less than 1% of the total sncRNA population in sperm, whereas transfer RNA-derived small RNAs (tsRNAs) and ribosomal RNA-derived small RNAs (rsRNAs) comprise the majority of the sperm sncRNA profile. These sncRNAs frequently possess chemical modifications and non-canonical terminal structures that hinder adapter ligation and reverse transcription during standard library preparation, thereby making their detection challenging with conventional methods.

In a prospective cohort study published in Genes & Diseases, researchers from Tongji University, Shanghai Institute for Biomedical and Pharmaceutical Technologies (SIBPT), and Chinese Academy of Sciences utilized PANDORA-seq—a panoramic RNA display strategy that employs a two-step enzymatic treatment with T4 polynucleotide kinase (T4PNK) and α-ketoglutarate-dependent dioxygenase (AlkB)—to remove these inhibitory modifications. By applying this method to a cohort of 25 participants categorized into normozoospermia (NZS), asthenozoospermia (AZS), and teratozoospermia (TZS) groups, the researchers generated one of the most comprehensive landscapes of human sperm sncRNAs to date.

The study revealed that tsRNAs and rsRNAs are not only the dominant species, constituting over 97% of the total small RNA population, but are also strongly correlated with clinical indicators of sperm quality, such as motility and morphology. Among rsRNAs, the majority are derived from cytoplasmic 28S and 18S subunits, with 28S-derived sequences alone accounting for over 74% of the rsRNA population. tsRNAs also exhibit distinct patterns, with nuclear-encoded species primarily originating from the 5' end of tRNAs, whereas mitochondrial-encoded tsRNAs are skewed toward internal cleavage sites.

Functional analysis identified robust linear correlations between these specific molecular species and clinical indicators: nuclear-encoded tsRNA-Phe and tsRNA-Lys are positively correlated with progressive motility (PR), whereas rsRNA-28S exhibits a significant negative correlation with motility parameters. Furthermore, rsRNA-5.8S showed a notable negative correlation with both the head shape index (TZI) and the percentage of intact sperm heads, suggesting a potential mechanistic role in regulating sperm morphology.

Conversely, tsRNA species such as tsRNA-iMet, tsRNA-Val, and various 28S-derived rsRNAs were negatively correlated with motility, indicating their association with subfertile states. While correlations between sncRNAs and morphology were generally less pronounced, rsRNA-5.8S remained negatively associated with intact head and head shape indices, and tsRNA-Val showed a positive association with abnormal morphological indices.

To translate these molecular findings into clinical utility, the researchers employed machine learning and LASSO regression based on sperm rsRNA and tsRNA profiles, establishing the male subfertility sncRNA signature (MSsncSig), the AZS-related signature (AZSsncSig), and the TZS-related signature (TZSsncSig). These models demonstrated exceptional diagnostic power, achieving area under the curve (AUC) scores of 0.83 or higher. This predictive capability represents a substantial improvement over traditional WHO semen quality assessments, providing a novel molecular framework for diagnosing male infertility.

In conclusion, PANDORA-seq provides critical insights into the landscape of the human sperm sncRNA repertoire, identifying tsRNAs and rsRNAs as pivotal markers of reproductive health. By establishing correlations between these modified RNAs and sperm fitness, this research offers a robust framework for assessing sperm quality and understanding the molecular mechanisms underlying male subfertility and its potential intergenerational impacts.

Reference

Title of the original paper:  PANDORA-seq reveals human sperm sncRNA signature endowed with sperm quality assessment

Journal: Genes & Diseases

Genes & Diseases is a journal for molecular and translational medicine. The journal primarily focuses on publishing investigations on the molecular bases and experimental therapeutics of human diseases. Publication formats include full length research article, review article, short communication, correspondence, perspectives, commentary, views on news, and research watch.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gendis.2025.101807