Wednesday, August 12, 2020

Indigenous Australians 'farmed bananas 2,000 years ago'

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One of the ancient banana cultivation sitesImage copyrightANU
Image captionAncient banana cultivation sites were found on Mabuyag Island
Archaeologists say they have found ancient banana farms once managed by Australia's Indigenous peoples.
The sites, which date back 2,145 years, were found on a tiny island north of the mainland in the Torres Strait.
Researchers found banana microfossils, stone tools, charcoal and a series of retaining walls at the site.
It further dispels the myth that Australia's native peoples were solely "hunter-gatherers", researchers said.
The findings from Mabuyag Island were released by a team from the Australian National University and the University of Sydney on Wednesday.
"Our research shows the ancestors of the Goegmulgal people of Mabuyag were engaged in complex and diverse cultivation and horticultural practices in the western Torres Strait at least 2,000 years ago," lead researcher Robert Williams said.
He said the Torres Strait had been historically viewed as a "separating line" between Indigenous groups in New Guinea - now part of Indonesia and Papua New Guinea - who practiced agriculture, and those in Australia who were labelled "hunter gatherers".
But the findings show that the strait was "more of a bridge or a filter" for horticultural practices across both regions, said Mr Williams.
The archaeologists found gardening tools as well as retaining walls at the siteImage copyrightANU
Image captionThe archaeologists found gardening tools as well as retaining walls at the site
The agricultural system reflected the local regional diet at the time which included staples such as yams, taro and bananas.
"Food is an important part of Indigenous culture and identity and this research shows the age and time depth of these practices," said Mr Williams.
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples are widely misconceived to have been nomadic hunter-gatherers in the time before British colonisation.
Historians have argued that the British denied evidence of Indigenous agriculture systems so they could claim the land was unsettled and unoccupied.
Ancient Indigenous land care practices are still not widely known in Australia.
But research in past decade has shed some light on pre-colonial agriculture, engineering and construction practices of the first Australians.

Stunning 'reverse waterfall' filmed near Sydney

High winds and torrential rain on the New South Wales south coast in Australia have resulted in a spectacular sight - waterfalls in the Royal National Park being blown in reverse.


Not enough bright orange clay in Mt Rushmore to add your face to it, Donald Trump told
Monday 10 August 2020 by Pete Redfern

Mount Rushmore won't be having Trump on it
The geological composition of Mount Rushmore would not fairly portray Donald Trump’s likeness, the President has been told today.
After asking if he could have his face added to the landmark, those in charge of preserving the monument were forced to tell him it wouldn’t work out, after they had eventually stopped laughing.
“There are a number of factors which influence whether someone can be added to the monument,” explained Chuck Williams, head of Mount Rushmore’s tourism board.
“Little things – like having achieved something noteworthy for the betterment of life in America at any point in your presidency, instead of killing 1,000 Americans per day, and not having a face that looks like a sunburned tangerine.
“The Trump presidency will definitely go down in the record books, and will be studied by academics for generations to come – but what it won’t be, is looked at as a golden era led by a very stable genius.
“There are at least 150 other people ahead of him in the queue, and we’ve only had 45 presidents.”
The logistics of creating a Trump likeness in Mount Rushmore would also prove difficult to overcome.
Williams went on, “Try and imagine just how much bright orange clay we’d have to slap on the mountain to do him justice.
“And that’s before you get to his hair. We’d have to find some wild, wavy, blonde-ish grey scrubs to add to the top, but even then that would be an improvement on how he actually looks.”
He concluded, “Mind you, it would be good to update it a bit. Perhaps we’ll chisel Barack Obama’s beautiful visage on the mountain for a laugh, just to see the look on Trump’s face.”

Mike Pence demands on-stage chaperone for VP debate with Kamala Harris
WELL IT COULD BE TRUE

Tuesday 11 August 2020


After Joe Biden selected Californian Senator Kamala Harris as his running mate for the November presidential election, Mike Pence wasted no time in demanding a chaperone for the VP debates to ensure he is not alone with her on stage at any point during the proceedings.

The Republican party have been left shocked at the announcement of Harris as Biden’s running mate, as it exposes Pence’s Achilles heel – women.

A GOP spokesperson told us, “We’ll be working with Vice President from now until the debates on mental exercises to picture Kamala Harris as a two-hundred-pound white man that he is entirely comfortable to be around.

“We also believe that at this point he is in discussions with Mrs Mike Pence to secure her permission to talk solely to another woman for a period of up to an hour.

“We’ve no idea what’ll happen if she says ‘no’. Maybe she’ll be up on the stage with him, giving dirty looks to Kamala Harris for trying to seduce her husband into unwanted verbal pleasantries.”

Pence has also asked that the traditional handshake be taken off the agenda, insisting physical conduct with a woman who is not his wife could lead to several hours of prayer when he should be supporting his President by doing the things that he does.

KAPITAL FLIGHT
Prudential slashes dividend as it retreats from the US: Insurer to focus on fast-growing markets in Asia and Africa
TRUMP SCARES FINANCE CAPITAL OFFSHORE
Insurance giant Prudential slashed the dividend in half as it announced plans to spin off its American business.

The FTSE 100 firm plans to float a minority stake in Michigan-based Jackson National Life, before gradually selling the rest of its holding over time.

Bosses said the shake-up will allow the Pru to focus on fast-growing markets in Asia and Africa.



Prudential plans to float a minority stake in Michigan-based Jackson National Life, before gradually selling the rest of its holding over time

But the company is cutting its prized dividend as part of the changes, to give it extra firepower to invest in Asia and enable Jackson to build up its own cash reserves before separation.


It is a blow to savers and pension funds who rely on dividends for income. The Pru is traditionally one of the top-20 dividend UK payers.

Other firms that have slashed their payouts include BP, Shell, HSBC, Lloyds Bank, Glencore and Aviva.


The small number of companies that kept their divis includes Legal & General, Standard Life Aberdeen and Unilever.

Pru boss Mike Wells said: 'To support the separation process Prudential will adopt a new dividend policy that is aligned to the Asia and Africa growth strategy and to the intended separation of Jackson.'
It is the second major upheaval announced by the Pru in as many years. In 2018, the British firm revealed plans to spin off UK business M&G into a separate listed company and the split took effect last October.

Jackson will be separated as well – but listed in the US, where it is expected to float next year.

The rest of the Pru's business will be based in London and it will keep its primary listing on the London Stock Exchange.
Wells said the 'rebalancing' of investments with the dividend was aimed at delivering strong growth and bumper profits in the long run.

The Pru declared a half-year dividend of 5.37 cents (4.1p) per share, 56 per cent down from the previously expected payout of 12.28 cents (9.4p).

445 firms who have cut their payouts


A total of 445 companies cut, cancelled or hit the pause button on dividends between January and late July, figures show.

Firms of all sizes desperately tried to rein in spending at the start of the pandemic. But this has been dire for pensioners, savers and retail investors as they have been deprived of a key source of passive income.

Fifty firms in the FTSE 100, 108 in the FTSE 250 and 89 small-caps were among those who suspended, trimmed or scrapped shareholder payouts between January 1 and July 24, according to exchange-traded fund provider Granite Shares. Some 139 companies on AIM also axed their divi.

On the Footsie, oil majors BP and Royal Dutch Shell made cuts, and Lloyds Bank, Barclays and Rolls-Royce have added to the misery.

Firms including Rio Tinto and BAE Systems are among those to have increased their payouts.

It expects to pay another 10.70 cents (8.2p) per share later in the year, taking full-year payouts to about 16.10 cents (12.3p) – worth £321million overall.

Wells said the divi would rise 'broadly in line with the growth in Asia'.

Pru shares rose 2.8 per cent, or 35p, to 1267p yesterday.

The fresh break-up is a victory for Third Point, the aggressive US hedge fund run by corporate raider Dan Loeb, which built up a stake of 5 per cent and demanded it separate Jackson.

Loeb also called for the Pru to scrap its UK base to save costs –something it has refused to do.

Wells said that the Pru is 'committed' to the City but will make its base more 'cost-effective', as it looks to save £53million a year by 2023.

He declined to say how many jobs at the HQ, where some 200 people are employed, are at risk but said the office would be 'appropriately-sized'.









Statue of Christopher Columbus that had stood in south Philadelphia since 1876 will be removed with almost 40 monuments of the explorer having been dismantled across the country since May

The Philadelphia Art Commission voted on Wednesday to remove the statue of Christopher Columbus from Marconi Plaza and place it in temporary storage 

The 144-year-old monument which sits in South Philly is currently still in place 

The commission voted 8-0 in favor of relocation with the stipulation that the city release a report on their progress at finding a new location for the statue 

36 monuments or busts of Christopher Columbus have been removed or placed into storage in the last few months


By JAMES GORDON FOR DAILYMAIL.COM  
12 August 202

A Philadelphia arts panel has cleared the way for the city to remove a 144-year-old statue of Christopher Columbus from a south Philadelphia park after the explorer became a focus of protesters amid nationwide demonstrations against racial injustice in the wake of the police killing of George Floyd in Minnesota.

The Philadelphia Art Commission voted 8-0 Wednesday, with one member abstaining, to place the now-boarded-up statue at Marconi Plaza in temporary storage and require a report every six months on efforts to find it a permanent home.

The city's historical commission had voted 10-2 late last week for removal of the statue.

A Philadelphia arts panel has cleared the way for the city to remove a 144-year-old statue of Christopher Columbus from a south Philadelphia park

City crews earlier built a wooden box around the statue following clashes between protesters and residents and the city later announced plans to seek its removal

The panel's chair, Alan Greenberger, said the statue was 'a serious piece of art' and a gift from the Italian government in the 1800s, and 'as a matter of practicality it has to be put safely in storage,' The Philadelphia Inquirer reported.

'It needs to be stored and protected so that something can be figured out,' he said. 'The worst thing in my view that can happen, as many of you said, is that it stays in storage and is forgotten.'

City crews earlier built a wooden box around the statue following clashes between protesters and residents and the city later announced plans to seek its removal, something some south Philadelphia residents have sued to block.

In Philadelphia, a city with a deep Italian heritage, supporters said they considered Columbus an emblem of that heritage.

In recent months the statue has been enclosed inside a wooden box

The Philadelphia Art Commission voted 8-0 Wednesday, with one member abstaining, to place the now-boarded-up statue at Marconi Plaza in temporary storage and require a report every six months on efforts to find it a permanent home

Mayor Jim Kenney said Columbus was venerated for centuries as an explorer but had a 'much more infamous' history, enslaving indigenous people and imposing punishments such as severing limbs or even death.

Statues of Columbus were earlier removed in nearby Camden, New Jersey, and Wilmington, Delaware.

In Richmond, Virginia, a statue of Christopher Columbus was torn down, set on fire and thrown into a lake.

In Columbia, South Carolina, the first U.S. city named for Columbus, a statue of the explorer was removed after it was vandalized several times, and a vandalized statue in Boston also was removed from its pedestal.

Monuments and memorials removed during the George Floyd protests

There has been a renewed push to remove Confederate monuments following the death of George Floyd in the custody of police.

In May and June 2020, a number of monuments and memorials were destroyed or removed, or commitments to remove them were announced. Some had been the subject of lengthy, years-long efforts to remove them. Where legal avenues had all but failed, some monuments were deliberately broken.

Many statues of Christopher Columbus were removed, as he participated in abuses against Native Americans and his arrival in the Americas was the beginning of the genocide of Native American people.

Monuments to many other local figures connected with racism were also removed. Some pro-Union or anti-slavery monuments were also targeted, as they were seen to embody disrespectful attitudes towards Native Americans or the enslaved.

At least 82 monuments or plaques in cities across the country have been removed since the protests began.

General Stonewall Jackson and Confederate President Jefferson Davis, Richmond, Virginia

Richmond Mayor Levar Stoney ordered the immediate removal of several confederate statues.

'These statues, although symbolic, have cast shadows on the dreams of our children of color,' Stoney said. 'Let me be clear, removing these monuments is not a solution to the deeply embedded racial injustices in our city and nation, but is a down payment.'

The work began with the statues of General Stonewall Jackson, who became one of the best-known Confederate commanders, and General Robert E. Lee, who was the only president of the Confederate States of America.

People watch as the Stonewall Jackson statue is removed from Monument Avenue in Richmond, Virginia on July 1, 2020

A statue of Confederate States President Jefferson Davis lies on the street after protesters pulled it down in Richmond, Virginia

John C. Calhoun, Charleston, South Carolina

Crews in Charleston tore down a statue of politician John C. Calhoun, a former Vice President of the United States, from its pedestal in Marion Square on June 24. He is remembered for strongly defending slavery and for advancing the concept of minority states' rights in politics.

Workers use cherry pickers to help remove the John C. Calhoun statue atop a monument in Marion Square in Charleston, South Carolina in June

The John Breckinridge Castleman monument, Louisville, Kentucky

John Breckinridge Castleman was a Confederate officer and later a United States Army brigadier general as well as a prominent landowner and businessman in Louisville, Kentucky. The statue will eventually make its way to Cave Hill Cemetery, where Castleman is buried.

Jefferson Davis statue from Kentucky Capitol rotunda, Frankfort, Kentucky

The statue had been in the building since 1936. Five years ago, Frankfort officials voted to get rid of the statue, but ended up just removing the bronze plaque that was displayed in the front.


Workers hoist a statue of Jefferson Davis after removing it from the Kentucky state Capitol in Frankfort, Kentucky in early June

Charles Linn, a city founder who was in the Confederate Navy, in Birmingham, Alabama

Linn was a sailor, wholesaler, banker and industrialist. He was a captain in the Confederate Navy and later one of the founders of Birmingham, Alabama.

Robert E. Lee that stood in front of Lee High School in Montgomery, Alabama

Robert Edward Lee was an American Confederate general best known as a commander of the Confederate States Army during the American Civil War. He commanded the Army of Northern Virginia from 1862 until its surrender in 1865.


The Robert E. Lee Statue stands off its base at Lee High School in Montgomery, Alabama, pictured in June 2020. The school has a majority black student population

Edward Carmack, a former US senator, Nashville, Tennessee

Carmack was an attorney, newspaperman and political figure who served as a U.S. Senator from Tennessee from 1901 to 1907. Following his political service, and after an unsuccessful run for Governor of Tennessee, he became editor of the one-year-old Nashville Tennessean.


Protesters toppled the statue of Edward Carmack outside the state Capitol after a peaceful demonstration turned violent at the end of May in Nashville, Tennessee

Confederate Adm. Raphael Semmes , Mobile, Alabama

Raphael Semmes was an officer in the Confederate Navy during the American Civil War. Until then, he had been a serving officer in the US Navy from 1826 to 1860. During the American Civil War, Semmes was captain of the cruiser CSS Alabama, the most successful commerce raider in maritime history, taking 65 prizes.


The pedestal where the statue of Admiral Raphael Semmes stands empty, in Mobile, Alabama. The city of Mobile removed the Confederate statue without making any public announcements

Bronze statue of Confederate soldier named 'Appomattox' removed from Old Town Alexandria, Virginia

The Battle of Appomattox Court House, fought in Appomattox County, Virginia, on the morning of April 9, 1865, was one of the last battles of the American Civil War.


Who was Christopher Columbus and why is he so divisive?

Christopher Columbus, (1451 - 1506)

Christopher Columbus, born in Genoa, Italy in 1451, secured his place in history by leading the first expeditions to make European contact with the Caribbean and Central and South America. Sponsored by the Spanish monarchy, Columbus made four expeditions across the Atlantic in a quest to find a western sea passage to the East Indies.

Columbus had convinced Spain's Queen Isabella to fund his voyage by promising that the riches he'd collect would be used to finance a crusade to 'reclaim' Jerusalem for Christians. Instead, he found new foods, animals and indigenous people who, he wrote, were childlike and could be easily enslaved.

Even in his own time, Columbus was accused of cruelty and incompetence in his role as Viceroy and Governor of the Indies, and of brutal mistreatment of the native Taino people on the island of Hispaniola.

Columbus' supporters say that many of the claims are exaggerated or false, and that the matter is clouded by a contemporaneous smear campaign both against Columbus by his political rivals, and by northern European countries against Catholic Spain.

However, there is good evidence that Columbus brutally subjugated and enslaved the Taino people in the quest for gold.

In 2006, historians discovered a contemporaneous investigative report in Spanish archives, which revealed the results of an inquiry into accusations that Columbus ruled brutally as governor.

The report contained accounts of mutilation, torture and cruelty that were shocking even to Columbus' contemporaries, and resulted in his permanent removal as governor and temporary imprisonment by King Ferdinand.

'Columbus's government was characterized by a form of tyranny,' Consuelo Varela, a Spanish historian who has seen the document, told journalists. 'Even those who loved him had to admit the atrocities that had taken place.'

Around 60 years after Columbus' arrival, the Taino indigenous population of the Caribbean had been reduced from an estimated 250,000 people to a few hundred because of slavery and death from new diseases.

However for many Italian Americans, the Italian-born explorer continues to be an important symbol in their heritage.

Millions of Italian immigrants traveled across the Atlantic and through Ellis Island in New York to start a new life in America in the late 1880s to 1920s.

They faced xenophobia and prejudice, including one of the largest single mass lynchings in American history when 11 were murdered in 1891 in New Orleans.

The Italian explorer thereby became a cultural hero for Italian immigrants to hold on to during this time, and Columbus Day parades began in the late 1800s.
Review of Arrighi: The Long 20th Century
 James Herod

Capitalism originated in the city-states of northern Italy. There had been a great expansion of production and trade in the late thirteenth and early fourteenth centuries. But this was not capitalist. (All this is according to Arrighi, of course.) There were many centers of this trade, with none being hegemonic. Within the city-states, there was no distinction between business and government – these functions were completely intertwined. In fact, one of the long term trends which Arrighi discovers is the 500-year transition from capital being embedded in the state, as in the early Italian city-states like Venice, to the state being embedded in capital, as in the contemporary United States. What happened is that the expansion of the trade networks of these city-states reached its limits, and profits began to fall. So the surplus capital that had been accumulated was shifted over to building up the state, waging war, and financial speculation (except for Genoa). This is how the second phase of the cycle always begins, with the over accumulation of capital. (And my God! Isn’t this still agonizingly true today: the huge accumulation of surplus capital which is sloshing around the world, with nowhere profitable to go in the real economy, is pouring into financial speculation, wars and weapons, and to building up police states.) Part of the Italian surplus capital was used to finance northern European governments and their wars. Florence became a major creditor. And this also was the beginning of another feature of capitalism – the control of public finances by private creditors (just as Wall Street now controls the U.S. Treasury, and the ”market” – private owners of surplus capital – is calling the tunes all across Europe). This first financialization that took place in northern Italian city-states was thus directly antecedent to the beginning of the first true systemic cycle of capital accumulation, carried out by the capitalist ruling class in Genoa. Genoa eventually won the city-state wars (Venice, Milan, Florence, and Genoa being the major competitors). Instead of wars and government, Genoa poured its surplus capital into developing new trade networks. It made a deal with ”Spain.” Spain handled the wars; Genoa managed the trade. This arrangement helped Genoa to become the first great hegemon of capitalism. Until it was overtaken by Amsterdam. I won’t try to summarize that transition, or the subsequent transitions to London, and then to New York, or how each new hegemon managed to expand the capitalist system. But I hope this brief sketch of the beginning of the story is tantalizing enough to whet your appetite so that you will read the book.

THE LONG TWENTIETH CENTURY: MONEY, POWER, AND THE ORIGINS OF OUR TIMES

Arrighi, Giovanni.
Heavily armed LAPD SWAT team descends on home of BLM leader in 'swatting' attack 

After cops receive anonymous call from 'fake kidnapper who claimed they were holding activist and her kids hostage for $1M and would kill them within an hour'

Melina Abdullah, co-founder of BLM-LA, began streaming live on Instagram Wednesday morning, showing the armed officers outside of her house 

In a live stream on Instagram, officers were reportedly seen in tactical gear screaming orders at her as she went outside to speak with them 

An officer tells Abdullah that they received a call saying that someone was holding her and her family hostage

The purported culprit demanded $1 million or said he would kill them in an hour

They left after Abdullah explained that there was no hostage situation underway 

LAPD's Major Crimes Division is investigating incident as a potential ‘swatting’

Swatting refers to a prank 911 call made to attract a large armed law enforcement presence to a specific address without actual cause

Abdullah, an outspoken critic of the LAPD, has also been at the forefront of recent protests against police violence in Los Angeles


By LUKE KENTON FOR DAILYMAIL.COM

PUBLISHED: 12 August 2020

The Los Angeles Police Department is investigating a possible prank call that led to a heavily armed SWAT team descending on the home of a prominent Black Lives Matter activist while she and her children were inside.

Melina Abdullah, co-founder of BLM-LA, began streaming live on Instagram Wednesday morning showing armed officers outside her home near the intersection of Crenshaw and West Washington boulevards.

‘I don’t know why they are here,’ Abdullah said to the camera, adding that the officers were pointing guns at her house, according to the LA Times.

The video feed reportedly showed officers dressed in tactical gear screaming orders at her as she went outside to speak with them. At least one of the officers in the clip was carrying a semi-automatic rifle.


Melina Abdullah, co-founder of BLM-LA, began streaming live on Instagram Wednesday morning showing armed officers outside of her home near the intersection of Crenshaw and West Washington boulevards

WHAT IS SWATTING?

Swatting is a criminal harassment tactic of deceiving an emergency service into sending heavily armed police and other emergency service response teams to another person’s address without actual cause.

This is often triggered by falsely reporting a serious emergency, such as a bomb threat, hostage situation, murder, or a ‘mental health’ emergency.

Making false reports to emergency services is a criminal offense in many countries, punishable by fines and imprisonment.

In March 2019, a California man was sentenced to 20 years in prison for carrying out a fatal 2017 swatting, in which 28-year-old Andrew Finch was shot dead by police as he left his home.

During a conversation with the assembled officers, one of them tells Abdullah that they received a call saying that someone was holding her and her family hostage, LAist reported.

The officer said dispatchers were told the purported culprit wanted one million dollars in ransom or he would kill Abdullah and her children within the hour.

The police left after Abdullah explained that there was no hostage situation taking place.

No one was injured in the incident, though Abdullah repeatedly voiced fears that officers would attempt to escalate the situation.

The activist said she was also concerned about the safety of her children, who were inside the home at the time heavily-armed officers arrived

LAPD spokesman Josh Rubenstein told the Times the department’s Major Crimes Division is now investigating incident, in what is said to ‘most likely be a swatting’.

Swatting refers to a prank 911 call made to attract a large armed law enforcement presence to a specific address without actual cause. Considering the potential confusion it causes among all parties, and the history of tactical teams using deadly force, the act of swatting is considered incredibly dangerous.

In California, swatters bear the 'full cost' of the response which can lead to fines up to $10,000.



Abdullah, an outspoken critic of the LAPD, has also been at the forefront of recent protests against police violence in Los Angeles, which were spurred into motion following the Memorial Day police killing of George Floyd in Minnesota.

Rubenstein said a call was made about a house on the block where Abdullah lives, but he would not specify the exact address or whether police think she was the intended target.

Abdullah's live stream was no longer available to view on her Instagram page as of Wednesday afternoon.

She has not responded to a DailyMail.com request for comment.

The incident came on the same morning Abdullah was scheduled to speak to the press about a campaign to appoint her as dean of the new College of Ethnic Studies at Cal State L.A., where she teaches.

Abdullah, an outspoken critic of the LAPD, has also been at the forefront of recent protests against police violence in Los Angeles, which were spurred into motion following the Memorial Day police killing of George Floyd in Minnesota.

Pinterest's top female executive files explosive lawsuit claiming she was paid less then men, left out of important meetings and fired after complaining about her treatment

Brougher has filed a lawsuit claiming she was sacked over her complaints

Suit accuses CEO Ben Silbermann of letting her go after she raised concerns 

Blogged that it's time to 'eliminate "boys' clubs" that dominate far too many companies'


By ALICE CACHIA FOR MAILONLINE

12 August 2020

Pinterest's former chief operating officer Françoise Brougher has accused the company of firing her for 'speaking out about the rampant discrimination, hostile work environment, and misogyny' in the business.

Brougher, who was the top female executive at the firm, left Pinterest suddenly in April this year with little explanation provided.

But in a lawsuit filed on Tuesday, Brougher accused the $21billion virtual pinboard business of sacking her after she complained about sexist treatment.


Brougher claims in a suit filed in San Francisco Superior Court that she was excluded from important meetings, paid less than male coworkers, and was given gender-specific feedback.

Pinterest is is understood to be defending the claim.


Brougher has accused the $21billion virtual pinboard business of sacking her after she complained about sexist treatment

She alleges that ultimately she was fired from the position she had held since 2018 by CEO Ben Silbermann after raising concerns over her treatment.

'When men speak out, they get rewarded. When women speak out, they get fired,' she told the New York Times.

Brougher was responsible for the company's revenue as COO and had around 1,000 employees reporting to her.

She only discovered she was paid less than male colleagues when Pinterest, which has a particularly large female audience, filed to go public last year.

'Even at the very top ranks of a public company, female executives can be targeted for sex discrimination and retaliation,' the lawsuit stated.

'Although Pinterest markets itself to women looking for inspiration, the company brazenly fired its top female executive for pointing out gender bias within Pinterest's male dominated leadership team.'

Brougher referenced a culture of 'constant exclusion' and claims she was not invited to board meetings after Pinterest went public.

Members of her team, however, were occasionally invited to those meetings without her knowledge, the suit adds.

Neither was she invited on the 'road show' to meet with investors for the company's public offering, the suit claims.



Brougher says she was excluded from meetings by Pinterest's CEO Silbermann (left) which made it 'impossible' to do her job. Pictured right is Todd Morgenfeld, Chief Financial Officer, at Pinterest headquarters in San Francisco.

'When you are brought in as a No. 2, you are expected to advise the CEO,' she said. 'But when you are not in the meeting where the decisions are made and don't have the context, it makes your job harder.'

The suit also alleges that Pinterest's chief financial officer Todd Morgenfeld asked her in front of colleagues, 'What is your job anyway?', as well as giving her feedback she believed to be sexist.

Brougher claims that Morgenfeld raised his voice and terminated the call when she questioned him about this over a video chat.

CEO Silbermann was dismissive of her concerns around Morgenfield, the suit alleges.

Court records claim that Silbermann compared the situation to a domestic dispute. HR treated it as a legal matter, the suit added.

Soon after the conversation with Morgenfeld, Silbermann fired Brougher during a video call.

She claims Pinterest asked her to announce that it was her decision to leave and sign a non disclosure agreement, which she refused to do.

Brougher's lawsuit also alleges that her equity grants were 'backloaded', meaning most vested after several years, but that her male peers' were not.

The suit says her compensation was adjusted after she complained.


Brougher added that after she was fired, not one board member called 'to hear my side of the story or discuss what had happened'

Brougher, who previously held executive positions at both Square and Google, published a 4,000 word blog post after the suit was filed.


She wrote: 'I believe that I was fired for speaking out about the rampant discrimination, hostile work environment, and misogyny that permeates Pinterest.'

'It is time to eliminate the "boys' clubs" that dominate far too many companies and make room for more women leaders and their ideas,' she added.

Although she did not reference the lawsuit in her post, Brougher detailed various ways she was allegedly mistreated at Pinterest.

She specifically says she was excluded from meetings by Silbermann, which made it 'impossible' to do her job.

'I had to waste time and energy just determining what was happening at a company where I was supposed to be a leader,' she wrote.


Although she did not reference the lawsuit in her post, Brougher detailed various ways she was allegedly mistreated at Pinterest

She also said that Morgenfeld wrote in in her performance review that her biggest accomplishment at the company was championing diversity issues.

'Reducing a female executive's achievements to 'diversity' is a common form of gender discrimination,' she wrote. 'Being a woman at Pinterest was not my only accomplishment.'

After being asked to say she had Pinterest on her own terms, 'I was not going to lie to my team and did not sign the NDA presented to me,' Brougher wrote.

'I realized it was more important to finally be an advocate for women at Pinterest, and for anyone else experiencing the pernicious effects of sexism, bias, and retaliation.'

She added that after she was fired, not one board member called 'to hear my side of the story or discuss what had happened'.

Brougher alleges in her blog that other women at Pinterest were also discriminated against.


Brougher alleges in her blog that other women at Pinterest were also discriminated against

She wrote: 'Certain teams could not retain women because the workplace was so toxic. Some women were offered spot bonuses not just to stay at the company, but to stick it out in certain departments that were particularly fraught.

'Women were pushed out for being too candid, others for being too caring. Many women felt they had been under-leveled when they were hired and could not get promoted.'

Brougher went on to write a list of eight steps she recommended both Pinterest and other organisations take to improve workplace culture.

The second recommendation was to 'recognize and dismantle the system of gender bias'.

Brougher wrote: 'We have to stop punishing women for the type of strong leadership that is rewarded in men, and root out the microaggressions that impede female leaders’ ability to be successful.'

Pinterest has been contacted for comment. 

Read more:
Thai king is seen in public alongside his wife days after thousands risked jail at protest criticizing the playboy royal who spends most of his time in Germany and has amassed a fortune while on throne

Thai king appeared in public for the first time amid mass protests 

Protesters read out a list of demands for the monarchy during a protest last night

Activists called for frank discussion about super-rich King Maha Vajiralongkorn 

Thailand's strict 'lese majeste' law can lead to 15 years in prison for defaming him


By TIM STICKINGS FOR MAILONLINE and REUTERS

12 August 2020

The Thai king has been seen in public for the first time after thousands took to the street to protest against the playboy royal.

Thai King Maha Vajiralongkorn was pictured alongside his wife, Thai Queen Suthida, as they greeted well-wishers after a ceremony to celebrate the brithday of Thai Queen Sirikit, the Queen Mother.

It comes asThai protesters are risking arrest and 15 years in prison by voicing rare public criticism of the country's normally unassailable monarchy.

Around 4,000 protesters listened in Bangkok this week as organisers read out a list of demands for the royal family, including reform of the 'lese majeste' law which protects the King from criticism.

Activists also called for frank discussion about the super-rich King Maha Vajiralongkorn, who has taken personal control of royal assets and has spent much of his time in Germany.

Protesters have previously made veiled references to the King, asking about the weather in Germany and holding up pictures of Harry Potter villain Lord Voldemort, also known as He Who Must Not Be Named.

But the latest protests have featured more direct criticism - prompting a rebuke from prime minister Prayuth Chan-o-cha who said the demonstrators had gone too far.

Thai protesters are risking arrest and 15 years in prison by voicing rare public criticism of the country's normally unassailable monarchy. King Maha Vajiralongkorn is pictured with Queen Suthida at a ceremony to celebrate the birthday of Thai Queen Sirikit, the Queen Mother, near the Grand Palace in Bangkok today


Reports in Germany earlier this year claimed the King (pictured today) was staying at a four-star hotel with a 'harem' of women who were assigned military titles


Palace officials declined to comment on the student protests or on any criticism of the monarchy. The King is pictured with his wife today

Protesters attend an anti-government rally at Thammasat University in Thailand on Monday night, where some demonstrators made demands to reform the monarchy

A pro-democracy protester dressed as a wizard holds up a picture of Lord Voldemort, the Harry Potter villain also known as He Who Must Not Be Named, at a protest last week
Thousands march in protests against the Thai government

Thailand's strict 'lese majeste' law protecting the monarchy from criticism


Thailand's royal defamation law is among the toughest in the world, setting jail terms of three to 15 years for anyone who 'defames, insults or threatens' the King, Queen, heir apparent or regent.

The law is written in Section 112 of the country's Penal Code and is widely known as the 'lese majeste' law, meaning 'to do wrong to majesty' in French.


The law against royal insults has been present in Thai criminal codes since early 1900s, when Thailand was known as Siam, and has been strengthened over the years by successive military rulers.


The prison term was raised to 15 years after 1976 student protests at Thammasat University were crushed.

The King is described in Thailand's constitution as 'enthroned in a position of revered worship'. Thai royalist traditionalists see the monarchy as a sacred institution.

Past convictions have included of a Swiss man jailed for 10 years for defacing pictures of the King, and a French businessman arrested for insulting the monarchy during a Thai Airways flight from London with two Thai royals on board.

However, there were only occasional prosecutions before 2014, when current Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-o-cha took power in a coup, according to Thai Lawyers for Human Rights.Many of those convicted at the time were pardoned by the current king's late father, King Bhumibol Adulyadej, who was widely revered during a 70-year reign until his death in 2016.

But between the 2014 coup and early 2018, at least 98 lese majeste charges were filed, according to a legal database by Thai watchdog iLaw.
Thousands of protesters chanted 'long live democracy' during a protest on a Bangkok university campus on Monday night.

Protesters from a student pro-democracy group made a 10-point call for monarchy reform while others called for the PM's resignation.

The students' demands included the reversal of a 2019 order that transferred two army units to the King's personal command, and a 2017 law that gave him full control of the crown's extensive property holdings.

Estimates of Vajiralongkorn's personal wealth start at $30billion and he has spent much of his time in Europe, including during the coronavirus lockdown.

Reports in Germany earlier this year claimed the King was staying at a four-star hotel with a 'harem' of women who were assigned military titles.

Palace officials declined to comment on the student protests or on any criticism of the monarchy.

Prayuth, a former chief of the armed forces, told reporters he had watched the protests and was very concerned.

'There are a lot of people in trouble waiting for their problems to get fixed, not just the young people. So is doing all of this appropriate?'

'It really went too far,' Prayuth said, without directly commenting on the demands on for royal reform.

Monday's protest prompted a public statement by Thammasat University apologising for the event.

It said that while the university supported free expression, it did not condone 'some references on the monarchy that impact people's feelings'.

Students have previously staged Harry Potter-themed protests and mentioned He Who Must Not Be Named in a veiled reference to the King.

Last week, human rights lawyer Anon Nampa took the stage at Bangkok's Democracy Monument and openly called for the palace's powers to be curbed.

'No other democratic countries allow the king to have this much power over the military,' he told about 200 protesters, with police standing by as he spoke.

'This increases the risk that a monarchy in a democracy could become an absolute monarchy.'

Anon was not arrested under the lese majeste law, but was detained and charged with sedition and breaking coronavirus rules by taking part in the protest.

However, he was released on bail and took part in another pro-democracy protest at the weekend.

Some Thai activits have called for frank discussion about the super-rich King Maha Vajiralongkorn (pictured at his wedding to Queen Suthida in 2019)


Approximately 3,000 anti-government protesters attended a rally in Bangkok on Monday night, the latest in a string of daily protests started by students in late July

Some protesters have worn face masks emblazoned with messages calling for the end of Section 112, the part of the Thai penal code which protects the monarchy from criticism.

While the country has been roiled by decades of political turmoil, the constitution says the monarchy must be held 'in a position of revered worship.'

Any form of challenge to the monarchy was extremely rare under Vajiralongkorn's father, King Bhumibol Adulyadej, who died in 2016 after 70 years on the throne.

The monarchy is also backed by the arch-royalist military, which has staged more than a dozen coups since the end of absolutism in 1932.

Protesters are also calling for a rewrite of the constitution and the dissolution of parliament.

'We're partly inspired by the Hong Kong protests,' said activist Tattep Ruangprapaikitseree, referring to the months-long unrest in the Chinese-run city.

'We have no real leaders or organisers - people just come out by themselves.'

The coronavirus pandemic sent Thailand's economy into freefall, focusing already simmering discontent against the government's handling of the crisis.

Pro-democracy protesters dressed as wizards attend a Harry Potter-themed protest demanding the resignation of Thailand's Prime Minister

Many protesters support the opposition Future Forward Party, whose leaders were banned in February from politics for a decade over electoral breaches.

FFP's mainly young supporters saw this as more evidence that the system was stacked against them.

Royalists have held counter-rallies, though with smaller numbers.

Even though King Vajiralongkorn spends much of his time in Germany, his image is pervasive in Thailan, where gold-framed royal portraits look down on city streets.

Cinemas play a royal anthem at which audiences are traditionally expected to stand, and conservatives say the monarchy is a guarantee of stability.

Some analysts say the military uses its close association with the monarchy to justify its prominent role in Thai politics.

Meanwhile, the king has strengthened his constitutional powers since he took the throne in 2016.

So far, only a handful of the dozens of student protest groups have openly criticised the monarchy, but they are united in demanding change to Thai politics.









No more fighting like cat and dog: Filling your home with appeasing pheromones could be the key to harmonious pet relationships

Researchers exposed dogs and cats in the same home to different pheromones 

Dog friendly and cat friendly pheromones work to improve relationships at home

They found dog friendly pheromones work best for creating household harmony


By RYAN MORRISON FOR MAILONLINE

PUBLISHED: 12 August 2020

Filling your home with pheromones that appeal to cats and dogs could be the key to a harmonious relationship feline friend and pet pooch, a new study discovered.

Animal behaviour experts from the University of Lincoln examined the impact of different scents on the relationship between different types of household pets.

The new research, led by Professor Daniel Mills and Dr Miriam Prior, explored the effects of two different pheromone products on cat-dog interactions in homes.


Feliway Friends, which emits pheromones that are calming for cats and Adaptil, which does the same for dogs can both be used to create a better environment.

They found that while both chemicals improved overall harmony, Adaptil actually led to positive behavioural changes in dogs which likely made cats more open to forming social bonds with their canine housemates.


Filling your home with pheromones that appeal to cats and dogs could be the key to a harmonious relationship feline friend and pet pooch, a new study discovered

The team from Lincoln worked with pet owners who have cats and dogs under the same roof and said there was 'room for improvement' in the animal relationships.

DOG FRIENDLY PHEROMONES LEAD TO BETTER HARMONY


Researchers found that both dog and cat friendly pheromones helped in terms of pet household harmony.

They both led to a reduction in negative behavioural traits.

However, dog friendly pheromones actually led to an increase in positive behavioural traits in dogs.

This improved overall harmony more than thee cat friendly pheromones.

The team suggest this was due to a reduction in the number of times the dog chased the cat.

This led to the cat being more open to creating a social bond with the dog.


The results show that both products had a positive impact on the interactions between cats and dogs living in the same home.

Over a six week period, both products led to a notable decrease in undesirable interactions between the two typical pet species.

This included dog chasing cat, cat hiding from dog, cat and dog staring at each other, and dog barking at cat.

Users of Adaptil even observed a significant increase in some desirable behaviours - friendly greetings between cat and dog, and time spent relaxing in the same room.

'We believe this is the first study of its kind to explore the use of pheromone products to improve the relationship when the two species are living in the same household,' explained Professor Mills.

'Seven per cent of households in the UK own both a cat and a dog, which represents a large number of pet owners and their animals living with potentially stressful animal relationships on a day-to-day basis,' he explained.

'Many cat and dog owners report that their animals are comfortable in each other's company, but where this isn't the case, a poor relationship between a resident cat and dog can have serious consequences for the welfare of individual animals.'

The team say this could be revealed as an unacceptable level of social stress or restricted access to resources such as food, water or toilet areas.


'There will also be increased stress for the remainder of the family (both human and animal), and potential risks of injury due to conflict,' Mills said.

A problematic relationship between a new pet and an existing pet is one of the main reasons for cats and dogs being taken to shelters for rehoming, experts claim.

The pet owners involved in this new scientific trial reported weekly on the frequency of 10 specific undesirable interactions and seven specific desirable interactions between their cats and dogs.

They were split into two groups - one group using Feliway Friends and the other using Adaptil, with the pheromones supplied in unlabelled packaging and randomly assigned by an independent staff member.

This was so that neither the participants nor the researchers knew which product was being trialled in each household until after the statistics had been collected.

They found that while both chemicals improved overall harmony, Adaptil actually led to positive behavioural changes in dogs which likely made cats more open to forming social bonds with their canine housemates

The researchers were aware that in many households, the comfortability of the cat seems to have a stronger influence over the quality of the cat-dog relationship.

It could therefore be seen as surprising that it was the product releasing dog pheromones which was seen to increase specific desirable interactions.

Miriam, a Lincoln-based vet said Feliway Friends should have in theory been more effective as cat comfort is usually more important in their relationship with dogs.

'This did not appear to be the case. Our results might be explained by the behaviour of the dog being the primary determinant of the cat's quality of interaction with it.

'We would like to investigate this further to really tease out the effects of these pheromone products individually and also to investigate their use in combination with each other,' said Miriam.

'We suggest that Adaptil may have had such a beneficial effect because a more relaxed dog may be less likely to disturb the cat, resulting in a cat that is less stressed and more willing to form some form of social bond with the dog.'

The Lincoln University study involved products provided free of charge with no condition on their use by Ceva Animal Health - but they didn’t fund the research.

The findings have been published in the journal Frontiers in Veterinary Science.

DOGS FIRST BECAME DOMESTICATED ABOUT 20,000 to 40,000 YEARS AGO



A genetic analysis of the world's oldest known dog remains revealed that dogs were domesticated in a single event by humans living in Eurasia, around 20,000 to 40,000 years ago.

Dr Krishna Veeramah, an assistant professor in evolution at Stony Brook University, told MailOnline: 'The process of dog domestication would have been a very complex process, involving a number of generations where signature dog traits evolved gradually.

'The current hypothesis is that the domestication of dogs likely arose passively, with a population of wolves somewhere in the world living on the outskirts of hunter-gatherer camps feeding off refuse created by the humans.

'Those wolves that were tamer and less aggressive would have been more successful at this, and while the humans did not initially gain any kind of benefit from this process, over time they would have developed some kind of symbiotic [mutually beneficial] relationship with these animals, eventually evolving into the dogs we see today.'

Read more:
Frontiers | Cats vs. Dogs: The Efficacy of Feliway FriendsTM and AdaptilTM Products in Multispecies Homes | Veterinary Science