Monday, February 07, 2022

America's hidden world of handmade pornography

Lisa Z. Sigel, Professor of History, DePaul University
Sat, February 5, 2022


Soldiers used spent shells and casings to make trench art, like this brass bottle opener that was made during World War II. Michael Riordan, CC BY-SA

“To live among the handmade,” philosopher and antiques dealer Leon Rosenstein once said, “is to live among the human.”

Well, there’s nothing more human than handmade pornography.

When you hear “pornography,” you might think of Playboy and Penthouse, X-rated movies and internet porn.

But one type that has been largely hidden and forgotten is the pornography people make for themselves. Unlike pornography for profit, handmade pornography is crude and funny and subtle. It, too, contains multitudes.

Over the past decade, I’ve visited archives and museums, met with collectors and antiques dealers, and talked with artists and scholars to reconstruct the ways people across America, from the 1830s to the 1970s, drew, painted, glued, sewed and baked their own pornography. Some altered coins or carved objects from wood, stone and bone. Others wrote stories, made pamphlets and designed comic books.

Despite the concerted efforts of law enforcement and social purists to destroy sexual artifacts, thousands of these fascinating objects remain. And now I’m publishing the first history of homemade and handmade pornography.

I’ve titled the book “The People’s Porn” because the objects being considered come from a true representation of the American people. As opposed to commercially produced pornography imported first from Europe to early America and then pirated as bootleg editions in major cities, these materials, often made with rudimentary artistic skills, cropped up organically in communities, small and large, across the country.
From funerals to farms

Pornography went wherever Americans went – in life and in death, at war and at sea. Men carved wooden pornographic objects at logging camps in the 19th century, and they made pornographic scrimshaw on whaling vessels during the 18th and 19th centuries. Others were inspired to refashion the 19th-century liberty penny that had “ONE CENT” written on the reverse side of the coin. By changing the “E” to a “U,” many Americans had the same idea for rendering the coin obscene. Who knows how many pockets jingled with these pennies over the years?


A celluloid toothpick from around the time of World War II. Michael Riordan, CC BY-SA

In many handmade objects, sexual gestures stand right behind propriety and erections pop up in staid places. For example, in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, people made small, carved coffins as a form of memento mori that concealed carved figures inside. When you lift a coffin lid, the male figure’s erection pops up. The popular objects were hand-carved, hailing from places that still prepared their own dead for burial and still made coffins for neighbors and kinfolk. You can imagine them circulating discreetly at wakes and memorials, provoking laughter even as people mourned.

Pornographic objects also leered about the barnyard, a reminder that America was a largely rural country up until the 1920s. When pornography showed cocks mounting hens, dogs humping each other and pigs acting like swine, it demonstrated that animals remained underfoot and in people’s sexual imaginations.

And when called to war, men made pornographic objects out of spent shells and casings and adorned planes with their favorite nudes.
Postwar pornographic potpourri

Despite the postwar world’s reputation for cultural conservatism, pornographic objects continued to be made in the home.

Women circulated patterns for pornographic potholders and aprons. Made with a wide variety of fabrics and trimmings, potholders came in pairs, with one side featuring a pop out penis and the other a vulva. Cookies, aprons, hook rugs, embroidery – all traditional women’s crafts – also came in pornographic form. Joined by explicitly feminist materials in the 1960s and 1970s, women’s creations show that the category of pornography can be much more capacious than you might think.


Red and white potholders feature sly allusions to genitals.

People from all walks of life – young and old, gay and straight, rich and poor, Black and white – made objects that the established order found embarrassing and preferred to ignore. Using commonly available materials, they found a way to express what moved them, what frightened them, what aroused them and what made them laugh.

Even as consumer culture expanded, pornography continued to be made by hand as people sought to articulate their own visions of sexuality. The mass market eventually took notice of these do-it-yourself productions, whether pornographic or not. By the 1990s, “amateur porn” started to flood the market in response to cravings for authenticity.

But you shouldn’t confuse this category of commercialized porn with what people made and continue to make. Handmade and homemade materials can expand our understanding of sexuality. Sometimes it’s beautiful. Sometimes it’s ugly.

As much as the world might like to limit sexuality to the realms of the uplifting and transcendent, homemade pornography – in all its incoherent, libidinal, confusing strangeness – reminds us that we are imperfect in body and in mind, subject to pain as well as pleasure, willing to laugh at ourselves and each other, and moved equally by the ridiculous, the violent and the sublime.

Naked wooden figures in a sexual postiion.

This article is republished from The Conversation, a nonprofit news site dedicated to sharing ideas from academic experts. It was written by: Lisa Z. Sigel, DePaul University.


How Playboy skirted the anti-porn crusade of the 1950s

More penises are appearing on TV and in film – but why are nearly all of them prosthetic?

‘The 120 Days of Sodom’ – counterculture classic or porn war pariah?

Lisa Z. Sigel does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

The Boeing 737 Max tragedy is a cautionary tale of cost-cutting corporate hubris

Bob Kustra

In 2018 in Indonesia and in 2019 in Ethiopia, pilots of two brand new Boeing 737 Max jet planes lost complete control of their planes and crashed, killing a total of 346 passengers and crew.

The Max was to be the latest version of the 737, often the workhorse of airlines. Tragically, the new 737 Max was built to fail. An important piece of its software would override pilots’ efforts to stabilize the plane, causing the two crashes with no survivors.

How could this happen to a corporation so steeped in the successful engineering and building of iconic airplanes like the 757 jumbo jet?

That’s what I asked author Peter Robison recently when I interviewed him at Reader’s Corner for his book, “Flying Blind: The 737 Max Tragedy and the Fall of Boeing.” His answer: corporate hubris that blew up a culture focused on engineering excellence and replaced it with a bottom-line culture where the focus included cutting budgets on traditional Boeing priorities like pilot training, flight simulators to train pilots, an electronic checklist for pilots and research to improve safety.

It started with Harry Stonecipher, the McDonnell Douglas CEO, a defense contractor expert at cutting budgets to win contracts, who took the reins at Boeing when the two companies merged.

Stonecipher and CEOs who followed him from General Electric’s Jack Welch school of management applied what author Peter Robison calls Welch’s standard corporate playbook: ”anti-union, regulation-light, outsourcing heavy.”

Later, Boeing decided to move its corporate headquarters to Chicago, encouraged by tax incentives from the state of Illinois and the city of Chicago. Critics claimed Boeing’s corporate chieftains place short-term profits ahead of engineering excellence as they left behind in Seattle the daily operations of Boeing and the accountability that accompanies a proximity to manufacturing. It also moved some of its manufacturing to South Carolina, a non-union state.

As usual in corporate America, those in the executive suites of Boeing were spared the cutbacks that research, safety protocols and employees suffered at the hands of these modern-day Scrooges. Boeing CEOs made out like bandits, and Boeing shareholders did, as well.

While engineers were forced to cut back, Boeing executives bought back its company stock, thereby increasing its price and enriching shareholders. According to Robison, Boeing spent $41.5 billion on stock buybacks from 2013 to 2018. Its CEOs walked away with millions in cash the buybacks generated.

Boeing’s board members didn’t do badly either, considering that the board caught none of this steady cultural drift toward deadly blunders. Board member Caroline Kennedy, the daughter of President John F. Kennedy, made a cool $800,000 from 2017 to 2019, while Kenneth Duberstein, onetime chief of staff to President Ronald Reagan, pulled down $5.3 million.

Boeing built a lobbying team in Washington second to none. According to Open Secrets, a comprehensive resource for campaign contributions, lobbying data and analysis, in 2019 alone, Boeing spent $13 million and employed more than 106 lobbyists including some of the most politically connected law firms in D.C.

The passengers of those two deadly flights didn’t have a chance, given heavy lobbying by Boeing in D.C.

Boeing “captured” the agency charged with regulating the company and the airlines. The Federal Aviation Administration not only loosened its rules that would ultimately impact a safety focus at the company, but it also stripped the agency of some of its regulatory authority and transferred it to Boeing personnel. (It would be like the FDA handing over its meat inspection to pork producers.)

This most egregious and blatant misuse of regulation would cost loss of lives, the airline’s reputation and its bottom-line on which it was so focused. In 2020 alone, Boeing lost $11.9 billion, according to Robison.

The immediate cause of the two crashes was software more powerful than what Boeing claimed in documents submitted to win the plane’s approval by the FAA. In underestimating the software’s ability to move the horizontal stabilizer, the small stabilizer on the plane’s tail, Boeing’s supposed processes to catch issues like this failed. Airlines and pilots in the industry claimed that Boeing had hidden the existence of the potentially deadly software.

After the two crashes, the FAA, sometimes referred to it as the “tombstone” agency because it only acts when people are dead, delivered on its loyalty to Boeing by deferring the decision to ground the 737 Max.

First, it was China that grounded the Max, followed by other nations, but the FAA took its time, waiting three days after the two crashes before ordering the 737 Max from the skies. Since these two crashes occurred in other countries, there were initial charges that foreign pilot error was to blame. When the 737 Max was finally grounded, investigations showed that pilot error was not the problem. Boeing software was!

Boeing did show just how quickly it can act when its self-interest is at stake.

After the Indonesian crash, agents of Boeing and Lion Air, the Indonesian carrier, were there at the Jakarta airport offering families “blood money” of $91,600 in exchange for the release of liability in any global court — a mere pittance to what could be awarded for the wrongful death of a loved one. Seventy of the victims’ families signed the settlement offer. In contrast, just last November, Boeing agreed to a settlement in a lawsuit filed against the company and its board for more than $230 million. The lawsuit accused Boeing and its board of failure to address safety warning signs before the two Max jetliners crashed.

The aftermath of the crashes produced a mixed bag of results.

Congress did return to the FAA the authority to regulate Boeing that those expensive lobbyists and legislators shifted to the company. The company corrected the software issues, but the 737 Max remains the only large commercial airliner without an electronic checklist in the cockpit to guide pilots. Eventually the FAA returned the 737 Max to the skies. Boeing also called a halt to those generous stock buybacks that ate up cash that could have been used to build planes, catch software errors and invest in research.

Who was ultimately held responsible for the deaths of 346 passengers and crew?

As is too often the case, criminal liability skated past Boeing’s executive offices and boardroom and landed down the chain of command on Boeing’s chief technical pilot who was indicted for lying about the flight control software that claimed so many lives. One lawsuit filed by shareholders against current and former Boeing directors was settled for $225M and Boeing agreed to a legal settlement with the Justice Department for $2.5 billion, thereby resolving a criminal charge that Boeing conspired to defraud the FAA.

After reading Flying Blind, the reader would expect some form of criminal liability like manslaughter to be imposed on CEOs at the controls as Boeing veered off course. No such thing happened, but two months after the Indonesian crash, the Boeing board would award the CEO on duty at the time, Dennis Muilenburg, a record-breaking salary of $31M including $13M bonus for performance.

The CEOs before Muilenburg who changed the culture and downplayed safety concerns also got off scot free. Robison reports on their post-Boeing lives of luxury thanks to their generous salaries and stock options. After learning of the Justice Department’s settlement of Boeing’s fraud conspiracy, Robison quotes one Boeing pilot as concluding, “Boeing got away with murder.”


Bob Kustra served as president of Boise State University from 2003 to 2018. He is host of Reader’s Corner on Boise State Public Radio and is a regular columnist for the Idaho Statesman. He served two terms as Illinois lieutenant governor and 10 years as a state legislator.

U.S. farm income expected to fall as costs for fertilizer, other production expenses climb sharply


Donnelle Eller, Des Moines Register
Sun, February 6, 2022,

Iowa and U.S. farmers can expect income from crops and livestock production to tumble, with costs spiking and government payments falling, the U.S. Department of Agriculture says in a forecast for 2022.

Agriculture department economist Carrie Litkowski said the agency expects U.S. farm income to fall to $113.7 billion, down $9.7 billion, or 7.9%, from 2021. Last year's farm income hit the highest level since 2016, with corn and soybean prices closing in on record highs set in 2012 and 2013.

Farming is a significant economic driver in Iowa, which leads the nation in corn, hog and egg production, and is second to Illinois in soybean production. Agriculture ripples through the state's economy, with ties to equipment manufacturing, insurance, seed and renewable fuel production — another category Iowa leads.

Randy Miller, a farmer from Lacona, harvests soybeans from one of his fields last fall.

The state ranks second only to California when it comes to the size of its farm economy.

Lance Lillibridge, president of the Iowa Corn Growers board, said he believes U.S. farm income will be lower this year than the agriculture department predicts in its forecast, released Friday, with production costs exploding.

"I think incomes will be significantly in the red," said Lillibridge, who grows corn and soybeans and raises cattle near Cedar Rapids.

The agriculture department expects the costs to raise crops and livestock will grow 5.1% to $411.6 billion over the 2021 figure, with the price of fertilizer climbing 12% and for livestock feed, 6.1%. This year's expected hike in expenses comes on top of a 9.4% increase last year, the forecast said.

Lillibridge, however, said the increases he's seeing are far greater. He said his fertilizer costs are up 300% and the costs of herbicides, pesticides and other crop protection products are up 100% to 150%.

"It makes you want to throw up," he said, adding that he expects his fertilizer costs will be $190,000 more than last year's by the time the season ends.

The forecast said soybean growers should expect to get 8.9% more when they sell their crops this year, and corn growers should receive 4.8% more, with both increases primarily due to larger quantities sold.

Cash receipts for soybean are expected to hit a record high, Litkowski said.

Cash receipts for dairy producers are expected to be 22.1% higher, the forecast said, and 8.5% higher for calf and cattle operators, both based on strong price growth.

Hog producers can expect to get 10.3% less for their animals this year, coming off strong prices in 2021, Litkowski said.

Randy Miller, a farmer from Lacona, harvests soybeans from one of his fields last fall.

While the prediction of improved prices for cattle is encouraging, Lillibridge said, receipts probably won't keep pace with increased costs.

More: Iowa farmers get big break with good harvest, high prices. But will their luck hold?

Farmers have a lot on their minds going into the next growing seasons, he said. In addition to higher production costs, Iowa farmers are concerned about whether they'll have equipment and parts next season, given supply-chain issues, and remain concerned about the possibility of a drought.

More: Competition is fierce for Iowa's used farm equipment, attracting bidders from across the world

Iowa and large parts of the Midwest struggled with drought conditions last year. Many farmers said they received rain just in time to preserve crop yields.

The latest U.S. Drought Monitor report, released Thursday, showed almost 55% of Iowa experiencing abnormally dry or moderate drought conditions in the week ending Feb. 1. That was up from about 52% the previous week and about 48% a year ago.

"It probably wouldn't take much for us to drop back into a drought," Lillibridge said.

Donnelle Eller covers agriculture, the environment and energy for the Register. Reach her at deller@registermedia.com 

This article originally appeared on Des Moines Register: 2022 US farm income is expected to fall 7.9%, as production costs rise
WHITE COLLAR BLUES
45% of Remote Workers Would Quit Their Jobs in 2022 for This Reason


by Maurie Backman | Published on Feb. 6, 2022


Image source: Getty Images

Would you do the same?

Key points

New data reveals the factors that would drive people to leave their jobs today.

There's one specific change that clearly won't sit well with workers.


There was a time not so long ago when the simple fact of having a job was something to be grateful for. Early on in the pandemic, millions of Americans lost their jobs overnight, so much so that unemployment reached its highest level ever.

These days, however, the job market is much healthier, and there are plenty of opportunities to be had. As such, workers have been quick to quit their jobs for better opportunities.

Now there are plenty of factors that might drive workers to leave a job today. A big one is compensation. With inflation driving everyday living costs up, workers may not hesitate to go after a higher paycheck -- one that allows them to more easily cover their bills and perhaps even add to their savings.

But in a recent Joblist report, there's one factor that could drive many workers today to tender their resignations. It's also something a lot of people might grapple with later on this year.

Is in-person work a deal-breaker?


Joblist says 45% of current remote workers would quit their jobs if their employers started requiring full-time in-person work. Another 24% say they're not sure if they'd quit if that were to happen, but reading in between the lines, it's clear they're considering it.

The reality is that while many companies presented remote work as a temporary change at the start of the pandemic, at this point, many people have been doing it for almost two years -- and they've gotten used to it and don't want to revert to their former setups. That's understandable.

Remote work has several benefits. For one thing, there's big savings to be reaped by not having to commute to an office all the time. This especially holds true today, with gas prices being up.

Remote work could also lend to a better work-life balance. First of all, skipping the commute could be a big time-saver for a lot of people. And being home during the day could make household tasks easier to manage while also putting in a full-time work schedule.

Should you quit your job if you're asked to return to an office?


At some point this year, there's a good chance companies will try bringing employees back to the office -- especially if things improve with regard to the COVID-19 outbreak. If you're told your remote work arrangement is coming to an end, you, too, may be tempted to quit.

But is that the right move? It depends.


If your employer is willing to be flexible and let you work remotely some of the time, that's a reasonable compromise to consider. And even if your employer won't let you work remotely on a regular basis, if you have the flexibility to go remote on an as-needed basis, that, too, may be reasonable.

But if your employer makes it clear remote work is completely off the table, then you may want to seek out another job -- one that's far more flexible. This especially applies if you earn an average salary and could easily command it elsewhere. If you're compensated well and can't afford a pay cut, you may want to roll with your company's changes even if you're not thrilled about them.

These days, many companies are adopting a more flexible approach to work schedules in the wake of the pandemic. If your employer starts insisting on full-time in-person work with no exceptions, it's a sign you should probably aim to find a role elsewhere.

WHITE BLUE OR PINK THE COLOR OF YOUR COLLAR DOESN'T MATTER
WE ARE ALL PROLETARIANS NOW!

40 beheaded Roman skeletons with skulls placed between their legs found by archeologists at construction site


Alia Shoaib
Sun, February 6, 2022,

Decapitated Roman skeletons found in Buckinghamshire, UK.HS2

Archeologists working on Britain's HS2 railway line uncovered a late Roman cemetery.

40 of the skeletons were decapitated, many with their heads between their legs.

The decapitated skeletons could have been criminals or outcasts, archeologists said.


About 40 beheaded skeletons were among 425 bodies found in a late Roman cemetery uncovered by archeologists in southern England.

The team of around 50 archeologists made the discovery during an excavation at Fleet Marston, near Aylesbury, Buckinghamshire, on the route of the multi-billion pound high-speed rail link that is currently under construction, HS2 said.

Around 10% of the bodies were decapitated. Many had their heads placed between their legs or next to their feet.

Archeologists said that one interpretation could be that the decapitated skeletons were criminals or outcasts, although decapitation was a "normal, albeit marginal, burial rite" during the late Roman period.

Over the next few years, the researchers will study the exhumed skeletons, offering an opportunity to learn more about Roman civilization's historic lifestyles, diet, and beliefs.

"All human remains uncovered will be treated with dignity, care, and respect and our discoveries will be shared with the community," Helen Wass, head of heritage at HS2 Ltd said.

The team also uncovered over 1,200 coins at the site, along with several lead weights indicating that this was an area of trade and commerce.

Domestic objects including spoons, pins, and brooches were found, as well as gaming dice and bells which suggest gambling and religious activity took place there too.

The Romans ruled Britain from 43AD to 410AD.

Archeologists uncovered objects including brooches and dice.HS2

"The excavation is significant in both enabling a clear characterization of this Roman town but also a study of many of its inhabitants," Richard Brown, Senior Project Manager for COPA said.

Fleet Marston is one of more than 100 archaeological sites that have been unearthed since 2018 as the construction of the HS2 line running from London to Birmingham has been developed.

Archeologists have been able to uncover rich details about life in Roman Britain, nearly two thousand years ago, through their excavation work.

Read the original article on Business Insider
MIT researchers create material as strong as steel, light as plastic

Michelle Shen, USA TODAY
Sun, February 6, 2022

It can be easily manufactured in large quantities, and the use cases range from lightweight coatings for cars and phones to building blocks for massive structures such as bridges, according to Michael Strano, the Carbon P. Dubbs Professor of Chemical Engineering at MIT and the senior author of a new study.

“We don’t usually think of plastics as being something that you could use to support a building, but with this material, you can enable new things,” he said in a statement from MIT. “It has very unusual properties and we’re very excited about that.”

The material is several times stronger than bulletproof glass, and the amount of force needed to break it is twice that of steel, despite the fact that the material has only about one-sixth the density of steel, according to MIT.

The researchers were able to do this by developing a new process to form polymers. Plastics are an example of polymers, along with rubber and glass.

OTHER MIT RESEARCH: MIT researchers develop glow-In-the-dark plants

The researchers wanted to see whether they could create a two-dimensional version of a polymer that could remain flat, thus making it lightweight. They tried for decades to create such a material, and the new process they developed was published in peer-reviewed journal Nature last week.

Polymers are essentially chains of individual molecules, called monomers, linked together by chemical bonds. Normally, when polymers are formed, they expand into three-dimensional objects, like how a sheet cake rises as it bakes in an oven. The challenge is if even one monomer begins to rotate, the polymer becomes three-dimensional.

For example, imagine if you wanted to line up children and pack a bunch of them in an auditorium by having them link arms. However, if even one of the children choose to be unruly and shift around, it would be impossible to maintain order.

The key came from building a process that could allow the monomers to link up and grow into a polymer chain without causing any one of the monomers to stray. If you could build several two-dimensional polymers, you could layer them like disks and stack a bunch of them together in a tight space, similar to how you could pack lines of children into an auditorium, if they're well-behaved.

Michelle Shen is a Money & Tech Digital Reporter for USA TODAY. You can reach her @michelle_shen10 on Twitter.
In conservative Russia, liberal teachers are shown the door




The sex education blog, aimed at adults, of former biology teacher Olga Shchyogoleva presaged her departure from the job, she says (AFP/Olga MALTSEVA)

Marina KORENEVA with Anna SMOLCHENKO in Moscow

Mon, February 7, 2022, 1:42 AM·4 min read

Biology teacher Olga Shchegoleva had not even finished her first six months at a prestigious school in Saint Petersburg when she came under pressure to quit over a sex education blog.

In Vladimir Putin's Russia, teachers are being increasingly caught up in the climate of social conservatism.

The 31-year-old Shchegoleva is one of hundreds of educators who recently have been fired or forced to quit over claims of misconduct, in a trend that reflects Russia's growing intolerance and conservatism.

Shchegoleva is the author of a sex education blog that addresses topics from sexual health and consent to birth control and toys.

Even though she writes for adults, several concerned parents complained to the school, which is part of the respected Rimsky-Korsakov conservatory in Russia's former imperial capital.

Shchegoleva said she liked her job -- and her students -- but felt she had no choice but to quit.

"There is this belief that teachers have no life or hobbies outside of work, and that there are some ethical standards -- not officially spelled out anywhere -- that teachers are expected to follow," she told AFP.

The education ministry did not respond to an AFP request to provide any figures, but the chairman of a Russian teachers' union, Yury Varlamov, said courts had delivered more than 2,000 rulings linked to immoral conduct in the last five years. Most cases involved educators, Varlamov estimated.

"The dismissal of teachers for immoral behaviour is increasingly being used by employers against unwelcome workers," he said.

The way the legislation is vaguely worded, experts say, leaves the door open for dismissal over a wide range of activities.

In one prominent case, a teacher from the Siberian city of Omsk -- who also worked as a plus-size model -- was pressured to quit in 2018 after pin-up-style pictures featuring her appeared online.

In 2021, a teacher from the largest Siberian city of Novosibirsk was pushed out after she posted online a racy video in which she was seen stripping down to lingerie and dancing.

The same year, a teacher from Sevastopol in Russia-annexed Crimea publicly complained about her low salary. She was interrogated by members of law enforcement and fired.

Activists say teachers have been fired for their sexual orientation and others removed for their support of the opposition.

- Conservative values -


Putin, who enjoys unwavering support from the Orthodox Church, has been promoting increasingly conservative values to rally support from his core constituency.

Amid raging tensions with the world's top democracies, he has sought to present Russia as the antithesis of Western liberal values.

In 2013, Russia passed a controversial law banning the promotion or displays of homosexuality to minors. Activists say the legislation has been used to crack down on gay men and women.

Nikita Tushkanov, a history and social studies teacher from the former Soviet-era gulag settlement of Mikun in northwestern Russia, has never shied away from criticising the authorities.

With a tattoo on his arm and a rebellious streak, the 27-year-old said he had long irritated fellow teachers, many of whom were near or past the pension age.

He made no secret of his disapproval of the aggressive promotion of Orthodox religious education at schools and militarisation of society.

He said some of his colleagues were sometimes racist and criticised how parents were being forced to make contributions for supplies that should be covered by the state.

"Our country is spending billions of rubles to purchase tasers but they cannot buy textbooks for children," Tushkanov told AFP.

- 'Keep silent or die' -


When opposition supporters took to the streets in support of jailed Kremlin foe Alexei Navalny last January, Tushkanov staged a one-man rally in Mikun.

"Keep silent or die," read a poster in his hands.

His protest over Navalny's arrest was "the last straw" for the school, he said. He was fired two months later and attempts to challenge his termination in court have been unsuccessful, while he has been unable to find a similar job elsewhere.

When he tried to get a job at one school, the principal received a phone call from prosecutors.

"She was told that if she hires me she will be in trouble," Tushkanov said the principal had told him.

Daniil Ken, head of a teachers' union with ties to Navalny, said pressure on teachers has been growing.

Legislation protects educators, and one of the few ways to get rid of a teacher is to dismiss him or her over immoral conduct, he said.

Ken, who himself lost a teaching job in Saint Petersburg in 2020, said authorities were afraid of outspoken teachers who call for change in society.

"This can threaten the well-being of the powers that be, from a minor bureaucrat to President Putin," Ken told AFP.

Shchegoleva, the biology teacher who now works at a non-government organisation, said the current climate has brought on a sense of stagnation in society.

"There is an impression that it is not possible to develop, move forward, be more modern, more loyal, more understanding and accepting," she said.

mak-as/jbr/cdw
Embattled rappers fight to speak out in troubled DR Congo

Heritier Baraka Munyampfura, with Seros Muyisa in Beni
Mon, February 7, 2022


The walls of Idengo's recording studio in Beni are decorated with portraits of Patrice Lumumba and Laurent-Desire Kabila
 (AFP/Seros MUYISA)

"I don't sing to avenge my family, but because other innocent people who know nothing about politics continue to die," says imprisoned Congolese rapper Idengo.

"I wanted to change the country with my music -- it will help me to create a new Congo," he adds.

Idengo -- real name Delphin Katembo -- is the only surviving member of a family of five devastated by conflict in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, and exemplifies the challenges faced by dissenting artists as the bloodshed knows no end.

A military tribunal in December convicted Idengo and fellow rapper Muyisa Nzanzu Makasi over song lyrics deemed dangerous and detrimental to President Felix Tshisekedi and the DR Congo's army.

Tshisekedi placed the eastern provinces of North Kivu and Ituri under a "state of siege" last May, aiming to intensify a military offensive against rebels, with soldiers replacing civil servants in key positions.

But the measures have not stemmed the killings, stoking anger among the local population and driving the two rappers' emotionally and politically charged music.

The men, who hail from North Kivu, spoke with AFP from their prison in the provincial capital Goma where they are awaiting an appeal hearing.

- 'Tired of their promises' -


Idengo, now 25, had a precocious passion for politically conscious rapping.

He says he was only around 10 years old when he produced his first song, "Droits de l'Homme (Human Rights), and gave his first concert at 14 in his hometown of Beni.

He was first imprisoned for his songs in 2019 and ended up behind bars again early last year for the track "Politicien Escroc" (Cheating Politician).

Another single, "Effacer le Tableau" (Wipe the Slate Clean), prompted his latest arrest in October and led to his 10-year jail term on accusations of urging people to kill soldiers, police officers and UN peacekeepers.

A YouTube music video shows Idengo dressed in torn fatigues, pretending to lop off heads with a bush cutter.

"They sacrifice us for money, we're tired of their promises," he sings, alternating between French and Swahili.

Idengo's lawyers argued in court that psychological trauma explained the explosive lyrics.

His friend Bienvenu Sondu says Idengo's mother was killed in 2013 or 2014 and his father was killed "sometime later".

"Several other" relatives were "massacred" by the Allied Democratic Forces (ADF) rebel group, he says, adding that Idengo's brothers are dead.

The ADF is the fiercest among dozens of armed groups operating in the mineral-rich east of the DRC.

- 'Awaken consciences' -

Muyisa, for his part, never got to know his father following the massacres, living with his mother and failing to finish university studies in IT management.

Younger sister Wivine remembers how he started singing at their local Catholic church when still in primary school.

"He loves peace, so he began searching for peace," she says.

Muyisa, 29, recounts starting music -- "the revolution" -- in 2020.

"If things change tomorrow, I'll move on to something else. But what's happening here pushes me to make my voice heard," he says.

"Bob Marley used to say music can change anything. I don't want to be a saviour, a hero, but I'm trying to awaken consciences."

Muyisa received a two-year prison sentence for insulting the head of state.

Speaking at his trial with Idengo, Muyisa said "nothing" had changed despite Tshisekedi's promises to put an end to the killings.

"That's why I say that the people in government are louts, idiots. But I didn't insult the president, I reminded him of his work," he insists.

- 'Shameful' -

Portraits of Patrice Lumumba, independent DR Congo's first prime minister who was assassinated in 1961, and of Laurent-Desire Kabila, the president who met the same fate in 2001, adorn the walls outside Idengo's recording studio in Beni.

"His conviction is shameful. The Grand Nord population is behind him!" Cesar Mutukufu Mukombozi, a 30-year-old fan, told AFP near the recording studio.

Inside, three young musicians work with a synthesiser, aiming to create new songs to show that the fight for freedom continues.

"Everything he sings about is reality. They want us to die en masse without speaking out," said 19-year-old student Francine Soki.

"He's innocent! It's a farce," said one of them, known as "Barareddy Zero".

Idengo hoped to host a concert in prison to honour his heroes Lumumba and Kabila.

But the prison director refused, fearing the event would help detainees escape.

hbm-smu/at/imm/gd
Livelihoods lost as climate disaster woes mount in Kenya

Raphael AMBASU, with Hillary ORINDE in Nairobi
Mon, February 7, 2022,


Marsabit has been the scene of a prolonged drought
 (AFP/Tony KARUMBA)



Nomadic livestock herders in East Africa's drylands have learnt to cope with the vagaries of weather over decades 
(AFP/Tony KARUMBA)


Poor rainfall in the last quarter of 2021 followed a devastating locust invasion a year earlier (AFP/Tony KARUMBA)


Experts say extreme weather events are happening with increased frequency and intensity due to climate change
 (AFP/Tony KARUMBA)

Dabaso Galgalo is now used to the smell and grisly spectacle of rotting flesh festering in the scorching heat as Kenya reels from a spate of climate disasters.

Surrounded by barren scrubland littered with withered carcasses of sheep and goats, the 56-year-old pastoralist is struggling to keep his beloved animals, and himself, alive.

What was left of his herd after a months-long dry spell was decimated by once-in-a-generation floods that hit northern Kenya, the latest in a series of unforgiving climate shocks lashing the region.

"We recently had heavy rains and strong winds that ended up killing livestock that had gathered at this water point," he told AFP, outside a settlement called 'kambi ya nyoka' (snake camp) in Marsabit.

The semi-arid region has been the scene of a prolonged drought. Then, when the rains finally came, the deluge pushed communities, who rely exclusively on livestock for their survival, to the edge of disaster.

"This is a very huge loss because we have lost lots of resources following this tragedy," said Galgalo.

"If one had 500 goats (earlier), they have between five and 20 goats left."

Nomadic livestock herders in East Africa's drylands have learnt to cope with the vagaries of weather over decades, driving their relentless search for water and pasture in some of the world's most inhospitable terrain.

But their resilience is being severely tested by climate change.

- Fight for resources -

Poor rainfall in the last quarter of 2021 -- the third consecutive failed rainy season -- followed a devastating locust invasion a year earlier, with animals now too weak to produce milk or too skinny to be sold.

There are growing fears that as the situation worsens, tensions among communities could sharpen as they compete for access to meagre resources.

Marsabit is particularly vulnerable because of a perennial conflict between the Borana and Gabra pastoralist communities.

President Uhuru Kenyatta declared the drought a natural disaster last September, with 2.1 million people -- four percent of Kenya's population -- already grappling with hunger, according to government figures.

The government said last week that 23 of the country's 47 counties faced "food and water stress" while the meteorological department has warned of a potential increase in "human-to-human and human-to-wildlife conflicts".

The authorities have invested 450 million shillings ($3.9 million, 3.4 million euros) to buy 11,250 cattle and 3,200 goats from farmers in the worst-hit counties.

The UN's Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO) on Monday called for "aggressive" efforts to address the situation, warning it was concerned about "the realities on the ground."

"We must stay committed to doing things differently," FAO Deputy General Beth Bechdol told a press conference in Nairobi before embarking on a trip to the drought-hit north.

"We have seen too many efforts that have taken too many years, that have been repeated and tried over and over again with often times the same disappointing outcomes."

- Africa hardest-hit -


East Africa endured a harrowing drought in 2017 which also brought neighbouring Somalia to the brink of famine.

In 2011, two successive failed rainy seasons in 12 months led to the driest year since 1951 in arid regions of Kenya, Somalia, Ethiopia, Djibouti and Uganda.

With conflicts raging in Ethiopia and Somalia, aid agencies are struggling to assess the true extent of the current crisis.

Experts say extreme weather events are happening with increased frequency and intensity due to climate change -- with Africa, which contributes the least to global warming, bearing the brunt.

For Galgalo, the race is on to save his remaining animals and protect his only source of income.

But he is losing hope.

"They are suffering from pneumonia and are still dying," he said.

ho/amu/yad
Humanitarian Crisis Feared As Cyclone Kills 20 In Madagascar

By AFP News
02/07/22 

Cyclone Batsirai swept out of Madagascar on Monday after killing 20 people, displacing 55,000 and devastating the drought-hit island's agricultural heartland, leading the UN to warn of a worsening humanitarian crisis.

Madagascar was already reeling from a tropical storm which killed 55 people weeks earlier, and the latest extreme weather event came as South African President Cyril Ramaphosa said the continent is "bearing both the brunt and the cost" of global warming.

Batsirai made landfall on the Indian Ocean island's east on Saturday evening bringing heavy rain and winds of 165 kilometres (102 miles) per hour, after drenching the French island of La Reunion.

Jean Benoit Manhes, a representative of UN children's agency UNICEF in the country, told AFP on Monday that "Batsirai left Madagascar this morning at 7 am (0400 GMT) heading out into the Mozambique Channel."


Madagascar's disaster management agency said that Batsirai had left 20 people dead and forced 55,000 from their homes.

Madagascar's disaster management agency said that Cyclone Batsirai had left 20 people dead and forced 55,000 from their homes Photo: AFP / RIJASOLO

UNICEF warned that many of the victims were likely to be children, which make up more than 50 percent of the country's population.

The cyclone first hit a sparsely populated agricultural area in the country's east on Saturday, before later weakening. The eastern city of Mananjary was "completely destroyed," a resident named Faby said.

Batsirai then moved west inland, causing flooding that ravaged rice fields in the country's central "breadbasket," UNICEF said.

The rising waters from the cyclone caused bodies to emerge from a cemetery in the island's east Photo: AFP / Laure Verneau

"The impact of the cyclone does not end today, it will last for several months, particularly the impact on agriculture," Manhes said.

"The roofs of several schools and health centres were blown off" in the affected areas, UNICEF said.

Batsirai spared the capital Antanarivo and the island's main port Tamatave, which led to a lower death toll than had been initially feared by the authorities and aid organisations, who had warned that nearly 600,000 people could be affected and 140,000 displaced.

Some 77 percent of Madagascar's population live below the poverty line and the latest blow comes during a severe drought in the south which has plunged more than a million people into acute malnutrition, some facing famine.

The cyclone partly destroyed the main road linking the island's north and south, "which will make it difficult to provide access and reinforcements to villages, including in drought-hit areas," Manhes said.

"Madagascar is in a constant humanitarian crisis," he added.

Some 10,000 people on La Reunion were left without electricity on Sunday, three days after Batsirai passed through the island, injuring 12 people on its path.

Tropical Storm Ana affected at least 131,000 people across Madagascar in late January, with most of the 55 deaths coming in Antananarivo. Ana also hit Malawi, Mozambique and Zimbabwe, causing dozens of deaths.

"Despite not being responsible for causing climate change, it is Africans who are bearing both the brunt and the cost," he said.