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Archive for the ‘Society’ Category

Society - 05.05.08

Russian women make gold-digging an art form: They sit at nearly every table in Moscow’s smartest restaurants, wearing designer jewellery and smiles that show they know they are the envy of every girl in Russia. But for the wives and girlfriends of Russia’s super-rich oligarchs, the good life has just got a little bit harder – thanks to a slew of books telling other women how to follow in their footsteps. [Telegraph]

For the Elderly, Being Heard About Life’s End: Edie Gieg, 85, strides ahead of people half her age and plays a fast-paced game of tennis. But when it comes to health care, she is a champion of “slow medicine,” an approach that encourages less aggressive — and less costly — care at the end of life. [NYT]

Want to take a city’s pulse? Head for the graveyard: Forget landmarks such as the Eiffel Tower, the Empire State Building or the Colosseum; cemeteries are the punctuation marks in between, quiet islands amid the city racket. A great one is an architectural jewel in its own right, a Vanity Fair party of spot-the-dead-celebrity, a stark warning from history, a store of cracking anecdotes or a life-affirming communion with past generations. [Guardian]


Society - 05.02.08

The Gospel of Consumption and the better future we left behind: But despite the apparent tidal wave of new consumer goods and what appeared to be a healthy appetite for their consumption among the well-to-do, industrialists were worried. They feared that the frugal habits maintained by most American families would be difficult to break. Perhaps even more threatening was the fact that the industrial capacity for turning out goods seemed to be increasing at a pace greater than people’s sense that they needed them. It was this latter concern that led Charles Kettering, director of General Motors Research, to write a 1929 magazine article called “Keep the Consumer Dissatisfied.” He wasn’t suggesting that manufacturers produce shoddy products. Along with many of his corporate cohorts, he was defining a strategic shift for American industry—from fulfilling basic human needs to creating new ones. [Orion]

Throw caution to wind, France told: A French doctor is urging his countrymen to give free rein to flatulence, sweating and other bodily taboos to reduce the risk of cancer. [Telegraph]

Lipstick Jungle: Ohmygod, the economy is, like, so bad right now. It’s really, like, wretched. I was in Bloomie’s the other day, and I saw this super-cute Nanette Lepore top, and I was totally going to buy it…and then I remembered: the scare of the downturn. It took all my willpower—but I put the shirt back on the rack. It was kinda, like, tragic. [CJR]

Japanese seniors go online to find love: You’re never too old to fall in love. That’s what Yoji Kawamura figured after retiring at the age of 62 and deciding that part-time work and his new hobbies of photography and computers weren’t enough to fill his days. Like a small but growing number of older Japanese singles, Kawamura has turned to an online matchmaking service in search of someone to share his “second life.” [msnbc]


Society - 05.01.08

It’s the Adultery, Stupid: Politics is now about sex. Not just scandalous sex, not just who is having what kind of sex, but what we think about the sex each politician is having, or not having. Sex (sex, not gender) in politics is as significant a subtext as race. It has the power to alter elections, undermine parties, and, possibly, change history. Barack Obama is running for president today because the ex-wife of his favored opponent in the 2004 Senate campaign in Illinois, Jack Ryan, said her husband took her to swingers’ clubs, handing the election to Obama. [Vanity Fair]

Back-to-basics biking movement takes hold in cities: But the most impressive piece of Woodroof’s outfit is his bicycle: A stripped-down race bike with no brakes and a single-speed, fixed-gear rear hub that, in effect, turns man into a cog of the machine. This is biking at its most primal – no stopping, no coasting with the pedals stationary, no helmets. It’s a ride built on adrenaline and danger, like walking across a lava flow in flip flops. [CSM]

A Better Way to Fight Crime: The brilliance of DNA swabbing: In June 2006, a minor brawl erupted at Ye Olde Six Bells pub in Horley, England. In the aftermath, police arrested Mark Dixie, a chef at the pub, who surprised them by breaking into tears. He had good reason. As a standard practice in arrests, a DNA swab was taken from him. What the authorities didn’t suspect, but he did, is that his DNA would match that of the man who raped and murdered an 18-year-old woman nine months earlier. He was eventually sentenced to life in prison. [Reason]

Why New York City’s Iconic Pizza Is So Tough to Replicate: Pizza may have been invented in Italy, but it was perfected in New York City. And whenever I go home to visit, I return with a sizable doggy bag from Arturo’s in Greenwich Village. That’s because the pizza in San Francisco sucks: flaccid crust baked in positive energy, its cheese and tomato sauce buried under bushels of organic artichokes and salad greens. Even when you can track down an unadorned pie — the pure, ideal form — it just doesn’t taste right. [Wired]


Society - 04.29.08

The New Economics of Hunger: In Chicago, Minneapolis and Kansas City, traders watched from the pits early last summer as wheat prices spiked amid mediocre harvests in the United States and Europe and signs of prolonged drought in Australia. But within a few weeks, the traders discerned an ominous snowball effect — one that would eventually bring down a prime minister in Haiti, make more children in Mauritania go to bed hungry, even cause American executives at Sam’s Club to restrict sales of large bags of rice. [Washington Post]

Philippines bans ‘transplant tourism’ : The Philippines has banned kidney donations in an attempt to end a booming industry in “transplant tourism” from developed countries including Britain. The move comes after the country was branded a transplant “hot spot” by health experts for selling some of the cheapest kidneys in the world. In 2006, 436 wealthy patients received kidneys from unrelated living donors. [Times]


Society - 04.28.08

Rearming the world: With much less fanfare than the early days of the Cold War, the world is entering a new arms race, and with it, a dangerous new web of military relationships. According to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, which tracks international armed forces spending, between 1997 and 2006 global military expenditures jumped by nearly 40 percent. Driven mainly by anxiety over oil and natural resources, countries are building their arsenals of conventional weapons at a rate not seen in decades, beefing up their armies and navies, and forging potential new alliances that could divide up the world in unpredictable ways. [Boston Globe]

Poland’s Jewish community flourishes: Nearly 70 years after the Holocaust, Poland’s Jewish community is flourishing again with Poles rediscovering their roots and synagogues filling with new members. The number of Jews is 30,000 - up from about 5,000 only a few years ago, Jewish cultural association Beit Warszawa estimates. Tomorrow, Prince Charles will open a Jewish centre in Krakow aimed at providing cultural support to the expanding population in a city which was once the capital for Poland’s pre-war 3.5 million Jews. [Telegraph]


Society - 04.25.08

Outsourcing Childbirth: Surrogacy itself seems to have come out of the mommy closet, to judge from recent media coverage. The New York Times and the Boston Globe have both reported on the practice of outsourcing wombs to poor Indian women. On a recent cover of Newsweek, the abdomen of a pregnant woman appeared with the words “Womb for Rent” emblazoned upon it. The issue’s lead story, “The Curious Lives of Surrogates,” ignited a small media frenzy with its sensationalistic revelations about military wives cashing in as surrogates — in part by bilking their government-provided health plans. The attention has rekindled the debate over the morality of renting wombs. [WSJ]

Brand names ‘as old as civilisation itself’: The urge to brand products with images of macho men and curvaceous women is as old as civilisation itself, according to a new analysis. Bottle stops used five millennia ago in ancient Mesopotamia (today’s Iraq), the birthplace of cities and writing, carried symbols that marked them out as the earliest evidence of branded goods. A London based archaeologist believes that they were promotional logos, along the lines of those used by Microsoft and Nike. [Telegraph]


Society - 04.23.08

Vengeance Is Ours: Though we might wonder how Daniel’s society came to revel in killing, ethnographic studies of traditional human societies lying largely outside the control of state government have shown that war, murder, and demonization of neighbors have been the norm. Modern state societies rate as exceptional by the standards of human history, because we instead grow up learning a universal code of morality that is constantly hammered into us: promulgated every week in our churches and codified in our laws. But the differences between the norms of states and of Handa clan society are not actually so sharp. In times of war, even modern state societies quickly turn the enemy into a dehumanized figure of hatred, only to enjoin us to stop hating again as soon as a peace treaty is signed. Such contradictions confuse us deeply. Neither pacific ideals nor wartime hatreds, once acquired, are easily jettisoned. It’s no wonder that many soldiers who kill suffer post-traumatic stress disorder. When they come home, far from boasting about killing, as a Nipa tribesman would, they have nightmares and never talk about it at all, unless to other veterans. [New Yorker]

Is Your Daily Life Enslaved by the Electronic World?: Future historians may very well look back at the beginning of the 21st century as an era in which the human mind developed into a split screen, with one eye on real space and the other ogling the electronic mirror. This morning on a crowded bus I counted six people within my immediate view, texting, talking on the cell phone, checking e-mail, listening to iPods. In other words, they were trying to keep the bus from being their only space, their only reality. And what was I doing? I recorded what I observed in my laptop, of course. [AlterNet]

‘Disneyland’ comes to Baghdad with multi-million pound entertainment park: Llewellyn Werner, a California investor, admits he is facing obstacles most amusement park developers never have to deal with. Such as insurgent attacks and looting. But when the amusement park you’re building lies in downtown Baghdad, those risks come with the territory. [Times]


Society - 04.22.08

Nomads at last: AT THE Nomad Café in Oakland, California, Tia Katrina Canlas, a law student at the nearby university in Berkeley, places her double Americano next to her mobile phone and iPod, opens her MacBook laptop computer and logs on to the café’s wireless internet connection to study for her class on the legal treatment of sexual orientation. She is a regular here but doesn’t usually bring cash, so her credit-card statement reads “Nomad, Nomad, Nomad, Nomad”. That says it all, she thinks. Permanently connected, she communicates by text, photo, video or voice throughout the day with her friends and family, and does her “work stuff” at the same time. She roams around town, but often alights at oases that cater to nomads. [Economist]

Autopsy, a new era: Autopsies were once standard procedure in U.S. hospitals. A few decades ago, doctors would recommend one even when the cause of death seemed certain, because it allowed them to gauge the effects of treatments and find out to what degree a disease had progressed, says Dr. Harry Bonnell, a fellow of the American Society for Clinical Pathology and a pathologist in private practice in San Diego. But today, fewer than one in 10 deaths in the U.S. is followed by an autopsy, in part because of its high cost (which Medicare and most insurance companies won’t cover) and because many doctors believe — erroneously — that modern imaging techniques such as the MRI have rendered the autopsy obsolete. [LA Times]

Syria tunes in the West on Madina FM: Popular ‘Good Morning Syria’ host Honey Sayed and others on the airwaves are mixing thumping music and racy U.S.-style talk shows, providing a rare cultural bridge in the Arab world. [LA Times]


Society - 04.18.08

Across Globe, Empty Bellies Bring Rising Anger: In Cairo, the military is being put to work baking bread as rising food prices threaten to become the spark that ignites wider anger at a repressive government. In Burkina Faso and other parts of sub-Saharan Africa, food riots are breaking out as never before. In reasonably prosperous Malaysia, the ruling coalition was nearly ousted by voters who cited food and fuel price increases as their main concerns. “It’s the worst crisis of its kind in more than 30 years,” said Jeffrey D. Sachs, the economist and special adviser to the United Nations secretary general, Ban Ki-moon. “It’s a big deal and it’s obviously threatening a lot of governments. There are a number of governments on the ropes, and I think there’s more political fallout to come.” [NYT]

Whatzat! Cheerleaders for Indian cricket?: The thud you can hear is the sound of jaws dropping at MCC: India’s first cheerleading squad is about to high-kick its way into the venerable sport of cricket. On Friday the Washington Redskins cheerleaders, usually found urging on the American football side of the same name, will make their subcontinental debut when they take to the field for the Bangalore Royal Challengers, the newly created cricket team. The Challengers will be playing the Kolkata Night Riders, a side backed by Shah Ruck Khan, a Bollywood megastar. [Telegraph]

When the Ex Blogs, the Dirtiest Laundry Is Aired: But in an era when more than one in 10 adult Internet users in the United States have blogs, according to the Pew Internet and American Life Project, many people are using the Web to tell their side of a marital saga. Despite the legal end of a marriage, the confessions can stretch toward eternity in a steady stream of enraged or despondent postings. In separation, of course, one person’s truth can be another’s lie. [NYT]


Society - 04.16.08

A new Evangelism for the US: The terms of engagement in America’s “culture wars” have been subtly changing since the 1990s with the economic, intellectual, social and political coming of age of many Evangelicals in the Bible Belt. This has been brought about by the rise of the oil and real-estate industries, and the occupational and geographical mobility of a considerable part of the younger generation of Evangelicals. They have flocked not only to Evangelical private colleges but also to the Ivy League universities (partly through radical access initiatives after the 1960s) and on to New York, Silicon Valley and even Hollywood as lawyers, bankers, IT professionals, academics and filmmakers. They constitute a new cosmopolitan Evangelical stratum, as concerned with ecology, AIDS (and not with policies exclusively dependent on abstention) and with human rights worldwide as with traditional questions of personal morality. They are also less solidly Republican. [TLS]

The Age of Nonpolarity: The principal characteristic of twenty-first-century international relations is turning out to be nonpolarity: a world dominated not by one or two or even several states but rather by dozens of actors possessing and exercising various kinds of power. This represents a tectonic shift from the past. [Foreign Affairs]

Saudi women jump through many hoops for basketball team: The Jeddah United women’s basketball team trickled onto the court, each player wrapped in a black abaya and head scarf. Within minutes, the women had shed their cloaks and were in uniform – white pants and jerseys with their names in red – practicing layups, passes, and foul shots. The team, made up mostly of Saudi students and housewives, is preparing for a local tournament this month. But what the women would really love to do, many said, is compete internationally and represent their country abroad, something Saudi Arabia does not permit. [CSM]


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