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Saudi Arabia arrests journalists and academics advocating for women's rights; two are US citizens

Saudi Arabia women's rights activists
© Aljazeera
Some of the female Saudi Arabian activists previously detained by Saudi authorities - From right to left: Samar Badawi, Aziza al-Yusuf and Loujain Al-Halloul
Saudi Arabia has arrested nine women's rights activists, two of whom are US citizens, in its latest crackdown on dissent. They are reportedly not frontline activists, but merely expressed support for reforms.

The seven men and two women arrested Thursday are journalists and academics who had connections to the 11 women's rights activists detained last spring on the eve of major women's rights reforms in the Arab country, but it's not yet known what they've been charged with.

Salah al-Haider and Bader el-Ibrahim hold dual citizenship with Saudi Arabia and the United States, the New York Times noted. In addition, one of the two women is pregnant, according to London-based Saudi human rights group ALQST, which confirmed the identities of all those detained to the Times.

Comment: See also:


Cheeseburger

LOL! Meat alternatives renamed 'veggie discs' and 'veggie tubes' under proposed new EU food labelling rules

veggie burger disc


A committee of MEPs has voted in favour of the proposed regulations


Veggie burgers could be rebranded "veggie discs" and vegetarian sausages turned into "veggie tubes" under new EU rules proposed in Brussels.

The latest round of food labelling regulations approved by the EU parliament's agriculture committee this week would ban the use of terms such as "burger", "sausage", "escalope" and "steak" for products that do not contain meat.

Some MEPs believe the plan bears the fingerprints of Europe's powerful meat lobby, keen to protect its profits and crush a trend towards veganism and vegetarianism among young people.

Comment: Rather than fault the meat industry as the bad guys for making the vegans change the names of their products, this should be re-framed. It's forcing people who are selling non-food and naming it food to be more honest about their products. A tube of manipulated plant ingredients and flavoring chemicals is not a sausage; nor is it a hotdog. Even calling it a 'veggie tube' is being generous. Why don't these companies practice a little truth in advertising and say what their products actually are, rather than what they're supposed to be imitating. Oh right, because then no one would buy them!

See also:


Arrow Down

'Experiment on kids': Cross-sex hormone therapy age down to 8 in US govt-funded study, doctor finds

Cross sex hormone
© Reuters / Brendan McDermid
Cross-sex hormones may now be given to US children as young as eight in a government-supported research program, despite the risks these drugs can pose, a doctor skeptical of transitioning gender-dysphoric kids has discovered.

"Imagine giving eight-year-old girls testosterone," Dr. Michael Laidlaw told a Heritage Foundation panel. "They are in third or fourth grade. This is unbelievable. But this is going on." Laidlaw, an endocrinologist, discovered via a Freedom of Information Act request that the minimum age for administration of cross-sex hormones had been lowered from 13 to 8 in a large five-year study being conducted at the Children's Hospital Los Angeles.

'This whole thing is an experiment on children.'

Laidlaw blamed the National Institutes of Health (NIH) for "allowing unethical research to be conducted on children and adolescents," as Dr. Johanna Olson-Kennedy, who runs the Los Angeles study, received a $5.7 million grant from the NIH.

Comment: See also:


Document

Both teachers' unions oppose Rhode Island bill that would make sex with students a crime

Yesterday at a hearing for a bill (HB 5817) that would make sex between school employees and students a crime - even after they've turned 16, the legal age of consent in Rhode Island - both teachers' unions made their objections known. NEA RI didn't have anyone testify but Pat Crowley did sign in to the hearing and note his opposition to the bill. I suspect the NEA also submitted written testimony. James Parisi of the United Federation of Teachers (UFT) did testify - in fact, we sat beside one another, each offering our very different opinions on the bill.
teachers students sex crime
As it currently stands, Rhode Island is one of a few states where it is perfectly legal for teachers and other school employees to have sexual relations with their students once they turn 16. It's literally a dirty little secret - almost no one seems to be aware of this loophole in the law and yet it leaves high school students without any protection from those who would sexually abuse them after their 16th birthday. We are also a state who, after a year long investigation by USA Today, received a grade of D for how well we track and share information about teachers who are also alleged abusers.


Comment: The reason it wasn't legally banned before now is because it was until recently assumed that it should not happen. But with the rise in teacher-student relationships...


Comment: Although Rhode Island has hit a stumbling block, policies and laws in the US and elsewhere are proliferating in an effort to contain these and similar inappropriate behaviors.

The problem is deeper: the 'anything goes' attitude to 'free love' that has radically altered (eviscerated, in fact) cultural values. First everyone was freed to have whatever sex they want. Then, as each problem arising from that comes up, new crimes have to be added to the books.

At the same time, everyone wants their rights, and no responsibilities...

'My body should be celebrated': Teacher sacked over topless selfie sues for sexual discrimination


Pistol

Maryland's new gun control law turns fatal as officer kills 60yo man who refused to turn in gun

Maryland police Anne Arundel
A 61-year-old man is dead after he was shot by an officer trying to enforce Maryland's new 'red flag' law in Ferndale Monday morning.

Anne Arundel County Police confirmed the police-involved shooting happened in the 100 block of Linwood Avenue around 5:17 a.m.

According to police, two officers serving a new Extreme Risk Protective Order (Red Flag Law), a Maryland protective order to remove guns from a household, shot and killed the man listed on that order.

Microscope 1

61-year-old American woman gives birth to her son's husband's sister's baby


Comment: Don't look at us! That's what the report says...


eledge surrogacy case
© Ariel Panowicz/AP
21st century family unit: Left, the father. Right, the 'other father'. Center, the grandmother, who is also the surrogate-mother.
A 61-year-old woman who served as a surrogate mother for her son and his husband has described her role as a "gift for her son".

Cecile Eledge thought doctors in her home state of Nebraska would not allow her to carry a baby for the couple because of her age.

But the family rejoiced when Uma Louise Dougherty was born in an old-fashioned delivery two weeks ago at a Nebraska medical centre in Omaha.

"I wanted to do it as a gift from a mother to her son," Cecile Eledge said.

Comment: No doubt they never gave it a second thought.

After all, what could possibly go wrong?

Onwards into the glorious future!


Russian Flag

Russian military: Nearly 1,000 refugees left Syria's Rukban Camp on 4 April

Rukban refugee camp
© AP Photo /
Almost 1,000 people left the Rukban refugee camp in Syria on April 4 through the Jeleb checkpoint, they were given all necessary assistance, Maj. Gen. Viktor Kupchishin, head of the Russian centre for Syrian reconciliation, has stated.

"On 4 April, 985 civilians left the Rukban refugee camp through the Jeleb checkpoint. They were transported to temporary residence sites in the city of Homs", Kupchishin said at a daily briefing.

The general stressed that the refugees were provided with all necessary assistance, including the provision of food and temporary accommodation.

NPC

Russiagaters sing ridiculous songs during cult-like 'Release the Report' rally

Russiagate protest Trump
© Reuters / Eduardo Munoz
The imploded Russian collusion narrative seems to have had little impact on changing the minds of its devotees. In fact, the hysteria may only have increased, judging by yesterday's rallies and their motto, "Release the Report!"

In a bizarre spectacle, demonstrations across the country organized by the MoveOn political action committee, with the endorsement of MSNBC's Rachel Maddow herself, have called for the immediate release of the full, uncensored report by Special Counsel Robert Mueller.

In order to energize the gatherings, NYC's Times Square rally also included the distribution of a surreal songbook, complete with lyrics of popular tunes like the classic "My Favorite Things" and "It's Not Unusual" by Tom Jones, changed to include references about alleged details in the conspiracy narrative.

NPC

Jussie Smollett's lawyer claims he 'will not be intimidated' into paying $130,000 to Chicago

Jussie Smollett
© Matt Marton/AP, FILE
Empire" actor Jussie Smollett arrives at the Leighton Criminal Court Building for his hearing in Chicago, March 14, 2019.
Two days after prosecutors in Chicago unexpectedly dropped all charges against Jussie Smollett, city officials gave the "Empire" actor a week to pay back $130,000 used to investigate a hate crime in January that officials said was bogus.

Smollett missed the deadline, and the city threatened a lawsuit on Thursday. A day later, a lawyer for the actor responded by saying Smollett "will not be intimidated into paying the demanded sum."

"Mr. Smollett vehemently denies making any false statement to the City of Chicago, or to any individuals investigating" the alleged attack, attorney Mark Geragos said in a statement addressed to Chicago's Department of Law on Friday. "All criminal charges against Mr. Smollett from this incident have been dismissed and his record has been sealed. Thus, your claim that Mr. Smollett filed a false police report and orchestrated his own attack is false and defamatory."

Comment: See also:


Control Panel

Google disbands AI ethics board in response to outcry over politically undesirable member

Google logo
© Carsten Koall/Getty Images
The Google logo featured in the opening of a company office in Berlin, Germany, on January 22, 2019.
The controversial panel lasted just a little over a week.

This week, Vox and other outlets reported that Google's newly created AI ethics board was falling apart amid controversy over several of the board members.

Well, it's officially done falling apart - it's been canceled. Google told Vox on Thursday that it's pulling the plug on the ethics board.

The board survived for barely more than one week. Founded to guide "responsible development of AI" at Google, it would have had eight members and met four times over the course of 2019 to consider concerns about Google's AI program. Those concerns include how AI can enable authoritarian states, how AI algorithms produce disparate outcomes, whether to work on military applications of AI, and more. But it ran into problems from the start.

Comment: What makes the ostensibly valuable discussion of AI ethics at Google so difficult, also, is it's highly charged politicized atmosphere. More on uproar concerning Heritage Foundation president Kay Coles' assignment to the group:
[...]

Multiple Google employees in the thread also engaged in outright smears against the Heritage Foundation. Google employees accused the think-tank of transphobia, homophobia, and "extremism," of viewing LGBT people as "sub-human," questioning their "humanity," and supporting "exterminationist" views.

"Would we even consider having a virulent anti­-semite on the advisory board? How about an avowed racist or white supremacist?" asked one Google employee. "This seems like a double standard where anti­-LGTBQ positions are tolerated more than other extreme discriminatory views."

"You don't need racists, white supremacists, exterminationists on the board to know their stances. you can just talk to their targets" insisted another.

"It's so upsetting that some of our leaders overlooked such hateful positions as Kay Cole James and the Heritage foundation have articulated and regularly advocate for," complained another Google employee.

Another employee suggested that the "rhetorical violence" of the Heritage Foundation "translate[s] to real, material violence against trans people, particularly trans women of color."

"There's no need to have these people in positions of any kind of authority in order to get their views" wrote another.

Another Google employee was so incensed by the Heritage Foundation that he suggested another employee who defended the inclusion of Coles James on pragmatic grounds should lose his job.

"It's not snobbery to object to associating with and legitimizing an organization dedicated to eliminating LGBTQ+ people from public life, driving them back into the closet, denying them healthcare, and so on," raged the employee.

"It's basic human decency, treating it like a difference of opinion is simply monstrous and I don't think it belongs on this list, or at Google at all."

"Please feel free to see yourself off this list if all you have to contribute is concern trolling about whether or not we're pandering to rank bigotry enough. I'm muting you, and I think you should take a long hard look at how you're behaving here."

At least one of the Google employees who smeared the Heritage Foundation and its president is a prominent A.I researcher who has attended tech symposiums at the Obama White House. Meredith Wittaker, co-founder of NYU's A.I. Now Institute and head of two projects at Google, the Open Research Group and the Measurement Lab, is revealed as one of the most vitriolic opponents of conservative involvement in Google A.I.

In the thread, Whittaker describes Kay Coles James, a black conservative who leads one of the most influential think-tanks in D.C., as an "outspoken bigot" who supports policies that "dehumanize and marginalize."

In a different leaked discussion thread, Whittaker attacked the idea of viewpoint diversity (the idea that it's valuable to tolerate and include a variety of ideological and political viewpoints) as "dangerous."

"Justifying including bigots in the name of 'viewpoint diversity' is, flatly, a dangerous weaponization of the language of [diversity & inclusion]" said Whittaker, who has since helped organize an internal petition against Coles James' inclusion. "I would note that the argument for viewpoint diversity was at the core of Damore's memo, and has been used by the alt­-right to argue against diversity efforts that focus on historically marginalized communities."

Whittaker also warned that the potential impact of A.I. was too dangerous to allow an "open bigot" like Coles James to be involved. She also used A.I. designed to assist ICE as an example of "harmful" A.I. Whittaker simultaneously recognizes the potentially vast influence and impact of A.I. while arguing that mainstream conservatives like the Heritage Foundation ought to be excluded from any participation in it.

"The potential harms of AI and "advanced" tech are not evenly distributed and follow historical patterns of discrimination and exclusion," wrote Whittaker. "Those who have been historically marginalized are at the most risk of harm. See AI that doesn't hear women, that doesn't 'see' trans people, or people of color."

"See systems deployed to aide ICE in targeting immigrants, to aid the Military in drone strikes, or to enhance worker control. Thus, in ensuring we are 'ethical' in our pursuit of AI dominance, we need to include and amplify the perspectives of those most at risk."

Few Google employees offered any justification for their claims, although one linked to a tweet from Coles James in which she expressed support for a number of mainstream conservative positions, including border security, a critique of gender identity, and support for the coal industry.

A few participants in the thread defended the inclusion of Coles James on Google's A.I. advisory board. But no employee dared express agreement with Heritage - the majority of Coles James' defenders argued for her inclusion on the basis of political expedience. One employee even wrote that the inclusion of Coles James could provide "political cover" for "actions that Google wants to take."

"The value is understanding these people's fears, and shining a light into how their population and ideas can be isolated or disproportionately targeted" wrote another Googler. "Leaving people out of the ML board will just mean that the external world will refuse to believe the board's decisions are fair at all."

"Is it disgusting? Yes, but that is the world we live in"

Blake Lemoine, a Google employee who Breitbart News has covered before, also emphasized the political expedience of including the Heritage Foundation's president on the advisory council.

Pointing out that Coles James is "unimpeachable in the eyes of the Republican party," Lemoine went on to outline the stakes for Google.

"The purpose of this advisory committee is to ease those people's fears. The people on this committee will be able to see how we conduct ourselves and be able to "vouch" for the ethical standards which we'll uphold. Kay Coles James wasn't included so that she can advise us about how our systems can more effectively oppress the various groups of people who her organization has undeniably advocated against in the past and will certainly advocate against in the future. She was included on that committee so that she can advise us as to why we scare the ever­ living shit out of conservatives and what we can do to ease their fears so they don't literally end our company's existence."

"Because that's what's on the line right now."

Only one Google employee dared call out the viewpoint intolerance on display in the discussion threads.

"The notion of tolerance being bandied around here seems to amount to 'tolerance for those who think like I do,' which amounts to no tolerance whatsoever" wrote the employee. "I'd rather see Rand Paul, Jim Webb, or Tulsi Gabbard on the committee, but doesn't mean I or anyone else should use irrelevant criterion to oppose membership."

Breitbart News has reached out to Google for comment.