city:boston

  • Emily Garfield’s Watercolor Drawings Map Imaginary Places and Examine the Fractal Shapes of Cities - CityLab

    http://www.citylab.com/design/2015/03/how-fractals-bring-imaginary-cities-to-life/386815

    Emily Garfield like to say that she grows cities. With pen, ink, and watercolor, the Boston-based artist creates maps of imaginary places that tap into the essence of urban form.

    “They evolve as I draw,” she says of her free-form cartographs. “I think that’s related to the way cities grow in real life.”

    #cartographie #Imaginaire #cartoexperiment

  • Nord-Est des Etats-Unis : syndicalisme de lutte et problèmes sociaux
    http://www.autrefutur.net/Nord-Est-des-Etats-Unis-syndicalisme-de-lutte-et-problemes-sociaux

    De Baltimore à Boston, en passant par Philadelphie et New-York, nous avons rencontré de nombreux militant-e-s témoignant de l’existence de mouvements sociaux actifs aux États-Unis depuis le début de la décennie (comme Black Lives Matter ou Occupy Wall Street), souvent soucieux de démocratie directe, (...) — Rencontres

  • L’épidémie de viols provoquée par Ebola | Slate.fr
    http://www.slate.fr/story/117047/ebola-epidemie-viols

    « Cela ne devrait surprendre personne si on envisageait les épidémies comme n’importe quelle autre catastrophe, explique Monica Onyango, chercheuse en santé mondiale à l’Université de Boston. Les épidémies sont identiques à des situations de conflit. Vous avez une lacune de gouvernance, vous avez du chaos et de l’instabilité. Autant de facteurs qui fragilisent les femmes face à la violence sexo-spécifique. » (...)

    (...) les victimes n’ont pas été correctement prises en charge et que les services qui pouvaient exister ont été entravés par l’épidémie et les mesures déployées pour y faire face. 
    Un phénomène qui s’explique notamment par la formation des équipes chargées de la lutte contre les épidémies : elles arrivent, œuvrent à stopper la propagation de la maladie et repartent le plus vite possible. « Nous n’avions tout simplement pas les moyens de voir au-delà de l’épidémie, confirme Kaci Hickox, infirmière de Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), présente en 2014 au Sierra Leone. Nous n’étions absolument pas formés pour nous occuper des viols et de la violence sexuelle, l’ampleur de l’épidémie était trop importante. Tous les humanitaires ont été plus que débordés. »

    (je ne recommande pas ce site trash qu’est Slate, mais cette traduction est intéressante)
    #viol #ebola #MSF #humanitaire #urgence

  • Re-evaluation of the traditional diet-heart hypothesis : analysis of recovered data from Minnesota Coronary Experiment (1968-73)
    http://www.bmj.com/content/353/bmj.i1246

    Conclusions
    Available evidence from randomized controlled trials shows that replacement of saturated fat in the diet with linoleic acid effectively lowers serum #cholesterol but does not support the hypothesis that this translates to a lower risk of death from coronary heart disease or all causes. Findings from the Minnesota Coronary Experiment add to growing evidence that incomplete publication has contributed to overestimation of the benefits of replacing saturated fat with vegetable oils rich in linoleic acid.

    #Huiles végétales : des vertus anti-cholestérol qui montrent leurs limites
    http://www.francetvinfo.fr/sante/alimentation/huiles-vegetales-des-vertus-anti-cholesterol-qui-montrent-leurs-limites

    Pour autant, cette étude a fait grincer des dents, notamment celles du Pr Frank M. Sachs, spécialiste de la prévention des maladies cardiovasculaires à Boston. Il a jugé que l’étude n’était « pas fiable ». Selon lui, il faut « au moins deux ans pour qu’un traitement visant à diminuer le cholestérol ait un effet sur les maladies cardiovasculaires ». Or, l’expérience menée entre 1968 et 1973 a duré à peine plus d’un an, en moyenne, pour chacun des participants.

    Cholestérol et risques cardiovasculaires : un nouveau pavé dans la mare ?
    http://www.francetvinfo.fr/sante/maladie/cholesterol-et-risques-cardiovasculaires-un-nouveau-pave-dans-la-mare_1

    L’utilisation de #statines est associée à de nombreux effets secondaires (notamment musculaires), aussi de nombreux laboratoires sont à la recherche d’alternatives thérapeutiques anti-cholestérol. Une nouvelle classe de médicaments, capable de limiter les échanges de cholestérol entre les transporteurs LDL et HDL, semblait prometteuse sur le papier [1]. Si les premiers candidats évalués ont déçu [2], le groupe pharmaceutique Eli Lilly avait identifié un champion : l’evacetrapib.

    [...]

    En effet, durant les phases préliminaires de tests, cet evacetrapib diminuait d’un tiers le taux de LDL, et parvenait à doubler le taux de HDL (transporteurs de haute densité, réputés bénéfiques). Un vaste essai clinique, initié il y a quelques années sur 12.092 patients, est venu confirmer cet effet biologique. Mais en octobre 2015, Eli Lilly interrompt prématurément cette étude, à la surprise de nombreux observateurs.

    Un échec cuisant
    Les raisons de cet arrêt ont été précisées ce 3 avril lors d’un important congrès international de cardiologie [3]. Durant l’étude, sur environ 6.000 participants sous evacetrapib, 256 ont fait une crise cardiaque. Dans le groupe témoin, qui prenait un placebo, le nombre de crise cardiaque était de… 255, soit une totale absence de différence statistique. De même, le nombre d’AVC dans le premier groupe était de 82, contre 95 dans le groupe placebo. Et le nombre de décès liés aux maladies cardiovasculaires de 434, contre 444. En bref : l’evacetrapib n’a absolument aucun intérêt thérapeutique.

    Cité par le New York Times, le docteur Stephen Nicholls, responsable de l’étude avortée, résume l’interrogation qui se trouve sur toutes les lèvres : « nous avions un médicament qui semblait agir sur tout ce qu’il fallait ; […] comment un traitement qui diminue quelque chose identifié comme délétère ne peut entraîner aucun bénéfice ? »

    #santé #science

  • Why It’s Hard to Recognize the Unlikely - Facts So Romantic
    http://nautil.us/blog/why-its-hard-to-recognize-the-unlikely

    Whenever I fly, I like to talk to the person sitting next to me. Once in a while, I find that we know at least one person in common. If you are like me, perhaps coincidences such as this happen in your life as well.The most unusual coincidence in my life took place when I flew from Boston, my home, to Chicago to meet Scott Isenberg, the new editor assigned to revise a statistics textbook I had authored a few years earlier. We were having dinner at a restaurant overlooking Lake Michigan, and Scott began to talk nostalgically about the orange groves that graced his neighborhood in a small town in California, where he grew up. I recalled that my wife, Debra, who is also from California, used to talk about orange groves as well. We both smiled and continued our conversation—after all, the (...)

  • Des actionnaires pesant 1.200 milliards d’euros en guerre contre les antibiotiques dans la viande
    http://www.latribune.fr/economie/international/des-actionnaires-pesant-1-200-milliards-d-euros-en-guerre-contre-les-antib

    Des dizaines d’actionnaires de poids comme Aviva ou Boston Common Asset Management ont exigé, dans une demande commune, que des grandes chaînes de restaurant comme McDonalds limitent leur utilisation des antibiotiques pour l’élevage du bétail. Ils y voient une menace pour la santé et pour leur retour sur investissement.

    Les actionnaires font pression pour que le recours aux antibiotiques ne soit pas automatique, mais il s’agit de bétail ici. Une cinquantaine d’investisseurs institutionnels, gérant un total de 1.000 milliards de livres (1.200 milliards d’euros), ont ainsi adressé une lettre datée du 15 mars aux McDonald’s et autres JD Wetherspoon pour leur demander de s’engager sur une date à laquelle ils limiteront le recours aux d’antibiotiques. Les huit autres approchés sont Domino’s Pizza Group, Brinker International, Darden Restaurants, Mitchells & Butlers, Restaurant Brands International, Restaurant Group , The Wendy’s Company et Yum ! Brands.

    Parmi les 54 grands actionnaires signataires de l’appel figurent des assureurs comme Aviva Investors ou encore Boston Common Asset Management.

    Aux Etats-Unis, 80% des antibiotiques seraient donnés au bétail

    Cette initiative fait suite à des mises en garde de l’Organisation mondiale de la santé (OMS) qui estime que de nombreuses infections ne pourront plus être soignées en raison d’un recours trop fréquent aux antibiotiques.

  • Gail Dines : Ghomeshi a joué le rôle d’un allié féministe, mais en privé il était pleinement embourbé dans la culture pornographique

    https://tradfem.wordpress.com/2016/04/04/gail-dines-ghomeshi-a-joue-le-role-dun-allie-feministe-mais-en-pr

    Au Canada, #Jian_Ghomeshi, un ex-animateur de radio, passait dernièrement en procès pour deux des signalements d’agressions sexuelles et autres qui ont entraîné son renvoi de la Société Radio-Canada il y a un an et demi. Voici ce qu’en disait Gail Dines à l’époque de la divulgation des faits, en 2014.

    « Du fait d’avoir été exposée à autant d’hostilité de la part d’interviewers masculins, je me souviens bien de ceux qui se sont montrés particulièrement favorables au point de vue féministe. Un de ceux qui se démarquent ainsi par la qualité de sa réflexion est Jian Ghomeshi, ancien animateur d’une émission de radio très écoutée du réseau CBC, Q. Non seulement Ghomeshi s’était-il montré bien informé du contenu de mon livre Pornland, mais il avait aussi exprimé de l’empathie pour les femmes dont le corps est sexuellement utilisé et violenté dans les productions pornographiques, à la seule fin de divertir des hommes.

    Alors, imaginez ma stupeur quand on a commencé à apprendre que des femmes accusaient publiquement Ghomeshi de les avoir agressées sexuellement, de façons conformes aux violences mises en scène dans le monde de la porno. Qu’il s’agisse d’asphyxier ses victimes avec son pénis ou de violences verbales pendant ses agressions, le comportement de Ghomeshi cadre parfaitement avec les scènes porno standard... »

    Traduction : #Tradfem
    Original : http://www.feministcurrent.com/2014/11/07/ghomeshi-played-the-role-of-a-feminist-ally-but-in-private-he-was-f

    #Gail_Dines est professeure d’études en sociologie et en études féministes au Wheelock College de Boston. C’est une des fondatrices du mouvement Stop Porn Culture, et l’autrice de Pornland : How Porn has Hijacked our Sexuality. Son nouveau documentaire, basé sur Pornland, peut être visionné en ligne.


    #proféminisme #médias #pornographie #agressions_sexuelles #Feminist_Current

  • Attentas de Bruxelles : réinvestir le crime.

    Ou bien vous n’appliquerez votre loi que d’une manière molle et intermittente ; elle ne regardera que d’un regard distrait dans le fond même des consciences, et vous laisserez échapper, mêlés à l’immense flot quotidien des pensées, les paroles, les propos imperceptibles et obscurs d’où demain, selon vous, sortira le crime ; ou bien votre loi voudra, d’un regard aigu, continu, profond, surveiller constamment toutes les consciences, et alors, sous prétexte d’hygiène morale, vous aurez installé dans ce pays la plus étrange tyrannie qu’on ait jamais pu rêver !

    Jean Jaurès
    http://www.jaures.eu/ressources/de_jaures/jaures-contre-les-lois-scelerates-anarchisme-et-corruption-1894
    >A propos des "lois scélérates" de 1893-1894
    http://www.vendemiaire.fr/lois-scelerates/index.html

    Après les attentats de Bruxelles, les responsables de l’UE préparent une vaste escalade de l’espionnage policier , par Alex Lantier - WSWS
    http://www.wsws.org/fr/articles/2016/mar2016/breu-m26.shtml

    Ignorant les questions posées sur comment il fut permis à des terroristes connus de planifier et d’exécuter un attentat alors que Bruxelles était en état d’alerte, les responsables de l’UE lancent de nouvelles attaques sur les droits démocratiques.

    Attentats à la bombe en Belgique : pourquoi on n’a pas « fait le lien »
    Par Alex Lantier et André_Damon 26 mars 2016
    http://www.wsws.org/fr/articles/2016/mar2016/pers-m26.shtml

    Les attaques terroristes de cette semaine en Belgique, qui ont fait 31 morts et 300 blessés, sont les dernières d’une série d’attaques similaires de haute visibilité ayant eu lieu au cours de quinze ans de « guerre contre le terrorisme. »

    Chacune d’entre elle suit un scénario similaire : les assaillants sont bien connus des agences de renseignement et sont des combattants actifs ou potentiels dans des opérations de déstabilisation et de changement de régime soutenu par l’Occident au Moyen-Orient ou en Eurasie. Après chaque attaque, l’absence de réaction sur des informations déjà en possession des services de renseignement est faussement justifiée par un prétendu « manque à faire le lien. » Enfin, malgré les défaillances monumentales des protocoles de sécurité, aucun responsable n’est licencié ou encore discipliné.

    Dans des incidents antérieurs, comme les détournements d’avion du 11 septembre, les attentats du marathon de Boston, la fusillade à Charlie Hebdo et les attentats de novembre 2015 à Paris, l’étendue de la connaissance préalable des services de renseignements n’est apparue que dans les mois ou les années suivantes, permettant à ces faits d’être soigneusement cachés des médias et relégués au domaine de la « théorie du complot »

    #Attentats #Bruxelles #Belgique #Terrorisme #théorie_du_complot #WSWS #Jean_Jaurès

  • Aujourd’hui, le Monde t’explique que Google/Alphabet ne serait pas intéressé à avoir pour « débouché commercial » l’« armée américaine ».

    Google veut se séparer des robots humanoïdes de Boston Dynamics
    http://siliconvalley.blog.lemonde.fr/2016/03/18/google-veut-vendre-les-robots-humanoides-de-boston-dynami

    D’autant qu’une partie des projets de Boston Dynamics sont menés en collaboration avec l’armée américaine, un débouché commercial qui n’intéresse pas Alphabet.

    Ohhh… tu veux dire qu’à la rubrique « 2.0 » du Monde, vous ne suivez pas l’actualité et que vous n’avez pas Wikipédia ? Il y a quinze jours :
    https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eric_Schmidt

    En 2016, il devient également directeur d’un comité pour le Pentagone américain afin d’étudier l’apport des innovations de la Silicon Valley à l’armée américaine.

    Discutez entre vous, les gens : Le patron d’Alphabet à la tête d’un comité de conseil du Pentagone
    http://www.lemonde.fr/pixels/article/2016/03/03/le-patron-d-alphabet-eric-schmidt-prend-la-tete-d-un-comite-de-conseil-du-pe

    Eric Schmidt, l’ancien PDG de Google et actuel président exécutif d’Alphabet, va prendre la tête d’un comité de conseil du Pentagone, a annoncé mercredi 2 mars le secrétaire américain à la défense, Ashton Carter.

    Ce nouveau comité sera consacré à l’innovation technologique dans la défense et devra conseiller le Pentagone sur des domaines « très familiers des entreprises de la Silicon Valley », comme « le développement rapide de prototypes », « l’analyse de données », « l’utilisation d’applications mobiles et du cloud » ou encore « l’organisation du partage d’informations », peut-on lire dans un communiqué.

    Je suppose que le Pentagone est surtout intéressé à pouvoir battre les asiatiques au jeu de go.

    Évidemment, on parle de robots humanoïdes et de Google, on ne va quand même pas rappeler les lubies transhumanistes de ces gens (alors que l’intitulé Replicant devrait un peu t’inquiéter). Tiens, encore récemment : Le pape parlera de transhumanisme avec le PDG de Google
    https://www.cath.ch/newsf/le-pape-parlera-de-transhumanisme-avec-le-pdg-de-google

    Le pape François recevra le PDG de Google, Eric Schmidt, en audience privée au Vatican, le 15 janvier 2016. La firme américaine investit beaucoup financièrement dans le transhumanisme.

  • Silicon Valley’s Unchecked Arrogance — The Development Set
    https://medium.com/the-development-set/silicon-valley-s-unchecked-arrogance-d86cbb8db52

    YCombinator and their Silicon Valley counterparts often talk about the value of geography. The best ideas, we are led to believe, come from a small stretch of earth close to San Francisco.
    James Fallows in a recent Atlantic essay describes how most of America’s elite believe in “The Big Sort” — that to be successful, one must be sorted into a few metro areas: San Francisco, New York, Boston, perhaps Seattle or Washington D.C. When it comes to people investing in new ideas, this is absolutely true. 78% of investment in startups goes to three states (New York, Massachusetts, California). While in the past 20 years startup investing has increased 300% in those states, it has actually declined in the other 47 across the country.
    Silicon Valley has become a “monocrop” culture where entrepreneurs are well-educated, have frictionless access to capital, and have their basic needs taken care of. The majority of resources today are going to entrepreneurs whose lived experience is in well-off, well-connected cities.

    #silicon_valley #capitalisme #revenu_de_base #arrogance

  • The pro-Palestinian Jewish Activists on U.S. College Campuses - Source Haaretz.com
    http://www.haaretz.com/.premium-1.709425
    Supporting the Palestinian cause, as they see it, is not a betrayal, but rather an affirmation, of their Jewish values.
    Judy Maltz Mar 17, 2016 6:40 PM

    As pro- and anti-Israel groups battle it out on college campuses across America, much attention has focused on the successful efforts of Palestinian rights organization to recruit other groups to their cause – among them blacks, Latinos, LGBT and union activists. Less notice has been given to the preponderance of Jews among their ranks.

    A recent tour of college campuses across California – a hotbed of anti-Israel activity – shows that Jewish students have come to assume key roles in the Palestinian solidarity movement.

    Many are founding members or serve on the boards of their local Students for Justice in Palestine chapters. Others have been instrumental in pushing through motions in student government recommending that their universities divest from American companies that “profit from the Israeli occupation.”

    Yet others have been lending support to their Palestinian allies on campus through local student chapters of Jewish Voices for Peace, an organization that supports boycott, divestment and sanctions as well as the Palestinian right of return (an idea considered anathema by much of the pro-Zionist left). In fact, JVP and SJP often organize campus activities together.

    Some of these Jewish students come from families with roots in Israel and bring in-depth knowledge of the conflict to their activism. Others have never stepped foot in the country. Some have found their way into the anti-Zionist left following an initial flirtation with J Street U, a progressive Zionist organization that opposes the occupation.

    For quite a few, Israel’s last two wars in Gaza, in which thousands of Palestinian civilians were killed, were the trigger for their radicalization. On the whole, these activists are relatively non-committal when it comes to advocating for a particular solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, but on one point they all agree: Supporting the Palestinian cause, as they see it, is not a betrayal, but rather an affirmation of their Jewish values.

    Who are these Jewish activists who have taken up arms in the pro-Palestinian struggle on United States college campuses? Here are some of their stories, as told to Haaretz:

    Eitan Peled
    A UCLA senior studying economics and public affairs

    Eitan Peled, who grew up in San Diego, is the scion of a prominent leftist family in Israel. His late grandfather Matti Peled, a general during the Six-Day War, served in the Knesset and was one of the founding members of the Progressive List for Peace, a Jewish-Arab political party that was among the first to advocate for dialogue with the Palestine Liberation Organization. His father, Miko Peled, is also an outspoken peace activist.

    The younger Peled serves today as a member of the SJP board at University of California, Los Angeles, where he is also active in JVP. Often on his childhood trips to Israel, he recounts, he would travel with family members to visit their Palestinian friends in the West Bank.

    “The imbalance was striking to me,” he says. “There were no swimming pools or parks there like there were in Tel Aviv, and my Palestinian friends had never even been to a beach because they weren’t allowed to go. That is what fueled my activism.”

    Asked if he had ever felt shunned on campus by fellow Jews because of his particular form of activism, Peled responds: “I’m not sure. But in any event, I’m proud of my activism.”

    Sarah and Elizabeth Schmitt
    A UCLA junior majoring in history, Sarah Schmitt, like Peled, is active in both SJP and JVP. Now her older sister is showing similar inclinations

    Growing up in a relatively unaffiliated Jewish family in conservative Orange County, Sarah Schmitt has never visited Israel. She first developed a keen interest in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict when she was barely a teen, during Operation Cast Lead, Israel’s 22-day offensive in Gaza that began in December 2008. “I just couldn’t understand the disproportionate nature of the killing, and that captivated me,” she says.

    As a student of history later on in life, Schmitt says, she began examining the conflict through the lens of Jewish history and became even further entrenched in her views. “It gave me a sense of disillusionment with the entity that presents itself as the Jewish state,” she says.

    Schmitt is not the only one in her family to feel betrayed by Israel. Her older sister Elizabeth, a history major at UC Santa Barbara, has shown similar inclinations of late. “I recently attended my first meeting of SJP here on campus,” she reports, “and although I wouldn’t call myself an activist, I’m definitely interested in getting more involved. I think the fact that Sarah has been so active has influenced me, but I’ve also been doing a lot of reading on my own about the conflict.”

    Asked how their parents have responded, she says: “It’s made them question their beliefs as well, to be honest. Definitely my mom – my dad, maybe not so much.”

    Melanie Malinas
    A doctoral student in biophysics at Stanford

    Melanie Malinas grew up in a Reform family in Ventura and took off a year before beginning her graduate studies to teach Hebrew school in Reno, Nevada. Never having traveled to Israel, her first exposure to the country came through a friend and fellow undergraduate at Oberlin College, who was active in a Zionist youth movement.

    “He got me interested, which prompted me to do my own research, and I started drawing my own conclusions,” she recounts. She had her first epiphany, she says, after reading an essay critical of Israel by writer and author Peter Beinart (today a Haaretz columnist). “It was like ‘wow,’” she says, “and it really sparked my interest.”

    As a first step in her activism, she joined J Street U, but was soon disillusioned. “It felt like it wasn’t in line with what I was feeling,” she says. So in 2012, she decided to attend the annual SJP conference.

    “I was blown away,” she recalls, “not only by their commitment to the Palestinian issue, but also to other forms of social justice.” As a core member of the SJP leadership team at Stanford, she helped push through a motion on divestment that was passed last year.

    Asked what sort of solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict she supports, Malinas says: “I wouldn’t say I’m in favor of a one-state or two-state solution, but I do support the right of return for Palestinians, and although I consider myself an anti-Zionist, I don’t think Jews should be expelled from Israel.”

    Michaela Ruth ben Izzy
    A Stanford sophomore and SJP activist on campus

    Michaela Ruth ben Izzy grew up in what she describes as a “culturally Jewish” home in Berkeley where her parents were active in the Reconstructionist movement.

    Although her grandparents live in Israel, and she has visited the country several times, “Izzy,” as she is known, says she was not well educated on the conflict until she began attending university. “There were a lot of things I simply didn’t know,” she says.

    As she began educating herself and forming her own opinions, J Street U seemed like it might be a good fit for her. “I wanted to get involved, and it felt like a good place,” she recounts.

    That was until last summer when during a trip to Israel to visit her grandparents, she decided to take a few weeks and travel around the West Bank. “Being able to see things from the other side really shifted my worldview,” she says. “When I got back, the first thing I did was join SJP.”

    “I see this as a very Jewish thing,” she notes. “Wrestling with the status quo has always been a Jewish value, and I think it’s in my Judaism to question these things.”

    Kelsey Waxman
    A Berkeley senior studying history and Arabic literature
    Kelsey Waxman was raised by social activist parents in urban Chicago where “great emphasis was put on applying Jewish values to daily life.”

    “Growing up in a very diverse neighborhood taught me not only the importance of diversity, but also to approach people with respect, wherever they’re from,” she says.

    Waxman learned about the other side of the conflict through her Palestinian friends in public school, and years later, when she spent two months on a study abroad program in Jordan, where she lived with a local family of Palestinian refugees. Initially, says Waxman, she thought J Street might be a good outlet for her activist tendencies, but after attending one of the organization’s conferences, found herself disappointed.

    After a summer spent volunteering at the Aida refugee camp outside Bethlehem, she says she realized where she belonged. “Members of my Jewish community back home had connected me to folks at JVP, but there was no JVP chapter here at Berkeley at the time,” she recalls. “So in September 2015, together with another student here, I founded the chapter.”

    Contrary to what might be assumed, not all the members of the Berkeley JVP chapter are Jewish. “We also have Palestinian, Muslim, Christian and Hindu members,” says Waxman.

    Why did she choose JVP over SJP, which already has an active chapter at Berkeley? “For me, it was important to speak about my experiences as a Jewish person because so much of what goes on in Palestine is justified by politicians who have the same religious identity as me,” she says.

    Tallie Ben Daniel
    A doctoral student at UC Davis

    Tallie Ben Daniel was born and raised in Los Angeles, the daughter of a Jewish-Iraqi mother and an Israeli father. Today, she serves as the academic advisory council coordinator at JVP.

    “I grew up with a lot of knowledge of Israel, having visited many times and having a lot of family there,” she says, “and I’ve always known that it’s a very complicated place.”

    It was during her undergraduate years at UC Santa Cruz, recalls Ben Daniel, that she made two important discoveries. “I had always thought that the Israeli-Palestinian conflict was a conflict between two equals, but I suddenly understand that the two sides were not equal because one side was an occupier,” she relays. “The other thing I discovered is that there were many American Jews who did not want to have this conversation.”

    Because this was not the sort of conversation that could be had in a predominantly Palestinian organization like SJP, she and some like-minded friends at the time set up their own group called “Confused Jews.”

    “That lasted about six months,” she recounts, “but it allowed me to realize just how different our views were.” Only when she eventually joined JVP, recalls Ben Daniel, did she finally feel at home. “I realized that I hadn’t had a Jewish community until then, and it felt great. I especially loved the fact that it had such a big tent.”

    Elly Oltersdorf
    A history major at UC Davis

    The daughter of a Jewish-Australian mother and a non-Jewish German father, Elly Oltersdorf grew up in a very Zionist home in San Diego. When asked if reports of widespread anti-Semitism on her campus are true, the UC Davis junior responds: “The only time I felt uncomfortable as a Jew on this campus was when I came out as pro-BDS. In fact, today, some people even question my Jewishness.”

    For the record, her initiation into social activism began elsewhere. “When I first started university, I became involved in the movement against raising tuition and then in Black Lives Matter,” she relays. It was the 2014 war in Gaza that sparked her interest in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. “That was a turning point for me,” she says. “I felt that something was severely wrong that needed to be addressed.”

    The president of the local chapter of JVP, Oltersdorf says her parents, and especially her mother, find it hard to accept her views. “For my mother, Israel is something so emotional that she has difficulty thinking rationally about it,” she says.

    Liz Jackson
    A graduate of Berkeley law school

    The only Jewish attorney at Palestine Legal, a non-profit that defends Palestinian rights activists, Liz Jackson is a graduate of Berkeley law school. Her dubious claim to fame – which goes a long way toward explaining where she is today – is having participated in the first ever Birthright trip to Israel.

    “I didn’t know much about Israeli history at the time, but this was so obviously a propaganda trip,” she says. “It was all about partying and getting free things, and it seemed to me that their main message was to find a Jewish man to marry. I was a serious kid, and that really disgusted me.”

    A prominent member of JVP, Jackson, through her employer, also represents student activists in SJP when they have a brush with the law. In the past year alone, she says, her organization has responded to 240 incidents, mainly involving false accusations of anti-Semitism and support for terrorism.

    Jackson, a 37-year-old mother of two, grew up in the Northeast, where she attended Brown University as an undergraduate. Before starting law school, she became involved in economic social justice work in Boston, where she says that “for the first time in my life, I felt that I had a Jewish community.”

    Operation Cast Lead began just as she was beginning law school and had become active in immigrant rights and other economic justice issues. “I became horrified and riveted and couldn’t look away,” she says.

    Not long thereafter, she joined a fact-finding trip to Israel and the West Bank for Jewish American peace activists. When she returned to Berkeley, she became involved in the divestment campaign at Berkeley that kicked off the BDS campus wars.

    Trying to explain what drew her to full-time professional involvement with the Palestinian cause, Jackson says: “I think that many people like me feel a connection because of our Jewish background. We identify with refugee rights and the underdog because such an important part of our Jewishness is overcoming oppression. That may sound cheesy, but it’s really been real for me.”

    David McCleary
    A doctoral candidate in molecular and cell biology at Berkeley

    David McCleary is a leader of the campus chapter of SJP, where he says about one-third of the core membership is Jewish. The son of a Jewish mother and an Irish-Catholic atheist father, McCleary, who grew up in Orange County, was raised Jewish and “nominally Zionist,” as he describes it, but never visited Israel.

    A long-time union activist, he says it was Operation Cast Lead that “opened my eyes” to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and “what it meant to have a Jewish state.”

    “It made me realize something was wrong, and it made me question the Zionist narrative that the Jews needed their own homeland,” he says.

    No, he says, the Holocaust did not justify the need for a Jewish state because “the only thing that saved the Jewish people during the Holocaust was the world getting together and saying this is wrong – and since then a system of international law has been set in place to ensure it doesn’t happen again.”

    But it took the 2014 Gaza war to turn him into a hard-core pro-Palestinian activist. “Those images of the destruction at Shejaiya [a neighborhood in Gaza particularly hard hit during the 2014 war], I asked myself if anything is worth that.”

    Asked if it is true that pro-Israel students on campus are meant to feel unwelcome in social justice organizations, he responds: “It’s totally true. You’re either for justice or against justice.”

  • Google Puts Boston Dynamics Up for Sale in Robotics Retreat - Bloomberg Business
    http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2016-03-17/google-is-said-to-put-boston-dynamics-robotics-unit-up-for-sale

    After the division’s latest robot video was posted to YouTube, in February, Google’s public-relations team expressed discomfort that Alphabet would be associated with a push into humanoid robotics. Their subsequent e-mails were also published to the internal online forum and became visible to all Google employees.
    “There’s excitement from the tech press, but we’re also starting to see some negative threads about it being terrifying, ready to take humans’ jobs,” wrote Courtney Hohne, a director of communications at Google and the spokeswoman for Google X.
    Hohne went on to ask her colleagues to “distance X from this video,” and wrote, “we don’t want to trigger a whole separate media cycle about where BD [Boston Dynamics] really is at Google.”

    ah, un petit pas en arrière pour les #robots de #google ; mais ils reviendront une fois qu’ils auront trouvé comment paraître cute et utiles…

  • Your Brain’s Music Circuit Has Been Discovered - Facts So Romantic
    http://nautil.us/blog/your-brains-music-circuit-has-been-discovered

    Before Josh McDermott was a neuroscientist, he was a club DJ in Boston and Minneapolis. He saw first-hand how music could unite people in sound, rhythm, and emotion. “One of the reasons it was so fun to DJ is that, by playing different pieces of music, you can transform the vibe in a roomful of people,” he says. With his club days behind him, McDermott now ventures into the effects of sound and music in his lab at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he is an assistant professor in the Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences. In 2015, he and a post-doctoral colleague, Sam Norman-Haignere, and Nancy Kanwisher, a professor of cognitive neuroscience at MIT, made news by locating a neural pathway activated by music and music alone. McDermott and his colleagues played a total (...)

  • Le Pentagone déploie les drones sur le territoire des États-Unis
    http://www.wsws.org/fr/articles/2016/mar2016/dron-m14.shtml

    Un « livre blanc » du ministère de la Justice sur les assassinats par #drone, fuité à la presse en février 2013, exposait la position du gouvernement Obama : la Maison Blanche avait le droit de tuer n’importe qui, même des citoyens américains, partout dans le monde sans procédure judiciaire. Au printemps de cette année, le procureur général Eric Holder a refusé d’écarter la possibilité que le président puisse, dans des « circonstances extraordinaires ... autoriser l’armée à utiliser la force létale sur le territoire des Etats-Unis, » y compris par des frappes de drones.

    Ces dernières années, le Pentagone a mené une série d’exercices domestiques simulant des opérations militaires à grande échelle. Il y avait parmi eux, ce qui était très significatif, l’Opération Jade Helm, commencée en juillet 2015 et comprenant des exercices dans certaines régions de Californie, du Nevada, de l’Utah, du Colorado, de l’Arizona, de la Louisiane, du Mississippi, du Nouveau-Mexique et du Texas.

    L’utilisation ou la simulation accrue d’opérations militaires dans le pays coïncide avec la militarisation des polices locales et l’emploi de la Garde nationale pour imposer une loi martiale de fait en réponse à des attaques terroristes ou des manifestations sociales, comme à Boston après l’attentat du marathon en 2013 ou à Ferguson et à Baltimore en 2014 et 2015, pendant les manifestations contre la violence policière.

  • This Is Why Americans Are Irrationally Anxious About Terrorism - Facts So Romantic
    http://nautil.us/blog/this-is-why-americans-are-irrationally-anxious-about-terrorism

    Kim Carpenter/WikicommonsOn September 11, 2001 I was living and teaching in Providence, Rhode Island, a town that is on the short flight path between Boston, where terrorists boarded two passenger airliners, and New York, where these planes were flown into the twin towers of the World Trade Center. In the following days, the whole campus seemed convulsed with grief; professors broke down weeping at their podiums and students huddled together, consoling one another. I remember these days as some of the most intensely emotional ones of my life.Almost a decade and a half has passed since then, and the rawness of that emotion has subsided. Most students now entering college or university have no conscious recollection of that day. To them, 9/11 is a pivotal date in history books—and to (...)

  • State of Exception Cities: From Boston to Paris, Producing a Police Cartography of Private Spaces | THE FUNAMBULIST MAGAZINE
    http://thefunambulist.net/2016/02/02/state-of-exception-cities-from-boston-to-paris-producing-a-police-ca

    It has now been 50 days that France is living in the state of emergency, declared in the wake of the November 13, 2015 attacks and voted in the form of a law by the Parliament on November 27. Although the duration of this state of exception was fixed to three months, and should therefore be ended by the end of this month, the government already announced its intention to push for an extension — “until we get rid of ISIS” even said Prime Minister Manuel Valls to the BBC a few days ago! — which should transform the exception into a rule as it is often the case in this kind of situations. A recent poll have shown that a majority of French citizens are in favor of such an extension. What this poll does not reflect in any way, is the extreme inequality of application of the state of emergency on different bodies. For many, the sole experience of this state of exception consists in seeing armed soldiers and police officers in the streets and accepting the search of bags at the entrance of large shops. Others who live in the various banlieues of the country (in large cities just like in small towns, on metropolitan territory just like on ultramarine territories) may experience the exceptional latitude given to the police forces in its racist violence. More than 3,000 individuals, families, companies and Muslim communities have thus seen their private space violated by the brutal intervention (50% of the time, at night) of police squads leading administrative perquisitions, sometimes breaking doors (see previous article) and turning the space ‘upside down’ to finally find nothing of interest in the overwhelming majority of cases.

    If most of theses searches leads to no conclusive results, it is neither because people whose homes are searched would be too smart to leave tracks of potential relation with future attack projects, nor because the secret services would be incompetent: it is because most of these perquisitions does not aim at finding anything in particular. They are used as an intimidation method against persons and communities considered as practicing a radical interpretation of Islam — in the context of a quasi-religious republicanism and its secularism, such practice is considered as sociopathic, if not illegal, by the authorities — but, also, as a means to construct a police cartography of private spaces, which is an opportunity that only rises during the application of a state of exception.

  • Gordon Parks stunning photos of families in 1950s Alabama | Daily Mail Online

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2833736/Shotguns-sundaes-segregation-Gordon-Parks-stunning-photos-families-1950

    Oh merci Elisabeth Vallet d’avoir signalé la publication de ces images étonnantes.

    Shotguns, sundaes and segregation: Stunning photos of families in 1950s Alabama offer poignant look at life during civil-rights era

    African-American photographer Gordon Parks captured the lives of three families living in Mobile, Alabama in 1956
    The collection, called The Restraints: Open and Hidden, follows the lives of three families
    A total of 40 prints will now go on display at the High Museum of Art in Atlanta, Georgia
    Parks worked for Life Magazine for 20 years, shooting the likes of Muhammad Ali and Malcom X

    #états-unis #ségrégation #racisme #photographie

  • De l’épée à la charrue - Robot Futures
    http://alireailleurs.tumblr.com/post/138331371874

    Sur son blog, l’anthropologue Lucy Suchman (Wikipedia) revient sur l’annonce du récent échec de Boston Dynamics (l’un des projets #robotique de Google/Alphabet) qui a vu ses robots quadrupèdes (les modèles LS3 et BigDog) retoqués par l’armée américaine, notamment du fait du bruit de leurs moteurs (voir l’article de Numerama). Un autre de leur robot (le modèle anthropomorphe bipède, Atlas) semble également dans la tourmente, puisque la société américaine vient d’annoncer qu’il pourrait être désormais adapté du terrain de guerre à l’espace domestique (voir l’article du Guardian qui illustre ce changement d’affectation en montrant Atlas passer le balai ou l’aspirateur : une affreuse musique d’ascenseur remplaçant les bruyants moteurs pour mieux nous en vendre l’idée). Un changement d’affectation qui permet à (...)

  • Journalisme digital et documentaires interactifs : le (super) rapport du MIT
    http://www.davduf.net/journalisme-digital-et-documentaires-interactifs

    Le MIT Open Documentary Lab (OpenDocLab) vient de rendre publique une synthèse sur la convergence entre le journalisme digital et les pratiques dans les documentaires interactifs et participatifs. Huit mois de travail. Passionnant. Le rapport « Mapping the Intersection of Two Cultures : Interactive Documentary and Digital Journalism » peut se lire d’une traite, comme un voyage dans une terra incognita. Ou comme un travail de recherche méticuleux, bourré de références. Une quarantaine d’acteurs de (...)

    #M.I.T_OpenDoc_Lab

    / Une, #MIT_-_Boston, #Nouvelles_narrations__Référence

    « http://opendoclab.mit.edu/interactivejournalism »

  • Spot retourne à la niche, les Marines ne veulent pas du robot de Google
    http://www.comptoir-hardware.com/actus/divers-a-fonkeries/30519-spot-retourne-a-la-niche-les-marines-ne-veulent-pas-du-robo

    On parlait de Spot le mois dernier, ce robot chien (qui n’a rien à voir avec le toaster de Secret of Evermore) de chez Google Boston Dynamics était à l’essai chez les Marines. Son rôle ? Assister les troupes terrestres, pour aider à déplacer du matériel volumineux et leur permettre de repérer des cibles entre autres tactiques militaires... [Tout lire]

    #Divers_•_Fonkeries