Batman Arkham Knight Gameplay Trailer Part Two Released

Last week the folks at Rocksteady released a new trailer for Batman Arkham Knight. The trailer provided us with a look at the gameplay footage from this title, which was expected to be released by the end of this year, but has now been pushed into 2015. Part two of that gameplay trailer has been released today and it continues where the last one left off, the infiltration of the Ace Chemicals plant.

We saw in the previous trailer how Batman was going to infiltrate the facility of Ace Chemicals. The caped crusader went through both land and air, with his trusty Batmobile making an appearance as well.

Part two of the Batman Arkham Knight gameplay trailer picks up from where we previously left off. We get to see a good amount of gameplay footage, which is something many of us are curious about, since it was Rocksteady’s decision to make this title available only on PS4 and Xbox One, part from the PC, to ensure high quality.

We also get to see Batman Arkham Knight’s villain a couple of times in this trailer series but up till now it hasn’t be revealed who the bad guy really is under that suit. The third and final trailer in this series will be unveiled at Sony’s opening keynote during the PlayStation Experience event in Las Vegas.

Rocksteady recently confirmed the new release date for this title. Batman Arkham Knight is now destined for release on June 2nd, 2015.

Batman Arkham Knight Gameplay Trailer Part Two Released

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6 Reasons I Love That My Kids Watch My Little Pony

Last year, when my son discovered My Little Pony on TV and sat with his sister, staring starry-eyed at the screen, mesmerized, my husband was less than thrilled. We both have a pretty low tolerance for crappy kids shows, and he assumed that MLP fell into that category. I’ll be honest (as always) — at first glance, it seems like fluff. The big-eyed, sickeningly sweet-voiced, dramatic cartoon would not have gotten approval from me had I not overheard an episode while shooting off an email.

This show has more substance than pretty pastels! Each episode seeks to leave their little viewers a bit wiser and empowered than they were a half hour earlier. These feisty little phillies focus on big ideas and they hammer home their messages in a way that resonates with kids.

6 Lessons To Be Learned from My Little Ponies:

1. Acceptance/embracing differences

2. Self-confidence

3. The importance of honesty

4. Compassion

5. Problem-solving

6. True, supportive friendship

So, as much as I like to minimize TV time (and I prefer PBS), I have to admit that I’m a fan of My Little Ponies.

This post was originally published on Mommy Business

Magnus Carlsen and a Parade of Chess Champions

The world chess champion Magnus Carlsen turned 24 last Sunday and had many reasons to celebrate: it was the most fruitful year of his young chess career. For nearly four years he has dominated the FIDE rating list as the world’s top-rated player. He won two additional world titles in the rapid and blitz play last July. With the victory in Sochi last month, Carlsen secured the classical world title for the next two years.

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“I feel happy and relieved,” said Magnus Carlsen after defending his title against the challenger Vishy Anand in the World Chess Championship Match that ended last month in Sochi, Russia. The final score was 6.5-4.5.

The two point victory margin was widely predicted before the match. The age of the players was the main factor: in the battle of the generations Anand, 45, was likely to make more mistakes than the 23-year-old Norwegian. Last year in Chennai, India, Carlsen beat Anand 6.5-3.5 to become the world champion.

Anand came to Sochi better prepared, posed more problems for his younger opponent and the match became tense and dramatic. It will be remembered for one fleeting moment in Game 6 after Carlsen allowed a three-move combination. It could have reversed the momentum of the match in Anand’s favor, but he missed it. After the match, the Indian grandmaster was gracious in defeat, admitting that Carlsen was the better player.

The match began with the drawing for colors performed by a magician. “In 1998 at the Chess Oscar ceremony,” Anand remembered, “we had a magician and he stole my watch.” Anand did better in Sochi: he kept his watch a drew the white pieces for the first game. The first two games gave us a preview of what to expect in the match.

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In Game 1, Anand opened with the queen pawn (1.d4) that gave Carlsen some trouble towards the end of the match in Chennai. This time the Norwegian played the Grunfeld Indian, seeking a more dynamic play with the black pieces. Later in the match, he also added the solid Queen’s gambit.

In Game 2, Carlsen established 1.e4 as his main attacking weapon with white. He revealed only after the match that one of his seconds was Michael Adams, the top British player of the last two decades and a king-pawn specialist.

Every world chess championship evokes the names of previous champions. Game 2 was played on November 9 – a memorable day.

It was Mikhail Tal’s birthday. He would have been 78 years old. A memorial blitz tournament in his name was being played in Sochi, won by the Azerbaijani GM Shakhriyar Mamedyarov ahead of Alexander Grishuk.

On November 9, 1985, Garry Kasparov defeated Anatoly Karpov in Moscow and became the youngest world champion at the age of 22. In the last game of the match he played the Two Tower variation of the Scheveningen Sicilian and won. It had a huge influence on their future encounters. Unable to break it, Karpov never played the move 1.e4 in a world championship match again.

Game 2 revealed what would be Anand’s main defense with the black pieces. He chose the Berlin defense (1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nf6 3.Bb5 Nf6)

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It appeared in the first official world championship match between William Steinitz and Johannes Zuckertort in 1886. Black wants to capture the central e-pawn – a sound opening strategy for the last two centuries. After 128 years we were back where it all began.

On November 9, 1989, the Berlin wall came down. The Germans were united and in other countries of Eastern Europe communism fell like dominos. But in the year of 2000 Vladimir Kramnik erected the Berlin wall on the chessboard and beat Kasparov in the world championship match in London. The Berlin defense was an excellent choice: Kasparov had to play without his favorite piece – the queen and Kramnik got his bishop pair.

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Kasparov could not win a single game in the match. After reigning for 15 years Kasparov had to part with the world title. Soon after the match the Berlin defense flooded the chess world. It appealed to many players either as a rich endgame or as a queenless middle game.

Carlsen said after the match in Sochi that the Berlin defense suites his style well and he likes it to play it with both colors. In Game 2, Carlsen just protected his e-pawn with 4.d3. It was not an ambitious choice, but at the beginning of the match – in the shadowboxing stage – players like to gather information before they start hitting hard.

Anand made a few inaccuracies and Carlsen took over the game. At one point he created a nice construction of heavy pieces on the e-file:

Carlsen-Anand, Game 2
Sochi 2014

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Carlsen just played Qh5-e2, creating a battery of heavy pieces on the e-file. The game continued: 28…b5 29.b3 bxa4 30.bxa4 Rb4 31.Re7 Qd6 32.Qf3 Rxe4 33.Qxe4 f3+ 34.g3 h5? A mistake that ends the game immediately with the attack on the seventh rank. Black had to play 34…Qd2 but after 35.Qxf3 Qxc2 36.Kg2 Kh8 (36…Qxa4? 37.Qb7 wins.) 37.Qc6 Rg8 (37…c4 38.Re8+-) 38.Ra7 white has a clear advantage. After the final blow 35.Qb7, black resigned.

The commentators brought in another world champion, Alexander Alekhine, and his heavy formation.

Alekhine-Nimzowitsch
San Remo 1930

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Alekhine just played his queen to c1, creating a formation of heavy pieces. After 26…Rbc8 27.Ba4! threatening to win outright with 28.b5, black had to give up a pawn. 27…b5 28.Bxb5 Ke8 29.Ba4 Kd8 30.h4! Black will soon run out of pawn moves on the kingside and white will win material with b4-b5. Black resigned.

The heavy piece line-up on the first three ranks was know as Alekhine’s train with the locomotive (the queen) pushing two wagons (the rooks). It is also known as Alekhine’s gun, a name that was appropriated by a heavy metal band from Brooklyn.

The title of the world champion carries weight. Otherwise we would have to call it Blackburne’s gun, since the man nicknamed “Black Death” grouped the pieces exactly as Alekhine did later already in Paris in 1878 against Rosenthal.

Blackburne-Rosenthal
Paris 1878

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It took Blackburne more time to finish his opponent: 24…c6 25.Bf2 Nc8 26.Bf1 Bf7 27.Nb2 Be6 28.Nd3 Qe8 29.Be2 Qe7 30.Nb4 Bd7 31.Bf3 Qf7 32.Bh4 Ne7 33.Re2 Qe6 34.Bxe7 Qxe7 35.e6 Be8 36.Bxd5 cxd5 37.Nxd5 Qd6 38.e7 Nc6 39.exf8Q+ Kxf8 40.Ne3 Nxd4 41.Rd2 Qxf4 42.Qf1 Qe5 43.Rcd3 Re7 44.Nc4 Ne2+ 45.Kh1 Qf4 46.Rf3 Qe4 47.Rxf5+ Rf7 48.Rxf7+ Bxf7 49.Rxe2 Black resigned.

We saw the formation used for a queenside invasion in the game of two famous world champions, Bobby Fischer and Boris Spassky.

Fischer-Spassky
Sveti Stefan 1992

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The Alekhine formation can be deadly on the kingside and often leads to mating attacks.

Taylor-Kavalek
Washington, D.C. 1970

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The game finished: 34.Bc3 hxg4 35.hxg4 Rh2+ White resigned.

Watching Game 2 was an “old man with white hair” as Carlsen put it. It was Boris Spassky sitting among the spectators. Was Boris thinking about his first world championship against Tigran Petrosian in 1966? I remember it well, having covered it for a Prague daily together with Salo Flohr, the 1937 FIDE challenger to the world champion Alekhine. Or perhaps the Match of the Century played against Bobby Fischer in Reykjavik in 1972 crossed Spassky’s mind?

In 1974 Bobby Fischer asked FIDE to play the world championship match to 10 wins, not counting draws. If each player wins nine games the title would remain with the world champion. It was rejected and in 1975 Fischer decided not to play the match with Karpov.

“It can take six months to win ten games,” I argued in Pasadena in 1978. I played the U.S. Championship there, but during the evenings Bobby and I had dinners, discussing all kinds of things.

“No, not if both players fight,” he countered. “The baseball season takes a half year and nobody complains.”

Fischer’s reason for longer matches was to determine who is the better player and to eliminate accidental wins, for example falling into an opening trap or tripping over unsuspected novelty. His invention – the Fischer Random – wipes out the opening preparation.

Bobby would never agree to play a 12-game world championship. He would point to Game 3 Carlsen and Anand played in Sochi. After 26 moves the Norwegian grandmaster was in dire straits right from the opening and lost rather quickly without a fight.

Anand-Carlsen, Game 3
Sochi 2014

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26.Rc6! Almost identical position appeared in the game Tomashevsky-Riazantsev, played in Moscow in 2008. The only difference was the position of the h-pawn on h3.

Tomashevsky-Riazantsev
Moscow 2008

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Carlsen’s seconds could have caught it, but they didn’t and the finish was painful.

26…g5 27.Bg3 Bb4 28.Ra1 Ba5?! 29.Qa6 Bxc7 30.Qc4 e5 31.Bxe5 Rxe5 32.dxe5 Qe7 33.e6 Kf8 34.Rc1 Black resigned.

“When something goes wrong, it’s always my fault,” Carlsen softened the blow. The match was now tied.

The turning point of the match came during Game 6. Trying to improve the position, Carlsen marched his king to the wrong square. It was a mental slip, an inaccuracy that should not happen. Anand didn’t expect a three-move combination that would not only bail him out but would give him a big advantage. It was not there before, but Carslen made it possible and all India held its breath. Is Vishy going to find the refutation and punish Carlsen for his mishap? In one minute, in which every second felt like eternity, Anand played a pawn move and Magnus escaped. When both players realized the double-blunder, Vishy’s resistance collapsed and he lost.

Carlsen-Anand, Game 6
Sochi 2014

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26.Kd2? a4? Missing 26…Nxe5! 27.Rxg8 Nxc4+ 28.Kd3 Nb2+ 29.Ke2 Rxg8 with good winning chances. 27.Ke2 a3 28.f3 Rd8 29.Ke1 Rd7 30.Bc1 Ra8 31.Ke2 Ba4 Anand lost the thread. His position quickly collapses. 32.Be4+ Bc6 33.Bxg6 fxg6 34.Rxg6 Ba4 35.Rxe6 Rd1 36.Bxa3 Ra1 37.Ke3 Bc2 38.Re7+ Black resigned. After 38… Ka6 39.Rxh6, threatening 40.Bxc5, white has too many pawns.

Inaccuracies, mistakes or just plain blunders make chess history. In the sixth game of the 1951 world championship match, David Bronstein made an unfortunate king move (57.Kc2) and Mikhail Botvinnik punished him.

Bronstein – Botvinnik
World Championship, Moscow 1951

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57.Kc2? White had a draw after 57.Ne6+ Kf3 58.Nd4+ Kf2 59.Ka4 e2 60.Nc2 e1Q 61.Nxe1 Kxe1 62.Kxa5 Kd2 63.Kb4 b6. Botvinnik played 57…Kg3! and white resigned. The passed e-pawn queens.

After experimenting with the Sicilian, Anand returned to the Berlin defense in Game 7. Sensing his opponent vulnerability, Carlsen took Anand on a long journey lasting 122 moves. But the Norwegian was unable to win the following unusual endgame.

Carlsen-Anand, Game 7
Sochi 2014

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It was the Berlin wall at its best or worst. “It was a key game,” said Carlsen later. Had he won it, the match would have been over, he believed. It should have tired Anand out; instead, it looked like it sapped energy from Carlsen.

Anand was still in the match, drawing the next three games. In Game 11, the last encounter of the match, Anand build the Berlin Wall again and played well in a tense battle. It could have gone either way, people thought, but Anand’s nerves cracked first. Emotions got the better of him.

He may have thought about Tigran Petrosian, a world champion who made living out of exchange sacrifices, and made a Petrosian-like sacrifice, plugging the b-file, perhaps thinking it was the best way to force Game 12. At a first glance the sacrifice looked playable, but it was not necessary and it played into Carlsen’s hands. The Norwegian loves material. He calmed down and played the technical ending well. Anand missed better defenses and Carlsen won the game and the match.

Carlsen-Anand, Game 11
Sochi 2014

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27…Rb4?!
In the spirit of Tigran Petrosian, but it does not quite work. If Anand wanted to sacrifice the exchange at all costs, he should have done it this way: 27…Rb3 28.Rb1 Ra3 29.Ra1 Rxc3 30.Nxc3 Bxc4 with compensation.
28.Bxb4 cxb4?!
As long as the position remains closed, Anand can hope for Game 12. But Carlsen finds a nice way to proceed. Anand wanted to free the square c5 for his dark bishop. The computers prefer 28…axb4!, for example 29.Nh5 Rxa4 30.Ra1 Bxd5+ 31.cxd5+ Kb5 with good chances to equalize.
29.Nh5!
Preparing to open the kingside with f2-f4.
29…Kb7
Anand could have tried the tricky 29…Re8 for example
A. 30.f4 gxf4 31.Ndxf4 Nxe5! 32.Kxe5 Bxg4+ 33.Kf6 (33.Kd4 Rd8+ 34.Nd5 Bxh5-+) 33…Bxd1 34.Rxe8 Bc5 with a messy position in which the passed b-pawn may compensate for the extra rook.
B. 30.Kd3!? Kb7 31.Kc2 Bd7 32.Kb3 securing the queenside and preparing f2-f4, white’s chances are better.
30.f4 gxf4 31.Nhxf4 Nxf4 32.Nxf4! Bxc4 33.Rd7!
The pawn on c7 will be under great pressure.
33…Ra6
Other moves don’t help either:
33…Be6 34.Nxe6 fxe6 35.Rc1 Rc8 36.Rh7 Kb6 37.Rh8 threatening 38.Rf1, winning the kingside pawns.;
Or 33…Rc8 34.Rc1 Ba2 35.Nd5 b3 36.Nc3 wins.
34.Nd5 Rc6 35.Rxf7 Bc5

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36.Rxc7+! The simplest way to victory. 36…Rxc7 37.Nxc7 Kc6
After 37…Kxc7 38.Rc1 wins.
38.Nb5! After 38.Rc1 b3 39.Nb5 also wins. 38…Bxb5 39.axb5+ Kxb5 40.e6 The kingside pawns decide the outcome.
40…b3 Or 40…a4 41.Kd3 Be7 42.h4 a3 43.g5 hxg5 44.hxg5 b3 45.g6 a2 46.Kc3 a1Q+ 47.Rxa1 Bf6+ 48.Kxb3 Bxa1 49.e7 wins. 41.Kd3 Be7 42.h4 a4 43.g5 hxg5 44.hxg5 a3 45.Kc3 Black resigned. After 45…Bb4+ 46.Kxb3 Bxe1 47.e7 white queens.

Carlsen’s next world championship challenge comes in 2016. Who will be his opponent? Magnus named Fabiano Caruana, Levon Aronian and Alexander Grischuk. He didn’t mention anybody from the forty-something group, players such as Anand, Kramnik, Veselin Topalov and Boris Gelfand. And Carlsen also skipped Hikaru Nakamura who won a $100,000 friendly match against Aronian last month in Saint Louis.

Note that in the replay windows below you can click either on the arrows under the diagram or on the notation to follow the game.

Images by Anastasiya Karlovich

Sexier Religious Holidays: 11 Sugarplums of Wisdom

What you need to know and consider about sex and the spiritual season we are entering this week:

1. Sex can break the stress cycle of Fight-or-Flight. Consider abandoning your to-do list for a little couple time. It could help return you to the meaning of the season.

2. Bed time burns calories — and during the weeks when we consume the most. A half hour of making out uses up 238 calories per half-hour if you’re an enthusiastic 150-pound woman, according to Sara Jio at Woman’s Day. Intercourse is more variable, burning 144 or more: “Experts estimate that women who orgasm during sex burn more calories during lovemaking than those who don’t.”

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3. Babies: Many a wee one gets his or her start in December. The most common birthday, according to NPR data reporter Matt Stiles, is September 16. Consider this comment on an earlier post: “My youngest child is the result of an extra glass of wine during Hanukkah. LOL.”

4. (Warning: Sexually transmitted ailments are also reportedly higher after the holidays. And office Christmas parties are famous for producing post-holiday awkward moments. Just a word to the wise.)

5. House guests: In a house full of relatives, many will simply decide to wait until the New Year. But there’s always the radio. Turn up the volume on what one of my young nephews used to call “ho-ho music.” Plus there’s the illicit delight of sneaking a little private time.

6. Reconsider that old caution to the newly-in-love: “Kissing Don’t Last; Cookery Do.” Cooking may take a lot more time at this season. And it may not be the heart of the matter.

7. Use the energy of the festivities. Let the sugar high and the wave of love (however fleeting) help to spark up a partnership bond that has worn thin. It’s worth considering.

8. If you’re celebrating alone and not liking that, keep in mind that a holiday is not a judgment day on anyone’s lovability or prospects. The whole point of the season is universal love and acceptance –and (less-often-noted) miraculous change, courage, and resilience. So go to any holiday party alone: full of dignity and self-worth; you’ll be interesting, mysterious, and fabulous.

9. Holiday within a holiday:Spiritual Peak Center suggests a behind-the-scenes private celebration of the season of love: Make this holiday season special for your partner: with little surprise gifts, mistletoe in unexpected places (in front of the washer/dryer), strings of Christmas lights in the bedroom.

10. Remember that, as beautifully said by author Gregory Popcak of Holy Sex!,

“Sex is holy in that it has the power to unite two souls… It is this unique power of sexuality to challenge shame and expand vulnerability at the deepest level that, in addition to its power to unite two people and create new life, makes lovemaking a spiritual exercise, first and foremost.” 

11. At the same time, don’t expect perfect holiday harmony. My husband and I celebrate both our birthdays and our wedding anniversary as well as Christmas and New Year’s in the stretch between Thanksgiving and Valentine’s. Sometimes, it’s necessary to take a break from the bliss of it all and read a good book.

(This blogger, Peggy Payne, is author of three novels set at the meeting place of sex and spirituality: Sister India, Cobalt Blue, and Revelation.

Human Rights and the Fight Against Trafficking

Co-Authored by Suzanne B. Seltzer, Principal of The Seltzer Firm, PLLC, and founding Steering Committee member of the NY Anti-Trafficking Network.


Human Rights Day
is December 10. It’s a day to commemorate the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and, rest assured, people who work on the pressing issues of the moment will be pumping new energy into efforts to protect the human rights of people in the most vulnerable situations around the world. As lawyers and advocates who’ve represented survivors of trafficking and advocated for policy change for over a decade, we’ve learned a lot about what it means to respond with the human rights of victims and survivors in mind.

Human rights are the notion that all people have rights, simply by virtue of their humanity. They represent both a set of values and a system of laws and enforcement mechanisms. Human rights embody the values of dignity, fairness, equality, and opportunity that are central in a just society and for empowered people.

Trafficking in persons clearly involves human rights concerns, based on the coercion, threats, or violence victims and survivors face. But the ways we as a community respond to human trafficking also involve very important human rights issues. A response to trafficking in persons rooted in human rights respects the dignity and self-determination of the person who is thought to be a victim or survivor. This means creating an environment where the person at risk is able to make his or her own decisions about the steps he or she wants to take in addressing the situation.

A human rights approach should follow a basic tenet: “Do no harm.” That includes doing the due diligence to investigate whether a situation involves coercion and trafficking, or not, before taking action.

Unfortunately, a well-meaning but misguided trend in anti-trafficking efforts hasn’t proven to help, but it has the potential to backfire and harm countless victims, survivors, and bystanders: Using sex offender registries as an anti-trafficking tool. Sex offender registries have their place in law enforcement, but human rights advocates and policymakers have been warning that over-use has been dangerous, both because they rarely protect potential victims, and they overload law enforcement agencies.

For example, anti-trafficking campaigns in New York State, California, and Michigan require a person convicted of paying for sexual services or other prostitution-related conduct to register as a sex offender, even if the activity does not involve force, fraud, or coercion — the very definition of trafficking. It may seem harmless to add these names to the registries, but doing so does nothing to help in identifying victims of trafficking, protecting survivors, or preventing others from being trafficked. People at the edges of prostitution-related activity, like drivers or people who handle the phones, who might be potential witnesses or be in a position to help a victim of trafficking safely leave his or her situation are less likely to come forward because these registries add another layer of risk. And by overloading law enforcement with long lists, a deluge of names actually makes it harder for them to do the job we need them to do in investigating and monitoring potential threats.

Sexual abuse, particularly of children, is monstrous, and we’ve seen the devastating effects firsthand, but putting prostitution-related offenses on the registry won’t protect our kids. In fact, engaging in commercial sex acts that don’t even involve trafficking can land someone on a sex offender registry, so it dilutes the purpose entirely. If the sex offender registry has names of people who haven’t committed any violence or abuse and who don’t pose a safety risk, how effective can the registry be in helping to determine who does represent an actual threat?

Public sex offender registries work off the idea that any of us can look them up and become aware of predators within our community, those who pose a significant safety risk to ourselves and our children. And of course, trafficking is certainly predatory in nature. But so many victims and survivors of trafficking are young people, immigrants, or people who work in informal labor sectors such as sex work, restaurants, or agriculture. They are afraid to come forward and deal with the authorities or law enforcement at all. And they (and their families) are not likely to actually take a look at registries, so as a means of prevention, they fall short.

Those exploited and abused by traffickers are better served by policies and actions that address the causes and conditions of trafficking. One-size-fits-all solutions don’t work on a problem this complex. As we think about protecting human rights for all, we should be putting our energy into policies that help to identify victims and survivors of trafficking, give them the help they need to reclaim their lives, and prevent trafficking in the first place. For ideas of solutions that work, see this list of things you can do to help in the fight against trafficking.

Jews Return, In Gladness and Song, To… Berlin?

Louis Lewandowski may be the greatest German composer you’ve never heard of. But hearing his setting of Psalm 150, just once, launched the career of America’s leading conductor of Jewish music. And hearing his music, just once, launched a festival of his Jewish music… in Berlin.

Which means that from December 18 through 21, Berlin, of all places, will be alive with the sound of Jewish music, performed in two churches and two synagogues by Jewish choruses from all over the world.

All coming to Berlin on the dime, or the mark, or more accurately the Euro, of a Gentile businessman, Nils Petersen. He heard Lewandowski’s music on a chance Friday night visit to a synagogue’s all-Lewandowski service with a professional cantor, choir, and organ.
He fell so deeply in love with what he heard that he started the Lewandowski Festival.

Bringing Jews from around the world to Berlin, to sing.

Josh Jacobson first heard Lewandowski as a 15-year-old at summer camp; he was so struck by the music that he found his life’s work: conducting; studying; teaching; and performing Jewish choral music.

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Photo credit to Zamir Chorale of Boston

Jacobson founded Zamir Chorale of Boston, America’s preeminent Jewish choir, which will be making its second Lewandowski Festival appearance in December.

“It’s not about the Holocaust,” Jacobson says. “It’s about reviving the culture that existed in Berlin before the Holocaust.”

Still, vestiges of the Holocaust haunt every footstep in Berlin.

“You can’t put the history out of your mind,” Jacobson says. “There’s an eerie quality when you think about what happened in those same streets. You see brass plaques all over the city – ‘Mr. Goldberg lived here and he died on Auschwitz, 9 September, 1942,’ or whatever. It never lets you go.”

Jacobson says that Germany, of all the countries of Europe, “is doing the most mea culpa/alcheit/atonement, if you want to use the word, for what they have done.

“Every German child must take a course on the Holocaust and must visit the death camps. Germany is also the most friendly toward Israel.”

At the same time, Jacobson avers, there’s much more to Berlin than Holocaust remembrance.

You can also see where the Berlin Wall stood,” he says, “and you can go to the Brandenburg Gate — there’s so much history in Berlin. Yes, the Nazi era and the Holocaust are part of the city’s past, but there’s so much else. Here’s where Napoleon marched in. Here is the home of great composers, great conductors — it’s a beautiful city.”

“When you go to Berlin,” he adds, “there’s Golda Meir Street and a Ben Gurion Street. The double decker tour buses have Israeli flags. Clearly there’s enough of an interest in Israelis and those who speak Hebrew to have that flag out there.

“Most of the audience at the Festival, like its founder, are non-Jews. They come because they love the music.”

Lewandowski himself was an orphan from a small town in Poland who came to Germany and created a magnificent career for himself as a composer and a conductor.

Jacobson says that as a composer, Lewandowski “rates an A-, just below a Mendelssohn, a Wagner, or a Bach. And that’s not bad!”

The Festival weekend is a whirl of rehearsals, concerts, synagogue services touring, and grand meals — all prepared by a kosher caterer, at the finest locales in Berlin. One of the performances takes place at the Rykestrasse Synagogue, an old Reform Synagogue restored by the German government.

For Jacobson, the Festival is a spiritual homecoming, a celebration of the music that gave his life a direction he has followed to this day.

And yet, there is always the spectre of the Shoah.

“When we went on our first big European tour in 1999,” Jacobson says, “we sang in Poland, and we visited some of the concentration camps. There were singers whose families had lost members in those camps. For them, it was very moving. You see certain buildings and you know how they were used during the war.

“You can see us singing at Auschwitz, people crying and hardly able to finish singing ‘By The Rivers of Babylon.’ In a sense, it’s a kind of a victory, saying, ‘We’re back here. We’re not extinguished. We’re making sure that culture wasn’t wiped out.’

“As a people, we have returned without shame.”

Blended Approach to Empowering South Africa's Youth

By Tiffiny Humphries, Project Manager, Community & Individual Development Association

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How do we empower the youth of South Africa to not only become future leaders but also to uplift their communities, provide for their families and pull themselves out of the cycle of poverty?

The Community & Individual Development Association (CIDA) founded the Maharishi Institute (MI) in Johannesburg because we believe that the answer to this question lies in education. Youth unemployment is one of the greatest socio-economic problems facing South Africa, leading to tremendous suffering – crime, violence, abuse of women and children, and societal instability.

South Africa has the third-highest youth unemployment rate in the world. Too many South African youth are not participating in the economy, nor acquiring the skills and work experience they need to assist in driving the economy forward. Not only are youth finding it more and more difficult to secure jobs due to inadequate job opportunities, they lack the skills, work experience, job search abilities and financial resources to find employment. To make matters worse “only 5% of African and colored youth (expressed as a percentage of the 20-24 year-old age group) are succeeding in higher education” while pure distance education programs have only a six percent graduation rate for black students within a five-year period.

While this paints a dismal picture for the youth of South Africa, the good news is that employment rates for university graduates in South Africa are high –  96 percent, according to a recent report. There are jobs available for skilled, educated people.

Thanks to a unique funding model which includes a successful bursary programme developed by CIDA, the Maharishi Institute is able to offer a Bachelor’s Degree in Business Administration (BBA) to disadvantaged youth who would not otherwise have the opportunity to go to university. The degree comes with specializations in various industries – qualifications that are immediately recognized by employers, in high demand, and that can be otherwise expensive to obtain.

Over a 10-year period we have placed 95 to 98 percent of our BBA graduates in jobs within six months of graduation, at salaries that compare favourably to market averages. The graduation rate on average has stabilized at 80 percent.

The Maharishi Institute has found that blended approaches – which combine technology, distance education and contact education together with our unique system of Consciousness-Based Education – are far more effective in helping students graduate successfully and find good jobs.

Our approach focuses primarily on the student rather than just the books or information. It is about connecting whatever the student is learning, with how it relates to them as a person and why it is useful in the world.

With good jobs, young people can provide their families with proper housing, education, and health care – a true empowerment of South African youth.

Between October 27 and December 5, CIDA is participating in the  Skoll Social Entrepreneurs Challenge on CrowdRise.

You Create Your Own Life

2014-11-30-iStockHuffPostredcarcreateyourownlifeNov3020142.jpg
This morning I was writing about negativity and positivity and Isaac Newton’s
Third Law of Motion came to mind.

I know you know it.

‘To every action there is an equal reaction.’

It’s a scientific law in the universe and that law includes every part of your life… from the work you do, to your family, friends and other people and your own opinion of yourself.

You are responsible for your own life. You create your own life. Every thought and word and action that you have also has an equal reaction.

Go Ahead –Test it!

If you’re a kind person, interested in giving to others, helping not hurting, then your actions will have a good affect or good re-action on others and also on you.

If you’re actions are corrupt and disrespectful to others then you’ll absolutely hurt people and hurt yourself as well.

1. Think about it — Who do you know that’s kind and who do you know that’s mean?

2. What is their life like?

3. Which person do you want to be around?

Like attracts like – You choose your attitude

• If you like to fight with people then you attract anger and hostility.

• If you’re thoughtful and generous then good intentions come back to you.

• If you focus on lack — not having certain things, complaining about money, not having work, trying to fool and beat out other people — what do you think you’re attracting?

• If other people treat you badly, say they lie to you, your reaction is not to trust them and to stay away. They’re not friends.

• If you live a kind life, focus on living an abundant life, then you’ll have it because whatever you put your attention to will increase and come into your life.

Think about what you’re putting out to the world and what you’re attracting back.

And — How do you think your actions, thoughts and words, affect your body, mind and heart?

It’s the Karma factor: “What goes around comes around.”

We create our own world. We are responsible for our attitude. That’s the reason you have the reality or the life you are living right now.

If your life stinks you had something to do with it and the opposite is true. If your life is good you had something to do with it.

The important news — you can change your life and change your way of seeing the world at any moment. You can make new choices, different choices, better choices at any time to improve your life in many positive and good ways.

So if misery, pain and coldness work well for you, keep going. OR – make a new choice and go in a new direction. You have the power. You’re in control of your life.

This is not mystical gibberish or double talk. It’s fact! Newton’s fact –

…for every action there is a reaction.

It reminds me of William Ernest Henley’s closing words from his famous poem ‘Invictus’:

‘I am the master of my fate, I am the captain of my soul.’

What he’s saying is this — you are the agent for your life. You are in charge of booking your present and your future journey. You go where you want to. It’s not haphazard — not hit or miss.
It’s your choice. Your destiny is in your own hands. Choose wisely.

Sure — life can be damn hard. It deals you a certain hand and you live with it but… the key is still this:

How do you want to react to life? How do you want to see life? How do you choose to live your life?

If you’re negative… you get negative.

If you’re positive… you get positive.

It’s cause and effect.

We’re all trying to be happy. We all want to lead the very best lives we possibly can —
to live with truth and beauty and love. After all — They’re the three greatest values in life.

Big Sister-To-Be Announces Mom's Pregnancy With Charming To-Do List

When Byron and Daria Brown learned they were expecting their second child, they decided their 1-year-old daughter Alexandria would be the best person to make the big announcement. Dad posted the adorable photo on Reddit.

Wearing the most perfectly festive headband, the toddler poses with a chalkboard checklist in the pregnancy announcement photo. Alexandria’s list includes completed tasks like “enter the world,” “steal hearts,” “learn to crawl,” “learn to walk,” and one final unchecked item — “become a big sister 4/18/15.”

Dad Byron told The Huffington Post in an email that he and his wife “were looking to do something fun” for the announcement and came up with the idea after browsing through options online. While Alexandria isn’t quite old enough to understand what’s going on, the dad said he is “sure she will be excited” when her baby brother is born.

H/T Reddit

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G.url Power

I know the stats. And they are depressing: the gender gap both in compensation (good karma notwithstanding) and participation in executive roles is alive and well. I have spoken on this topic on many panels and will continue to carry this message forward. Among the depressing numbers: for S&P 500 companies, women represent only five percent of CEOs, 15 percent of C-suite roles, and 17 percent of board positions.

At the same time, I feel something big and positive is happening for women now, somethingthat may change that underrepresentation. What used to feel like a collection of dots of voices for empowering women, now feels increasingly connected, like an unstoppable force for social change; it is becoming shameful NOT to change. As a result, I believe we are going to look back at this coming decade as a time ofthe most profound change in cultural and economic attitudes toward women in my lifetime.

Telltale Signs in The Arts

Real social change often finds its root in the arts. The cultural and social movement of The Renaissance was characterized by the secularization of writing and art, as previous political and religious beliefs were challenged. Similarly, the 1960’s is remembered by new music (e.g. The Beatles), films with less censorship, and the emergence of “hippies” (derived from “hipster” in the 1940’s song “Harry the Hipster“).

Music, movies, fashion and media all shape and are shaped by public sentiment. As Abraham Lincoln noted, “Public sentiment is everything. With public sentiment, nothing can fail. Without it nothing can succeed.”

In music, books and movies, women are rebelling against historical stereotypes in gender roles. This is increasingly presented as the fierce, sexy, warrior, owning her own sensuality and vulnerability. Nicki Minaj’s “Anaconda” and Miley’s twerking shocker at the 2013 MTV Music Awards are just a few examples. Taylor Swift’s new album “1989” has a softer version of the same theme.

If Taylor’s “Shake It Off” was a shove to her critics, we heard a younger women’s version from Elsa in “Let it Go” in Disney’s Frozen. She found the power to accept herself and create her own world in exile. With four teen and preteen girls in my own household, I was stunned by the speed and power with which the lyrics of the songs in Frozen were committed to memory and belted from the backseat of carpools.

News media is also playing a role. Check out Megyn Kelly in this interview; it is a great no-nonsense takedown of antiquated perceptions about women as breadwinners. Or what about the statement released this month by Karl Stefanovic, co-host of Australia’s Today? He very effectively made the point about the fashion double standard. While his co-host Lisa Wilkinson has to change outfits everyday, he revealed that he wore the same suit every day for the previous year without notice!

Social Media: Playing A Profound Role

An obvious question is why now? And what is the role of social media in shaping this sentiment at scale? Incredibly, more than 40 percent of content is now consumed via Facebook or Twitter, forwarded with a line or two of sentiment by a friend or follower. This generally invites a response and surfaces hidden communities of like-minded people, increasingly less inhibited to sharing their truths.

We are all increasingly playing both content roles, as creators and consumers, but social media’s role in enabling the voice of women is really a sea change. By contrast, such unfiltered access has been more limited for women in old media, which has historically been controlled by men.

By contrast, the sheer volume of participation and female expression unleashed on the major social networks is having a profound effect. Across the internet, women are much more likely to use Facebook, Pinterest, and Instagram than men are, and participation on Twitter is close to equal weighted across men and women. In my opinion, it is this unleashing of this voice that is changing society.

I see this impact most prevalently on issues of sexual and physical violence against women. Such violence is not new to college campuses, professional sports, or in celebrity contexts, yet the speed and breadth with which it is now being outed through social media is rapidly accelerating…as is public ridicule for institutional apathy, denial and excuses.

For example, when the video was publicly released of Ray Rice knocking his fiancé against the wall and dragging her out of the elevator, outrage spread like wildfire across social and traditional media. Domestic violence in the NFL is sadly not a new issue, yet the Rice video struck an important social chord.

And it was also a video that went viral that proved the undoing of Bill Cosby. In October of 2014, comedian Hannibal Buress referred to Bill Cosby as a rapist in a comedy routine. The video of this performance went viral and it wasn’t long before society began to hear this issue differently. What caused him to use this example in his routine at this moment of time? The allegations against Cosby go back decades.

Similarly, college campuses have been notoriously resistant to shine a light on the issue of student rape.But inspired a video made by Emma, a rape victim at Columbia University, millions of people have now heard her story. This led hundreds of students protested the university’s sexual-assault policies on October 30th, 2014 to stack mattresses at president Lee Bollinger’s doorstep and demand reforms.

Less than one month later, Rolling Stone ran an article about an alleged gang rape as a part of Greek life hazing at the University of Virginia, chronicling the intimidation and cover up pressures faced by the victim in the aftermath as well as tolerance by the university. The story sparked immediate national outrage, ultimately leading to the suspending of all fraternities pending an investigation.

Just as important as these examples is the venom in the backlash against women standing up for themselves. Counter movements such as hacker retaliation actions after spokeswomen for feminism have made comments show that the other side is feeling the heat. Consider the leaked nude photos “Celebgate” in August of this year by 4chan and other sites of more than 500 celebrities, including Jennifer Lawrence, Victoria Justice and others and the threats to Emma Watson after her recent eloquent speech on feminism. These speak to the panic being felt by those that feel threatened by true cultural and economic equality.

G.URLs

Getting to economic equality, in pay and in participation, is much more likely to occur when the culture of society demands it, from the bottom up. When boards and business executives are embarrassed not to have more representation and also embrace Warren Buffett’s opportunity cost message that we are missing out on half of society’s energy and intellect, we will see more acceleration in the numbers.

But women are taking things into their own hands. TechCrunch recently ran an article called “40 over 40.” What caught my eye here wasn’t that the most successful founders start their businesses at the age of 40 or older, but rather than 18 of the 40 on the TechCrunch list are women. That’s 45 percent!

By contrast, it will likely take the Fortune 500 a very long time to get to equal representation of women in C-level roles and serving on boards, primarily because board and executive team sizes are not expanding. In other words, it is largely a zero-sum game and turnover in such roles is very slow.

However, in most industries, the surest way to create major and lasting value is not through market share, but by expanding or creating new markets. That’s what women are doing to the stats by starting their own businesses.

For every new business that is started, a new URL is born.

It is hard to put a finger on where this momentum started. There have been many signals along the way. But what seems to be changing now, is that these signals are coming much faster, with more frequency, and from a much broader base, as society’s views change. Social media is giving women a voice to tell their stories on a massive scale.

I find inspiration and hope in voices like that of 17-year Malala Yousafzai, recipient of the 2014 Nobel Peace Prize: “Why shall I wait for someone else? … Why don’t I raise my voice? Why don’t we speak up for our rights?” While many obstacles remain, we all have to join this chorus if we want to keep this momentum going for the betterment of our girls.

Sue can be found on Twitter @suedecker and the entire article with more detailed references and links is on DeckPosts.net.