She Can Wear What She Wants Because She Lives in a Free Country Called India

“Girls should not wear provocative clothes.”

“Tight clothes and jeans cause rape.”

“Good Indian girls cover up.”

“She was a bit of a loose character anyway.”

“Cellphones in the hands of women is what is causing trouble.”

If you live in India, chances are you have heard the above lines. Despite all the increased attention and deliberations on crimes against women, this “it-was-kind-of-her-fault” narrative refuses to die down. It is not just limited to ordinary citizens. We have had people in power make similar statements. Many religious organization heads believe the same, as do large sections of the police force. Sure, feminists scream and, with media outrage, shut down such people. However, deep down, the beliefs remain.

In fact, it’s not just men; a lot of Indian women believe the same too. Many Indian women also think and sometimes say, “Why does she have to wear skimpy clothes?” or “Why did she have to go watch a movie late at night?”

“It is much easier to assume that the victim somehow is different from the women around me.”

The important question is: Why do such attitudes prevail? Why do so many of our citizens believe women not behaving in a certain way are asking for trouble or are not “good girls”? What is the core fundamental issue here? More importantly, how do we convince them to think otherwise — that what a woman chooses to wear is her choice and that it’s important for society to protect that choice.

For the extreme feminist outrage isn’t working. Until we engage with all sides, no matter how regressive their attitude, we will never make a breakthrough in attitudes towards women.

So why do many Indians think this way in the first place? Two main reasons: the first is it acts as a coping mechanism. Rape is a devastating occurrence. It is unnerving to believe that all women are at risk. It is much easier to assume that the victim somehow is different from the women around me. It is somewhat comforting to believe that if my daughter or sister dresses a certain way or behaves in a certain manner, they will not be susceptible. It gives a scared person a sense of control, a fake reassurance.

“It is much easier to scream at your daughter for wearing a tight pair of jeans.”

However, the reality is that how a women dresses has little correlation with rape. What matters often are men’s attitudes towards women, the kind of law enforcement system in place and a certain understanding of sexuality in society at-large. Of course, the regressive mindset finds dealing with all this far too complex and out of its control. It is much easier to scream at your daughter for wearing a tight pair of jeans.

The second reason why women are asked to cover up is to deny them their sexual power.

Various kinds of power exist in society. We all know about political and economic power. Another example is power of the pen, which I use here, to make my points across to you. There is a primitive form of power called muscle power, where one can physically harm the other person. Males have been granted more muscle power than women on average. Women, on the other hand, have been granted a certain sexual power. Through that sexual power, a woman can come across as attractive to a man, who will then need her consent to take things forward. This sexual power counterbalances the extra muscle power given to males.

“A woman has a certain sexual power, and she has the right to use it if she chooses to.”

However, most male-dominated societies have denied and judged women who try to use this power. When we ask women to cover up, we deny them their choice in expressing their power. Therein lies the inequality. We never say men should have their hands tied up when they go on the streets, to check their muscle power, so that they cannot molest a woman. However, we have no qualms in saying a woman better cover up if she doesn’t want to be molested. Therein lies an inherent biased attitude against women. It is denying women their free will, with no equivalent penalty for men. What’s worse, in the case of an untoward incident, it lets the offender off the hook and questions the victim instead.

That is why this attitude must change. A woman has the right to aim to look attractive walking down the street. And a man, no matter how immensely and inexplicably attracted to her he is, has to seek her consent before he can infringe on her personal space. Hence, a woman has a certain sexual power, and she has the right to use it if she chooses to.

The regressive side will then often ask the automatic question, “Like all powers, can’t the woman abuse that power? Can’t she entice, hook, tease or give mixed signals to a man if we give her that free will?” The answer is yes. Yes, she can abuse that power to a certain extent, though that tends to be the exception. And if that happens, you cannot act without consent and say she was asking for it. Lack of consent is unjustifiable in any circumstance, period.

We have to make all our men and women understand these concepts. Outrage won’t help. Sensitivity to women’s issues will come from educating our broad population about power, individual rights and free will. Meanwhile, she can and she will wear whatever she wants. Not because she is modern or inspired by the West or has corrupted her values. It is simply because she is a free citizen living in a free country called India. And don’t you dare try to deny her that.

Dolby is launching its super-vivid IMAX competitor in the Netherlands

Dolby has just announced a huge new project, but it’s not about audio as you’d expect — it’s about the upcoming launch of its IMAX competitor called Dolby Cinema. This giant screen format will be able to project movies using the “Dolby Vision” techn…

Meet Bruma, A Photogenic Dog That REALLY Knows How To Work The Camera

This dog takes the role of “man’s best friend” to the next level.

Since 2012, Spanish photographer Dani de los Muros has been photographing his 5-year-old dog, Bruma, and posting the shots on Instagram. Not only does Bruma, a Weimaraner, strike hilarious and adorable poses, but de los Muros says he and Bruma get along very well, especially when the camera starts clicking.

“Everything is a game for her. I have never had a dog before so I don’t know so much about training, I think it’s just a good agreement together,” de los Muros told The Huffington Post. “She always comes with me and we travel together, and that’s why she is very patient and loving. I’ve been very lucky.”

He added that it’s hard to choose a favorite photo, but that he finds the photos of his nephew and Bruma particularly touching.

“He’s [a] very beautiful boy [and] Bruma is very patient with me when we are taking photos,” de los Muros said.

Check out a few more pictures of Bruma below, and visit Instagram to see even more adorable images.

Llegó el frío… ❄️ Toca abrigarse bien! A sonreír que es viernes!! Buen fin de semana!

A photo posted by Dani de los Muros (@danidlm) on Nov 11, 2013 at 12:09am PST

Vampiro!! Hoy a Bruma le ha mordido un murciélago muy grande y la noto un poco rara, que será? Feliz noche!!

A photo posted by Dani de los Muros (@danidlm) on Oct 10, 2014 at 11:42am PDT

H/T Design Taxi

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<i>The Double</i> and the Christmas Holidays

[NOTE TO EDITORS: PLEASE ADD HUFFPOST BLOGGER JASON APUZZO AS CO-AUTHOR]

Do you feel like you’re turning into a different person over the holidays? How about your fellow citizens – do they appear to be morphing into unrecognizable automata? The holidays can do that to you – especially in Los Angeles. It’s a time when people get consumed with travel schedules, holiday parties, frenzied “gifting,” and trying to keep up with the Kardashians – and forget to act like real human beings.

Just this past week we saw a grown man bark at a Starbucks barista because his eggnog latte wasn’t hot enough, soccer moms body-check each other grabbing at Target discount wreaths, and senior citizens hydroplane in a Mercedes while trying to grab a parking spot at a rainy mall.

Fellow citizens, enough is enough. Get some perspective – before you become ersatz human beings even your nearest and dearest wouldn’t recognize.

This is where indie cinema can offer some timely lessons on the perils of modern dehumanization. One of our favorite films at the Sundance Film Festival earlier this year was The Double, starring Jesse Eisenberg and written and directed by Richard Ayoade. Currently out on DVD and VOD, the film is one of the smartest adaptations yet of Fyodor Dostoevsky’s The Double, the seminal novella of modern alienation.

Jesse Eisenberg plays Simon James, a meek office drone toiling away in a retro-futuristic dystopia of grimy office buildings and gray apartment flats. The bleak settings owe much to Terry Gilliam’s Brazil and George Orwell’s 1984, while Simon’s character recalls Anthony Perkins’ persecuted office worker in Orson Welles’ adaptation of Kafka’s The Trial.

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The hapless, ineffectual Simon loves a fellow office worker, Hannah (Mia Wasikowska), but he is completely unable to assert himself with her or with his co-workers – indeed, at times he is barely able to make it out of the office elevator. For this he is treated as if he is of little more consequence than the paint on the dingy office walls.

A wrench is thrown in the works one day when Simon is introduced to a new co-worker: a fellow named James Simon (also played by Eisenberg) who strangely enough, looks exactly like him. In personality, however, James is the opposite of Simon – smooth, assertive, full of charm and slick maneuvering. In short order, James takes credit for Simon’s work, double-crosses him with his boss, and starts putting moves on the lovely Hannah before Simon’s horrified eyes.

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Making matters worse, no one seems to notice the striking similarity between Simon and James – something that infuriates poor Simon. James taunts Simon by stealing more and more of his life, eventually driving Simon to take desperate measures before a final, surreal denouement.

The story of The Double is a parable of how people can get caught up in the hamster wheel of modern existence – cowed by authority, hierarchy, and external standards of worth into trying to please everyone around them, while not pleasing the most important person they have to live with: themselves.

Surrounded by materialistic, selfish co-workers, Simon initially makes the mistake of adopting their standards and losing sight of who he is. In trying to fit into the absurd confines of a cookie-cutter existence, he squashes his own individuality. Through a metaphysical twist, however, Simon’s punishment for this self-betrayal is to be hounded by a wilier, craftier double of himself – until he finally learns to stand up and fight back.

Interestingly enough, The Double isn’t the only movie this year to deal with these themes. Enemy, starring Jake Gyllenhaal and directed by Denis Villeneuve, depicts a lonely professor, Adam Bell, who encounters his doppelganger, an actor named Anthony Clair (both played by Gyllenhaal). Caught up in a web of competitiveness and mutual jealousy, the two men attempt to destroy each other’s lives. Based on José Saramago’s 2002 novel The Double, Enemy is a timely allegory of the kind of alienation that can result from losing sight of fundamental human values.

So as we head into the holidays, remember: it’s not about what you have, how much you spend, how perfectly wrapped your gifts are, or where you need to be in fifteen minutes. It’s about taking time to reflect, appreciating the company of those around you, and giving back to the universe through acts of kindness and generosity.

As the classic Frank Capra movie says, you can’t take it with you – so enjoy the holidays and take the time to be a real human being.

Now please excuse us as we grab that last parking spot …

Protest Of Chokehold Death Turns Violent In Berkeley

NEW YORK (AP) — Protests of a grand jury’s decision not to indict a white police officer in the chokehold death of an unarmed black man continued around the country, and authorities said a march in California turned violent when masked demonstrators smashed windows and threw objects at police.

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A Berkeley police officer received hospital treatment for a shoulder injury, while another sustained minor injuries after some of the protesters threw rocks and other projectiles, spokeswoman officer Jenn Coats said.

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She said several businesses were looted and damaged during the march, and officers attempting to get the crowd do disperse used tear gas. There have been no reports of any arrests.

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berkeley

Thousands of demonstrators have protested peacefully in New York and elsewhere since the announcement Wednesday that a grand jury would not indict a white officer in the death of Eric Garner, a black man who gasped “I can’t breathe” while he was being arrested for selling loose, untaxed cigarettes. The decision closely followed a Missouri grand jury’s choice not to indict a white officer in the fatal shooting of Michael Brown, an unarmed black 18-year-old.

The scope of the demonstrations and the lack of violence were moving to Garner’s mother and widow, they said Saturday.

“It is just so awesome to see how the crowds are out there,” said Eric Garner’s mother, Gwen Carr, who added that she ended up stuck in her car after protests shut down traffic.

“I was just so proud of that crowd,” Carr said. “It just warmed my heart.”

Garner’s widow, Esaw Garner, said she saw demonstrators from her apartment window and told her son, “Look at all the love that your father’s getting.”

Officers have said the outcry over the grand jury decision has left them feeling betrayed and demonized by everyone from the president and the mayor to throngs of protesters who scream at them on the street.

“Police officers feel like they are being thrown under the bus,” said Patrick Lynch, president of the police union.

Garner’s family members joined the Rev. Al Sharpton later Saturday as Sharpton laid a wreath at the site on Staten Island where Garner died July 17 in a confrontation that started when police tried to arrest him.

An amateur video seen by millions showed Garner gasping, “I can’t breathe” during the fatal encounter.

“All we’re concerned about is justice from the police,” said Garner’s stepfather, Benjamin Carr, who wore a T-shirt with the words, “Enough is enough.”

Protests continued in New York City for a fourth day with several dozen people lying down on the floor of Grand Central Terminal and marching into stores in Times Square. There were no reports of arrests.

Protests have also been held in Philadelphia, Chicago, Miami, Las Vegas and a number of other cities.

In Seattle, several hundred people marched downtown to police headquarters Saturday. Authorities said a group then split off from the main protest and tried to get onto a roadway. Police say some protesters threw rocks at officers who blocked them from entering it. Seven were arrested.

Sharpton announced plans this week for a march in Washington, D.C., next Saturday to protest the killings of Garner, Brown and others and to press for change at the federal level.

Typhoon Churns Across Philippines, 1 Million Evacuated

By Rosemarie Francisco and Manuel Mogato

MANILA, Dec 7 (Reuters) – A powerful typhoon plowed through the central Philippines on Sunday, bringing howling winds that toppled trees and power poles and cut off communications with areas where thousands were killed by a massive storm just over a year ago.

More than 1 million people had fled to shelters away from coastal areas and landslide-prone villages by the time Typhoon Hagupit made landfall on Saturday night, in what a U.N. agency said was one of the world’s biggest peacetime evacuations.

As the storm barrelled in from the Pacific, power was cut across most of the eastern island of Samar and nearby Leyte province, including Tacloban City, considered ground zero of the devastating super typhoon Haiyan last year.

“I can’t penetrate the areas, I can’t go north or south because of fallen trees and power lines. Many areas are flooded,” Ben Evardone, congressman for Eastern Samar, said from his base in the provincial capital Borongan.

Local radio reported at least two people were killed in Eastern Samar, that could not be confirmed by officials. The Philippine Red Cross said they were also verifying the report.

Hagupit had weakened to a category 3 storm, two notches below “super typhoon,” when it hit land, but still brought torrential rain and the risk of potentially disastrous storm surges of up to 4.5 meters (15 ft).

“This storm is still very strong, it could bring massive devastation,” said weather forecaster Alvin Pura.

The eye of the typhoon was located 70 km (45 miles) northwest of Catbalogan, Samar, after slamming into the town of Dolores, in Eastern Samar, on Saturday night.

After churning across Samar island overnight, it was expected to make a second landfall on the island of Masbate around 10 a.m. (0200 GMT) on Sunday, the Philippine weather bureau PAGASA said.

“There were areas that experienced storm surges,” said Science and Technology Secretary Mario Montejo, adding the agency was verifying the exact height of the waves.

Hagupit was moving west northwest at 15 kph (9 mph), bringing winds of up to 160 kph (99 mph) near the center and gusts of up to 195 kph (121 mph).

The weather bureau said Hagupit – which means “lash” in Filipino – maintained its projected path towards Masbate, Romblon and Oriental Mindoro provinces, slightly north of areas devastated by super typhoon Haiyan last year and missing the capital Manila.

Residents of low-lying villages and landslide-prone areas had been evacuated to schools, civic centers, town halls, gyms and churches, the national disaster agency said.

There were more than 1.2 million people crowding over 1,500 evacuation centers across central Philippines, said Gwendolyn Pang, secretary general of the Philippine Red Cross, adding local governments were providing the evacuees’ basic needs.

But there were worries on sanitation and the impact on health of the evacuees in cramped spaces especially in urban areas.

“The critical issue is in evacuation centers where there is a high number of evacuees,” said Social Work Secretary Corazon Soliman. “We are concerned that the congestion will cause more threat on health.”

Environment and humanitarian groups are hoping the typhoon would spur action at U.N. climate talks in Lima, where almost 200 nations are meeting to work out an accord to slow global warming, due at a summit in Paris in a year’s time.

“My country is under water, farms have been wiped away, homes destroyed, families separated,” Shubert Ciencia of the Philippine Rural Reconstruction Movement and a member of global relief organization Oxfam, said in Lima.

“Nobody should have to live under the threat of destruction year after year. But we want action, not pity. Negotiators have a chance to make history by standing up for those who have already lost so much and the millions more who will suffer the same fate unless we act now,” Ciencia said.

An Oxfam report in November showed Asia is highly vulnerable to increasingly severe and frequent weather extremes and woefully underprepared to manage growing crises.

(Reporting by Rosemarie Francisco and Manny Mogato in Manila and Alister Doyle in Lima)

Why the Sierra Club Can't Be Silent

During the past week, the Sierra Club has spoken out about Michael Brown in Ferguson, Eric Garner in New York City, and President Obama’s executive action on immigration. Some have told us that they consider these to be “non-environmental” issues. Here are some quick thoughts on why these issues are so important to address. I’ll share more later this week.

The Sierra Club believes that all people deserve a healthy planet with clean air and water and a stable climate. All people also deserve equal protection under the law and the right to live their lives free of discrimination and hatred. These issues are not separate. Indeed, we believe that working toward a just, equitable, and transparent society is not only morally necessary but also exactly what we need to confront the unprecedented environmental challenges we face.

Injustices in our political system and in our culture empower polluters and lead to the destruction of our most cherished places. Those same injustices often breed hatred, sow division among us, and threaten our health and safety. The Sierra Club’s mission is to “enlist humanity” to explore, enjoy, and protect the planet. That mission, which applies to everyone, cannot be achieved when people’s rights are being violated and their safety and dignity are being threatened on a routine basis. This must stop.

That is why we must speak out on these issues. As Martin Luther King, Jr. said, “In the End, we will remember not the words of our enemies, but the silence of our friends.”

Energy Firms In Secretive Alliance With Attorneys General

The letter to the Environmental Protection Agency from Attorney General Scott Pruitt of Oklahoma carried a blunt accusation: Federal regulators were grossly overestimating the amount of air pollution caused by energy companies drilling new natural gas wells in his state.

After Exodus, The New Republic Cancels Its Next Issue

The New Republic magazine said on Saturday that it would not publish its next issue, but would return to newsstands in February next year, after dozens of its top editors and contributors resigned in the face of a leadership change.

Nationwide Protests Condemning Police Brutality Continue With No End In Sight

Demonstrations continued Saturday night in New York City and across the country, as protesters raised their hands and voices to decry abusive police tactics in light of the growing number of unarmed black men who have been killed by police officers.

Picketers swarmed New York City’s Grand Central Terminal and Times Square, four nights after a Staten Island grand jury decided not to indict white police officer Daniel Pantaleo for the chokehold death of Eric Garner, and not quite two weeks after a Missouri grand jury refused to indict Ferguson police officer Darren Wilson for the shooting death of Michael Brown.

The protesters were also out honoring 28-year-old Brooklyn dad Akai Gurley, whose somber funeral was held Saturday, after he was shot dead by a NYPD officer on Nov. 20 in a Brooklyn public housing project stairwell.

Riled up demonstrators flocked into the aisles of the Times Square Toys “R” Us, picking up plastic guns from the shelves in a nod to the toy pellet gun that 12-year-old Tamir Rice was holding when a rookie officer fatally shot him in Cleveland on Nov. 22.

“We want all people treated equally,” Manhattan resident Taylor Azure said.

Earlier in the day, about 50 supporters gathered at the Louis H. Pink Houses in Brooklyn, where Gurley was shot to death. “The cops are supposed to be there to help us, but instead they’re killing us,” Rosetta Jordan, 65, told The Huffington Post.

Passionate protests also played out across the U.S.: In Davidson, N.C., more than 200 people interrupted a Christmas event by sprawling out on the ground in a street, an increasingly-common protest tactic known as a “die in.” A similar demonstration was held in Tampa.

Protesters gathered outside a Seattle police station.

In Los Angeles and Salt Lake City, protesters of all races flooded streets and public spaces, calling for fair and equal treatment from police.

In California, protesters shut down a major San Francisco transportation center and marchers filled Berkeley streets.

Even in Anchorage, Alaska protesters marched holding signs on snow-covered thoroughfares.

In Cleveland, angry demonstrators expressed fury about the death of 12-year-old Rice. And in Phoenix, protesters decried the shooting death of Rumain Brisbon, yet another unarmed black man who was killed, this time after a police officer mistook a pill bottle for a gun on Dec. 2.

Tensions have been running high throughout the country after it was revealed that Wilson would not be indicted for killing Brown in Ferguson, Missouri. Protests in Ferguson were at times violent, but most other cities have held almost entirely peaceful demonstrations — with cries of “Hands up, don’t shoot,” “I can’t breathe,” and “Black lives matter,” richocheting from coast to coast.