German Kindergartens To Report Parents For Refusing Vaccine Advice Under New Law

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Germany will pass a law next week obliging kindergartens to inform the authorities if parents fail to provide evidence that they have received advice from their doctor on vaccinating their children, the health ministry said on Friday.

Parents refusing the advice risk fines of up to 2,500 euros ($2,800) under the law expected to come into force on June 1.

Vaccination rules are being tightened across Europe, where a decline in immunization, has caused a spike in diseases such as measles, chicken pox and mumps, according to the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC).

“Nobody can be indifferent to the fact that people are still dying of measles,” German health minister Hermann Groehe told Bild newspaper. “That’s why we are tightening up regulations on vaccination.”

Italy made vaccination compulsory this month after health officials warned that a fall-off in vaccination rates had triggered a measles epidemic, with more than 2,000 cases there this year, almost ten times the number in 2015.

Lack of public trust in vaccines has become an important global health issue. Experts say negative attitudes may be due to fears over suspected side-effects and hesitancy among some doctors.

In 10 European countries, cases of measles, which can cause blindness and encephalitis, had doubled in number in the first two months of 2017 compared to the previous year, the ECDC said last month.

That is leading to greater activism among parents and public health officials. Last week, a German court ruled that a father could insist that his child be vaccinated over the objections of the child’s mother because it was in the child’s interest.

 

(Reporting by Thomas Escritt; Editing by Louise Ireland)

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U.S. Lawmakers Call On Russia To End Alleged Killings Of Gay Men In Chechnya

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A bipartisan group of House representatives called on Russia’s government to condemn the alleged persecution of gay men in the country’s Chechnya region with a resolution this week.  

H. Res. 351, which is co-sponsored by Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R-Fla.) and was introduced Wednesday, called on Russian President Vladimir Putin to investigate the troubling claims of abuse and murder of gay men in Chechnya.

The claims initially emerged in April when a Russian opposition newspaper, Novaya Gazeta, reported that at least 100 men had been detained “in connection with their nontraditional sexual orientation.” Three of those men, the report found, had possibly been killed.

A second Novaya Gazeta article, published April 4, cited a source who claimed that the Muslim-majority region’s anti-LGBTQ efforts included Nazi-style concentration camps.

Ros-Lehtinen, whose son identifies as transgender, said U.S. lawmakers “must pressure Russia to uphold its international commitment to prevent any further abuses from happening while perpetrators are brought to justice” in a statement. “For over a month, hundreds of gay or perceived to be gay Chechens have been arrested, many have been tortured, and some even killed,” she said. “This bipartisan resolution sends a clear message to Chechnya and Russia authorities and any oppressor that the U.S. will not stand idly while these human rights atrocities are being committed.”  

No word yet on how Russia will respond to the resolution. The Novaya Gazeta reports have been repeatedly dismissed by Chechnya’s leader, Ramzan Kadyrov. “You cannot arrest or repress people who just don’t exist in the republic,” Kadyrov’s spokesman, Alvi Karimov, is quoted by The New York Times as saying. 

Ros-Lehtinen was joined by 52 other representatives from both the Democratic and Republican parties as co-sponsors of H. Res. 351. The resolution passed in the House Foreign Affairs Committee Wednesday by a unanimous voice vote. 

In a statement, Rep. Eliot L. Engel (D-NY) called reports of the alleged torture “chilling,” and noted, “We are witnessing the unfolding of a horrific tragedy and it’s long past time that the Kremlin start protecting its own citizens—all of them—regardless of sexual orientation.” Putin, he added, must “respect and promote the dignity of all persons and provide safe haven for all those fleeing such horrific persecution.”

Elected officials and celebrities such as Ellen DeGeneres, Matt Bomer and Billy Eichner have spoken out against the allegations in the weeks since the news first broke. The resolution itself follows U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley’s push for an investigation into the Chechen abuse claims, which she called a “violation of human rights.”

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Ivanka Trump Is Not To Blame For Her Dad's Terrible Policies

WASHINGTON ― As President Donald Trump unveiled a budget proposal this week that progressive groups have deemed the worst for women in a generation, his older daughter offered a consolation prize.

Ivanka Trump had worked for months to tuck a paid maternity leave policy into the federal spending plan. Alongside the massive proposed cuts to safety net programs that many women rely on, the policy was quickly labeled a “cruel joke.” Still, no other White House has gone this far.

That the measure is broader than what Donald Trump suggested on the campaign trail ― it also covers fathers and adoptive parents ― is notable. That it was proposed despite clear opposition to any kind of paid leave mandate from House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) and the GOP shows a willingness to buck party desires. That it originated from a right-wing, male-dominated administration demonstrated that Ivanka indeed has some influence inside White House walls.

And yet, the inclusion of a paid leave policy in the budget hasn’t won Ivanka much, if any, goodwill across the aisle. If anything, the proposal seems to have made her more of a target for progressives, who continue to blame her for her father’s worst impulses and initiatives.

“As far as I’m concerned, this is a budget that she now is responsible for,” said Planned Parenthood president Cecile Richards. “She’s responsible for all women’s issues. And this is the most outrageous attack on women, women’s rights, women’s access to health care, that we’ve seen from any president.”

“Ivanka is not simply tolerant of her father’s blathering radicalism, let alone nobly embattled by it; she is an active proponent and beneficiary of the outrageous robbery her family is perpetrating against those they purportedly serve,” charged feminist writer Lindy West in a Guardian column this week. “Come on. She loves it.”

“Reminder: Ivanka is not your champion, or your moderating influence on her despicable father,” tweeted actor Wil Wheaton. “She is complicit, and as evil as any of them.”

Ivanka-blaming is a passion among the president’s critics. It started during his campaign, when she was presented (by herself and her father) as a moderating influence. At the time, those skeptical about Donald Trump desperately hoped that Ivanka’s cosmopolitan, socially liberal sensibilities would move him in genuinely progressive directions on environmental policy, women’s issues and LGBTQ rights. Those hopes were fueled, at first, by his often-bizarre infatuation with his daughter, and then heightened when he made her a senior adviser. 

But that fantasy hasn’t panned out, which has engendered both disappointment among the wishful thinkers and a flood of I-told-you-so rejoinders from those who thought the expectation was ridiculous in the first place.

Ivanka-blaming has also become an overly simplistic way to express fury over White House policies in general. It’s possible that Ivanka is fully complicit in shaping the president’s agenda and just pretending to be a moderate voice to protect her own brand. It’s also possible that she has limited powers as an adviser, little to no policy knowledge in the areas she covers, and zero political experience in a White House stacked with right-wing men who’ve spent careers in Washington.

Donald Trump is, and remains, Donald Trump ― a man who called women dogs and pigs, bragged about grabbing women “by the pussy,” and said that when he comes home from work and dinner isn’t ready, he “goes through the roof.” That he gave his daughter a post in the White House in no way guaranteed that he was going to take direction from her. It also didn’t negate the fact that he is a wild card with his own opinions, thoughts and instincts.

In truth, we know very little about what Ivanka has and hasn’t tried to do in the White House. What we do know is fairly broad. She and her husband, Jared Kushner, have “frequently tried to blunt Trump’s riskier impulses,” according to The Washington Post. They have notably failed to intervene at certain crucial moments ― like the firing of FBI Director James Comey ― but Ivanka claims she is picking her battles and regularly challenges her father, even if it doesn’t always work. 

I’ll go to the mat on certain issues and I may still lose those,” she recently told The New York Times. “But maybe along the way I’ve modified a position just slightly. And that’s just great.”

Those who despaired over Trump’s election needed a vehicle for hope and turned to her. Advocates imagined that she’d swoop in, whisper something about Planned Parenthood into her father’s ear, and convince him to go against the multiple anti-abortion advocates he had already placed in his administration. They imagined that she’d sit down with dad over dinner, explain the harms of rising carbon levels, and persuade him to remain in the Paris climate pact. They concocted scenarios of her tip-toeing into the Oval Office after Vice President Mike Pence had left and explaining to her father that, in fact, religious freedom laws endanger social progress on gay rights and thus win out over the veep.  

As an adviser to the president with the benefit of a close personal connection, Ivanka has certainly disappointed. She is a self-proclaimed feminist, but her speeches and writings on “women’s empowerment” have been narrow and low on substance. She has been notably absent from Washington during intense legislative battles, like when she went skiing during the health care debate. Her Instagram feed, filled with trips to museums and high-profile events, suggests that she isn’t exactly putting in the insane office hours that senior advisers traditionally do. And aside from her (inadequate) paid leave plan, she has won no apparent victories for women or the environment so far. (The decision whether to stay in the Paris accord remains TBD.)

But to blame Ivanka for the entirety of the dumpster fire that has been her father’s presidency is misdirected anger. When Trump proposes defunding Planned Parenthood, it’s far more likely that he has been influenced by his vice president and dozens of anti-abortion advisers. Or that he’s basically forfeited domestic policy to Pence entirely, since that was reportedly what he’d always planned to do.

Many have argued that Ivanka could stand up for her own values and become “a national hero” by publicly denouncing some of her father’s moves. But where, exactly, would that leave her? She’d have publicly admonished her dad while giving up any potential sway she had over him and his future policies. No such expectations were put on past presidential advisers. Nobody demanded that Valerie Jarrett ditch Barack Obama when she disagreed with something he did. 

Ivanka herself has said that she intends to be private in her advice. In April, she urged people “not to conflate lack of public denouncement with silence.”

Her critics haven’t done that. They have perhaps fairly blamed her for giving some of her father’s policies the type of moderate, sensible veneer they don’t deserve ― it’s why “Saturday Night Live” mocks her as “complicit.” 

We don’t know enough, however, to blame Ivanka for all her dad’s decisions. It’s unclear what she’s tried to do behind the scenes. What we do know is that, as senior adviser to the president, she isn’t up for the job and shouldn’t have been hired in the first place.

But maybe, just maybe, Trump’s policies are his own fault. 

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Qualcomm pays BlackBerry $940 million in royalty spat

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Darth Vader Helmet Armchair: The Dark Side of the Furniture

This Darth Vader armchair is the perfect chair for anyone who is allied with the Dark Side and wants to show it. Emperor Palpatine probably has one just like it in his office that he makes Vader sit in when they’re having meetings.

From the front it just looks like a modern black chair, cool but nothing super special. But from the back it is all Darth Vader. I think it should have a button that makes Vader’s breathing sound, but sadly it doesn’t.

Its maker, DSDStudio plans on making just 10 of these, so that is all that will ever exist. Don’t get excited about having one in your office or living room just yet though, because it will cost you $11,999.99(USD). And then there’s the small problem of having one shipped from Russia.


[via Internet Vs Wallet]

The 30 best YouTube channels you’ve never heard of (2017)

YouTube has been around a long while, so long, in fact, that you’ve probably developed an impression of it that’s a bit obsolete. Once the bastion of cat videos and fail compilations, YouTube has developed into a platform with some seriously great content — including series and shows with production and writing quality that’ll rival anything you see on TV. … Continue reading

Five Ways Montana Did The Resistance Proud

Sure a guy who lied to his constituents about the healthcare bill, has financial ties to Russia and body slammed a reporter just won a Congressional seat. That’s infuriating. It’s depressing. And, frankly, it’s tempting to allow it to become discouraging. However, Montana Democrats should be proud of what they accomplished…and not just in an “at least you tried” kind of way. There are some major accomplishments of note that we could all benefit from focusing on in the weeks and months ahead.

The Redness – It would have been all too easy for Montanans to dismiss this as a long shot and phone in their efforts. How red is this state? Montana went for Trump by 20 points. In fact, Montana has voted for EVERY Republican candidate for President but two since 1952 (Clinton in ‘92 and Johnson in ‘64). To even have a reasonable shot at making this happen, their Democrats statewide had to have an extraordinary amount of faith and that is not easy to come by in politics.

The Scope – Unlike most Congressional races, this was not a local district seat. This was actually a statewide race. And unlike a governor’s race that usually involves two years of preparation and groundwork, Montana had only a few months to pull everything together. Thousands of volunteers, organizers, field captains, phone bankers, data analysts and community leaders assembled with a candidate, a message, a plan and statewide outreach in record time and outperformed most Presidential machines from the last six decades.

The Rally – Quist is perhaps not a candidate that some Americans picture in Congress. A folk singer with a mustache and a cowboy hat, it would be easy to fall into a pattern of cynicism and ridicule him as not being formidable or serious. But the differing factions from the 2016 cycle came together for this race and rallied behind Quist as a singular band of Progressives and Independents. Even when Quist inevitably hit a few rough media cycles, his supporters did not grumble or waver, and their unified focus on the bigger mission paid off.

The Values – Quist is a pro-choice man who supports access to healthcare and rights for the LGBTQ community….in Montana. It would have been SO easy for him to whittle away at his progressive platform in an attempt to appear more moderate. We’re witnessing more experienced Democrats struggle with that very issue. Instead, Rob Quist made the decision not to run as a Democrat representing the interests a narrow group. Instead, he proudly ran a campaign that championed the ideals of Progressive values that impact a wide intersection of different people and that is ultimately what the resistance is fighting for.

The Swing, the swing, the swing… – This cannot be said often or loudly enough. Montana’s Congressional District went from 20-point underdogs to being within SIX POINTS of an actual win. If other Congressional districts move the needle HALF that much, Democrats will pick up dozens of seats. To quote President Bill Clinton, “That’s just math.” Republicans may be celebrating a win for the public to see, but GOP insiders are already huddling to address a serious problem they see for 2018. This race shouldn’t have been close and they know it. They were able to dump millions of dollars of PAC money and fly Trump surrogates to the state because it was the only game in town, but they cannot defend hundreds of seats all at once as aggressively. Montana served as a warning shot and the message that the resistance is coming for them was received.

So what now? After taking our collective breath and getting some much-needed rest, there are two more critical battles on the horizon in South Carolina and Georgia. The area covered is much smaller, the political landscape is more favorable and we still have a few weeks to make things happen. If you’re tempted to sit these races out, consider the fact that multiple sources are saying that losses of these seats would likely cause Republicans to shift course and protect their seats…even if it means abandoning Ryan’s healthcare plan and the human Trump shield they have formed.

The stakes are high and, contrary to what some are saying, momentum is on our side. Get to work on these campaigns as much as you can and don’t abandon the efforts you’re building to creating a wave of change next year.

Oh, and one more thing: 2018 is coming for Gianforte too so don’t forget Montana in all of the excitement. I guarantee they’ll be there ready for the next fight.

#Resist

Shawna Vercher is a leading political media strategist and President of the Democracy Legacy organization. Reach out to find out more ways you can get involved and support your issues and candidates.

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Global Warming Is On Pace To Cause Many Sleepless Nights By 2099, Study Finds

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Nick Obradovich couldn’t sleep. It was October 2015, and a surprise heat wave sent thermometers across San Diego soaring 7 degrees Fahrenheit above average. The window air-conditioning unit in his living room wasn’t powerful enough to cool the bedroom. So the climate impact researcher lay on top of his sheets, fixated on the idea that global warming could forecast many more nights like that one.

Turns out that may be the case. Surges in nighttime temperatures correspond with an increase in self-reported nights of restless and insufficient sleep, according to a study Obradovich published Friday in the journal Science Advances.

“Human sleep relies on ambient temperature for its regulation,” Obradovich, now a postdoctoral fellow at Harvard University’s John F. Kennedy School of Government, told HuffPost by phone this week. “When that ambient temperature is unusually warm, when it’s not expected to be, that can predict disruption in sleep patterns.”

To test his theory, he and three other researchers compared U.S. responses from 765,000 people surveyed by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention between 2002 and 2011 to local weather data. On hotter-than-normal nights, more people said they struggled to fall or stay asleep.

That bodes ill for the future: Temperatures are forecast to rise more than 3.5 degrees Fahrenheit above pre-industrial levels by the end of the century as burning fossil fuels, industrial farms and deforestation emit more planet-warming gases into the atmosphere. An increase that large would yield catastrophic results as ice caps melt and glaciers retreat. Antarctic ice melt alone could send sea levels surging by up to 49 feet by 2500, a study released in March 2016 found.

Lack of sleep is linked to heart disease, obesity and mental health diseases. In the more immediate term, sleep deprivation impairs motor and cognitive functions and leads to rash behavior, so it makes sense that poor sleep patterns hurt job performance. Sleeplessness costs the U.S. economy about $411 billion in lost productivity each year, according to a study released last year by the RAND Corp.

Climate change already affects low-income people disproportionately, as rising sea levels destroy low-lying homes, pollution worsens costly diseases and droughts make food and water scarcer and more expensive. Now add poor sleep to that list.

“Poorer people are more likely to have disruptions in their sleep, probably due to the fact that they don’t have air conditioning or, if they have it, can’t afford to use it the whole night during summer,” said Obradovich, who also works as a researcher at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Media Lab.

“It’s not just sleep,” he added. “It’s sleep in the bigger picture of the other factors climate change is likely to impact.”

Obradovich said he would like to replicate the study with data from hotter, poorer countries closer to the equator.

“If we were to have data from India or Brazil on the relationship between unusually warm nights and sleep, we might observe substantially larger effects,” he said. “If we do see larger effects in those countries, that’s an even further example of how climate change is going to affect people across the world.”

Aggressive reductions in greenhouse gas emissions could limit the rise in global temperatures. But, even as carbon emissions plateaued over the past two years, that seems unlikely in the near term. President Donald Trump has already scrapped policies crucial to meeting U.S. commitments under the Paris Agreement, the first climate deal to include China and the U.S., the world’s biggest emitters. But the White House is considering pulling out of the accord amid its massive push to increase fossil fuel production across the country. Without U.S. participation, the deal ― a symbolic first step toward slashing emissions, but not enough to halt the calamitous temperature increases forecast by most climatologists ― could fall apart.

Improvements in air conditioning that make the technology cheaper and more widely available could help stave off some effects of warming temperatures. But air conditioning sucks up a lot of electricity, and the utility sector ― dependent on burning coal and natural gas ― remains the largest emitter of greenhouse gases, at least in the U.S. So that solution may be like feeding a hungry snake its tail.

“Sleep is just one of many other factors that ultimately combine into the broad perspective on human well-being,” Obradovich said. “Take into consideration that temperature may affect exercise patterns and mood, too, and you get this cornucopia of factors that, when we combine them all, you realize climate is going to really affect human behavior.”

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