http://www.npr.org/blogs/krulwich/2013/04/16/177512687/a-whom-do-you-hang-with-map-of-america?utm_source=NPR&utm_medium=facebook&utm_campaign=20130417
Mapping regions of social interraction
http://www.npr.org/blogs/krulwich/2013/04/16/177512687/a-whom-do-you-hang-with-map-of-america?utm_source=NPR&utm_medium=facebook&utm_campaign=20130417
Goodbye Maggie T...

As one blogger (BC Bass) put it, Thatcher was "a tough leader who sought to restore the grandeur of England's Victorian period. She succeeded in bringing the nostalgic charm and quaint class values of the Dickensian era back to modern day Britain. She will best be remembered for the decisive actions she took during her 11-year term, which continue to affect the United Kingdom today: deregulating banks to cause the still problematic credit crunch, doubling inflation, destroying trade unions, eliminating free milk in schools for underprivileged children, creating a gaping disparity between the country's rich and poor, driving unemployment to historically high levels, destroying the coal industry, and implementing the egalitarian poll tax, which ensured that those living near poverty in Middle England would pay the same taxes as millionaires nearby."
Here's one view of Thathcher's economic legacy from Time Magazine:
Was Thatcherism Good (or Bad) for the Economy?
http://business.time.com/2013/04/09/was-thatcherism-good-or-bad-for-the-economy/#ixzz2PyVfWdCi
Remember what George Satayana said about those who didn't learn from the past?
One thing is certain is that while we are not reliving the 80s 30 years later, we are debating the same questions about what to do with domestic and global economic policies.
On other issues, BC Bass continues: "Thatcher will also be celebrated for her uncanny prowess in foreign policy, particularly with her brave decision to use the superior might of the British military to wage war against Argentina over an island full of sheep.
She further led the charge for Great Britain by labelling Nelson Mandela a "terrorist," supporting underdog government factions such as the Khmer Rouge and embattled Chilean dictator Pinochet, and for tirelessly fighting to keep the ignorant rabble of Northern Ireland under the yoke of England to protect them from themselves."
But she did some good stuff too.
Population: Birth Control in the news

Do you know the difference between the "Morning After" pill and the "Abortion Pill"? No? Neither did most of the legislators who passed laws on the first thinking it was the second.
With a new Pope coming from a region that needs (and quietly uses) birth control, you would think his stance on it is fairly moderate. But it isn't. The real news on the BC has nothing to do with priggish medieval social instititions and their quaint insistence that they are the last word on sexual morality. Rather, it is the revolution in birth control that we are on the brink of experiencing. The male version of "The Pill" is right around the corner, seemingly, and there are other safe, cheap and effective achoices for birth control on the horizon.
Time Magazine section on Birth Control (includes resources from around the web, including the New York Times).
http://topics.time.com/birth-control/
RELIGION: Shia and Sunni Explained (But not by me.)
A couple of resources on Sunni vs. Shia Islam (cuz it's been on my mind lately):


Hoping to get a grant to travel to Turkey this summer- a destination people have been recommending to me for years. It will be my first experience in a Muslim country.
Cultural Anthro: Wealth and Inequality
http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/category/the-great-divide/
Also, this viral Youtube video generated discussion in class today:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QPKKQnijnsM
Wealth Inequality in America
Wealth Inequality in America ... Infographics on the distribution of wealth in
Globalization: Will "cyberwarfare" usher is a new cold war?
Or should we come up with a new term to describe it, say, a "cool war." If that sounds too rad, how about "Warm War." Cyber warfare isn't comprised of shooting bullets and lobbing missiles, but it is more destructive than the Orwellian propaganda pandering, back-room diplomacy, espionage and military mobilization and sabre-rattling that we came to understand as daily life during the Cold War.
Worse yet, since it is much more an act of conventional hostility, could it heat up to an actual shooting war? Remember, China is a very important trade partner, as well as money lender. How could we possibly afford hostilities with the Chinese?
From the New York Times:
In Cyberspace, New Cold War
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/25/world/asia/us-confronts-cyber-cold-war-with-china.html?src=recg
ANTHRO: Culture Wars in anthropology


Napoleon Chagnon
Marshall Sahlins, one of the most eminent cultural anthropologists alive, through down the gauntlet when Napoleon Chagnon, one of the most notorious cultural anthropologists alive, was admitted to the National Academy of Sciences.

Naploeon Chagnon in the mid 1960s
The war within anthropology between nature and nurture has been recast as a debate about the respective importance of genes and environment. At a more philosophical level, the discipline has been split for decades between the positivist, empiricist scientific tribe, and the literary, interpretive humanistic tribe.
From time to time there is detante, but when memoirs get published or there are elections in the American Anthropological Association, the barbs get sharpened, the drums start beating and the natives get restless.
The endless cycle of warfare returns to the valley.
Here's a New York Times article about how Chagnon became the center of a controversy that spans all of anthropology:
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/17/magazine/napoleon-chagnon-americas-most-controversial-anthropologist.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0
Here's another article about the controversy:
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2013/02/25/prominent-anthropologist-resigns-protest-national-academy-sciences
If that's not enough, try these from Nicholas Wade:
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/26/science/national-academy-of-sciences-scholar-resigns-over-napoleon-chagnons-admission.html
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/19/science/napoleon-chagnons-war-stories-in-the-amazon-and-at-home.html
NPR chimes in:
http://www.npr.org/blogs/13.7/2013/02/26/172951757/the-napoleon-chagnon-wars-flare-up-again-in-anthropology
GEO: The most friendless people in the world
A few years ago though I read an associated press news item about a gropup in Burma known as the "Rohingya." They were described as "The most friendless people in the world." U had never heard of them before, and Until recently I never heard of them again. Now they are back in the news.
The Rohingya are a persecuted minority living under a brutal regime that is unfriendly even to its citizens, and these were people who, while they had been living in the country for centuries, were not considered citizens and had no rights under the law. Furthermore, there is no place for them to go, because they have no other home country and no country seems all that thrilled about taking them in.
Even undocumented immigrants in the United States, the Palestinians and other stateless ethnic minorities have advocacy groups and friends in governments around the world. The Rohingya have virtually nobody troubling themselves on their behalf.
This article in Time Magazine rbought them back to my attention:
Horror at Sea: Adrift for Months, Starving Asylum Seekers Threw 98 Bodies Overboard
Upon further searching it seems the Rohingya have quietly crept back into the news cycle, although they are hardly front page, above the fold. The term "genocide" is being used now, and like Rwanda, like Sudan, the major media outlets have been largely silent. That will probably change when the calamity escalates. I shudder to think of how bad ethnic violence has to get before it gets noticed.
The Rohingya are a persecuted minority living under a brutal regime that is unfriendly even to its citizens, and these were people who, while they had been living in the country for centuries, were not considered citizens and had no rights under the law. Furthermore, there is no place for them to go, because they have no other home country and no country seems all that thrilled about taking them in.
Even undocumented immigrants in the United States, the Palestinians and other stateless ethnic minorities have advocacy groups and friends in governments around the world. The Rohingya have virtually nobody troubling themselves on their behalf.
This article in Time Magazine rbought them back to my attention:
Horror at Sea: Adrift for Months, Starving Asylum Seekers Threw 98 Bodies Overboard
Upon further searching it seems the Rohingya have quietly crept back into the news cycle, although they are hardly front page, above the fold. The term "genocide" is being used now, and like Rwanda, like Sudan, the major media outlets have been largely silent. That will probably change when the calamity escalates. I shudder to think of how bad ethnic violence has to get before it gets noticed.
GEO: Horse: It's what's for dinner- globalization and food supply concerns
This has been in the news a lot recently despite the fast news cycle (after all, it takes a lot to knock the Grammy's the Oscars, Superbowl, Downton Abbey and the Walking Dead off the front page).
From Reuters, via the Huffington Post.
Horsemeat Scandal Raises Concerns Over Europe's Food Quality Control
CHINA: Rare Earth Elements, Global Trade and China
Interesting look at the global trade in rare Earth elements (REEs) and China's impact on the industry.
Understanding China's Rare Earth Metals Market: What Changing Regulations Could Mean
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