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Entries in animal rights (5)

Monday
Oct222012

In Taiji, Dolphin Slaughter Continues As Scientists & Activists Seek Personhood Status

Loris Gréaud: The Snorks on Nowness.com.

Actress Charlotte Rampling and director David Lynch weave together the threads of Loris Gréaud’s expansive project in the Parisian-art star’s new film The Snorks: A Concert for Creatures. Thirty-six months in the making, the film takes in everything from hip hop-avantists Antipop Consortium’s concert for deep-ocean dwellers, to a pyrotechnic sculpture of fireworks in Abu Dhabi, and traces Gréaud’s voyages exploring the possibility for communication between species. Inspired by bioluminescence––or biological production of light––used by deep-sea creatures to communicate with each other, the aesthetic adventurer broadcast specially commissioned music by Antipop Consortium at a depth of 4,000 meters and elicited vibrant bursts of light from the audience of plankton, unicellular creatures and jellyfish in response. “I gave them carte blanche,” says Gréaud of working with Antipop Consortium. “The only direction really was to play the game, to imagine they playing in front of aliens.” Ahead of the 28-minute film’s premiere at MK2 Bibliothèque next week and a forthcoming world tour combining screenings with Antipop Consortium performing the concert live, Gréaud unpicks the threads making up The Snorks.

Read on about The Snorks project at NOWNESS and The Snorks A Concert for Creatures website

French Roast News

Anne is reading …

We are late in reporting about the annual slaughter of dolphins and whales in Taiji, Japan. Basically, nothing has changed in this barbaric cruelty against some of nature’s smartest creatures — all in the name of nationalism and man’s God-given right to control nature. We add controlling women for context, believing that Taiji’s patriarchal principles represent the ultra-orthodox values of male domination that are worldwide.

In spite of massive international protests against the slaughter of dolphins in Taiji, and the Academy Award winning documentary ‘The Cove’, little has changed for these splendid creatures.

First, some recent thoughts about the annual dolphin slaughter in Taiji and today’s news that at least one special white whale can imitate the voices of humans. Dolphins are known for trying to communicate with their captors.

A Whale With a Distinctly Human-Like Voice Science Daily

“Our observations suggest that the whale had to modify its vocal mechanics in order to make the speech-like sounds,” said Sam Ridgway of the National Marine Mammal Foundation. “Such obvious effort suggests motivation for contact.”

Taiji Dolphins: Marineland’s Cruelest Attraction Global Animal

Op-Ed: Sea World’s Convoluted Logic on Taiji’s Dolphin Slaughter Take Part

Dolphins Can Remain Alert for Up to 15 Days at a Time With No Sign of Fatigue Science Daily

Do Dophins Think Nonlinearly? Science Daily

Strong Opposition to Aquarium’s Plan to Import Beluga Whales NYTimes

Whales and dolphins are so intelligent they deserve same rights as humans, say experts The Independent

Anne Enke’s Dolphin Writing

Blood-soaked cove of dolphin blood in Taiji, JapanFemale, Dolphin-Loving Principles Can Win in Blood-Thirsty, Male-Dominated Taiji, Japan

My maiden writing into the topic of whales was When the Subject is Women’s and Whale Rights, the Japanese Fall Far From Grace, if we don’t count my high school senior paper on the meaning of the great white whale in Moby Dick.

Whaling is a very patriarchal tradition, and the subject of their hunt — whales and dolphins — are gorgeous animals that represent female principles.

When I wrote Let’s Hope Smart Sensuality Pink Dolphins are Smart Enough to Stay Out of Japanese Waters, I was unconsciously or semi-consciously making the same point. Now I understand why folklore has it that putting a pregnant woman in the boat attracts dolphins, and also why Dave sent a video of a dolphin attending the birth of a baby.

The real challenges in getting the Japanese to change their patriarchal whaling ways, is akin to convincing the Sudanese Islamists to stop flogging women.

Returning Ancient Greek ‘Person’ Status to Dolphins

The clues to dolphins as ‘female’ are prolific in Greek and Roman art, and also in earlier Minoan artifacts.

Joining the Dolphin Family

Dolphins leap above the waves off Alabama’s Orange Beach. Photo: Cal Britton, My ShotWriting as a guest blogger for National Geographic, Maddalena Bearzi of the Ocean Conservation Society has been in the company of dolphins — mothers and their calves — for 20 years. 

All around me, I see other dolphins. I feel I am part of a family, but it’s somehow different from my terrestrial one. We are a grand and flexible family, yet I have a strong sense that our underlying bonds remain constant. I reach a huddle of mothers and calves. Seven females are clustered, forming a protective screen of bodies around a pregnant female. They swim beside and below her, waiting for the moment to arrive.

Dolphin Brains Rival Human’s | The Japanese Slaughter Disgrace Continues

“Dolphins are sophisticated, self-aware, highly intelligent beings with individual personalities, autonomy and an inner life. They are vulnerable to tremendous suffering and psychological trauma,” says Emory University neuroscientist Lori Marino, a leading expert in the neuroanatomy of dolphins and whales

 

The patriarchal reality of the Taiji’s fishermen’s killing of the whales involves banging on metal poles to herd panicked dolphins into a cove, then spearing them to death in what protesters describe as a gory bloodbath. For animals with brains as large as humans and an established level of cognitive ability, this method of slaughtering dolphins is abhorrent to many.

‘The Cove’ Academy Award documentary director Ric O’Barry explains how he became a dolphin activist.

Friday
Dec302011

Maintaining Weight Loss | New York Leads in Longevity | Great Apes Consciousness | Egypt Police & Virginity Tests

DFR Daily French Roast

Anne is reading …

Weight Loss Regained

NYTimes writer Tara Parker-Pope writes The Fat Trap,  an in-depth examination of the latest research on weight gain after significant weight loss. Overweight herself, Parker-Pope takes full responsibility for a lifetime of challenging weight management and an endless cycle of dieting.

New research in small studies that have yet to be replicated in large surveys suggests that dieters who lose 10% of body weight or more fight uphill battles not to regain the weight. Many doctors believe that this altered state of metabolic inefficiency in which the body is actively trying to regain the weight can last for a good six years.

The hunger hormone ghrelin, often called the hunger hormone, was 20% higher in weight losers and levels of leptin, a hormone that suppresses hunger remained lower than expected.

The story visits the National Weight Control Registry that tracks 10,000 people who have successfully kept off the weight. Interviews confirmed what is already known about success. Not only do dieters exercise for at least an hour almost every day, but they weigh themselves every day and keep food journals. Simply stated, maintaining weight loss is a daily job AND not a fair one.

It’s believed that people who diet their weight to a new low of 150 pounds must eat 5-10% fewer calories a day to maintain the weight as a 150 pound person who was never overweight. Read on at NYTimes.

Egyptian Ban on Police Virginity Tests

An Egyptian administrative court ruled that police officials can’t subject female detainees to virginity examinations as part of their arrest and detainment procedures.  The case was led by 25-year-old Samira Irbrahim, a marketing manager who was arrested during the March 9 protest, with backing from groups like Amnesty International.

The order doesn’t govern virginity tests routinely given to women who are about to be married. Read on at CNN.

More DFR

Complex Jungle-Based Decisions

Max-Planck-researchers have demonstrated that chimpanzees, orangutans, gorillas and bonobos make more sophisticated decisions than was previously thought. While all four species demonstrated sophisticated decision making strategies, chimpanzees and orangutans were overall more likely to make risky choices relative to gorillas and bonobos. The decision-making study around large and small banana pieces adds to the growing evidence that great apes enjoy a much more complex mental life that is often assumed. Read on at Science Daily

Also, before sounding an alarm, chimps consider information available to their audience, based on a new study of chimpanzees in Uganda. The chimps were more likely to alarm call to a snake “in the presence of unaware than in the presence of aware group members, suggesting that they recognize knowledge and ignorance in others. Read on at Science Daily

New York Life Expectancy Leads US

The latest data from the Bureau of Vital Statistics shows New York City has the highest life expectancy in the country. Babies born in 2009 can expect to live a record 80.6 years. That’s almost three years longer than a decade ago, and more than two years longer than the current national average of 78.2 years. Read on at Good.

Tuesday
Dec062011

News: Global Women on Exec Committees | Tavi Gevinson on Always Saying 'Sorry' | Hitchcock & Hedren | Editorials 12/5

Just IN

2012 Pirelli Calendar Images on Sensuality News NSFW

DFR Daily French Roast

Anne is reading …

Jim Urquhart/AP/FileEnvironmental News

A federal court said Nov. 22 that the decline of a food source resulting from global warming is sufficient reason to keep animals — in this case Yellowstone grizzlies — protected under the Endangered Species Act.

The ruling not only establishes a legal foothold that could require the government to take action to preserve species facing extinction by climate changes. The ruling could open the door to challenges against the current Endangered Species Act, which currently requires action one species at a time, rather than on behalf of all habitation on the planet. Read on at Christian Science Monitor

Amazon forest loss at lowest in 23 years: Brazil: Science Daily

Global Carbon Emissions Reach Record 10 Billion Tons, Threatening 2 degree target Science Daily

Dave Sanders Gone Rogue

 

When Steve Jobs said “It’s better to be a pirate than to join the Navy”, he wasn’t endorsing Dave Sanders: Fiber-Optics Exec by Day, Defender of Justice at Night.

(Excerpt) U.S. District Court Judge John Mendez didn’t know what to make of the man standing in his courtroom for sentencing on September 7, 2010. Dave Sanders was a successful corporate sales executive—a widower who was raising his three young children in a suburb outside Sacramento, California… the 43-year-old had confessed to operating a bizarre paramilitary vigilante squad that targeted people involved in Ponzi schemes. His team included a 365-pound US postal worker and a woman who looked like a Playboy Playmate; it was equal parts SWAT team and three-ring circus, and it had landed Sanders here, in a Sacramento courthouse, facing up to 11 years in prison. Read on Wired Magazine cover story.

More DFR

Alfred Hitchcock’s Obsession: Sienna Miller As Tippi Hedren in ‘The Girl’ AOC Style

Sienna Miller will play acclaimed actress Tippi Hedren opposite Sean Connery in a film ‘The Girl’. The drama claims that Alfred Hitchcock — was was notoriously enchanted with blondes — was obsessed with the actress, who thwarted his advances.

When Hedren refused his advances, Hitchcock set out to ban her from acting, says Hollywood gossip and Donald Spoto’s account of the couple’s relationship in his 2008 book ‘Spellbound By Beauty.’

Tippi Hedren has enjoyed a fulfilling, philanthropic life since her acting days. Read on about her work with animal rights and endangered species — especially big cats — and also Vietnam refugees.

Progressing Beyond Tokenism

A new report “20-first’s Global Gender Balance Scorecard” digs deeper into the world’s top 300 companies, looking at Executive Committee Composition.  While we dig into the details, at a top level, the US leads, but there is no reason for applause. In an analysis of America’s Top 100 companies, only 205 (or 17%) of Executive Committee members are female and the majority (125) are in staff or support positions like HR or legal. Only 60 women in America’s top 100 companies are in Executive Committee line or operational roles.

Elizabeth Taylor Love Affair

Cecil Beaton’s portrait of a bejeweled Taylor, with Richard Burton at the Rothschild Proust Ball, 1972. Photo: Cecil BeatonDiamonds and Pearls: British Vogue looks at Elizabeth Taylor’s jewelry auction at Christies.

Anne of Carversville 12/5

Sophie Vlaming | Klaas Jan Kliphuis | Avantgarde December 2011 | ‘Holy Mary’

AOC Private Studio

Andrea Stancu | Karel Losenicky | Kitten Mag K82 J’Adore

Ming Xi | Daniel Jackson | Vogue China December 2011 | ‘Party Fun’

Cato Van Ee | Alexander Neumann | Vogue Mexico December 2011

Sensuality News 12/5

SN Living

Farah, Jana, Manja, Anhelina, Serena | Walter Chin | Glamour France January 2012

Lisette & Nell | Chris Craymer | Glamour France January 2012 | Oh My Dog

Dovile Virsilaite | Alice Rosati | Forget Them Magazine #1

Kim Mooil | Harper’s Bazaar Korea December 2011 | ‘Black vs White’

Alessandra Ambrosio | Matt Jones | Hugo Boss Orange S/S 2012

Charlotte de Calypso | Hunter & Gatti | Vogue Spain Joyas December 2011

Sigrid Agren | Kerry Hallihan | Muse Winter 2011 | ‘Skyline’

Movin’ on Up for Tavi Gevinson

“I will be begging her for a job,” 44-year-old writer Cintra Wilson, best known for her cutting “Critical Shopper” column at The New York Times, said introducing Tavi Gevinson at The Economist’s World in 2012 Festival, “even though I have shoes older than she is.” Read on via Stylist

Tavi at Economist 2012

Tavi frequently apologized for her speech, admitting, “I’m a better writer than I am a talker…I don’t know why I’m so apologetic. It’s actually super annoying. [Apologizing] is such a stupid thing that girls are supposed to do when they feel bad for talking or taking up space.”