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Friday, March 11, 2016

An Artist Explains The Issue With Kim Kardashian’s Naked Selfies

It’s disconcerting to me that there is so much conversation about a nude female body like Kim Kardashian’sbecause it perpetuates the perception and treatment of a woman’s body as an object.
There’s a really simple but profound concept to consider here: To be aware of where we’re coming from, what we’re doing and why. I think it’s important to ask where the inspiration for beauty standards is coming from. You hear people say things like, “Women get boob jobs because they want do it for themselves!” I’m sorry, but if the male gaze didn’t exist, women would never think to themselves, “Oh, I really want to make my boobs bigger by inserting giant balloons of silicon into them.”
Why aren’t we seeing more images of Kim Kardashian in a business meeting running the show or having meetings with other parents or of her helping change her kid’s diaper? If those things were “hot,” we’d be having a different conversation right now.
I think that celebrities like Kim have the potential for profound influence. I would love to see more people like her engaging with substantive issues in both a fun and critical way.
Nobody has the right to police women’s bodies. I don’t think a woman should ever be chastised or threatened for presenting herself in whatever way she chooses. But we have to have a conversation about where a woman’s identity comes from and what factors influence how she constructs that identity.
My own artwork will often cite poses from art history or women who used their body as an instrument of political protest, and I think it’s possible to portray nudity without presenting the body as just an object to consumed. But it’s often hard for people to tell the difference. It’s absolutely important to me that an image introduces a dialogue or asks a question. And I think it’s important for women in particular to have the autonomy to decide when her body is sexualized and when it’s not.

Former Rival Carson Endorses 'Cerebral' Trump

Former Republican candidate Ben Carson has endorsed one-time rival Donald Trump, ahead of what could be the decisive week in the party's presidential nomination race.
The retired neurosurgeon joined Mr Trump in a news conference on Friday morning at the real estate tycoon's Mar-a-Lago club in Palm Beach, Florida.
Mr Carson said: "I've come to know Donald Trump over the last few years.
"He is actually a very intelligent man who cares deeply about America.
"There's two different Donald Trumps.
"There's the one you see on the stage, and there's the one who's very cerebral, sits there and considers things very carefully."
He said he had "buried the hatchet" with the real estate magnate over their scathing campaign clashes.
Mr Trump, 69, mentioned during Thursday night's televised Republican debate that Mr Carson would be backing him.
Mr Carson halted his own White House campaign last week after failing to win a single primary contest, though he remains popular with evangelical voters.
Mr Carson, 64, briefly leapfrogged Mr Trump in opinion polls earlier in the Republican campaign.
But voters deserted him after a series of missteps and following vicious attacks by Mr Trump on his character, accusing him of lying about his autobiography.
In a blistering barrage, Mr Trump had said his former rival was a "pathological liar" and even compared him to a child molester.
Mr Carson turned the other cheek and said: "Pray for him."
Asked about the past personal attacks on Friday, Mr Trump shrugged and said: "It's a tough business, politics."
He described Mr Carson as a "special, special person". 
As political newcomers who launched unlikely insurgent challenges against establishment candidates, they are in some way natural bedfellows.
Mr Carson is the second former Republican presidential candidate to officially back Mr Trump, following New Jersey Governor Chris Christie's approval last month.
The latest endorsement is a blow to Texas Senator Ted Cruz, who has been in a tug-of-war with Mr Trump for the evangelical vote.
Mr Carson announced last week that he is to chair an organisation that works on turning out the Christian vote.
Mr Trump is leading ahead of next Tuesday's Republican primaries in Ohio and Florida when he could all but sew up the party's nomination, which will be decided in July.
He has been appealing to Republican grandees, who remain wary that he could lead the party into oblivion in November's election, to unite behind him.

A bus driver has been jailed after trying to smuggle cocaine worth up to £18m on a school trip taking Romanian schoolchildren to Britain.

A bus driver has been jailed after trying to smuggle cocaine worth up to £18m on a school trip taking Romanian schoolchildren to Britain.

Ioan Buciuta, 53, tried to use the pupils' trip to London as cover to sneak the cocaine through the Port of Dover in Kent.

The Romanian was caught after Border Force officers found around 130 packages wrapped in tape in a specially adapted area behind a false bulkhead in the luggage compartment.

Investigators acting on intelligence from the National Crime Agency (NCA) found a panel covering the drugs had been screwed into place and then covered with carpet.

Buciuta, a courier for a Romanian organised crime gang, was arrested on 6 June last year and the schoolchildren travelled on to their hotel in taxis.

He later pleaded guilty to importing the Class A drug and has been sentenced at Maidstone Crown Court to 17 years in prison.

Matt Rivers, of the NCA's Dover border investigation team, said they had caused "major disruption" to the organised crime gang.

He said: "Ioan Buciuta was a trusted courier, comfortable with the task of carrying millions of pounds of Class A drugs across a continent.

"The fact he was happy to do so using the cover of a children's school trip shows how cynical his criminal organisation is."

Ioan's brother, Gheorghe Buciuta, 36, was cleared of importation charges in connection with the same seizure following a trial last November.

Geordie Shore's Charlotte Crosby Gets Driving Ban

Charlotte Crosby court case
Reality TV star Charlotte Crosby has been banned from driving for three years after a second drink-driving conviction.
The 25-year-old Geordie Shore star was caught driving her Range Rover early in the morning after drinking on a train home from Newcastle to London.
Two police officers saw her weaving down the road and, after pulling her over, a breath test showed she was more than double the legal limit.
Chairman of the bench Keith McIntosh at Newcastle Magistrates' Court said it "beggared belief" that she had been caught for a second time.
It puts into jeopardy the Celebrity Big Brother 2013 winner's plans to launch a career in America because she will now be unable to get a visa to travel there.
She was banned from driving for 18 months in 2012.
Crosby, who has more than 2.7 million Twitter followers and has also made fitness DVDs, pleaded guilty to the latest charge on 28 January.
Nick Freeman, defending, said she had decided to make the short journey from the railway station to her hotel despite having initially planned to get a taxi.
He said "she accepts that she is the author of her misfortune" and added that she was "bitterly ashamed, contrite and embarrassed".
Mr Freeman said Crosby had been close to landing a TV career in America but "that will not now happen as she will not get a visa".
"She would like to apologise to the court and her family," he said.
"She would like to apologise to her legions of fans and supporters who she has let down in a huge way."
Crosby was also told to pay £1,185.

Japan Tsunami Victims Remembered Five Years On

Japan is marking the fifth anniversary of the devastating earthquake and tsunami that left more than 18,000 people dead or missing.
At 2.46pm local time (5.46am), the moment the quake hit, bells rang out across Tokyo and people around the nation bowed their heads in a moment of silence.
Emperor Akihito and Prime Minister Shinzo Abe led a ceremony attended by 12,000 people, bowing in front of a stage laden with white and yellow flowers.
It included survivors from the northeast coastal region of the country, which was virtually wiped out by the tsunami.
People observe a moment of silence at 2:46 p.m., the time when the magnitude 9.0 earthquake struck off Japan's coast in 2011, atop of a seawall at Taro district in Miyako, Iwate prefecture, Japan
A total of 15,894 people are confirmed to have died in the disaster, with 2,562 more unaccounted for. Another 340,000 people were displaced from their homes.
Figures released last year revealed that some 170,000 people remain stuck in temporary accommodation along the worst hit parts of the coast.
The earthquake also triggered the world's worst nuclear disaster since Chernobyl in 1986, crippling the Fukushima nuclear plant.
Meltdowns in three reactors leaked radiation over a wide area of the countryside, contaminating water, food and air.
Ichihara fire fightIchihara fire fight
Some areas remain no-go zones due to high radiation.
The nine-magnitude quake struck offshore, creating a tsunami that swept across the coastline.
Naoto Kan, the Prime Minister at the time, has said he feared he would have to evacuate Tokyo and that Japan's very existence could have been in peril.
The current Prime Minister, Shinzo Abe said the five years had been days of hardship and pain for those affected by the disaster, but he has promised enough money to help people in the worst-hit areas rebuild their lives.

Celebrities Voice Support for Hillary Clinton in New Ad

Shonda Rhimes and the stars of her TGIT lineup are voicing their support for Hillary Clinton in a new video released by the presidential candidate.
The ad features Rhimes alongside Scandal’s Kerry Washington, Grey’s Anatomy’s Ellen Pompeo, and How to Get Away With Murder’s Viola Davis. It was directed by Washington’s Scandal costar Tony Goldwyn.
In the clip, the Shondaland leading ladies describe the characters they play as “brilliant,” “complex” women who fight for justice and give voice “to the voiceless.” “Our characters are on television,” Washington says. She and the others then add, “The real world has Hillary Clinton.”
Rhimes, Davis, Pompeo, and Washington each take turns speaking as they praise Clinton as “a bonafide, rolls up her sleeves, fights for what’s right, in it for you, won’t back down champion for all of us.”
“So proud that I am with her because she is with US,” Rhimes tweeted Thursday night, sharing a link to the ad.
Clinton replied, “Talk about a power lineup. Thank you for being on this team!”
An ABC spokesperson issued a statement on the ad Thursday night, saying, “This was a paid political advertisement placed on a number of stations. Broadcasters are required by the FCC to carry these ads.”

Greece Hopes To Clear Camp Within Two Weeks

Authorities in Greece say they are hoping to clear an overcrowded refugee camp on its border with Macedonia border within two weeks.
They are trying to persuade those in the camps to move to nearby government-built shelters.
Migrants rest near their tents at a makeshift camp on the Greek-Macedonian border, near the village of Idomeni
Some 14,000 people are camped out at the border near the village of Idomeni and conditions are getting increasingly desperate.
Nikos Toskas, a deputy minister for public order, says force will not be used to empty the camp.
We have to persuade them (to move) and we can't do that using tear gas. Half the people there are women and children," he said.
Authorities say around 800 people have so far agreed to leave the camp, but more are arriving daily.
Macedonia this week became the latest country to close its borders to all migrants and refugees this week after several Balkan countries and Austria began imposing restrictions in February.
Meanwhile, around 650 migrants have arrived in the main port of Athens from islands in the eastern Aegean Sea.
They continue to take the dangerous sea route despite the route into northern Europe remaining closed.
The had arrived from Lesbos and Chios.
Some could be seen leaving the port on foot while others made for the passenger terminals, which more than 3,000 people are currently using as a shelter.