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Society

Does Wisdom Come With Age? Only If You Do The Work

It's not the passage of time or overcoming hardship that makes you wise, but rather the effort to keep your mind truly open.

Updated April 18, 2024 at 5:15 p.m.*

MUNICH — Rick Levenson, a professor of psychology at Oregon State University, has conducted research at several esteemed U.S. institutes and published an impressive number of scientific papers. This is laudable, obviously, and yet is just part of a typical academic life. What distinguishes Levenson comes from a sentence uttered by his Austrian colleague Judith Glück: "Rick is the wisest person I've ever met."

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Geopolitics

U.S.-Egypt: How Relations Could Change With A Trump Return To The White House

Will former U.S. President Donald Trump maintain his "dealmaker" approach towards Egypt in case he finds his way back to the White House?

-Analysis-

CAIRO — If the current polls hold, Donald Trump will return to the White House next year. Egypt, like other countries around the world, is busy positioning itself in case that comes to pass.

It's worth noting that Cairo bet on Trump before his first election amid tense ties with the administration of then Democratic President Barack Obama. In the final months of the 2016 campaign in the U.S., President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi of Egypt made several public remarks that appeared to endorse Trump against his rival Hilary Clinton. That went against a longstanding Egyptian foreign policy not to publicly support any American presidential candidate before election day.

That public support most likely explains why el-Sisi was the first head of state to speak with Trump by phone immediately after he was certified as the next U.S. president in November 2016.

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The former president, who loves inking high-profile political deals, praised el-Sisi during his term in the White House. He considered him a reliable partner to achieve the Trump administration’s visions in the Middle East, which included “the Deal of the Century” project that aimed to establish peace between Israel and the Palestinians.

Trump also seemed to understand Egypt's concerns about the Ethiopian Renaissance Dam and its direct impact on its water security. It was also convenient that he was not interested in the agenda of his predecessor Obama in supporting human rights and democratic transformation in the Middle East.

Will Trump maintain his approach towards Egypt and the broader Middle East if he reaches the White House for the second time later this year?

The answer to this question may depend on the profound transformations that the region is currently going through, especially in the face of Israel's war on Gaza. The war has affected the U.S. plans to withdraw from the Middle East and shift its military might to the Pacific region to contain China.

The answer also depends on the U.S. demands from Egypt in the coming years, which have undergone a subtle but important shift in recent years.

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Geopolitics

Iran-Russia-China: Axis Of Evil Or Alliance Of Convenience?

What are the links between Iran and the two powers challenging the Western order, Russia and China? And how do their relations affect the international climate? This is a key question at a time when the logic of war is at work in several regions of the world.

-Analysis-

PARIS — Would an open war with Iran be "only," so to speak, a regional conflict? Or could it take on a more global, globalized character? The question obviously arises in light of the possible escalation between Iran and Israel, and in light of the cooperation, not to say alliance, between Tehran and the two powers challenging the Western order, Russia and China.

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Is Tehran-Moscow-Beijing this the new "axis of evil," to use the outdated terminology of Bush era neo-conservatives? Or is it a flirtation of circumstance based on a common adversary, the West?

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In The News

EU Ramps Up Iran Sanctions, U.S. Cancels Venezuela Oil Deals, Pointe Record

👋 Ekamowir omo!*

Welcome to Thursday, where European leaders expand sanctions against Iran in the wake of its attack on Israel, the U.S. reacts to Maduro’s crackdown on opponents by nixing oil and gas deals with Venezuela, and 353 ballerinas set a new record in New York. Meanwhile, independent Arab media Daraj reports on how the lack of humanitarian aid and the economic situation in Gaza are forcing women to sell their jewelry to feed their children.

[*Nauruan, Nauru]

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Society

A Psychiatric Test To See If He's Gay? It Happened To An Italian Policeman

After two inmates reported a policeman in an Italy prison accusing him of being gay, the Head of the prison made the officer take a test to verify his sexual orientation. And we call ourselves a civilized nation?

-Analysis-

TURIN — I have no idea what kind of questions there are in a psychiatric test to determine whether a person is gay or not, maybe they ask if you love your mom, hate your dad, like flowers, and therefore if you want to be a florist. The news of the Italian policeman forced to take a psychiatric test to determine his sexual orientation lies at the intersection of tragedy and farce.

Here's the background: two inmates had reported that a certain prison police officer in a corrections facility in the northwestern Piedmont region was gay. Can we presume that the officer had allegedly done something illicit, because to my knowledge being gay is not a crime in this country, nor should it be "investigated." At that point, instead of investigating the facts of the alleged crime, the head of the prison decided to submit the policeman to a psychiatric test.

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The story ends this way: the information given by the two inmates turned out to be false, the policeman then sued his workplace, and the regional administrative court ordered the Interior Ministry to compensate the officer with ten thousand euros for moral damages. The court wrote that questioning the officer's suitability for work would help convey "the idea that the homosexuality attributed to him could be a personality disorder."

The officer also spoke of repercussions at work, including bullying and mockery from colleagues.

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Geopolitics

France-Senegal: Witness To A Neo-Colonial Breakup?

The election of the new president of Senegal, Bassirou Diomaye Faye, paves the way for a period of deep uncertainty between Paris and Dakar, amidst the spread of an "anti-French sentiment" in West Africa.

-Analysis-

DAKAR — Bassirou Diomaye Faye, Senegal’s new president, built his campaign on the promise of a “break-up” with France that would include a renegotiation of economic and political ties between the two nations. Faye's election ushers in a period of uncertainty in the relationship between the two countries, against the backdrop of spreading anti-French sentiment across West Africa.

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Without waiting for the final results of the presidential election, French President Emmanuel Macron sent Faye his public "best wishes for success" via a tweet, adding that he was "looking forward to working with him".

These early wishes amounted to a gesture of diplomacy by Macron towards his Senegalese counterpart, whose party, the Pastef, has not spared its criticisms against France in recent years.

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This Happened

This Happened - April 18: San Francisco Earthquake

Updated April 18, 2024 at 11:15 a.m.

An earthquake hit San Francisco and its surrounding areas in California this day in 1906. The earthquake, which was caused by the movement of tectonic plates along the San Andreas Fault, was one of the most powerful in American history.

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GLOBAL PRESS JOURNAL

Queer Reception: Mexico's LGBTQ-Owned Hotel, Where Every Guest Feels At Home

The hotel, the first in San Cristóbal de Las Casas to be staffed by a mostly queer team, is bringing the marginal into the mainstream.

SAN CRISTÓBAL DE LAS CASAS — Casa Venus, a hotel with a simple white-walled exterior, opened its doors on a main thoroughfare in downtown San Cristóbal de Las Casas in September 2023. In the entrance, visitors see the hotel’s logo, which depicts Venus, the Roman goddess of love, emerging from a carnivorous plant. A nearby sign announces that there is no discrimination in this space.

Casa Venus is the first hotel founded and managed by trans people in San Cristóbal de Las Casas, the second-most touristic city in the state of Chiapas. It employs 12 people who identify as nonbinary, gay, lesbian, trans or allies. Since opening, it has been described as a pioneering local space for inclusive employment.

The hotel’s founder, a trans man named Pen, says the project arose as an alternative given “the lack of opportunities for trans and queer people,” groups that experience discrimination on a regular basis.

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Despite anti-discrimination laws in Mexico, and despite the fact that the constitution prohibits discrimination, 37% of people who identify as members of the LGBT community say they experience discrimination, according to the 2022 National Survey on Discrimination, conducted by the National Institute of Statistics and Geography. The survey also showed that less than half of workers in this group have written contracts (47.2%) or access to social security services (48.4%), both of which are basic rights stipulated in the Ley Federal del Trabajo, the country’s federal law governing labor.“We have been very intentional in selecting our team,” says Pen, who prefers to be referred to by this name.

Casa Venus employees say working in the hotel gives them a feeling of security they did not have at other jobs.

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Russia

The West's Defense Of Israel Reminds Ukraine Of A Bitter Truth

Seeing the near-perfect effectiveness of Israel's defense against Iranian drones and missiles, Ukrainians are bitterly wondering why the West is denying them life-saving assistance. Fear of confrontation with a nuclear Russia remains the main reason.

-Analysis-

PARIS — Seeing how effectively Israel and its Western allies destroyed 99% of the more than 300 missiles and drones launched by Iran on Saturday, you may have thought, as I did: if it's possible there, why not in Ukraine?

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Ukrainians asked themselves the same question, starting of course with President Volodymyr Zelensky who, in his daily address to the nation, praised how the “free world has demonstrated such unity” and efficiency in defending Israel, before adding “the same is possible in defending Ukraine."

More bitterly, Ukrainian commentators wonder whether they are second-class allies compared to Israelis for not being receiving the same solidarity against the same threat.

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Women Worldwide

Women Of Disquiet: A Loud, Hard "No" To Portugal's Paid Housewife Scheme

A right-wing association of men in Portugal wants housewives to be recognized for their work — but in doing so wants to make sure that housework is something that is only connected to the female gender. Stop right there.

-OpEd-

LISBON — Disquiet has characterized women — by nature. Created to provide company to the lonely Adam, woman couldn't resist the temptation of the forbidden. Conceived at the request of Zeus as a (poisoned) gift for men, she was ultimately the eternal torment of Pandora's Box. The same is true today.

At the very beginning of my career as a full-time university lecturer, I got pregnant (earlier than I had planned, but still at the age of 38). I never knew if that little belly that was already visible was the reason why, at the end of the academic year, the institution no longer required me to work there.

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Another university (a Catholic one, by the way) took me in without caring that I had made it clear that I would be at home for 42 days between one semester and the next (at the time, the minimum maternity leave). On the contrary, the person hiring me, a man with decision-making power, not only trusted my professional ability but celebrated my motherhood.

When my son was born on December 24, I didn't anticipate the maternal commitment I would have from then on. But it never crossed my mind to stay at home for three, six or nine months either: it simply wasn't financially feasible. But I didn't want to either. It was actually the father who took the rest of his parental leave, which was very good for him and for me.

From then on, my disquiet bothered many people: those who asked me how it had been possible to "abandon" my son when he was so small (in fact, I was only gone for three hours four times a week); why I didn't give him a sibling (I was being "selfish"); and finally, how it was possible to have separated from his father when my son was six (again: "selfish").

In all these micro-criticisms, my identification was reduced to woman-mother, woman-caregiver. Just as disabled people are reduced to their disability, homeless people are reduced to their homelessness, and ex-convicts are reduced to the crime they committed.

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FOCUS: Israel-Palestine War

Netanyahu's "Iran Diversion" — Why It Can't Hide His Gaza War Crimes

By helping to intercept Iran's counter attack against Israel, the U.S. and Western allies, along with Jordan, have deprived Benjamin Netanyahu of a pretext to expand the war and to divert attention from his actions in Gaza.

-OpEd-

CAIRO — Since Israel's April 1 attack on the Iranian consulate in Damascus, the United States has been in constant contact with Iran, both through intermediaries and directly, to avoid an expanded war in the region. That has been Washington's goal since Israel launched its war against Hamas in Gaza in response to the group's Oct. 7 attack.

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Before Iran's April 13 counter attack, the U.S. and Western media reported on Washington's attempts to persuade Tehran not to respond directly to Israel's attack. But the Iranian regime, whose supporters have been chanting “Death to America. Death to Israel,” apparently decided that not responding directly to the Israeli attack would cause great embarrassment at home and shake its prestige in the region and among its allies in the axis of resistance.

Washington and Tehran agreed on a somewhat theatrical response.

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FOCUS: Israel-Palestine War

Missing In Khan Younis: How I Found My Brother’s Body

The brother of Palestinian journalist Mohamed Abu Shahma chose to return home to Khan Younis despite Israel's offensive on the city. He paid the ultimate price.

KHAN YOUNIS — My brother Suhail was a loving person, and we were very close. He treated me like his son, following my late father’s will. We would discuss our sorrows and stick together in the darkest times. The Israel-Hamas war has been difficult.

In the first days of the war, we moved from house to house in search of shelter from Israeli bombs. As the bombardments intensified, the Israeli ministry ordered residents in our area of the Khan Younis camp to leave. Suhail, his family and I moved to the city of Rafah and built a tent.

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As displaced people, we have lived through poverty, starvation, insecurity, the winter cold and the summer heat. Everyday, we went out in search of food, a small portion of which reached the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA).

Suhail did not accept living as a displaced person and the humiliation of living in tents; he wanted to return home to Khan Younis. But I told him that it was too risky because the area was being heavily bombed, he reluctantly agreed and stayed in the tent.

He was later overjoyed when he heard on the radio that the Israeli military had withdrawal from Khan Younis after concluding its ground operations, saying “Now we can return to our homes and demolish the tents." And he returned to Khan Younis, the city where he grew up and that he knew by heart.

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