Is Ivanka Trump As 'Complicit' In Working Against Poor & Average Income Women As SNL Suggests

Is Ivanka Trump As 'Complicit' In Working Against Poor & Average Income Women As SNL Suggests

Saturday Night Live host Scarlett Johansson played Ivanka Trump in the March 11 episode, introducing us to Ivanka's new perfume Complicit, "the fragrance for the woman who could stop all of this, but won't." The ad continued, showing the First Daughter putting on lipstick in the mirror and seeing the reflection of her father, President Trump. "She doesn't crave the spotlight, but we see her. Oh, how we see her."

Complicit's tag line may be giving Ivanka too much credit for her ability to influence her father, but it's timely in aggressively hitting the role of Ivanka's agency in advancing her father's agenda. 

"She's a woman who knows what she wants—and knows what she's doing," said SNL. Increasingly, large numbers of Independent, Democrat and even educated Republican women realize that Ivanka will remain publicly silent on her father's plan to defend Planned Parenthood.  

Eye | American Parenting As Religion | Elizabeth Holmes Billionaire | Kurdish Women Fighters Update

Redtracker

Kurdish Fighter Ceylan Ozalp Said To Be Alive

I just checked in again on the incredibly brave women — about 1/3 of Kurdish forces — fighting ISIS in Syria. My heart dropped with reports that Ceylan Ozalp (wearing blk/wht checked hat), the woman who said ISIS shakes when confronted with women fighters, had committed suicide with her last bullet. SHE IS ALIVE and not in Kobane came reports just now from reliable sources. However, another young woman did commit suicide rather than be taken. Three Kurdish women fighters and seven men were beheaded by ISIS this week in Kobane. Please take a minute to honor the spirits of these brave people, and especially the Kurdish women fighters.

Previously: Kurdish Women Fighters In Syria Say ISIS Fears Women Soldiers So Much They Shake AOC Salon

Parenting As Religion

How American Parenting Is Killing American Marriage  QZ.com

Physician and researcher Danielle Teller and husband Astro Teller, head of Google X, recently published a book Sacred Cows: The Truth about Divorce and Marriage  focused on society’s “nonsensical but deeply ingrained beliefs surrounding marriage and divorce.”

 It seems only logical then, that the duo will next take on parenting. Calling American parenthood a ‘religion’, the Tellers refer to Ayelet Waldman’s 2005 essay in The New York Times, where she explained that she loves her husband more than her children.

The earth shook beneath Waldman’s feet as thousands of readers threatened to burn her at the stake.

Lab Grown Organ Transplants

The lab-grown penis: approaching a medical milestone The Guardian

Since 1992, Anthony Atala and his colleagues have worked on the premise that penises could be grown in a laboratory and then transplanted to humans. He believes that in the next five years, his first penis transplant will occur.

Penises aren’t the only focus of Atala and his team. In 2005 they implanted the first vagina — one of four. Eight years later, all four vaginas have normal structure and function. Earlier in 1999, Atala’s group completed their first laboratory-grown bladder transplant made from the patient’s own cells.

Simplifying the Blood Test

This Woman’s Revolutionary Idea Made Her A Billionaire — And Could Change Medicine Business Insider

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Eye | US Poverty & Child Development | Stella McCartney's Green Carpet Collection

RedTracker

Nancy Pelosi the money juggernaut Politico

25 Famous Women on Childlessness NY Magazine

Oscar Pistorius and Reeva Steenkamp’s relationship was far from ‘normal’ The Guardian

The Afghan Girls Who Live As Boys The Atlantic

India’s Caste Culture is a Rape Culture The Daily Beast

Baduan has woken up the world to this reality. India’s culture of caste is a culture of rape. Both for oppression and opportunism, caste-based sexual violence is meant to silence our communities. Each attempt to achieve equality— going to school, getting a job, or voting—brings greater risk of reprisal.  Because at its heart, caste-based sexual violence is about creating a climate of terror so that Dalits will fear challenging this system. This reprisal violence though has now reached record numbers with a recent study by the National Campaign on Dalit Human Rights reporting that over 67% of Dalit women have faced some form of sexual violence.

This culture of rape is also a culture of impunity where upper-caste Hindu perpetrators of these crimes are protected within India’s rape culture at all levels of the justice system. UN Special Rapporteur Ms. Rashida Manjoo relays in her recent report on the status of women in India that there is a “deeply entrenched patriarchal attitude of police officers, prosecutors, judicial officers.” This coupled with the unsavory reality that members of the police, judiciary, and public officials often collude with perpetrators to keep Dalit women from filing claims and receiving justice.   

HopeTracker

The Way to Beat Poverty NY Times

One reason the United States has not made more progress against poverty is that our interventions come too late. If there’s one overarching lesson from the past few decades of research about how to break the cycles of poverty in the United States, it’s the power of parenting — and of intervening early, ideally in the first year or two of life or even before a child is born.

The article points out further:

— 60% of children born with fetal alcohol symdrome or effects become expelled from school. Nearly half have displayed inappropriate sexual behavior — public masturbation, for example.

— 20% of babies have mothers who smoked during pregnancy. An Emory University study found that when a mther smoked a pack of cigarettes a day during pregnancy, her children (especially boys) were more than twicee a likely to be violent criminals as adults.

Dr. Jack P. Shonkoff, founder of the Center on the Developing Child at Harvard University, argues that the constant bath of cortisol (stress hormones) in a high-stress infancy predicts that a child will embrace a high-risk environment. The cortisol affects brain structures so that those individuals live a fight-or-flight existence as adults.

Dr. Shonkoff calls this “toxic stress” and describes it as one way that poverty regenerates itself in an ongoing cycle. Moms in poverty are more likely to live in high stress environments. Juggling enormous challenges, they are also more likely to be teenage mothers. “A baby in such an environment is more likely to grow up with a brain bathed in cortisol.” Read on at NT Times

Saint Laurent, Brurberry And Dior Deny Animal Cruelty Vogue.com

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