14のときの強姦されたが、40になるまで誰にも言えなかった、強姦されたことについて公にしてはいけないような雰囲気がこの社会にはまだある、なぜ、大声を出さなかったんだ、抵抗できただろう、作り話だろう、などと強姦について男の視点から語られることがあるが、言語道断である、と。
強姦被害について、日本でももっと取り上げるメディアがあってもいい。
たとえば、リンドバーグが撮ったケイト・ウィンスレットの写真は、手にクロースアップしている。それは、「女性は若く見える方が美しい」という考え方に対する反対表明だ。
「ピーターに、手の甲を撮って欲しいと頼みました。40歳の私の手は、30歳の時や20歳の時とは違います。私はそれを眺めるのが好きです」
@lautarogodoy
移民問題や不法滞在者強制退去関連のツイをよく見かけるんだけど、日本の入管や外国人への姿勢が他国と比較して極めて悪いとか人権無視とか、そんなことねーぞ。
他国だともっと優しく対応してくれるとでも夢見てんのか。
どこ行っても国のゲートキーパーたるイミグレの基本姿勢は鬼やで…
Salon - タイムライン via kwout
In a Facebook post this week, Omar made clear that despite whatever progress her own election highlights, many Americans have become “bold” in expressing their anti-Muslim views since the election of Trump.
Omar says she was visiting Washington D.C. for policy training about “middle-class economics” at the White House with President Obama’s adviser Valerie Jarrett on Tuesday when the incident happened. While riding in a taxi back to her hotel, Omar wrote that she was subjected to “the most hateful, derogatory, Islamophobic, sexist taunts and threats” she had ever experienced.
She said the cab driver in D.C. called her “ISIS” and threatened to take off her hijab before she rushed out of the car.
Americans have found a mean-spirited, tongue-in-cheek way to get even when a relationship turns bad - send a tweet saying they hope US President-elect Donald Trump does not deport their ex, but revealing their undocumented status and even their home address.
"I hope Donald Trump doesn't deport my illegal Dominican ex," wrote @eddiecabanas, who then gave the apartment address in Kentucky, with the specific note this person lives "at the top of the stairs."
Trump took a hard line against illegal immigration during his campaign, vowing to deport more than two million undocumented immigrants with criminal records after he takes office on January 20.
His promises have raised fears of deportation among the undocumented, most of them from Latin America, and estimated at 11 million in the country.
"Oh no! Trump please dont deport my ex-boyfriend Sergio, who lives @... in Davie, Florida... apartment number...," wrote @Marco_Rosano. AFP has omitted the address details, out of privacy concerns.
The vengeful tweets -- posted by users in Florida, New York, California and across the country - sound sarcastic, using a formula to out an ex apparently by expressing just the opposite.
"I'm afraid Trump might deport my illegal Swedish ex-gf who cheated on me twice & lives at... & keeps a hide-a-key under the mat," wrote one Twitter user.
Tweets like these are mushrooming on the internet as worries spread about deportation and anti-immigrant bias.
インフレになると借金が減る
例えばあなたが300万円の借金をしているとします。毎月の給料は30万円です。借金は給料の10ヶ月分です。
ただ、インフレが進行して給料が上がり、月60万円になったとします。このとき、借金は給料の5ヶ月分ということになります。さらにインフレが進行し、給料が150万円になったとします。そうなれば二ヶ月あれば借金が返せます。
かつて完全雇用をターゲットにしてインフレが起きたように、物価の安定を政策ターゲットに据えたことで、今度はデフレがニューノーマルになってしまった。低金利の融資が提供された結果、危機を経たアメリカの家計債務は12兆2500億ドルにも達した。反インフレの秩序を設計した伝統的な中道左派と右派の政党は政治的に糾弾され、反債権者・親債務者連合が組織された。これを反乱的な左派・右派の政党が取り込んだ。これが現実に起きたことだ。
These parties of course have very different policy stances. The new right favors nationals over immigrants and has, at best, a rather casual relationship with the liberal understanding of human rights. The new left, in contrast, favors redistribution from top to bottom and inclusive rather than exclusionary growth policies. But they also have more in common than we think. They are all pro-welfare (for some people, at least), anti-globalization, and most interestingly, pro-state, and although they say it sotto voce on the right, anti-finance.
Wages in such a world will have to continually rise to hold onto labor, and the only way business can accommodate that is to push up prices.This mechanism, cost-push inflation, where wages and prices chase each other up, emerged in the 1970s
The 1970s became a kind of “debtor’s paradise.” As inflation rose, debts fell in real terms, and labor’s share of national income rose to an all-time high, while corporate profits remained low and were pummeled by inflation. Unions were powerful and inequality plummeted.
In a world of disinflation, credit became very cheap and the private sector levered up—massively—with post-crisis household debt now standing at $12.25 trillion in the United States. This is a common story. Wage earners now have too much debt in an environment where wages cannot rise fast enough to reduce those debts. Meanwhile, in a deflation, the opposite of what happens in an inflation occurs. The value of debt increases while the ability to pay off those debts decreases.
Seen this way, what we see is a reversal of power between creditors and debtors as the anti-inflationary regime of the past 30 years undermines itself—what we might call “Goodhart’s revenge.” In this world, yields compress and creditors fret about their earnings, demanding repayment of debt at all costs. Macro-economically, this makes the situation worse: the debtors can’t pay—but politically, and this is crucial—it empowers debtors since they can’t pay, won’t pay, and still have the right to vote.
The traditional parties of the center-left and center-right, the builders of this anti-inflationary order, get clobbered in such a world, since they are correctly identified by these debtors as the political backers of those demanding repayment in an already unequal system, and all from those with the least assets. This produces anti-creditor, pro-debtor coalitions-in-waiting that are ripe for the picking by insurgents of the left and the right, which is exactly what has happened.
Growing Up Half Black in Japan Pt. 1| Meet a Halfie ft. Joe 日本で生まれ育った黒人のハーフの経験 | HAPA HOUR - YouTube via kwout