Considering what happened in the weeks leading up to last year’s Ryder Cup at Marco Simone, you could not pen a better script for this year’s ending at Royal Montreal.
Keegan Bradley went from being snubbed to clinching the winning point, defeating Si Woo Kim in the sixth match of the day, 1 up. Bradley’s win gives the Americans their 10th straight win in the Presidents Cup, continuing their dominance over the Internationals in this competition.
“That was incredible,” Bradley said after on the 18th green.
“I was saying all week I didn’t know if I’d ever get to do this again. To play in this tournament and then to win the [clinching] point, my goodness, the last time I played, I was the point to lose the Ryder Cup.”
Bradley had not played on an American team since 2014, when the Europeans trounced Team USA at Gleneagles in Scotland. That Ryder Cup is best remembered for what happened afterward, as Phil Mickelson eviscerated Tom Watson’s captaining strategies in the post-round press conference while sitting next to Watson and the entire team.
Bradley was 28 years old then, and he thought he would play on many more teams in the future. But those opportunities never came—until this week in Canada.
“I missed the guys. The guys, they’re just incredible,” Bradley said.
“They really love each other. The wives and the caddies love each other. It’s such an amazing atmosphere. I’m just so proud of the team, and I’m proud of just being here.”
Bradley played in only three matches this week for Captain Jim Furyk, but he won two points for the Americans, an impressive accomplishment since he sat out two sessions.
His victory on Sunday proved exceptional as well. His opponent took over the Presidents Cup on Saturday with his Steph Curry-like celebration, and Kim gave Bradley his all on the front nine on Sunday. Both players made three birdies over the first nine holes, but Kim walked to the 10th tee with a 1-up lead.
Then, Bradley won the 10th, 11th, 12th, and 14th holes, making three birdies over that stretch to open a 3-up lead with four holes to play. It looked all but certain that next year’s Ryder Cup captain would win his match, but Kim refused to go away. The South Korean won the 16th and 17th holes, forcing the match to go to the 18th with Bradley holding a 1-up lead. But Kim could not get his birdie to try to drop, thus giving the Americans the full point and the Presidents Cup victory.
“I learned that I can still do this. It’s always hard. It always is,” Bradley said.
“That was really uncomfortable there at the end. But I’m proud of the way everyone played today.”
Now, Bradley gets to look ahead to next year at Bethpage Black, the course he knows like the back of his hand thanks to his playing days at St. John’s University in nearby Queens. He says he will employ tactics like the ones Furyk employed this week. If they prove successful again, perhaps Bradley will go from being the Presidents Cup clincher to being the victorious Ryder Cup captain in a 12-month span.
That would be some story, wouldn’t it?
Although this story of redemption—one that began with a heartbreaking phone call from Zach Johnson one year ago—is also a pretty good tale.
Jack Milko is a golf staff writer for SB Nation’s Playing Through. Be sure to check out @_PlayingThroughfor more golf coverage. You can follow him on Twitter @jack_milko as well.
This page: https://www.globalissues.org/issue/245/war-on-terror.
To print all information (e.g. expanded side notes, shows alternative links), use the print version:
It was with disbelief and shock that people around the world saw footage of the terrorist attacks in the US on on September 11, 2001 when the planes-turned-missiles slammed into the World Trade Center towers and damaged the Pentagon.
This ultimately resulted in the US declaring and waging a war on terror. Osama Bin Laden was eventually tracked down and killed some 10 years later. But the way the war on terror has been conducted has led to many voicing concerns about the impact on civil liberties, the cost of the additional security focused changes, the implications of the invasions and wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and more.
Reaction to the September 11, 2001 events
With disbelief and shock around the world people saw the news footage of the events on September 11, 2001 when the planes-turned-missiles slammed into the World Trade Center towers and into the Pentagon. What is probably the worst terrorist attack on the United States, was totally inexcusable and roundly condemned.
Some 3000 were killed. Initial fears were that it was over 6000 A number of factors for this revised number, were said to include initial overestimates; more than one person reporting the same missing person; heroic rescue operations, etc. This lower number doesn’t in any way reduce the impact though.)
The subsequent bombing of Afghanistan to attack Osama Bin Laden’s Al Qaeda terrorist network and the Taliban for harboring them has also led to some 3,500 civilian deaths, according to an independent study released at the beginning of December 2001.
The ghastly terrorist attacks led to a mixture of political, social and economic reaction around the world.
Hatred and anti-Islam sentiment, (without distinguishing the despotic militants from ordinary Muslims) increased, even though most of the Muslim communities around the world condemned this act.
While visible efforts were seen by politicians to try to separate terrorists from Muslims in general, it has not been easy. On the one hand, after years of economic and geopolitical history, there are some aspects of distrust, while on the other hand, extremists in the Muslim and Christian communities are adding to the antagonisms. For example, during the height of the shock and anger to the September 11 attacks, extremist tendencies in the West resulted in beatings and even killings of Muslims. Even non-Muslims that just happened to have long beards or in some way resembled Taliban/Al Qaeda members were targeted. Others saw this as proof that Islam is inherently violent or that it is the primary threat to the rest of the world, etc. On the Muslim side, there have also been equally extreme reactions, from support of these terrorist acts to even being convinced that this was some sort of Zionist conspiracy to blame Muslims! In both cases these seem to be a minority of people with such extreme views but of course the concern is always that it will increase over time.
There was no question that there was going to be some sort of retaliation and response from the United States. One could not have expected them seriously to refrain from wanting to take revenge. Yet the fear was in what form this revenge would be and how it would be carried out as well as what the impact on ordinary Afghans would be, who have already suffered at the hands of the Taliban and outside forces for years.
In addition, some eight months after the attacks it was revealed in the mainstream press around the world that the CIA had warned George Bush of the threats weeks before September 11. This caused an uproar in many places, including the United States Congress, where members demanded more information to understand if all those deaths could have been prevented.
The terrible events of September 11 saw the considerable quieting of what was until then growing domestic and international criticism of the Bush Administration. The September 11 events resulted in a war on terror which saw support for Bush and his popularity soar at the time.
Up to September 11, 2001, the Bush administration was being criticized around the world for its stances on various issues domestically and internationally. Even European and other allies were very critical of positions on numerous global issues.
But even before the Bush Administration, throughout the world, many nations and groups of people had expressed their frustrations at how U.S. foreign policies had affected them on all sorts of issues, ranging from economic/globalization issues that have deepened poverty and/or inequality for most people around the world; geopolitics/arms/missile defense; environmental issues and so on. Protests either directly, or indirectly at U.S. policies have occurred all around the world—especially on globalization issues—as mentioned on this web site. (See the section on global protests for more on that, for example).
Yet that cannot be an excuse for the atrocity of September 11 as it killed many innocent people. At the same time, people have correctly pointed out that when other regions around the world have faced similar terrorist attacks, the outpouring of concern and condemnation has not been as much. The Washington Post (September 12, 2001) even dared to admit this at such a sensitive time shortly after the attacks. (Their article is no longer online.)
However, behind the unity of the American people in the shock of September 11, a heightened sense of security resulted with concerns reverberating throughout the world. Many were concerned about the resulting crackdown of freedoms and civil liberties in various nations. Many worried that various countries around the world would also use this war on terror as an excuse to pursue more aggressive options on their own citizens.
For example, consider the concerns Amnesty International raised in October 2001, shortly after the September 11, 2001 attacks: In the name of fighting international terrorism, governments have rushed to introduce draconian new measures that threaten the human rights of their own citizens, immigrants and refugees…. Governments have a responsibility to ensure the safety of their citizens, but measures taken must not undermine fundamental human rights standards. It appears that some of the initiatives currently being discussed or implemented may be used to curb basic human rights and to suppress internal opposition. Some of the definitions of terrorism under discussion are so broad that they could be used to criminalize anyone out of favor with those in power and criminalize legitimate peaceful exercise of the right to freedom of expression and association. They could also put at risk the right to privacy and threaten the rights of minorities and asylum-seekers.
In May 2003, Amnesty International charged, The war on terror, far from making the world a safer place, has made it more dangerous by curtailing human rights, undermining the rule of international law and shielding governments from scrutiny. It has deepened divisions among people of different faiths and origins, sowing the seeds for more conflict. The overwhelming impact of all this is genuine fear—among the affluent as well as the poor.
Even in the U.S. some of the resulting policies on how suspects will be treated, on how access to personal information will be made available for security concerns and so on, led to debates at all levels on what is considered an attack on civil liberties, and what is reasonable for security. On the foreign policy arena, there was increasing concern that the U.S. would be able to use the war on terror to pursue aggressive policies that were previously criticized by many other people. This can range from economic, to political and even military policies. The Iraq war was one such example, where among other things, the concern of terrorism was used to justify a war against Iraq, even though the terrorism links were not real.
While citizens everywhere, especially Americans, were rightly outraged at the attacks, the mainstream media has largely concentrated on the effects, the various aftermaths and impacts, and reporting what political leaders are doing, saying or not doing, or not saying, etc. They have also reported immense detail on some of the aspects of the actual bombing in Afghanistan, etc. As with most other conflicts in recent history though, while enormous in quantity, media reporting appears comparatively lacking in depth, historical context, and investigative analysis on the causes that fuel such outrageous militant extremism and terrorism.
The so-called range of discourse then, is quite narrow, but within it, coverage is quite detailed. The reporting of some aspects is indeed very moving and very good. There is, however, appropriate criticism of some extremism creeping into some aspects of the mainstream media as well, in certain circumstances. Importantly though, our range of perspectives is also affected by the range of discourse. This is especially relevant now, as citizens seek answers on how and why such a terrible atrocity could be committed. (For more on the coverage of the media, with analysis and critique of the mainstream media itself, see this web site’s section: War on Terror Mainstream Media and Propaganda)
With all the vivid imagery, we can only now begin to imagine how other people and societies around the world have suffered in other situations. With often worse results, albeit not so sudden and shocking, entire cities/regions have been leveled and/or enormous amount of life has been lost in places like Kosovo, Iraq, Democratic Republic of Congo, East Timor, Hiroshima/Nagasaki, all over Europe during the World Wars, and too many other places to be able to list here.
With the US-led bombing campaign on Afghanistan, there has always been more and more concern about civilians being caught in the middle. Indeed, by early December 2001, some 3,500 Afghan civilians were believed to have been killed by U.S. bombing. Furthermore, many aid agencies criticized the food drops for not delivering much actual aid and being a token gesture, rather than an effective one.
Perhaps one of the biggest fears, voiced before the retaliation started, is that retaliated violence could result in more retaliated violence and we risk tit-for-tat violence that looks hard to get out of. In all this, civilians on all sides will always be affected. We only need remind ourselves of that shuddering speech by Osama Bin Laden on his threats of retaliation against civilians and of various hawkish politicians in the West asking for the equivalent of no mercy. Martin Luther King is worth quoting:
The ultimate weakness of violence is that it is a descending spiral, begetting the very thing it seeks to destroy. Instead of diminishing evil, it multiplies it… Through violence you may murder the hater, but you do not murder hate. In fact, violence merely increases hate…. Returning violence for violence multiplies violence, adding deeper darkness to a night already devoid of stars. Darkness cannot drive out darkness; only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate; Only love can do that.
Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
Yet, how does one get out of this vicious circle? Of course it is not easy, and even a lot of the peace movement struggle on this answer, but perhaps if more voice was given in the media to these broader views, then alternative thoughts could be considered. True, more on peace-related alternatives are discussed in TV forums and debates, but when it comes to the actual reporting and one-on-one discussion and analysis, the context is limited to the current actions and options. The discussions are therefore within those confines, mostly.
On the foreign policy front, even recent history of the last 50 years or so has been questionable by both Western leaders and Middle Eastern leaders. For example, the support by the west of brutal leaders in the middle east has contributed to an extremist backlash. In their fight to get the Soviet Union out of Afghanistan, Osama Bin Laden himself, as well as other jihadists, were supported by the US, encouraging the training of jihadists and the rise of miltantism to galvanize opposition to the communists. As the article in the previous link implies, while it seems that the lesser of two evils was supported, perhaps the long term consequences were not fully explored and it does seem that violence and fear breeds more violence and fear.
On numerous fronts there are many, many things going on which readers have asked me to write on. It is difficult to keep up with all the angles with the view to write on all of them. As a result, for now, until I am able to catch up, included below, under this section on the war on terrorism are articles reposted from other web sites and authors from around the world that offer a variety of deeper and wider perspectives and views. They are broadly categorized into the sections listed below, although many articles can easily fit other categories too.
Also, in the More Information page is a growing collection of links and sources to other web sites that offer deeper perspectives.
I do not necessarily agree with all of the views of all the links and sources provided, and by no means are they a comprehensive list, rather an example.
Some of the more mainstream sources concentrate much more on the effects and aftermaths, while some of the other sources also offer deeper analysis on causes as well as ramifications around the world. These sites have more links that you can follow to other web sites. More sites will be added as time goes on.
Read “Sept 11 Reaction and in Context” to learn more.
Read “War on Terror Mainstream Media and Propaganda” to learn more.
Read “New War on Terror” to learn more.
Read “War on Terror: Crackdown on Civil Rights; War on Freedom” to learn more.
Read “US Military Commissions Act 2006—Unchecked Powers?” to learn more.
Read “9/11 Investigation” to learn more.
Read “War on Terror Geopolitics” to learn more.
Read “War on Terror: Civilization and Ideology” to learn more.
Read “Terrorism” to learn more.
At the start of June 2013, a large number of documents detailing surveillance by intelligence agencies such as the US’s NSA and UK’s GCHQ started to be revealed, based on information supplied by NSA whistle blower, Edward Snowden.
These leaks revealed a massive surveillance program that included interception of email and other Internet communications and phone call tapping. Some of it appears illegal, while other revelations show the US spying on friendly nations during various international summits.
Unsurprisingly, there has been a lot of furor. While some countries are no doubt using this to win some diplomatic points, there has been an increase in tension with the US and other regions around the world.
Much of the US surveillance programs came from the aftermath of the 9-11 terrorist attacks on the US in 2001. Concerns about a crackdown on civil rights in the wake of the so-called war on terror have been expressed for a long time, and these revelations seem to be confirming some of those fears.
Given the widespread collection of information, apparently from central servers of major Internet companies and from other core servers that form part of the Internet backbone, activities of millions (if not billions) of citizens have been caught up in a dragnet style surveillance problem called PRISM, even when the communication has nothing to do with terrorism.
What impacts would such secretive mass surveillance have on democracy?
Read “Surveillance State: NSA Spying and more” to learn more.
The war on terror section on this web site includes many articles reposted from elsewhere around the web. View this page to see the full list of those articles.
Read “Full List of Articles in War On Terror section” to learn more.
Read “War on Terror Links and Resources” to learn more.
If you spend any time on social media, you’ve probably seen ads for supplements by a company called Arrae. This post looks at the company’s most popular supplements for a combined Arrae MB-1 review and Arrae Bloat review.
Like I said, Arrae Bloat supplement seems to be one of the most popular, but the company has a new ‘fauxzempic’ supplement that it claims is effective for weight loss.
Just another company jumping on the ‘natural Ozempic’ trend.
Read my Xyngular GLP-X review here.
This Arrae supplement review looks the science behind Arrae products, and how their claims hold up against current evidence.
Arrae was founded by a husband and wife team. Essentially, she was a beauty influencer who had digestive issues, he was a tech bro, and it was a match made in heaven.
Arrae marketing
Arrae clearly targets their products to a specific demographic (female, wealthy).
You all know that I don’t like to mince words, so I’m going to come out and say it: as a dietitian and health professional who is also public-facing, I have issues with much of Arrae’s content. This includes influencer posts, but also Arrae social media ads and some of the posts on the Arrae site.
It’s totally fine and expected for Arrae to target a certain demographic and to make claims about the products that people find enticing. That’s how marketing works.
But in order to properly market a nutritional supplement, you should understand the science and physiology behind it and the conditions you’re claiming that supplement can help.
My overarching issue with Arrae as a company is that they seem to make claims about their products that are not supported by solid, peer-reviewed, human trials. Yes, the company seems to lean heavily on alternative medicine. No, it’s not okay to act like a product does something that it potentially may not do.
I think that’s a fair statement, don’t you?
Here are some examples:
Arrae claims that its products ‘heal your gut over time,’ which is likely unproven.
It advertises that one of its products ‘kills anxiety for good,’ which is reckless and potentially dangerous. Do not avoid taking medications for anxiety if you need them.
Here we have one of the Arrae founders implying that Arrae bloat helps with gluten and dairy sensitivity.
A bloated face is likely due to water retention. FYI.
Yes, bloating can be uncomfortable and a sign of illness – if you have painful bloating that doesn’t go away, and is associated with other symptoms such as rashes, diarrhea, vomiting, or excessive gas, don’t just take a supplement. Please see a doctor/RD.
I discussed the specific gluten and dairy sensitivity claim with a gastroenterologist, who saw the Arrae bloat ingredients and concurred with the following take:
Dairy sensitivity – which we can assume is lactose intolerance – is a deficiency in lactase, an enzyme produced in the small intestine that breaks down lactose into glucose and galactose. Lactose intolerance can cause bloating and diarrhea when lactose is consumed.
Bloat supplements don’t contain lactase, and therefore can not break down lactose.
The cause of gluten sensitivity is not known. Many people experience a bloated belly after they eat carbs, but THIS IS NORMAL. For every gram of glycogen we absorb, we retain 3-4 grams of water. It doesn’t mean you’re sick or that you don’t tolerate carbs or gluten.
This influencer was upset that I called her out for her extensive anti-bloat routine and making unproven claims about Arrae.
Lastly, there’s something really disingenuous and gross about a woman in a small body selling a weight-loss supplement.
Arrae MB-1 review
I know a lot of you want to read an Arrae MB-1 review about the company’s recently-released ‘faux-zempic’ supplement.
Like similar ‘natural Ozempic’ supplements, Arrae MB-1 is marketed as being a ‘natural alternative’ to the ‘chemicals’ in GLP-1 agonist medications.
Telling us that a product is ‘natural’ and therefore ‘better’ is called the Appeal to Nature fallacy, and it’s absolutely wrong.
GLP-1 agonist medications have never been matched in weight loss efficacy by a supplement. These meds have been around since 2015, and have a good safety record. Yes, some people don’t tolerate them, just as some people may not tolerate MB-1. But to market MD-1 by wrongly implying that GLP-1s aren’t safe, is completely unethical.
In reality, supplements – including MB-1 – aren’t well regulated, and neither are the claims companies make about them.
Read my review of GLP-1 agonists here.
Read my review of Oprah’s Weight Loss special here.
As for the cost, I’d rather pay more for something that’s clinically proven, tightly regulated, and approved by the FDA than a supplement that is none of those things.
Some of the marketing of Arrae’s new MB-1 supplement is absolutely offensive. Hello, what message does the image below send? You need pills to be thin? Being thin is preferable? You can depend on this pill for weight loss?
The 80s called…they want their advertising back.
The founders claim that 88% of Americans are ‘metabolically out of balance,’ but we don’t know where that number came from or what that even means, exactly.
The above is just vague enough to convince people that they probably have something wrong with them, while not telling them anything at all.
And boosting your metabolic rate by 500%? I’m sorry, what?
If my BMR is 1400 calories a day, this would mean that MB-1 would potentially boost it to 8400 calories a day. How is a company even allowed to make this claim? ‘Boosting metabolism’ is a marketing term, not science.
Arrae claims that MB-1 is ‘clinically proven.’ This sounds exciting, until you realize that the supplement itself has not been studied; the ingredients in it have. Even if these ingredients have research behind them, this doesn’t mean that this research is good, or that it backs up the claims Arrae is making.
All research isn’t good research, and if a study’s outcomes haven’t been replicated, it’s hard to imagine any ethical company using it to support the efficacy of their product.
We’ve seen this sort of shady marketing in a lot of supplements, including the Glucose Goddess’s Anti-Spike.
Read my Glucose Goddess Anti-Spike review here.
When I wrote the company asking for the research behind MB-1. They were very responsive and sent me 3 citations right away.
The first one was a 72-person 2008 study looking at cissus quadrangularis for weight loss. It was sponsored by a company that makes supplements containing this ingredient.
Interestingly, a 2021 study on cissus quadrangularis and weight loss concluded that compared to the 2008 study’s result, investigators found that this ingredient had no effect on weight, BMI, body fat, or body fat percentage. They hypothesized that the 2008 study participants may have lost lean mass versus fat mass, as these were not measured in the old study.
All but two studies in the review were in mice or in vitro, and therefore don’t prove a thing (at least, to me).
One 2016 study found a statistically significant but minimal 2.4-4% reduction in body fat in 24 subjects who were given B-Lactis. A 2019 study found increased beneficial bacteria in the gut with B-Lactis, because of course it did. Nothing remarkable and to me, nothing that proves most of the above claims.
Moving on, the third study the company sent me was a 4-week 2014 study on grains of paradise on 19 non-obese women aged 20-22. Not exactly representative of the general population, not to mention that the study is old and tiny. Subjects received 30g of GP a day.
The study found ‘Neither GP nor placebo ingestion affected subcutaneous or total fat.’ Intervention subjects lost 2.9 cm of visceral fat compared a visceral fat gain in the placebo group. Is that clinically relevant?
Basal energy expenditure was measured in a metabolic chamber, and did find a 97 calorie reduction per day in the intervention group. Is that the 500% metabolic boost the company advertises? Who knows, but if so, it’s not accurate.
African mango is another ingredient in Arrae MB-1, and while the company didn’t send me a study on it, here’s the one they use on the Arrae site to prove this ingredient’s efficacy. The study concluded that 300mg of African mango aka irvingia gabonensis appeared to cause significant weight loss.
Two more recent studies – one in 2013 and one in 2019 – found that although this ingredient may cause some weight loss, the only human research we have on it is methodologically flawed and can’t be used to prove the efficacy of this ingredient.
The other ingredients in MB-1 – green tea extract, chromium, and vitamin B6 – are frequently used in weight loss/fat burner supplements but have no convincing evidence behind them in terms of their effect on body weight.
Arrae supplements, like many others, contain a proprietary blends of their active ingredients. I never recommend supplements that contain proprietary blends, for several reasons:
First of all, we have no way of knowing if the product contains effective doses of their active ingredients. We actually don’t know how much of these ingredients the product has, period. Aside from potentially being too low, it may also be too high. Hiding ingredient amounts in a blend prevents us from knowing if an ingredient is in a dose that may be dangerous to some people.
The bottom line is this:
No food burns fat. No supplement burns fat. If something like this existed, the weight loss industry would cease to exist. If MB-1 burns fat and is so great for weight loss, why have none of the scientists and researchers discovered it until now? If any of its ingredients were that effective, why in the world wouldn’t they be first-line treatment for obesity?
Because they just aren’t all that great. As a dietitian, I would not recommend MB-1 or any ‘fat burning,’ ‘metabolism-boosting’ supplement to anyone. I think they’re all total scams.
Arrae Bloat Review
Arrae Bloat seems to be the other very popular Arrae supplement. One ‘well-meaning’ bride in California actually handed it out at her wedding, and I just don’t even know what to say about that.
We have medicalized bloating to the point where people believe that having a full stomach is wrong and that it needs to be fixed. For most individuals, transient bloating after eating is completely normal and doesn’t require a supplement to ‘cure’ it.
The main ingredient in Arrae Bloat is ginger. While research supports the use of ginger for nausea and vomiting in pregnancy, the evidence is otherwise mixed and mostly unimpressive in terms of ginger’s efficacy for indigestion.
One small study showed an improvement in gastric emptying with 1200mg of ginger taken an hour before meals (Arrae recommends taking Bloat after a meal). Bloat only contains 220mg of ginger per dose.
Bromelain, an enzyme from pineapples, is also in Bloat. There’s really not a lot of human research around the efficacy of bromelain for indigestion or bloating, but it does contain enzymes called cysteine proteinases that may help the body break down protein in the stomach.
The other ingredients in Bloat – dandelion (diuretic), along with mint, lemon balm, and slippery elm – have historically been used to soothe the gut after meals. There is solid evidence supporting the use of peppermint for IBS symptoms.
Again, most of Arrae Bloat’s active ingredients are in a proprietary blend. Who knows if we’re getting enough?
My issue with Bloat is not with the supplement as much as how it’s marketed.
For this Arrae Bloat review, I asked Arrae for the research behind the supplement, since they make some pretty big claims about it.
They directed me to a small 35-person open-label, unpublished trial using subjective outcomes. The trial’s size, the fact that it was open-label, single-arm, not peer-reviewed or even published, and commissioned by the company. Garbage in, garbage out, as we say in my business. Before and afters, random influencers, and testimonials are not research.
That being said, I can’t see Bloat being dangerous for most healthy people (except to your wallet – it’s expensive), so try it if you want.
Arrae supplements review in short
I can’t give Arrae a pass, even if its founder is Canadian. Their advertising is disappointing. Their claims are disappointing. And, their ‘research’ is not, for me, good enough.
Arrae Bloat may be effective for some people with gastrointestinal issues. Otherwise, let’s stop medicalizing all bloating, please. Having a full stomach is normal, and your stomach isn’t supposed to be flat all the time.
A pretty package and high price tag isn’t what people should be looking for in a supplement.
Also: can we stop believing that fat burners do anything for weight loss?
ԳՅՈՒՄՐԻ, 29 ՍԵՊՏԵՄԲԵՐԻ, ԱՐՄԵՆՊՐԵՍ: Գյումրու դրամատիկական թատրոնը սեպտեմբերի 28-ին բացեց իր 159-րդ թատերաշրջանը։ Ինչպես տեղեկացնում է «Արմենպրես»-ը, մինչ թատերաշրջանի բացումն ազդարարող առաջնախաղը, Թատերական հրապարակում հրավառության մեկնարկը տվեց Գյումրիում ծնված Folkastic Band-ը։
Գյումրու դրամատիկական թատրոնի թատերաշրջանի բացումը ազդարարվեց Նոել Քոուարդի «Խելահեղ Seance» լիրիկական կատակերգությամբ՝ ռեժիսոր Ռաֆայել Ասատրյանի բեմադրությամբ։
Առաջնախաղից առաջ թատրոնի գեղարվեստական ղեկավար Լյուդվիգ Հարությունյանը լրագրողների հետ զրույցի ժամանակ նշեց, որ ստեղծագործությունը խորը փիլիսոփայական կամ բարոյահոգեբանական աշխատանք չէ, բայց տրամադրություն ստեղծող է, դրական հույզեր առաջացնող։
«Յուրաքանչյուր տարի թատրոնը փորձում է առանձնահատուկ կերպով բացել թատերաշրջանը, և այս տարի էլ բացառություն չէ։ Մենք հասկացանք, որ այն, ինչ արել ենք, հիմնականում ծանր ներկայացումներ են, և թատրոնին պակասում են կատակերգությունները, ու այս անգամ որոշեցինք թատերաշրջանը բացել գունեղ ու պոզիտիվ լիցքերով։ Հանդիսատեսը բեմում կտեսնի նոր երիտասարդական խմբի՝ դերասաններ, ովքեր առաջին անգամ են խաղում, և նրանց հետ հանդես կգան մեր փորձառու դերասանները։ Ես այս ներկայացումն առանձնացնում եմ նրանով, որ նոր դեմքեր կան, երիտասարդական նոր ստեղծագործական կազմ, նոր նկարիչ»,- նշեց թատրոնի գեղարվեստական ղեկավար Լյուդվիգ Հարությունյանը՝ հանդիսատեսին այս թատերաշրջանում խոստանալով երեք նոր առաջնախաղ, այդ թվում՝ նաև մանկական ներկայացում։
Ներկայացնելով կատակերգությունը՝ ռեժիսոր Ռաֆայել Ասատրյանը նշեց, որ ներկայացումը սիրո, հավատարմության և հենց դրա պատճառով ստեղծված ծիծաղելի իրավիճակների մասին է։ «Ուղերձն այն է, որ եթե կինը սիրում է, նա միշտ, ամեն գնով իր ամուսնու կողքին է, անգամ մահից հետո։ Սիրող կինը կարող է շրջանցել կյանքի ու մահվան սահմանները, վերադառնալ ու մնալ ամուսնու կողքին։ Ներկայացումը փոթորիկ է լցնելու մեր հանդիսատեսի կյանքում, և այս ներկայացումով խորհուրդ ենք տալիս գնահատել այն արևածագն ու առավոտները, որ ունեք, և երբեք կյանքում չկորցնեք փոթորիկները, որ ունեք»,- նշեց Ռաֆայել Ասատրյանը։
Srinagar, Indian-administered Kashmir – As Kashmir gears up for the last phase of local elections due on Tuesday, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi has promised to restore the disputed territory’s “statehood” that was stripped five years ago by his Hindu nationalist government.
“We had promised in the parliament that Jammu and Kashmir [official name of Indian-administered Kashmir] will again be a state,” Modi said, addressing a rather dull crowd in Srinagar, the main city in the disputed Muslim-majority territory.
Only the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) “will fulfil this commitment”, he said without elaborating further.
Modi’s latest election pitch comes amid widespread anger in Kashmir at the BJP for scrapping the region’s limited autonomy and demoting it into a federally run territory in 2019.
The move is also aimed at blunting attacks from Kashmir-based parties, who have made the restoration of the special status and statehood their main poll agenda.
The ghost of New Delhi’s unilateral decision to scrap the region’s special status, aimed at safeguarding local culture and demography, still looms large over the poll campaigns.
Anti-India sentiment runs deep in the disputed Himalayan region, which has witnessed decades of armed rebellion. India has accused Pakistan of backing rebels – a charge denied by Islamabad. Both the South Asian neighbours claim Kashmir in full but have governed parts of it since their independence from Britain in 1947.
So, what will be the nature of the promised state? What powers will the newly elected assembly wield? And can Kashmir’s unionist political parties, technically, deliver on their poll promises?
How does India’s federal structure function? Where does Kashmir fit in?
Late Professor Kenneth Clinton Wheare, an Australian academic and expert on constitutions of the British Commonwealth, described India as a “quasi-federal” state.
“Almost devolutionary in character: a unitary state with subsidiary federal features rather than a federal state with subsidiary unitary features,” he observed, implying that while power is centred in New Delhi, states are allowed to govern and legislate in accordance with regional contexts.
The Indian constitution defines the country as a “Union of States”, and then breaks down the power-sharing, legislative structure into three lists: the Union List, including remits such as defence and currency that are exclusive to the parliament; the State List, including powers such as police and public health that can be drafted by the states; and the Concurrent List, including areas such as marriage, education, and forests, which can be legislated by both.
But Kashmir’s relationship with New Delhi has been unique and complex as it joined the Indian union in 1947 with a set of conditions, which were enshrined in Article 370.
Under the terms of the instrument of accession, Kashmir gave India the power to manage matters of foreign affairs, defence, and communications — and left New Delhi with limited legislative powers.
While successive governments in New Delhi gradually eroded those powers, Kashmir still flexed its separate constitution, flag, and freedom to make laws on permanent residency and property ownership, and reserve government-sponsored opportunities exclusively for the state’s subjects.
Indian security personnel stand guard as voters queue up to cast their ballots at a polling station during the first phase of assembly elections in Pulwama, south of Srinagar on September 18, 2024. [Tauseef Mustafa/AFP]
What happened to special status?
On August 5, 2019, the Modi government removed Article 370, fulfilling BJP’s decades-long promise to remove the special status, which it said was responsible for the region’s political crisis and separatism.
New Delhi also bifurcated the region into two federally governed territories: Jammu and Kashmir bordering Pakistan in the west, and Ladakh bordering China in the east.
On the same day, Amit Shah, India’s home minister and Modi’s confidante, informed the parliament that, unlike Ladakh, “statehood” will be restored to Jammu and Kashmir.
To prevent the outbreak of protests, authorities arrested thousands of Kashmiri leaders and activists and imposed a months-long communication blockade – a move denounced by the opposition and international rights observers.
The decision was also immediately challenged in India’s top court, which eventually upheld the move in December last year and called for the restoration of the same statehood as any other Indian state – with no separate autonomy rights – “at the earliest and as soon as possible”.
But just weeks before the region’s first assembly elections, the Modi government gave its handpicked administrator more powers, further shrinking the scope of the incoming legislature.
“For the last five years, all Kashmiris have seen is an arrogant bureaucracy and the important missing layers of a local government,” said Anuradha Bhasin, editor of Kashmir Times and author of A Dismantled State: The Untold Story of Kashmir after Article 370.
“New Delhi has suppressed this area that has a history of turmoil. It has worrying, ominous signs,” she told Al Jazeera.
Speaking at a poll rally in the Jammu region, Rahul Gandhi, leader of the opposition in parliament, took a dig at the local administration saying “non-locals are running Jammu and Kashmir”.
“Your democratic right was snatched. We have given priority to the demand for restoration of statehood,” he said, addressing the crowd. “If [the BJP] fails to restore statehood after the elections, we will put pressure on them to ensure it.”
What power will the elected government have in Kashmir?
Political observers and Kashmiri analysts see the elections as a referendum on the BJP’s controversial decision –– and reflect upon the unchartered duality of running a legislature subservient to the central government.
While Kashmir parties have tried to realign their politics along the calls for restoration of special autonomy and “dignity”, experts told Al Jazeera that the newly elected government will have to work at the mercy of the Lieutenant Governor (LG), a constitutional head appointed by New Delhi under the current setup.
Under the flipped framework after August 2019, the LG will sway more influence than the elected assembly and will retain control over issues of “public order and police”. The government will also be unable to introduce any financial bill without a nod from the LG, holding the assembly a virtual prisoner in fiscal matters.
The LG now wields control over the greater bureaucracy, the anticorruption bureau, appointment of the Advocate General and law officers, and is included in matters of prosecutions and sanctions.
“The elected assembly will be completely under the thumb of the Lieutenant Governor, with curtailed powers for the head of government without any appreciable autonomy for the state,” Siddiq Wahid, an academic and political expert, told Al Jazeera.
The events of August 2019, Wahid said, “stripped us completely naked (of) our enhanced autonomy, dismantled the state and left it without any democratic representation for six years”.
The promise of statehood by the BJP, he added, is merely an act of “handing over a cap”. “We can put on a cap on top of our heads, but it means nothing,” he said, adding that “the more immediate objective is to divest Delhi of the direct political control over the state.”
Even in a case where the BJP restores the statehood to Jammu and Kashmir, the scenario remains open to alterations that will be tailored to New Delhi’s needs, said Sheikh Showkat, a senior Kashmiri analyst.
What are the choices before the pro-India parties?
The pro-India Kashmir parties have accused the BJP of denying Kashmiris their democratic rights and promised to restore Article 370 and full statehood.
Showkat said he has observed a “huge revulsion and deepening trust deficit” post-August 2019 between Kashmiris and New Delhi. But despite the enthusiasm he has noticed among the cadres of regional political groups, Showkat said the upcoming government “will be nothing more than a sort of a metropolitan council”.
“It may deal with day-to-day administration and local issues but cannot go beyond that,” he said. “It will always be dependent upon the views and wishes of the LG.”
That is a reality that has not escaped the regional political powerhouses.
The last two elected chief ministers of Indian-administered Kashmir, Omar Abdullah and Mehbooba Mufti — who head the National Conference (NC) and People’s Democratic Party (PDP) respectively — initially denied participating in the polls citing curtailed powers.
But both Abdullah and Mufti have reversed their decision to boycott the polls amid fears that the BJP may benefit from their non-participation.
Shokwat, the analyst, said the Kashmiri parties are facing “two bad choices: participating in polls gives legitimacy to New Delhi but staying away could give the BJP an edge in the government”.
He also emphasised a resolution that the new assembly could pass on the reorganisation of the erstwhile state in August 2019 — a vital key missing, as required under the constitution.
“Whosoever comes to power,” Showkat added, the new government will “use the avenue to legitimise or delegitimise the August 2019 decision”.
Mehbooba Mufti, leader of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP), greets supporters during a campaign rally in Jammu [Channi Anand/AP Photo]
Will the Kashmir status quo be returned?
The friction between the elected government and the LG is not new to India. In Delhi, the Arvind Kejriwal-led government has fought multiple court battles, protested in the streets, and campaigned for greater control over the legislature.
That also provides a view of the upcoming tussles in Indian-administered Kashmir, said Bhasin, the editor. “The way that the BJP keeps controls, I don’t see they have a very different vision of governance in Jammu and Kashmir.”
Even before the abrogation of Article 370, Kashmir’s first leader Sheikh Abdullah was arrested in 1953 for backing a UN-sponsored plebiscite in Kashmir. He was released after 11 years in prison and after ceding powers to New Delhi. Over the decades, rights guaranteed under Article 370 were hollowed out by nearly 47 presidential orders.
In August 2019, the BJP claimed it had put the last nail in the coffin.
But Bhasin painted a pessimistic political outlook as she pointed out the unprecedented crackdown on press freedom and human rights.
“The hands of the clock have never moved back. Whatever has been taken from the people, in terms of their autonomy or democratic rights, has never been given back. I doubt that would change in the near future,” she told Al Jazeera.
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Olivia Rodrigo burst onto the music scene inwith her debut album Sour.
The singer-songwriter, known for her emotionallyrics and versatile sound, quickly became a global sensation with hits that explore the rollercoaster of love, heartbreak, and self-discovery.
Whether you are on the verge of crying your eyes out, or on top of a table singing your guts out, this young music icon just paved way for a new generation of music that would last for long time.
Since, we’re talking about this talented singer and her songs, let’s make this your guide to which songs you should listen to depending on your mood.
Ready?
When You’re Heartbroken: Drivers License
The moment when you’re feeling the pain of a heartbreak, this is the perfect song for you. This emotional ballad captures the raw pain of unrequited love and the loneliness that follows. With lyrics like, “I still see your face in the white cars, front yards,” Olivia paints a picture of a relationship that lingers long after its over. Ouch.
When You’re Angry and Over It: Good 4 U
If you’re in a mood where you just need to scream and let out some pent-up frustration, “Good 4 U” is your go-to. This high-energy track is packed with sarcasm making it an anthem for anyone whose had enough of their ex moving on too easily. Bye!
When You’re Feeling Nostalgic: Deja Vu
There are times when memories hit you like a wave, and “Deja” Vu” speaks to that eerie feeling of seeing someone you loved move on with someone new while obviouslyreusing the special moments you once shared. It’s like your ex is just using your template. Yuck!
When You’re Reflecting on Growth: Traitor
Sometimes, heartbreak doesn’t hit you all at once. it creeps up on you when you realize someone wasn’t as loyal as they claimed to be. “Traitor” is a hauntingly beautiful track about betrayal and coming to terms with being deceived. Everything will be alright, don’t worry.
When You Want to Celebrate: Happier
If you’re in the mood to celebrate self-love and resilience, “Happier” is a bittersweet but empowering track. It’s not about wishing ill on someone it’s about wanting the best for them, but also hoping they remember how good things were with you.
Olivia’s music is like a therapy session wrapped in a playlist. Whether you need to cry, scream, reflect, or dance, her songs tap into the highs and lows of life with raw honesty and emotion.
No matter what mood you’re in, you can always count on finding an Olivia Rodrigo track that speaks to your heart.
And this October 5, she will be performing in Manila for the first time for her Guts World Tour.
ՀՀ վարչապետի տիկին Աննա Հակոբյանի նախաձեռնությամբ և մասնակցությամբ օգոստոսի 25-31-ը Արցախի զորամասերից մեկում անցկացվել է հավաք, որտեղ ներգրավված են եղել Արցախում բնակվող տարբեր տարիք և մասնագիտություն ունեցող 15 կանայք։ Դասընթացի նպատակն է եղել ծանոթանալ զինվորական կյանքին, ձեռք բերել ռազմական հմտություններ։ Այս նախաձեռնությունը լայնորեն քննարկվում է հասարակության շրջանում. որոշները ողջունում են այն, մյուսներն էլ՝ քննադատում և հերթական ձևականությունը համարում:
«Ադեկվադ» նախաձեռնության համահիմնադիր Արթուր Դանիելյանը ԼՈՒՐԵՐ.com-ի հետ զրույցում նշեց, որ վերջին շրջանում կատարվող և կատարվելիք քայլերով իշխանությունները հասարակությանը պատրաստում են պատերազմի. «Խնդիրն այն է, որ Նիկոլ Փաշինյանի քայլերը բերել են տրամաբանական կետի, որտեղ պատերազմն անխուսափելի է, ընդ որում, իմ ինտուիցիան ինձ հուշում է՝ դա գիտակցված է արվել: Ես տեսնում եմ, որ նրանք հասարակությանը փորձում են պատրաստել պատերազմի, բայց չեն պատրաստում հաղթանակի, որովհետև հաղթանակին պատրաստելիս՝ իշխանությունները պարտավոր կլինեին օտարերկրյա գործակալական ցանցերը չեզոքացնել Հայաստանում, առաջին հերթին, հենց սորոսական տարատեսակ հիմնադրամները, ինչը չի արվում: Ահաբեկչական խմբերը ազատ շրջում են փողոցներում և ինձ մոտ տպավորություն է ստեղծվել, որ մեզ պատրաստում են մի պատերազմի, որտեղ շատ հնարավոր է՝ ցավալի կորուստներ ունենանք, բայց իշխանությունները նախապես ուզում են ստեղծել իմիջ, որ նրանք ամեն ինչ իրենց ուժերի ներածին չափով արել են: Եվ ինչպես մի քանի անգամ արդեն եղել է, նախապես իրենց ուսերից գցեն պատասխանատվությունը, սակայն ցույց տան, որ, իբրև թե, ամեն ինչ արել են»,- ասաց Դանիելյանը:
Վերջին շրջանում տեղի ունեցած գործողությունները Արթուր Դանիելյանը բնորոշում է որպես դիմակահանդես. «Աշխարհազոր են ուզում ստեղծել, կանանց են զինվորական համազգեստով ցուցադրում, և տրամաբանական հարցեր են առաջանում՝ եթե աշխարհազորը այդքան կարևոր է, ապա ԵԿՄ-ն ինչու կազմաքանդվեց և նմանատիպ կառույցները, որոնք օրհասական պահերին միշտ Հայաստանի կողքին են եղել: Հիմա իրենց քայլերով մեդիահարթակներով փորձում են գովազդել, որ իրենք պատրաստվում են պատերազմի: Այս գործողությունները փախկապակցված են»:
«Ինձ մոտ շատ վատ կանխազգացում կա՝ ինչ-որ դավադրություն է հյուսվում, որի շրջանակներում, շատ հնարավոր է արդեն նախապես պայմանավորված, սարսափելի պարտություն է մեզ սպասվում, որտեղ հիմնական մեղավորը, ըստ ամենայնի, դուրս կգա Ռուսաստանը: Այսինքն՝ բացառված չէ, որ Նիկոլ Փաշինյանը ինչ-որ պահի ելույթ կունենա, և կասի, որ մենք սարսափելի կորուստներ ունեցանք, որովհետև, օրինակ, Ռուսաստանը մեզ դավաճանեց: Իրադարձությունների տրամաբանությունը և օրինաչափությունը հուշում են, որ դեպքերը կզարգանան հենց այս ֆոնով»,- ընդգծեց «Ադեկվադ» նախաձեռնության համահիմնադիրը:
Դանիելյանը վստահ է՝ այս քայլերը հանգեցնլու են սարսափելի հետևանքների. «Ես չեմ կարծում, որ Աննա Հակոբյանը այս նախաձեռնությամբ Մեհրիբան Ալիևայի նմանակման ինչ-որ նպատակ էր հետապնդում, ինձ թվում է՝ նրանք, ընդամենը, ստեղծում են պատրանք, որ ամեն ինչ անում են պատերազմի պատրաստվելու համար, մինչդեռ իրականում անում են հակառակը: Նրանք ՊՆ բյուջեն կրճատել են, հայտարարել են, որ բյուջեն 30%-ով աճել է, բայց, չգիտես ինչու, նախորդ տարիների համեմատությամբ միայն ՊՆ բյուջեն է կրճատվել, ընդ որում, ռազմամթերքի գծով ծախսերը էականորեն են կրճատվել, որովհետև, օրինակ, զինվորների սնունդի վրա ծախսվող գումարը 3-4 անգամ ավելացել է: Այնպես որ սա հերթական թատրոնն է, որի արդյունքում մենք ունենալու ենք սարսափելի հետևանքներ, շատ ավելի ցավալի, քան կորոնավիրուսի հետևանքով»:
«Չգիտեմ՝ հակառակորդը ինչպես է ընկալելու և արձագանքելու Աննա Հակոբյանի այս քայլը, բայց, կարծում եմ՝ էական էլ չէ: Զինվորական համազգեստ կրելու խնդիր չեմ տեսնում, բայց խնդիրն այն է՝ որ այդ ամենը թոզ է, և նրանք ստեղծում են պատրանք, թե ռազմահայրենասեր են. դա ինձ մոտ նողկանք է առաջացնում, որովհետև ցանկացած անբարոյական երեսպաշտության դրսևորման արդյունքում ես ոչ մի դրական զգացում չեմ կարող ունենալ, բայց բուն փաստը, որ պետական այրերը կամ իրենց կանայք ռազմական համազգեստ են կրում, կարծում եմ՝ սխալ կամ ճիշտ չի կարող լինել, նույնիսկ, ողջունելի է»,- եզրափակեց Դանիելյանը:
Search and rescue teams in Nepal’s capital have been picking through wrecked homes as floodwaters have started to recede.
Officials reported on Monday that the death toll from the monsoon floods and landslides had risen to 193 around the Himalayan nation. At least 31 others were missing and many others injured, police said.
Entire neighbourhoods in Kathmandu were inundated after the heaviest rains in more than two decades, with the capital temporarily cut off from the rest of the country after landslides blocked highways.
“Our focus is on search and rescue, including people who have been stranded on highways,” said Ministry of Home Affairs spokesman Rishi Ram Tiwari.
Deadly floods and landslides are common across South Asia during the monsoon season, lasting from June to September, but experts say climate change is making them worse.
The International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development, a Nepal-based think tank, said the disaster had been made worse by unplanned urban encroachment around the Bagmati River, which courses through the capital.
Nepal’s army said more than 4,000 people had been rescued using helicopters, motorboats and rafts.
Bulldozers were being used to clear nearly two dozen sections of main highways leading into Kathmandu that had been blocked by debris.
Nepal’s weather bureau said preliminary data from stations in 14 districts measured record-breaking rain in the 24 hours to Saturday morning.
A monitoring station at the Kathmandu airport recorded about 240mm (9.4 inches) of rain, the highest since 2002.
The monsoon season brings 70-80 percent of South Asia’s annual rainfall and is vital for agriculture and food production in a region home to about two billion people.
But monsoon rains also bring widespread death and destruction in the form of floods and landslides.
Experts say climate change has worsened their frequency and intensity.
More than 300 people have died in Nepal in rain-related disasters this year.