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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
2 yrs

Is There Really A Link Between Math Skills And Musical Skills?
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Is There Really A Link Between Math Skills And Musical Skills?

It’s an idea that’s become so widespread as to be repeated as gospel – people who are good at math also tend to be good at music. Most of us know someone who fits the stereotype. Maybe it was a kid at school who got top marks in math class and could rattle off a Mozart piano sonata at the drop of a hat. Maybe it was your deskmate from orchestra who went on to become a rocket scientist. But how much truth is there in it‚ really?Why do we believe there’s a connection between music and math skills?There are plenty of examples of high-profile musicians with a mathematical background‚ and a good few famous scientists who’ve moonlighted as composers or instrumentalists. Take Queen's lead guitarist Sir Brian May‚ who has more recently been in the news thanks to his work as an astrophysicist‚ helping map the anatomy of the most dangerous asteroid we know about. Another familiar face in the astrophysics world is Professor Brian Cox‚ but did you know he once played the keyboard for 90s band D:Ream?In the classical world‚ we have influential composer Philip Glass‚ who studied math and philosophy at the University of Chicago. Then there's pioneering astronomer and discoverer of Uranus William Herschel‚ who also managed to find time to compose a large catalog of musical works for a variety of instruments. And‚ perhaps the doyen of them all: Pythagoras himself. Although best known for the famous theorem that sent you to sleep at school (something something triangles?) and his slightly eccentric beliefs about beans‚ the so-called “father of numbers” also made some of the first great strides in understanding the fundamentals of harmony that still apply in Western musical composition today. But though the famous examples might catch our attention‚ there is such a thing as confirmation bias. For every polymath (no pun intended) out there‚ there’ll be scores of mathematicians who can’t tell a piccolo from a viola‚ and loads of musicians who’d be lost without their smartphone calculators.There’s no denying the idea has stuck‚ though‚ and it could be partially because – as old Pythag’ noted – music and math themselves are connected in fundamental ways. “The two have a surprising amount in common‚” Dr Ayça Akn‚ a researcher from the Department of Software Engineering at Antalya Belek University in Turkey‚ told IFLScience.“Think about symbols and symmetry. Both subjects also require abstract thinking and quantitative reasoning. Arithmetic lends itself particularly well to being taught through music since fractions and ratios are also fundamental to music.”“Mathematics is all about numbers and fractions. If you replace those numbers with notes‚ rhythm and tempos‚ you get music.”          Some higher education institutes allow students with twin passions for music and math to capitalize on this by following a joint study course in both disciplines. Prestigious science and medicine university Imperial College London offers a 4-year joint bachelor’s program in physics and music performance‚ together with the neighboring Royal College of Music. The University of Edinburgh offers Mathematics and Music as a bachelor’s degree course‚ which focuses on theoretical and cultural aspects of music alongside the math courses. All this notwithstanding‚ it’s fair to say that‚ for most of us‚ any music education we received was pretty far removed from our mathematical education. But could we be missing a trick there? Might combining these two seemingly diverse subjects be beneficial for the next generation of kids? Luckily for us‚ there’s some fascinating research already going on in this area‚ and we were able to speak to Dr Akn about a recent study she carried out‚ aiming to answer just these kinds of questions. Should music and math education be combined?In this research‚ Dr Akn set out on a hunt through half a century's worth of scientific literature. She was interested in finding out whether there was any evidence that teaching music to young children could help them develop their math skills‚ so she sifted through papers published between 1975 and 2022.“Math is not easy for every child‚” Dr Akn told IFLScience. “Recent scores in mathematics among the students of the developed countries are at their lowest in decades‚ prompting concern from parents‚ educators and authorities.”There are no easy answers to this problem‚ but Dr Akn was interested in the growing body of interdisciplinary research within education. “Although math and music are treated as two distant subjects in schools‚ I see math and music as two disciplines that are close to each other‚” she explained. From her search of the literature‚ she identified 55 studies for further analysis‚ containing data from almost 78‚000 students of all ages‚ from kindergarten to university.“I analyzed three different music interventions‚” she told IFLScience. “The first concerned general music intervention‚ where children learn to sing and listen to music […] In the second intervention‚ children learned to play a musical instrument‚ both individually and in a band […] And with the third intervention‚ music became an important part of math class; music-mathematics integrated interventions in which music is integrated into maths in various ways.”In all cases‚ the children participating in the various interventions had their math skills tested before and after the study period. “Overall‚” Dr Akn explained‚ “music in any form was associated with better math scores.”“To summarize the findings‚ 58 percent of the children who had taken regular music lessons and 69 percent of the children who had learned to play a music instrument performed better on the math tests.""But‚” she added‚ “the integrated lessons in particular had a great effect. Because no less than 73 percent of the students who also had music lessons during maths lessons noticed progress.”The size of the effects observed came as a surprise to the researcher.Dr Akn also explained that the interventions had the greatest effect in younger age groups. This would seem to suggest that the best way forward is to embed music within the math curriculum from an early stage‚ an idea that might bring cries of joy or consternation from math teachers depending on their own musical prowess. Music simply makes math more fun.Dr Ayça AknIn Turkey‚ where Dr Akn is based‚ as in much of the rest of the world‚ musical interventions are not often included in math instruction. It’s something that she would like to see change.“Based on the results of the research‚ it is thought that interdisciplinary learning environments that allow mathematics and music teachers to work together might contribute to increasing students’ mathematics achievement and their mathematical beliefs and decreasing students’ mathematics anxiety.”This second point is another important strand to all of this: beyond actually helping to improve students’ math skills‚ there’s some evidence that the addition of music can help those who suffer anxiety around arithmetic.“Even children who have difficulty with math and have therefore developed a certain fear of math can relax a little more thanks to music‚” said Dr Akn. “Music simply makes math more fun.”This makes sense‚ given what we know about how music can benefit our wellbeing at all stages of life. A recent report from the University of Michigan National Poll on Healthy Aging found that 75 percent of adults aged 50-80 said music “relieves stress or relaxes”‚ and 60 percent said it “motivates or energizes”‚ which sounds like the ideal state of mind to be in before tackling a math class.The feelings that are evoked by music also seem to be remarkably universal across human cultures. Recent research from the University of Turku in Finland found that Western and Asian listeners experience similar emotions and bodily sensations when listening to the same tunes. This suggests that interventions that bring music into the math classroom could have wide appeal.But what might these interventions actually look like? Dr Akn has some suggestions.How do you bring music and math together?“Music into mathematics lessons can be designed in different ways‚” she explained. “For example‚ students can clap their hands in time to songs with different rhythms. You could even design musical instruments using math. In addition‚ mathematical problems can be solved on the basis of original pieces of music. Or the other way around‚ making pieces of music based on mathematical patterns. Mathematics can also be represented in alternative ways‚ such as in musical notes.”Dr Akn stressed that this need not put an extra financial burden on schools – simple rhythmic instruments that would do the job just fine could even be made by the students themselves. It’s all about helping children to look at math in a new way‚ a way that will hopefully be more accessible‚ particularly to those who have struggled in the past.“These methods not only help children understand key math concepts‚ but also enable them to see the parallels and connections between math and music‚ which provides a richer and more engaging learning environment‚” said Dr Akn. “I believe that this is an important way to get students involved in math and have a good time.”Math is a vitally important skill. A good grounding in the world of numbers can help kids‚ whether they aspire to start their own business‚ cure the next pandemic disease‚ solve a longstanding mathematical mystery‚ or simply navigate the adult world with confidence. But it’s fair to say that learning math doesn’t come naturally to everyone. Why shouldn’t we try something that might make that learning process better? According to Dr Akn‚ and many of the authors of the papers included in her analysis‚ it just makes sense that music would fit into this picture.“Maths and music may seem like two very different worlds‚ but in fact they go very well together.”
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2 yrs

Disney Exec Blames Woes on Racist‚ Sexist Fans
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Disney Exec Blames Woes on Racist‚ Sexist Fans

Few would deny Disney is in serious trouble. Stock woes. Box office flops (“Wish‚” “Haunted Mansion‚” “The Marvels“). Theme park struggles. Beloved brands struggling for relevancy after years of culture dominance (Indiana Jones‚ Pixar‚ “Star Wars‚” the MCU). There’s a cottage industry of alternative media outlets documenting Disney’s decline.      Nerdrotic The Critical Drinker The Quartering Film Threat What went wrong? The company’s hard-Left turn‚ for starters. Disney declared war on popular Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis‚ pushed a “not-at-all-secret gay agenda” and embraced DEI principles behind closed doors.     Yet the company may not be listening to fans all but shouting for the Mouse House to course correct‚ and fast. Bulwark Culture Editor Sonny Bunch shared a snippet from a recent Puck Newsletter suggesting Team Disney isn’t about to change its ways. The teaser comes from Matt Belloni of Puck News fame who spoke with an unnamed Disney executive on the company’s woes. Said executive blamed consumers‚ not the company‚ for its problems. Audiences are too sexist‚ racist‚ etc. to embrace Disney product. It’s not us. It’s you (racist).   I love this‚ from Matt Belloni's newsletter. Disney cannot fail‚ it can only be failed by the mouthbreathing bigots who refuse to acknowledge the greatness of their films. pic.twitter.com/83jkY4DL0x — Sonny Bunch (@SonnyBunch) February 19‚ 2024   Everyone says ‘It’s the movies‚ stupid‚’ which is an easy thing for people to say. More appealing movies are a great way to jump the political issues. But more and more‚ our audience (or the segment of the audience that has been politicized) equate the perceived messaging in a film as a quality issue. They won’t say they find female empowerment distasteful in The Marvels or Star Wars the latest trilogy starring Daisy Ridley]‚ but they will say they don’t like those movies because they are ‘bad.’ So ‘make better movies’ becomes code for ‘make movies that conform to regressive gender stereotypes or put men front and center in the narrative.’ Except critics aren’t so keen on Disney’s recent product‚ either. Films like “Wish‚” “The Marvels” and “Haunted Mansion” all fared poorly at Rotten Tomatoes. Others earned more positive reviews but hardly the kind of raves past Disney product earned. Survey Says … It’s Complicated. A Puck-produced brand survey offered mixed results for Disney. On one hand‚ Disney‚ Inc. is suffering for its political leanings. All 29 companies have high favorability ratings (that’s consistent with most opinion surveys of major companies)‚ and people actually carry pretty positive feelings about the major studios. But Disney clearly scores the lowest‚ with 21 percent unfavorable. No other entertainment company had an unfavorable rating above 11 percent‚ meaning Disney is nearly twice as disliked as any other Hollywood entity we included. (Hulu‚ which is owned by Disney‚ scored especially well at only 8 percent unfavorable‚ indicating the problem is the Disney brand‚ not any of its sub-brands necessarily.)  Yet the same survey suggests consumers won’t take that into account if the Disney product in question seems entertaining. Long story short? If last year’s “Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny” trailer looked exciting‚ few would have connected the sequel to Disney’s ongoing woes. It didn’t. The film proved to be a flop based on its gargantuan budget ($300 million versus $383 million worldwide gross). Disney: Come See Our Films‚ Mr. and Mr. Racist Disney still has considerable assets to build a comeback upon‚ including future sequels (“Moana 2‚” “Inside Out 2‚” “Toy Story 5”) effective belt-tightening measures and allegiances to the video game revolution. Blaming audiences for the company’s problems‚ especially suggesting naysayers are bigots‚ hardly seems like the best way to heal the company’s financial wounds. If one unnamed executive is saying it‚ chances are he or she is hardly alone.
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2 yrs

NBC‚ CBS Ignore Georgia Student's Alleged Murderer Is An Illegal Immigrant
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NBC‚ CBS Ignore Georgia Student's Alleged Murderer Is An Illegal Immigrant

The big three networks of ABC‚ NBC‚ and CBS had three underwhelming‚ yet widely varying approaches to the news that a released illegal immigrant has been charged with the murder of a Georgia college student on the respective editions of Good Morning America‚ Today and CBS Saturday Mornings. ABC mentioned the illegal immigrant part‚ but not the released part. NBC mentioned the murder but omitted the illegal immigrant angle‚ and CBS ignored the story altogether. On Friday’s Evening News‚ CBS did manage to do a report on the subject with Mark Strassman reporting that “Late this afternoon‚ police announced they had a murder suspect in custody but gave no other details. Friday felt different here‚ edgy for many. All day police scoured this apartment complex‚ and Friday classes were canceled.”     However‚ not only was no update given in the morning‚ but the story itself was ignored. Over at NBC and Today‚ host Peter Alexander teed up a report by the unrelated Blayne Alexander by noting‚ “There is some breaking news from overnight in Georgia. The 26-year-old man arrested in connection with the death of the college student who was killed on a run was booked into the Clark County Jail there. The suspect‚ a local resident but not a U.S. citizen. Authorities say it appears this was a crime of opportunity.” The latter Alexander’s report included a clip of University of Georgia police chief Jefferey Clark declaring that “Jose Antonio Ibarra‚ 26 years of age‚ has been charged with the following: malice murder‚ felony murder‚ aggravated battery‚” but no other information about Ibarra was given. On GMA‚ ABC’s Morgan Norwood concluded her report by noting that “this morning we know Ibarra is being held without bond. Police say he's undocumented and believe he came to this country from Venezuela.”  Certainly‚ a good portion of the reports were appropriately spent honoring the victim‚ who was a nursing student on the dean’s list‚ but is one sentence mentioning that Ibarra is an illegal immigrant who crossed the border in El Paso and released because of a lack of detention space too much to ask for? Here are transcripts for the February 23 and 24 shows: CBS Evening News 2/23/2024 6:37 PM ET MARK STRASSMAN: Late this afternoon‚ police announced they had a murder suspect in custody‚ but gave no other details. Friday felt different here‚ edgy for many. All day police scoured this apartment complex‚ and Friday classes were canceled.    *** NBC Today 2/24/2024 8:13 AM ET PETER ALEXANDER: There is some breaking news from overnight in Georgia. The 26-year-old man arrested in connection with the death of the college student who was killed on a run was booked into the Clark County Jail there. The suspect‚ a local resident‚ but not a U.S. citizen. Authorities say it appears this was a crime of opportunity. NBC's Blayne Alexander has the very latest.  BLAYNE ALEXANDER: After a terrifying 24 hours in the bustling college town of Athens‚ Georgia‚ police have announced a suspect is in custody in what university officials say is the murder of 22-year-old Laken Riley JEFFERY CLARK [UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA POLICE CHIEF]: Jose Antonio Ibarra‚ 26 years of age ‚has been charged with the following: malice murder‚ felony murder‚ aggravated battery.  BLAYNE ALEXANDER: Police say a friend of Riley’s called 911 Thursday afternoon‚ saying Riley went for a morning run and never came back. Officers searched the area and within minutes found her body in an area around Lake Herrick near the school’s intramural fields. CLARK: He did not know her at all. I think this was a crime of opportunity.  BLAYNE ALEXANDER: Here in Athens‚ the homicide has rocked two different campuses. Riley was a junior at Augusta University’s college of nursing where she was on the dean's list.  She had recently transferred from the University of Georgia‚ a student there until last spring‚ she remained active with her sorority. Friday‚ classes on both campuses were cancelled. MILKA RAMIREZ: I mean‚ everybody thinks that they’re safe‚ but in reality‚ you never know.  BLAYNE ALEXANDER: UGA senior Milka Ramirez lives right by the fields where Riley was found.  RAMIREZ: I mean‚ that’s very‚ kind of‚ concerning and scary just because that did happen very close by.  BLAYNE ALEXANDER: And police say this is the first homicide on UGA’s campus in at least 20 years. Classes are set to resume on Monday. Peter and Laura.  *** ABC Good Morning America 2/24/2024 8:11 AM ET MORGAN NORWOOD: The community‚ though relieved by the arrest of a suspect‚ now faced with grief. The 22-year-old nursing student had just transferred from UGA to Augusta University's College of Nursing program in Athens last spring. The school saying she was a dean's list student adding‚ “this sudden loss of one of our students is truly heartbreaking.” Indeed‚ it is and this morning we know Ibarra is being held without bond. Police say he's undocumented and believe he came to this country from Venezuela. 
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2 yrs

NPR Honors Anonymous Texas Teacher and Her 'Secret' Library of 'Banned' Books
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NPR Honors Anonymous Texas Teacher and Her 'Secret' Library of 'Banned' Books

Taxpayer-funded National "Public" Radio hates Republicans‚ and in red states like Texas‚ leftists become heroes for their "courage" in dangerous territory. On Wednesday's Morning Edition‚ openly gay NPR arts reporter Neda Ulaby spent seven minutes touting how "A secret shelf of banned books thrives in a Texas school‚ under the nose of censors." On NPR‚ the "censors" are censored: there's no opposing viewpoint on the "banned books." And the heroic teacher and her queer students are all granted anonymity. ULABY: These students have a lot in common besides attending the same public school. UNIDENTIFIED STUDENT #2: We're all minorities. ULABY: And they're all queer. The secret bookshelf‚ they say‚ is the one place where they can easily find books that give them characters they can immediately relate to. UNIDENTIFIED STUDENT #4: Just to see‚ like‚ Latinos‚ LGBTQ - that's not something‚ like‚ you really see in our community‚ or it's not very well represented at all. UNIDENTIFIED STUDENT #3: Well‚ I am a young black lesbian‚ and I don't meet people like myself in my day-to-day life‚ either. So reading these characters in these books - it really gives me hope. ULABY: You will not hear the names of these students. NPR has confirmed their identities‚ but they worry about the consequences of going public with their secret classroom bookshelf. UNIDENTIFIED STUDENT #4: We don't want to jeopardize our teacher in any way - or the bookshelf or the district or the school. ULABY: Or themselves. Sharing such books in a Texas public school has felt dangerous for the past few years. These students do not want to draw the ire of antagonistic activists or put their teacher at risk.  The villain in this NPR story is Republican Matt Krause‚ who as a state legislator in 2021 made a list of 850 books he was questioning in Texas school libraries. He wouldn't return comment‚ so apparently there was no one else in the vast state of Texas they could find to dissent from their orthodoxy.  ULABY: I reached out to former Texas lawmaker Matt Krause for comment repeatedly and got no response. He's currently running for county commissioner in Fort Worth.  But the unidentified teacher not only has disdain for Republicans‚ but for the parents of the children she's "helping" with all the queer literature:  ULABY: To be clear‚ this public school with the secret bookshelf in Texas‚ it's not in a fancy part of town. Many students there do not have parents who can drop everything to get their kids books about being queer. Here's the teacher. UNIDENTIFIED TEACHER: Oh‚ I have taught kids whose parents have never set foot in a classroom. They are from small towns in other countries‚ and their parents were farmers. I've had kids whose names were not spelled correctly because their parents were illiterate. You know‚ a lot of the kids have parents that did not go to college. A high amount of kids here are on free and reduced lunch. Ulaby did find leftist Kasey Meehan of the "free speech advocacy group" PEN America to find the secret shelf "incredible‚ and it's really courageous." Maybe if they were more courageous‚ they wouldn't hide behind NPR's fur coat of anonymity. But it makes the "secret" public-relations angle more sexy. NPR wouldn't feel this way if a teacher in California had several hundred Christian books and bibles and "anti-LGBTQ" titles they were secretly sharing in a "dangerous" blue state‚ would they?
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The Blaze Media Feed
The Blaze Media Feed
2 yrs

NYC congregation is split on 'tacky' and grotesque depiction of Jesus' crucifixion that some compared to pizza
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NYC congregation is split on 'tacky' and grotesque depiction of Jesus' crucifixion that some compared to pizza

A Christian congregation in Queens is torn over what has been described as a "tacky" life-size cutout of a bloodied Jesus. Some have compared the bloodied Jesus to a "bad Halloween decoration‚" while others have compared it to a slice of pizza‚ according to the New York Post. The cardboard cutout has become a controversial talking point at Our Lady of Grace in Howard Beach. The cutout reportedly appeared beside the altar last week for the beginning of the Lenten season. However‚ the cutout appeared to some as a caricature of the Messiah. The image appeared on Facebook‚ with one woman suggesting that people who planned to attend should consider visiting another parish for the season.“I am extremely upset by the grotesque cardboard cutout of a bloody Jesus in Our Lady of Grace Church‚” one woman wrote in the original post in the Howard Beach Dads group‚ per the report.“Our children do not need to see the nightmarish Jesus when they go to Church.”Some in the Italian community even mistook the depiction of Jesus' deep wounds as cheese and tomato sauce.“I went for ashes on Wednesday … I thought he looks like a slice of meat lovers pizza‚” a second Facebook user said.Another social media user suggested that the piece would not have drawn the ire of some attendees if it had been done by a more talented artist‚ writing on Facebook: "If this piece were re-worked by a more talented classically trained artist‚ I think there would be no complaints."However‚ not all the comments were negative. Some attendees suggested that the cutout was supposed to make people feel uncomfortable about what really happened to Jesus leading up to his crucifixion‚ and that children could learn from the imagery.“This is our religion — it happened‚” one woman said. Pastor Dominick Dellaporte wrote on Facebook that "[i]t's not pretty‚ but [it] will move us to sorrow‚ reparation‚ prayer‚ and most importantly‚ reconciliation."Dellaporte went on to say that cancel culture had tried to erase what Catholics believe happened to Jesus. "The culture we live in wants to cancel out things that are not acceptable to one's way of life‚ the culture wants us to live in a society where it’s better to change what we don't like to see or hear. We simply want to avoid something‚ and so my dear friends‚ there's no changing what was done to our Blessed Lord then and now‚" Dellaporte wrote. "The sins that we commit as mankind‚ instead of trying to change what He looks like or what He went through‚ what He has experienced for the outrageous sins committed against Him and His Dear Mother‚ isn't it better to accept this as trying to change our lives and the lives of the world and make reparation? Keeping before our eyes this Lenten Season the effect of sin upon the Christ‚ that is what you see in the scourging of Christ: not what someone has done but what we have done this very day to our Christ‚" he continued. "We are called to recognize our sins‚ make reparation‚ and truly change our lives‚ because that is why the Scourged Christ is before His Dear Mother Mary. All that He suffered on His body is what she suffered in her heart."There is no indication that the church intends on removing on the controversial depiction of Jesus.
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The Blaze Media Feed
2 yrs

Female cyclist champion allegedly dismissed from women's event for being Jewish and serving in the IDF 30 years ago
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Female cyclist champion allegedly dismissed from women's event for being Jewish and serving in the IDF 30 years ago

A Jewish cyclist who was reportedly disinvited as the keynote speaker for an International Women's Day event because she previously served in the Israeli military suggested that there could be more to the story for why she was dismissed‚ per Fox News Digital. Leah Goldstein is a Canadian cyclist who secured her name in the history books after she became the first woman to win a 3‚000-mile bike race across the United States. It seemed that she was an excellent choice to be the keynote speaker for an International Women's Day event in Ontario‚ Canada.But just five months after she was asked to be the keynote speaker‚ she was informed she had been disinvited from the event. In those five months‚ Hamas launched a surprise attack against Israel‚ slaughtering 1‚200 Israelis and abducting 250 more. Since the October 7 attack‚ anti-Semitism has been on the rise.During an interview with Fox News on Thursday‚ Goldstein asked: "The question is… what about other Jewish women that want to come to this conference? Are they also excluded?""Another question is‚ if I was a Palestinian woman‚ would I also be removed? And‚ as a Jewish woman‚ let me just add that I wouldn't feel offended listening to a Palestinian woman talk about her life experiences and stuff that she had gone through‚ so why am I excluded from this? But it is simply because I'm Jewish. The IDF is just an excuse."The Times of Israel reported that a growing number of anti-Israel activists expressed that Goldstein's service in the IDF over 30 years ago was the reason why she was disinvited from the event. While critics have put pressure on Goldstein to give her opinion on the ongoing conflict in the Middle East‚ she suggested that doing so would be "ridiculous." The women's empowerment group commented on the situation‚ stating: "Our focus at INSPIRE has been and will always be to create safe spaces to honor‚ share‚ and celebrate the remarkable stories of women and non-binary individuals."“In recognition of the current situation and the sensitivity of the conflict in the Middle East‚ the Board of INSPIRE will be changing our keynote speaker.”Marina Rosenberg — the Anti-Defamation League's senior vice president of international affairs — said that the situation surrounding Goldstein represents an alarming trend.“We’re seeing more and more instances of Israeli speakers being disinvited simply because of their nationality or IDF service‚” Rosenberg said. “Let’s be clear: Boycotting Israeli speakers is hurtful‚ antithetical to free speech and ultimately counterproductive. It fails to recognize the complexities of the situation.”Goldstein noted that she did not plan to make a political speech. Instead‚ she planned to "talk about the crap that I went through and the crap that most women go through‚ and they still do‚ and how I handled it."Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors‚ sign up for our newsletters‚ and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!
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National Review
National Review
2 yrs

Suspect Arrested for Murder of Georgia Nursing Student Confirmed as Illegal Immigrant from Venezuela
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Suspect Arrested for Murder of Georgia Nursing Student Confirmed as Illegal Immigrant from Venezuela

Ibarra illegally crossed into El Paso‚ Texas‚ in September 2022 and was released from U.S. Customs and Border Protection custody‚ three sources confirmed.
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2 yrs

Bill Melugin Nukes Axios' 'More Fortified Than Ever' Border BS With a Short Video (Then Got Blocked)
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Bill Melugin Nukes Axios' 'More Fortified Than Ever' Border BS With a Short Video (Then Got Blocked)

Bill Melugin Nukes Axios' 'More Fortified Than Ever' Border BS With a Short Video (Then Got Blocked)
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2 yrs

State Dept's Victoria Nuland Tries to Sell Americans on the Upside to Funding Wars
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State Dept's Victoria Nuland Tries to Sell Americans on the Upside to Funding Wars

State Dept's Victoria Nuland Tries to Sell Americans on the Upside to Funding Wars
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2 yrs

'Must Miss TV': Biden Heads to NYC for Interview With Seth Meyers
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'Must Miss TV': Biden Heads to NYC for Interview With Seth Meyers

'Must Miss TV': Biden Heads to NYC for Interview With Seth Meyers
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