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Showing posts from February, 2021

Entrenched Anti-Female Bias in the Global Music Industry

It seems like the MeToo movement has finally hit the pop music industry. The grassroots criticism of how male managers and guardians of young pop stars like Britney Spears that have been brewing for years and decades have now re-emerged as society reexamines the power dynamic of the entertainment industry, with older men in power abusing their power to overwhelmingly benefit, both financially and sexually, from the hard work of female workers. As the world comes to acknowledge and be appalled by the behavior of Harvey Weinstein and his associates over the course of decades, there is a growing call for other men to come forward with their misdeeds.

Automation is not Reserved just for the Unskilled Laborers

When people talk about automation in the world of work, they assume that it is the unskilled blue-collar laborers that will be the victims of it. As factories and warehouses depend more and more on machines to operate, thousands upon thousands of people who depend on their hands and feet for a living will be out of work, with nowhere to go since other menial jobs they are qualified to do are also disappearing. In this scenario, the wealth gap between the uneducated, vulnerable to automation, and the educated, evermore in demand due to their ability to thinking critically and innovate, will only become wider and wider.

What One Term Says About the Japanese Attitude Toward Marriage

「お二人は3月にゴールインしました!」goes the TV program that discusses the relationship trajectory of a newlywed couple. Literally stating that "the two people reached the 'goal in' in March," this phrase uses "goal in," a Japanese-made English term that is commonly used to refer to two people that have been dating for a long time getting to the stage of marriage. The term is so commonly used that Japanese speakers rarely think about the underlying implication of the term itself, and how marriage, as an institution, is perceived within modern Japanese culture.

While Foreign Politicians Decry Myanmar's Coup, the General Public Remains Apathetic

It is sad to see how low the reputation of Aung San Suu Kyi, the de facto leader of Myanmar until a few days ago, sank on international social media. While Burmese citizens appealed for international solidarity in criticism toward the military coup that toppled the Suu Kyi government on the likes of Facebook and Twitter, the response of foreigners has been lackluster, to say the least. The few outspoken foreigners have instead used the sphere to criticize Suu Kyi's apathy toward the suffering of the Rohingya under her watch.