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By the time we reached the third waterfall on the Kahunira trail, my wife, Kiki, and I had been walking through the fore...
29/08/2024

By the time we reached the third waterfall on the Kahunira trail, my wife, Kiki, and I had been walking through the forested backcountry of Kiambu County, Kenya, for nearly three hours. Along the way, we had tasted sweet lady finger bananas in the market town of Githunguri, sipped a sour Kikuyu home brew called muratina proffered by laborers at a rural gravel quarry and made a heart-pounding shortcut across rust-flecked irrigation pipes that traversed a steep gorge fringed with tea plantations.

Our companions were two dozen young Kenyans who’d learned of the excursion through Lets Drift, an outdoor recreation community that creates weekly hikes, bicycle excursions and mountaineering treks in the countryside outside Nairobi.

Upon arriving at the forest-shaded waterfall, some members of our cohort stripped down to swimsuits, performed acrobatic dives off boulders that edged the cascade pool and posed for selfies in the midafternoon sun.

In a part of Africa where the conventional tourism industry was built around a wildlife-focused, British colonial footprint, Lets Drift stands out as an exuberant Kenyan-centered enterprise. Its aim is to celebrate outdoor recreation and, at the same time, generate a sense of community among the country’s growing urban middle class.

The author sought an authentic experience, and found it in Lets Drift, “an exuberant Kenyan-centered enterprise” of people living in and near Nairobi.

In attacking Democrats and Kamala Harris, Republicans have been making a legitimate point: One of our major political pa...
25/08/2024

In attacking Democrats and Kamala Harris, Republicans have been making a legitimate point: One of our major political parties has worked to undermine America’s families.

The problem? While neither party has done enough to support families and children, the one that is failing most egregiously is — not surprisingly — the one led by the thrice-married tycoon who tangled with a p**n star, boasted about grabbing women by the ge****ls and was found by a jury to have committed s*xual assault.

You’d think that would make it awkward for the Republican Party to preach family values. But with the same chutzpah with which Donald Trump reportedly marched into a dressing room where teenage girls were half-naked, the G.O.P. claims that it’s the Democrats who betray family values.

“The rejection of the American family is perhaps the most pernicious and most evil thing that the left has done in this country,” JD Vance said in 2021. Pressed on those remarks last month, he went further in a conversation with Megyn Kelly, saying that Democrats “have become anti-family and anti-kid.”

This is gibberish. Children are more likely to be poor, to die young and to drop out of high school in red states than in blue states. The states with the highest divorce rates are mostly Republican, and with some exceptions like Utah, it’s in red states that babies are more likely to be born to unmarried mothers (partly because of lack of access to reliable contraception).

One of President Biden’s greatest achievements was to cut the child poverty rate by almost half, largely with the refundable child tax credit. Then Republicans killed the program, sending child poverty soaring again.

Can anything be more anti-child?

Well, maybe our fi****ms policy is. Guns are the leading cause of death for American children and teenagers, largely because of Republican intransigence and refusal to pass meaningful gun safety laws.

It’s because of the G.O.P. that the United States is one of only a few countries in the world without guaranteed paid maternity leave. Republicans fought universal health care and resisted the expansion of Medicaid; that’s one reason a child in the United States is three times as likely to die by the age of 5 as a child in, say, Slovenia or Estonia.

Think of it this way: We’d be saving the life of one American child between the ages of 1 and 5 every three hours if we had the same child mortality level as Norway or Finland.

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Project 2025, a blueprint for a Trump administration that Trump is frantically trying to disavow, would make things worse. It would end Head Start, a lifeline for low-income children, and would dismantle the Department of Education.

“My Administration will be great for women and their reproductive rights,” Trump posted on Friday. But even putting aside abortion rights, Republican extremism has led to obstacles to in vitro fertilization, especially after an Alabama court ruled that a frozen embryo must be considered a child. The Southern Baptist Convention, a bastion of support for Trump, this summer criticized I.V.F.

Vance has supported a watered-down bill that he says protects I.V.F., but Republican senators blocked stronger legislation to defend I.V.F. fertility treatments and expand access. They are leaving hanging so many of the one in seven women who have trouble conceiving or sustaining a pregnancy.

Can anything be more anti-family?

Look, I’ve repeatedly argued that growing up in a two-parent household is the one privilege that liberals ignore, that the left wrongly demonized Daniel Patrick Moynihan for his emphasis on family structure and that Democrats can do more to remove marriage penalties and bolster opportunities for children.

I’m troubled by the collapse of marriage in America’s working class — more than 70 percent of Americans without a high school diploma are unmarried. If we care about child poverty, we must face the reality that households headed by single moms are five times as likely to live in poverty as those with married couples. So concerns about family and children are legitimate, and Democrats should do better.

But for Republicans to blame Democrats is ludicrous, for the G.O.P. has seemingly gone out of its way to undermine families and children.

Union membership among men raises their marriage rates, for example, apparently because they then earn more money and become more stable and appealing as partners. But Republicans have worked for decades to undermine unions.

Likewise, one way to raise marriage rates may be to help teenage girls avoid pregnancy; then they may be more likely to marry in their 20s. But Republicans have often been suspicious of comprehensive s*x education and have tried to defund Title X family-planning programs, and it’s no accident that the states with the highest rates of births to teenage mothers are all red states.

Republicans like the House speaker, Mike Johnson, object to no-fault divorce laws, which make it straightforward for couples to obtain divorces. They claim this is a pro-family stance. (Trump, understandably, appears more sympathetic to divorce.) But the evidence is overwhelming that before easy access to divorce, large numbers of women were trapped in violent marriages that terrorized them and their children.

One careful study by the economists Betsey Stevenson and Justin Wolfers found that the introduction of no-fault divorce in America was associated with about a 20 percent reduction in female suicides, at least a 25 percent reduction in wife-beating and an apparent decline in husbands murdering wives.

Is it really pro-family to increase the number of moms who are beaten and murdered?

I’m glad Republicans are squawking about the challenges facing families and children. But if Trump, Vance and other Republicans want to blame those most responsible for the plight of families and children in America today, they should look in the mirror and hang their heads in shame.

When right-wingers pursue policies that mire children in poverty, it takes gall to preen about their family values.

The World Health Organization on Wednesday declared an international health emergency over a large and rapidly expanding...
16/08/2024

The World Health Organization on Wednesday declared an international health emergency over a large and rapidly expanding outbreak of mpox that is spilling out of the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

It is the second time in about two years that mpox's spread has spurred the WHO to declare a public health emergency of international concern (PHEIC), the highest level of alarm for the United Nations health agency. In July 2022, the WHO declared a PHEIC after mpox cases had spread across the globe, with the epicenter of the outbreak in Europe, primarily in men who have s*x with men. The outbreak was caused by clade II mpox viruses, which, between the two mpox clades that exist, is the relatively mild one, causing far fewer deaths. As awareness, precautions, and vaccination increased, the outbreak subsided and was declared over in May 2023.

Unlike the 2022–2023 outbreak, the current mpox outbreak is driven by the clade I virus, the more dangerous version that causes more severe disease and more deaths. Also, while the clade II virus in the previous outbreak unexpectedly spread via s*xual contact in adults, this clade I outbreak is spreading in more classic contact patterns, mostly through skin contact of household members and health care workers. A large proportion of those infected have been children.

To date, Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), where the virus is endemic, has reported more than 22,000 suspected mpox cases and more than 1,200 deaths since the start of January 2023. In recent months, the outbreak has spilled out into multiple neighboring countries, including Burundi, Central African Republic, Republic of the Congo, Rwanda, Kenya, and Uganda.
Earlier on Wednesday, the WHO convened an emergency committee to review the situation, in which experts from affected countries presented data to independent international experts. The committee concluded that the outbreak constituted a PHEIC, and WHO Director-General Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus followed their recommendation.

"The emergence of a new clade of mpox, its rapid spread in eastern DRC, and the reporting of cases in several neighboring countries are very worrying," Tedros said in a statement announcing the PHEIC. "On top of outbreaks of other mpox clades in DRC and other countries in Africa, it's clear that a coordinated international response is needed to stop these outbreaks and save lives."

On Tuesday, the Africa Centers for Disease Control and Prevention declared a similar emergency. Africa CDC Director General Dr. Jean Kaseya said the declaration will "mobilize our institutions, our collective will, and our resources to act—swiftly and decisively. This empowers us to forge new partnerships, strengthen our health systems, educate our communities, and deliver life-saving interventions where they are needed most."

For now, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention assess the risk to the US public to be "very low," given that there is limited and no direct travel between the US and the epicenter of the outbreak. So far, no clade I cases have been detected outside of central and eastern Africa.

The declaration is "the highest level of alarm under international health law."

11/08/2024
Is your kitchen as exciting as watching paint dry? Fret no more, fellow kitchen decor enthusiast! This island is here to...
09/08/2024

Is your kitchen as exciting as watching paint dry? Fret no more, fellow kitchen decor enthusiast! This island is here to spice things up (quite literally, with all the extra space for your spice collection).

Made from a combination of reclaimed German pine so fancy that it probably yodels and laminated chipboard so tough that wouldn't flinch at a toddler tantrum, this island boasts an eye-catching burnt wood effect that'll add loads of raw charm to any space.

Worried you'll need a team of oxen to move it? Fear not! Self-lubricating wheels (because who needs a hernia?) make rearranging a breeze. Plus, two of them lock, perfect for those times your dance moves risk sending the island on an impromptu salsa session.

Storage woes? Begone! This island swallows everything from your hoard of mismatched spatulas (because who needs a full set, they all just fight in the drawer anyway) to your secret stash of emergency cookies (we all have them, don't judge). Handy rails keep your flour-encrusted aprons (because baking is messy, but looking like a pastry chef gone rogue is a choice) within arm's reach.

Sold? Head over to Ess Store, opposite Cravers Hotel, in Thika. Ask for Esther, the island whisperer (she can answer all your burning questions, pun intended), or reach her at 0720 677 172. Don't miss your chance to take your kitchen from “meh” to “wow!”

The Olympic battles, which are set for Aug. 9 and 10, will be a watershed moment for a dance form conceived and cultivat...
06/08/2024

The Olympic battles, which are set for Aug. 9 and 10, will be a watershed moment for a dance form conceived and cultivated by Black and Hispanic youth in the Bronx during the 1970s, when they boogied at basement parties and park jams to the break beats played by hip-hop architects like DJ Kool Herc and Grandmaster Flash.

Back then, breaking’s fundamental movements provided escapism and expression, competitive and spontaneous physical performance breathed to life by the dawning genre of hip-hop. Breakers danced to make a name for themselves and earn respect in their neighborhoods.

But breaking — not “break dancing,” a term coined by media and disdained within the breaking community — no longer belongs solely to New York City. In Paris, Olympic breakers representing countries like Japan, Lithuania and Morocco will compete one-on-one in battles waged for a global television audience.

“This was something we did to release,” said Beta Langebeck, a pioneering Miami-based B-girl who now judges competitions. “These kids now, it’s a different opportunity. They get to elevate and compete with the best.”

Breaking spread across the globe in the decades after it originated in the streets of New York City. Its roots will be on display in Paris, if you know what to look for.

Make a stunning statement with this one-of-a-kind wood leaf table. Featuring a striking three-tier wood-leaf design, it ...
31/07/2024

Make a stunning statement with this one-of-a-kind wood leaf table. Featuring a striking three-tier wood-leaf design, it gives you plenty of space for your keys, earrings, pens, and that random stuff you can never seem to find a spot for. The striking burnt-wood effect adds a touch of raw charm to any room—think "rustic chic" without the splinters. Use it as a side table, a console, a display stand for your favorite photos, or just to show off to your guests. The possibilities are endless—let your imagination (and maybe your cat) run wild!

22/07/2024
Is your kitchen as exciting as watching paint dry? Fret no more, fellow kitchen decor enthusiast! This island is here to...
22/07/2024

Is your kitchen as exciting as watching paint dry? Fret no more, fellow kitchen decor enthusiast! This island is here to spice things up (quite literally, with all the extra space for your spice collection).

Made from a combination of reclaimed German pine so fancy that it probably yodels and laminated chipboard so tough that wouldn't flinch at a toddler tantrum, this island boasts an eye-catching burnt wood effect that'll add loads of raw charm to any space.

Worried you'll need a team of oxen to move it? Fear not! Self-lubricating wheels (because who needs a hernia?) make rearranging a breeze. Plus, two of them lock, perfect for those times your dance moves risk sending the island on an impromptu salsa session.

Storage woes? Begone! This island swallows everything from your hoard of mismatched spatulas (because who needs a full set, they all just fight in the drawer anyway) to your secret stash of emergency cookies (we all have them, don't judge). Handy rails keep your flour-encrusted aprons (because baking is messy, but looking like a pastry chef gone rogue is a choice) within arm's reach.

Sold? Head over to Ess Store, opposite Cravers Hotel, in Thika. Ask for Esther, the island whisperer (she can answer all your burning questions, pun intended), or reach her at 0720 677 172. Don't miss your chance to take your kitchen from “meh” to “wow!”

In speeches and event appearances, Ms. Harris, who has long been seen as the embodiment of a country growing more racial...
21/07/2024

In speeches and event appearances, Ms. Harris, who has long been seen as the embodiment of a country growing more racially and ethnically diverse, has often nodded to her mother and the generations of women of all races who paved the way for someone like her. Her selection as vice president was also seen as an acknowledgment of the critical role Black women have played in Democratic victories since 2016.

Ms. Harris, the first woman and person of color to be vice president, has faced s*xist and racist attacks, but she has energized a network of support.

President Biden, 81, abandoned his bid for re-election and threw the 2024 presidential contest into chaos on Sunday, cav...
21/07/2024

President Biden, 81, abandoned his bid for re-election and threw the 2024 presidential contest into chaos on Sunday, caving to relentless pressure from his closest allies to drop out of the race amid deep concerns that he is too old and frail to defeat former President Donald J. Trump.

After three weeks of often angry refusals to step aside, Mr. Biden finally yielded to a torrent of devastating polls, urgent pleas from Democratic lawmakers and clear signs that donors were no longer willing to pay for him to continue.

Mr. Biden’s decision abruptly ends one political crisis that began when the president delivered a calamitous debate performance against Mr. Trump on June 27. But for the Democratic Party, Mr. Biden’s withdrawal triggers a second crisis: who to replace him with, and specifically whether to rally around Vice President Kamala Harris or kick off a rapid effort to find someone else to be the party’s nominee.

The announcement by Mr. Biden, who is isolating with Covid, came just three days after Mr. Trump delivered an incendiary, insult-laden speech accepting his party’s nomination for a chance to return to the White House for a second term. Mr. Trump, who has been preparing for a rematch with Mr. Biden for years, will now face a different — and as yet, unknown — Democratic opponent, with only 110 days left until Election Day.

Here’s what to know:

Staying in office: Mr. Biden said he will not resign the presidency, and intends to finish out his term even as he leaves it to others to try and defeat Mr. Trump. Over the next several months, the president faces the ongoing war in Ukraine and the increasingly desperate efforts to reach a negotiated deal to end the fighting between Israel and Hamas in Gaza.

A political first: No sitting American president has dropped out of a race so late in the election cycle. The Democratic National Convention, where Mr. Biden was to have been formally nominated by 3,939 delegates, is scheduled to begin Aug. 19 in Chicago. That leaves less than a month for Democrats to decide who should replace Mr. Biden on the ticket and just under four months for that person to mount a campaign against Mr. Trump.

Spotlight on Harris: The president’s decision puts the vice president under renewed scrutiny, with some Democrats arguing that she is the only person who can effectively challenge Mr. Trump this late in the election. And they say the party will fracture if Democratic leaders are seen as passing over the first Black vice president. But others argue that the Democratic Party should avoid a coronation, especially given Ms. Harris’s political weaknesses over the last three-and-a-half years.

Age a chief concern: Mr. Biden’s re-election bid was brought down by longstanding concerns about his age and whether he remains physically and mentally capable of performing the job. Even before the debate, polls consistently showed that people thought he was too old, and majorities — even of Democrats — wanted someone younger to be president. Mr. Biden was born during World War II and was first elected to the Senate in 1972, before two-thirds of today’s Americans were even born. Mr. Biden would have been 86 at the end of a second term.

The debate moment: The White House and aides closest to Mr. Biden denied for years that his age was having any impact on his ability to do his job. But the debate with Mr. Trump in late June, which was watched by more than 50 million people, put his limitations clearly on display. He appeared frail, hesitant, confused and diminished, and was unable to make the case against Mr. Trump, a convicted felon who tried to overturn the last presidential election.

President Biden wrote on social media that he was ending his campaign for re-election after intense pressure from within his own party. He subsequently endorsed Vice President Kamala Harris to replace him atop the Democratic ticket.

For Donald J. Trump’s most devoted supporters, the bullet that nicked his ear and came within inches of ending his life ...
17/07/2024

For Donald J. Trump’s most devoted supporters, the bullet that nicked his ear and came within inches of ending his life was only further proof that a higher power is looking out for him.

“I don’t see this as luck,” said the Rev. Nathaniel Thomas, a Republican National Convention delegate and a pastor from the Washington, D.C., area. “I see this as God’s protection.”

After he spent decades pursuing riches, fame and power, Mr. Trump’s life has been far from pious. Yet he has drawn a committed core of followers — many in Milwaukee this week for his nominating convention — who view him as handpicked by God for a second term in the White House.

These supporters are less likely to explicitly compare him to Jesus and instead view him as the latest example of a morally flawed Old Testament hero, like Cyrus or David, who was ordained by the heavens to lead profound missions of good versus evil. Their passion for Mr. Trump has long transcended slogans on faded rally T-shirts or political bumper stickers, but now, it appears to be reaching new heights after the assassination attempt on Saturday.

“Something’s got to be at play,” said Michael Thompson, the Republican chairman in Lee County, Fla., while looking toward the sky as if to invoke the heavens. “I don’t think the average person could withstand a tenth of what he has gone through. So yeah, I think he’s probably chosen at the right time in our country’s history.”

Sue Means, 73, a delegate from Bethel Park, Pa., the hometown of the gunman accused by law enforcement officials of attempting to assassinate Mr. Trump, is an evangelical Christian who has been a member of a prayer team for the former president since 2016.

She marveled at the miracle of his survival: “I mean, he turned his head right when the bullet went past him.”

Gregory Rice, 33, a Rhode Island delegate who is Catholic, said the outcome of the shooting struck him more as luck than divine intervention. Still, he added of Mr. Trump, “He can definitely be God-like for many people, myself included.”

Mr. Trump’s ability — and willingness — to capitalize on such devotion for political purposes remains crucial to understanding how he will coast to his third consecutive Republican presidential nomination this week, despite being convicted of 34 felonies, charged with even more felonies and ordered to pay $83.3 million to the writer E. Jean Carroll for defaming her after she accused him of r**e.

In the aftermath of the shooting, Mr. Trump has described the near-miss both in terms of luck and divine intervention. In an interview with The Washington Examiner, he credited himself for turning his head to look at an immigration chart on a rally screen and avoiding the bullet hitting his skull.

Some of Donald J. Trump’s followers had long viewed him as handpicked by God. The attempted assassination has only increased such quasi-religious devotion and rhetoric.

…Assassination attempts are very much “a part of the American way of life.” Of the 46 presidents in U.S. history, four h...
15/07/2024

…Assassination attempts are very much “a part of the American way of life.” Of the 46 presidents in U.S. history, four have been murdered. In the 20th century alone, there were at least six serious failed attempts on the lives of presidents and one on a former president. At least one-quarter of presidents have been killed or nearly killed by an assassin.

And for pundits predicting that this weekend’s assassination attempt will amount to a political win for Mr. Trump: Not all of these assassination attempts generated the kind of sympathy that one might have expected from the public.

From 1865 to 1901, three presidents were murdered, and the 20th century was arguably worse in terms of political violence. John Kennedy was murdered. A bullet hit former President Teddy Roosevelt in the chest when he was running for president on a third-party ticket in 1912. (Mr. Roosevelt continued speaking for more than an hour as he was bleeding.) President-elect Herbert Hoover was the target of a plot in Latin America to bomb his train, but authorities foiled it in the nick of time. An anti-elite Italian immigrant laborer shot five people in Miami, killing Mayor Anton Cermak of Chicago, and just missing his target, President-elect Franklin Roosevelt. Mr. Truman, Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford and Mr. Reagan were all the subjects of assassination attempts.

Historically, many politicians have blamed mental illness as the cause of these attacks. They argue that a sick individual, acting on his or her own accord, with easy access to fi****ms, is unrepresentative of a good society. And yet the United States has sat alone as the most politically violent of all industrialized democracies. Canada’s prime ministers in the 20th century all survived their terms in office; not a single one was shot. Since Japan’s establishment as a full parliamentary democracy in the wake of World War II, only one prime minister, Shinzo Abe, was assassinated, after he left office, while giving a speech in support of a candidate for the Japanese upper house of Parliament. Although Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher survived a bombing attempt by the Irish Republican Army in 1984, Britain has lost only one prime minister to assassination, and that happened in 1812. Since the Federal Republic of Germany was created in 1949, not a single chancellor has been murdered. Among all major democracies, then, when it comes to assassination attempts on heads of government, the United States is the leader of the pack.

The assassination attempt against Trump is one on a long list of attacks.

In a striking sign of how deep violence has become embedded in American politics, several of the political figures who c...
14/07/2024

In a striking sign of how deep violence has become embedded in American politics, several of the political figures who condemned the shooting at Saturday night’s rally for former President Donald J. Trump had experienced political violence themselves.

“Political violence is terrifying. I know,” Gabrielle Giffords said in a statement. Ms. Giffords, a former Democratic representative from Arizona, was shot in the head at a political event in 2011, where six people were killed. “I’m holding former President Trump, and all those affected by today’s indefensible act of violence in my heart.”

One spectator was killed in the shooting at Mr. Trump’s rally, and the suspected shooter was killed by law enforcement, according to the Secret Service. Mr. Trump wrote in a post on his social media platform that he had been “shot with a bullet that pierced the upper part of my right ear.” The Secret Service and other law enforcement agencies have not yet publicly confirmed that Mr. Trump was shot in the ear, saying only that shots were fired, that the former president was “safe” and that the shooter was now dead.

Investigators have released few details about the suspect, or his motive. But some politicians who have been the target of politically motivated violence, or attempted violence, offered their condolences to the former president.

Representative Nancy Pelosi of California, the former Democratic House speaker whose husband was attacked at their home in 2022 by an assailant who was looking for her, wrote in a post on X that she knew “firsthand that political violence of any kind has no place in our society.”

“I thank God that former President Trump is safe,” she added.

Gov. Gretchen Whitmer of Michigan, a Democrat who was the target of a foiled kidnapping plot, said on X that she was “horrified” to hear the news of the violence at the Trump rally.

Political violence cuts across the nation’s partisan divide, and the attack at the Trump rally comes as threats of such violence are increasing in the United States. Judges, members of Congress and local elections officials have all been besieged with threats in recent years.

Those threats often do not result in acts of violence, but some political figures have reported deeply harrowing experiences. A person who had written threatening emails to Representative Pramila Jayapal of Washington, a Democrat, showed up outside her house with a gun. Someone smashed a storm window at the home of Senator Susan Collins of Maine, a Republican.

And in 2017, a gunman opened fire on a group of Republicans practicing for a congressional baseball game. Representative Steve Scalise of Louisiana was gravely injured.

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“There is never any place for political violence,” Mr. Scalise wrote on X after the shooting at the Trump rally on Saturday...

Judges, members of Congress and local elections officials have all been besieged with threats of political violence in recent years.

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