Sarmad Mayo
Bio
If you are looking for a New side Hustle, Selling Feet Pictures is a lucrative venture for you to start Today.
Sell Feet Pictures on FunwithFeet
Stories (45/0)
First days of school
It seems like yesterday when we took our little one to kindergarten for the first time and, in the blink of an eye, we are already preparing the uniform for the senior school. It is a great step that not only affects our children, that is also why we offer you the keys you need so that this time of change that begins with the first days of school passes in the best possible way for the whole family and that their adaptation to school is quick and positive.
By Sarmad Mayo3 years ago in Education
Masculinity and violence
95% of homicides on the planet are committed by men (UN, 2013), 93.2% of people in prison are men (WPL, University of London, 2018), 75% of suicides are carried out by men (600,000 each year)… These are examples that reflect an objective reality that indicates that “violence is a man's thing”.
By Sarmad Mayo3 years ago in Viva
50 years ago. Women in the Paris Commune
150 years ago, on March 18, 1871, the insurrection that gave birth to the Paris Commune began, which would last 72 days. Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels wrote about this historical experience. His conclusions are part of the basic principles of revolutionary socialism throughout the world to this day.
By Sarmad Mayo3 years ago in Viva
Ecofeminism: alternatives in defense of life and the environment
The economic and social impacts of the covid-19 pandemic are overwhelming and have revealed the fragility of the system in which we live. In a scenario of the destruction of ecosystems and natural disasters that require an urgent response, ecofeminism is presented as an alternative that defends life and the environment. On the foundations of ecofeminist thought and the role of women in the fight for environmental conservation and sustainable life, the daily spoke with the referents of the ecofeminist collective Dafnias Ana Filippini and Mariana Achugar.
By Sarmad Mayo3 years ago in Viva
Twenty years is it nothing?
The September 2001 attacks led the United States to the longest and most costly campaign in its history: the so-called "war on terror." The international operations, supported by allied countries and NATO, led not only to open battle fronts in several Middle Eastern nations, but also to a hunt for the main leaders and members of what Washington considered "terrorist organizations."
By Sarmad Mayo3 years ago in The Swamp
Green economic recovery in terms of effective gender equality
The COVID-19 pandemic showed that humanity was surprised with low defenses to face the subsequent health and socioeconomic crises. The primary foundations for building resilience — of ecosystem health, climate balance, and effective gender equality — were weakened and had not received sufficient attention. We are witnessing, then, a kind of perfect storm in which a triple interconnected crisis is configured, which is the result of human actions and omissions. It is our responsibility to face them, and this requires a multidimensional, integrated approach, with a long-term perspective, and from a green economic recovery. for our region of Latin America and the Caribbean.
By Sarmad Mayo3 years ago in Humans
Society of Spectacle Crypotocurrancies Part 2
The "human phenomenon" referred to by Theilard de Chardin loses all ontological, ethical, erotic, playful, and aesthetic consistency by turning the human being into a worker. You can romanticize all you want to work, but in itself, as work, it is always brutalizing. Upon entering the factory, Simone Weil wonders, "What did I gain from this experience?" and the answer is: "The feeling of not having any right, whatever it may be ..." (Weil 2002, 170), and continues: "confused in the eyes of all and in my own eyes with the anonymous mass, the misfortune of others it has entered my flesh and my soul ”(Weil 2002, 32). Curiously, Simone Weil's testimony is very similar to that of Primo Levi, when he recounted his experience as a "worker" at the Lager. Regarding her experience as a worker, Simone Weil writes: “I received the mark of the slave there and forever” (Weil 2002, 38). Weil's testimony realizes that the work of the workers is brutalizing by definition and that “no perfect social equity can ever erase” that condition of modern slavery (Weil 2002, 39).
By Sarmad Mayo3 years ago in 01
Alienation, society of the spectacle, cryptocurrencies and behavioral economics Part 1
With the birth of capitalism, the notion of work became a civilizing ethos. Thus, in the 19th century, Marxism transformed workers into the subjects of social emancipation and, in fact, it was they who provoked the revolutions of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The welfare state, for its part, turned them into the middle class. The neoliberalism of the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries led them to absolute precariousness.
By Sarmad Mayo3 years ago in The Swamp