Thursday, 8 October 2020

Alicia Keys’ Controversial Marriage With Swizz Beatz Hides An Inspiring Truth


This might come as a massive shock to her longtime fans but Alicia Keys’ beginnings with Swizz were rife with complications. Alicia and Swizz actually met as teenagers when the singer was just getting started in the music industry. But back then, Swizz didn’t impress her at all. Alicia said he was too “ostentatious” with his expensive cars, jewelry, and clothing, and so she found him “annoying.” 

And so Swizz instead turned to another woman: Mashonda Tifrere. The two tied the knot and welcomed their only son Kasseem Dean in 2006. Swizz also fathered two other children from two different relationships over the years. Therefore, Swizz was accompanied by a whole lot of baggage when he began seeing Alicia. On top of that, it’s been widely speculated that Swizz and Mashonda were married when Swiss began seeing Alicia.

To what extent was Swiss committed to Mashonda is hard to say but Mashonda did go on the record and accuse Alicia Keys of being a home wrecker. She said about Alicia:

My concern with [Alicia Keys] is no longer the fact that she assisted in destroying a family but that she has the audacity to make these selfish comments about love and wanting to be with someone, even after knowing their situation […] You have no idea how much pain I was caused because of this affair. 

It took no time at all for Alicia Keys to be labelled as “the other woman,” in the relationship. While Mashonda was launching her accusations, Alicia and Swizz denied that their relationship had broken up the marriage.

They both said that Swizz and his wife were already broken up when he started dating Alicia. We can only speculate what really occurred between Swizz, Alicia, and Mashonda but it’s safe to say that the three of them had landed in a quandary. Things turned from bad to worse when Swizz and Mashonda fought over child support and carried out a lengthy legal battle. 

But Alicia began to embrace her “blended family” and became a super stepmom

Despite the drama with the ex-wife, Alicia and Swizz were married by July 2010 and had their first child, Genesis, the same year. Genesis’s arrival also meant that Swizz now had four children by four different women. Thankfully, the complicated family was able to make amends at some point down the line because Mashonda told People Magazine that they were able to repair those broken relationships. She said:

Time has a way of healing things, but we also had to heal ourselves. […] We realized we could minimize the impact on our children by reducing the conflict we had with one another. 

The same sentiment was felt by Alicia herself. In a joint interview with Swizz and Mashonda, Alicia spoke about the co-parenting arrangement and how the entire family tackled their personal differences for the sake of the kids involved. Alicia said:

We love each other, we hang out with each other. We go to dinner together, our family is one big beautiful family […] it’s a beautiful partnership […] It’s a real thing and it’s possible.

Alicia added that both Swizz, Alicia, and Mashonda make an effort to spend time together with the kids and that they have each others’ backs. But this wasn’t easy. Mashonda revealed that it was a “rollercoaster” and it took many a therapy session to get it working. But they thought about Kasseem, who was getting caught up in a family battle through no fault of his own. And so everyone “put the work in,” and began to heal as a family.

Alicia and Mashonda are so proud of their co-parenting success that the two have crafted songs and self-help books about it. Mashonda released her book Blend: The Secret to Co-Parenting and Creating a Balanced Family in 2018, and Alicia wrote a song called “Blended Family” in 2016. The lyrics for the song communicate everything there is to say about Alicia’s love for her stepson and his mother. Alicia addresses Kasseem directly, saying:

Hey I might not really be your mother/That don’t mean that I don’t really love ya/ […] I think you’re beautiful/I think you’re perfect /I know how hard it gets /But I swear it’s worth it

As far as the whole family has come in the last few years, it doesn’t mean that they don’t encounter new challenges. In fact, Alicia said on Late Late Show With James Corden recently that while she and Swizz often have disagreements, they never raise their voice at each other. She said:

We don’t raise our voices at each other. We’ve definitely disagreed, it’s not that we haven’t disagreed […] We definitely have had moments where we’re like, ‘Hmm that felt weird,’ but we definitely communicate in a way, we don’t let it build up. 

Set drama aside and focus on what matters

Life and drama go hand-in-hand, so you’d have to be a rare being to not have ever dealt with it. Alicia Keys, as pristine as her life may seem at the moment, also encountered a world of drama but instead of buckling under the pressure and turning to unhealthy coping mechanisms, she found a path of love and understanding with Swizz’s ex-wife. She knew what mattered at the end of the day: family and togetherness. The kids’ wellbeing was in question, and nothing could ever be prioritized over that. 

Therefore, she and Mashonda dealt with the drama, developed a functional system, and just went about being the best parents and step-parents they could. Drama is oftentimes unavoidable and sometimes it may be that you don’t necessarily want to avoid the drama in the first place.

And yes, if the drama or a tense, conflicting situation can help you speak your truth, then, by all means, let it out. But more often than not, it’s just not worth it. You don’t need us to tell you that — it’s one of those things that you’ll realize for yourself when the time comes. Because you’re the one and only person that truly knows about what matters — and doesn’t matter — in your life. 

SOURCE

Monday, 7 September 2020

Jacob Blake speaks from his hospital bed: 'Change your lives out there'

 Elliot Hughes Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

MILWAUKEE – Jacob Blake, shot seven times by Kenosha, Wisconsin, police, has some powerful words from his hospital bed as the nation grapples with escalating tension over racial inequities: “There’s a lot more life to live.”

A minute-long video was posted to Twitter on Saturday by Blake's attorney, Benjamin Crump, in which the 29-year-old Black man calmly described the pain he's experienced and encouraged viewers to value their lives and lives of others.  Blake is paralyzed from the waist down after being shot in the back at point-blank range by Kenosha Police Department Officer Rusten Sheskey on Aug. 23. 

“There’s a lot more life to live out here man,” he said. “Your life, and not only just your life, your legs – something that you need to move around and move forward in life – can be taken from you like this. I promise you, the type of (expletive) that you will go through – I got staples in my back, staples in my (expletive) stomach – you do not want to have to deal with this (expletive), man.

Thousands march: Thousands march with Jacob Blake family in Kenosha: 'We’ll walk hand in hand'

“Every 24 hours, it’s ... pain. It hurts to breathe, it hurts to sleep, it hurts to move from side to side, it hurts to eat. Please, I’m telling you, change your lives out there. We can stick together, make some money, make everything easier for our people out here, man, because there’s so much time that has been wasted.”

In this photo from Kenosha County Court video, Jacob Blake answers questions during a hearing Sept. 4. 2020, in Kenosha, Wis.
AP

The video comes a day after Blake made his first public appearance by video in Kenosha County Circuit Court. On Friday, he pleaded not guilty to several charges stemming from a domestic incident in May – a case unrelated to the shooting.

The investigation into the shooting is ongoing and being conducted by the Wisconsin Department of Justice.

Video of the shooting set off days of protests in Kenosha – which sometimes included looting, arson and violence – and attracted in-person visits from President Donald Trump and Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden.

Biden in Kenosha: Biden describes talk with Jacob Blake during Kenosha visit: 'He talked about how nothing was going to defeat him'

Trump in Kenosha: Trump claims credit for bringing calm to Kenosha in visit criticized as politicizing unrest

Blake was initially handcuffed to his hospital bed with deputies stationed in the room until the open warrant in the domestic case was vacated a week ago after a $500 bail was posted. The handcuffing outraged Blake’s family and others, including Gov. Tony Evers.

A GoFundMe page for Blake’s medical expenses and counseling for him and his family raised $2.2 million as of Saturday evening.

Friday, 4 September 2020

What happens when a bird flies into a plane engine


What happens if a bird flies into a plane engine? The event is called a bird strike. Each year, bird strikes cost US airlines an estimated $1.2 billion. Only part of those costs are from actual damage. The rest comes from flight delays and cancellations.

A bird strike can disable a plane's engine. But engines are designed to withstand at least one bird. Plus, pilots can still fly a plane with just one operating engine.

As a result, the chances of an accident are slim. Between 1990-2015 there were 160,894 bird strikes on US aircraft. Only .025% (40) of those strikes resulted in an accident.

Despite the low risk, a bird strike can be a shocking experience. Here are some helpful tips to combat the element of surprise.

Expect more bird strikes from July to October. That's when over half of them occur each year. Most bird strikes happen during takeoff or landing. They're also more likely to occur during the day than any other time.

Now, if only there was a way to let the birds know.

SOURCE

Tuesday, 1 September 2020

Dr. Mukhisa Kituyi, Secretary-General of UNCTAD

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Mukhisa Kituyi, of Kenya, became UNCTAD's seventh Secretary-General on 1 September 2013. After serving an initial four-year term, he was reappointed by the General Assembly in July 2017 for an additional term that began on 1 September that year.

Dr. Kituyi has an extensive background as an elected official, an academic, and a holder of high government office. He also has wide-ranging experience in trade negotiations, and in African and broader international economics and diplomacy.

He was born in Bungoma District, western Kenya, in 1956. He studied political science and international relations at the University of Nairobi and at Makerere University in Kampala, Uganda, receiving a BA in 1982. He went on to earn an MPhil in 1986 and a doctorate in 1989 from the University of Bergen, Norway.

Dr. Kituyi served as a researcher at Norway's Christian Michelsen Institute from 1989 to 1991, and as Programme Director of the African Centre for Technology Studies in Nairobi from 1991 to 1992.

He was elected to the Kenyan Parliament in 1992, and was twice re-elected.

He was Kenya's Minister of Trade and Industry from 2002 to 2007.

During this period, Dr. Kituyi chaired for two years the Council of Ministers of the Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (COMESA) and the African Trade Ministers' Council.

He also served as chairman of the Council of Ministers of the African, Caribbean and Pacific (ACP) Group of States, and was lead negotiator for Eastern and Southern African ministers during the European Union-ACP Economic Partnership Agreement negotiations. He was convenor of the agriculture negotiations carried out at the World Trade Organization's Sixth Ministerial Conference held in Hong Kong, China in 2005.

From 2008 to 2012, Dr. Kituyi was a member of a team of experts advising the presidents of the nations of the East African Community on how to establish more effective regional economic links.

From 2011 to 2012, he was a consultant for the African Union Commission, where he helped to develop the structure for a pan-African free trade area.

Immediately prior to becoming Secretary-General, Dr. Kituyi was Chief Executive of the Kenya Institute of Governance, based in Nairobi. The Institute is a think tank and advocacy organization that focuses on linking academic research and the development of public policy.

During 2012, Dr. Kituyi also served as a non-resident fellow of the Africa Growth Initiative of the Brookings Institution, Washington, D.C. He was a resident scholar there in 2011.

Dr. Kituyi is married and has four children.

BY Henry Jefferson Ogoi

Wednesday, 29 July 2020

We’re not aware of Covid-19 reopening rules, Kenyan school heads now say

By DAVID MUCHUNGUH

A majority of headteachers are in the dark concerning the Covid-19 guidelines the Ministry of Education has issued before schools reopen in January.

The headteachers say the new guidelines could interfere with their budgets.

The regulations demand that the teachers be more involved in making learning institutions safe before, during and after the reopening.

“I know nothing about the document. The ministry should have alerted us,” Kenya Secondary Schools Heads Association Chairman Kahi Indimuli said by phone.

He, however, added that the task force set up by Education Cabinet Secretary George Magoha suggested protocols to be developed.

SAFETY PROTOCOLS

The ministry has published on its website a 43-page document titled ‘Guidelines on Health and Safety Protocols for Reopening of Basic Institutions amid Covid-19 Pandemic’, spelling out measures heads should put in place before they are issued with certificates that allow a school to reopen.

It is not clear why the ministry published the document marked “draft”.

Some senior ministry officials appear unaware of it.

Heads are required to carry out risk assessment of their schools using a matrix provided by the ministry.

The grid will establish the level of exposure a school faces and suggest mitigation measures.

Principals and headteachers should also identify the person responsible for the intervening actions.

“As much as possible, institution activities, playing, teaching/training and learning will take place outside the classrooms/lecture halls /tutorial rooms,” the document says.

METRE APART

Where learners will be in enclosed spaces, they must be kept a metre apart from one another.

This will be a challenge for schools since a majority are congested. Schools are expected to develop policies and procedures suitable to their environment.

The document advises school managers “to revise institution budgets to prioritise infrastructure to maintain social distance, provision of water, sanitation and hygiene...and focus on remedial education and training to compensate for lost instructional time”.

The teachers, however, complain that the government has not supported schools since the March closure directive.

“There are very many conditions and it will be impossible to implement them all,” a principal said.

AUTHORITY TO REOPEN

The authority to reopen a school will be given by a multi-sectoral team “that will conduct assessment on the feasibility and readiness of institutions’...preparedness”.

A checklist for assessing preparedness has been provided. The inspecting officials will then issue a compliance or non-compliance certificate.

Schools are expected to adopt a proactive approach to reintegrate most vulnerable learners and trainees.

There have reportedly been many cases of teen pregnancies and marriages since schools closed in mid-March.

The guidelines instruct school managers, in liaison with Ministry of Interior, to follow up on cases of absenteeism in order to reduce the number of dropouts.

SOURCE

Saturday, 4 July 2020

How to see the planets in the night sky, July 2020

What planets will be in the night sky this month, and when best to observe them.

Saturn and Jupiter appear close together in the sky, and they are joined by a full Moon on 5 July 2020. Credit: Pete Lawrence
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The planet Saturn reaches opposition on 20 July 2020. ‘Opposition’ is the term used to describe when a planet lies on the opposite side of the sky to the Sun. In this position we are at the closest to that planet and consequently it appears bigger and brighter than at other times.
The more distant a planet is from the Sun and therefore Earth, the smaller these effects become.
For example, we’re going to see major changes in the appearance of Mars as we head through to its opposition on 13 October.
Jupiter too will be at its brightest and largest through the eyepiece on 14 July, but the changes are less impressive than those which will appear for Mars.
And the progression continues through to Saturn with its brightness and increase in apparent size being fractionally less impressive than that which occurs with Jupiter.
Saturn’s rings can appear to brighten significantly at opposition. Credit: Pete Lawrence
Saturn’s rings can appear to brighten significantly at opposition. Credit: Pete Lawrence
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Having said this, Saturn still has a trick up its sleeve in the form of the Seeliger effect. As the planet approaches opposition, the myriad particles which make up its ring system line up so that from Earth the shadows they cast on particles further back are hidden from view.
The net effect is a brightening of the rings. This effect can normally be seen a few days before opposition, reaching a peak brightness at opposition and then fading off in the days after.
Saturn and Jupiter reaching opposition within a week of each other occurs as a consequence of both appearing close in the sky. On 20 July Saturn appears 7.1° east of Jupiter.
At opposition, Saturn’s brightness will be mag. +0.4. A full Moon – the Moon at opposition – lies near to both planets on the evening of 5 July and into the following morning.
The phase and relative sizes of the planets, July 2020. Each planet is shown with south at the top, to show its orientation through a telescope. Credit: Pete Lawrence
The phase and relative sizes of the planets, July 2020. Each planet is shown with south at the top, to show its orientation through a telescope. Credit: Pete Lawrence

How to see the planets this month

Saturn

  • Best time to see 20 July, From 00:00 BST (23:00 UT)
  • Altitude 16°
  • Location Sagittarius
  • Direction South
  • Features Rings, atmospheric belts, occasional storms, moons
  • Recommended equipment 150mm or larger

Mercury

  • Best time to see 31 July, 1 hour before sunrise
  • Altitude 4° (very low)
  • Location Gemini
  • Direction Northeast
Mercury reaches inferior conjunction on 1 July and then returns to morning skies. It’s poorly placed in July’s first half but improves from the 16th, as it brightens and appears higher before sunrise. On 16 July it rises over the northeast horizon an hour before sunrise. Greatest western elongation (20.1°) occurs on the 22nd.

Venus

  • Best time to see 31 July, 04:00 BST (03:00 UT)
  • Altitude 14°
  • Location Taurus
  • Direction East-northeast
Morning planet Venus shines at mag. –4.3 at July’s start, with a scope showing it as an 18%-lit crescent, 42 arcseconds across. On 12 July, mag. –4.4 Venus appears less than a degree from mag. +0.8 Aldebaran.
Venus is 28%-lit and 36 arcseconds across on this date. A waning crescent Moon sits 2.6° from Venus on 17 July, both visible close to the Hyades at around 03:00 BST (02:00 UT). At the month’s end, Venus rises three hours before sunrise, shining at mag. –4.3.

Mars

  • Best time to see 31 July, 04:00 BST (03:00 UT)
  • Altitude 35°
  • Location Pisces
  • Direction Southeast
Mars improves this month. On 1 July it hovers low above the east-southeast horizon as the sky starts to brighten. Visually it shines at mag. –0.5 and through the eyepiece its apparent size is 11 arcseconds.
As Mars rises around 1am on 12 July, it shines at mag. –0.7 and appears 3° from a waning gibbous Moon. On this date Mars attains a higher altitude in darker skies, being over 20° up by 03:00 BST (02:00 UT).
At July’s end, Mars shines at mag. –1.1 and will look impressive as it reaches an altitude of 35°. On 31 July, Mars has a 14 arcsecond disc 84%-lit when viewed through a scope.

Jupiter

  • Best time to see 14 July, 01:00 BST (00:00 UT)
  • Altitude 15°
  • Location Sagittarius
  • Direction South
Jupiter reaches opposition on 14 July, appearing at its brightest and largest in 2020. At mag. –2.6 it will be impressive visually, but it’s low and this will reduce the detail through a scope. A telescope view will still show the main atmospheric belts and four largest moons. The full Moon on 5/6 July lies close to Jupiter and Saturn.

Uranus

  • Best time to see 31 July, 02:30 BST (01:30 UT)
  • Altitude 23°
  • Location Aries
  • Direction East
A morning planet shining at mag. +5.8, Uranus is able to reach an altitude of 30° in darkness at July’s end.

Neptune

  • Best time to see 31 July, 02:30 BST (01:30 UT)
  • Altitude 29°
  • Location Aquarius
  • Direction South-southeast
Morning planet Neptune almost makes it to its highest altitude due south at the month’s end. Currently in Aquarius, at mag. +7.8, it requires binoculars to see.
Pete Lawrence is an experienced astronomer and a co-host of The Sky at Night. This guide originally appeared in the July 2o20 issue of BBC Sky at Night Maagzine.

Saturday, 27 June 2020

Here’s What You Do With Two-Thirds of the World’s Jets When They Can’t Fly

Here’s What You Do With Two-Thirds of the World’s Jets When They Can’t Fly

Just finding space to park can be a problem, and idle planes require a surprising amount of work, from maintaining hydraulics to stopping birds from nesting.