• At a research conference, Hayes remarked that he chose the term "chemical castration" specifically because it angered Syngenta representatives. (niche-canada.org)
  • The work is life-size and depicts Alan Turing, scientist and wartime code-breaker, 1912-1954, who was given the option of prison on account of his homosexuality, then illegal, or to undergo chemical castration. (culturecatch.com)
  • Forced to choose between prison and chemical castration, he chose the latter. (eugeneweekly.com)
  • But because homosexuality is illegal in Britain, the war hero is given a choice of jail or chemical castration. (umassmedia.com)
  • The Ethics of Compulsory Chemical Castration: Is Non-Consensual Treatment Ever Permissible? (ox.ac.uk)
  • Tory Grant, the justice minister for New South Wales (NSW) in Australia, has announced the establishment of a task force to investigate the potential for the increased use of anti-libidinal treatments (otherwise known as chemical castration) in the criminal justice system. (ox.ac.uk)
  • Currently, in New South Wales offenders can volunteer for this treatment, whilst courts in Victoria and Western Australia have the discretion to impose chemical castration as a condition of early release. (ox.ac.uk)
  • However, Grant's task force has been established to consider giving judges the power to impose compulsory chemical castration as a sentencing option. (ox.ac.uk)
  • Notably though, New South Wales would not be the first jurisdiction to implement compulsory chemical castration in the criminal justice system. (ox.ac.uk)
  • For instance, Florida and Poland also permit compulsory chemical castration of sex offenders. (ox.ac.uk)
  • The use of chemical castration is in the criminal justice system is highly controversial. (ox.ac.uk)
  • Although Grant supports his establishment of the task force by pointing out that 17 per cent of child sex offenders are likely to commit further offences within two years, many have raised concerns about the limited effectiveness of chemical castration in preventing recidivism amongst violent sexual offenders. (ox.ac.uk)
  • Another concern that has been voiced following the announcement of Grant's task force pertains to the side effects of chemical castration. (ox.ac.uk)
  • Furthermore, since chemical castration reduces the subject's ability to procreate, human rights groups have claimed that compulsory chemical castration amounts to 'cruel and unusual punishment' of the sort that is ruled out by the eighth amendment of the US constitution. (ox.ac.uk)
  • However, arguably the most salient ethical concern with permitting the imposition of compulsory chemical castration in the criminal justice system pertains to considerations of autonomy. (ox.ac.uk)
  • Moreover, since the length of the offender's sentence is not contingent upon their undergoing chemical castration, there are few concerns about undue influence undermining the validity of the offender's consent under the current system. (ox.ac.uk)
  • whilst chemical castration may ostensibly only be carried out on an offender if they provide valid consent in these jurisdictions, many have criticised this sort of policy on the basis that making an offender's release contingent on their undergoing a medical intervention represents undue influence on their decision to undergo the treatment of the sort that undermines the validity of their consent. (ox.ac.uk)
  • Whether or not we believe that offenders can validly consent to chemical castration in this context is an interesting theoretical question, but it is one that need not concern us here. (ox.ac.uk)
  • [2] However, it serves as an interesting comparison to the prospect of imposing compulsory chemical castration. (ox.ac.uk)
  • The creator of the modern computer, Turing received little recognition for his work during his life, which ended when he committed suicide after he was convicted of a homosexual act and forced to undergo chemical castration. (humanists.international)
  • Following his conviction for "indecency", Turing was obliged to undergo chemical castration to "cure" his homosexuality. (humanists.international)
  • Brenda Martone, Nurse Practitioner is joined by Assoc. Prof. Alicia Morgans from GU CONNECT to discuss shared decision-making in non-metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (nmCRPC) and the treatment considerations to maintain quality of life. (cor2ed.com)
  • She has been a member of several medical advisory boards, as well as developed programs about metastatic and non-metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer. (cor2ed.com)
  • Nevertheless, there is an urgent need to identify and validate prognostic and predictive biomarkers that can be applied across clinical scenarios, ranging from localised disease to metastatic castration-resistant PCa. (bvsalud.org)
  • Response to androgen receptor signaling inhibitors (ARSI) varies widely in metastatic castration resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC). (cdc.gov)
  • The identities of two additional formative members of a castration fetish site which hosts child sexual abuse fantasies have now been revealed as influential academics. (substack.com)
  • A viral Facebook post purported to provide information about the life of Turing, including details about his sexuality, war efforts, death, and inspiration. (snopes.com)
  • A viral Facebook post made several claims about the life and death of Alan Turing including that he died by suicide and that he inspired the Apple computer company's logo. (snopes.com)
  • A popular Facebook post about the life and death of British mathematician Alan Turing is truthful. (snopes.com)
  • In June 2022, a Facebook post went viral about the life of British mathematician, logician, and cryptographer Alan Turing, including several claims such as a rumor about why a bite is taken out of the design of the Apple computer company's logo. (snopes.com)
  • According to the Facebook post, Turing ended his own life in 1954 by eating an apple laced with cyanide poison, purportedly a final act carried out by the computer scientist after the way he was treated by the British government for being gay. (snopes.com)
  • The post also said that Turing saved millions of lives during World War II and even served as the inspiration for the Apple logo. (snopes.com)
  • John Ferrier Turing, of West Road, Guildford, a solicitor, said his brother was a Reader at Manchester University and a Fellow of the Royal Society, whose work was with the computing machine. (snopes.com)
  • During WW II, Turing built a machine that cracked the vital Nazi code called Enigma, and much of The Imitation Game focuses on Turing and a small staff as they work frantically to decipher a code that changes every day. (eugeneweekly.com)
  • The Imitation Game plays it incredibly safe where Turing's personal life is concerned, pushing anything remotely revealing to flashbacks (where young Turing crushes on a classmate) and a framing sequence set in 1951. (eugeneweekly.com)
  • Some years after the war, when his work was still secret, Turing was prosecuted for being gay. (eugeneweekly.com)
  • The Imitation Game" centers around real-life mathematician Alan Turing, who in World War II developed the computer's forebear to crack a pivotal Nazi code. (umassmedia.com)
  • Kinship with, and guidance from Clarke begets character change in Turing, and the team begins to work together. (umassmedia.com)
  • Humanists have warmly welcomed the Queen of England's praise for the gay atheist Alan Turing, whose work breaking German codes played a crucial role in World War II. (humanists.international)
  • I think JP's interest in Turing and his work gave me permission to do some mixing, using those mathematical and computational skills to probe the question of what makes a poet and what makes poetry, a question closely linked, I think, to Turing's own interest in thinking machines. (marianchristiepoetry.net)
  • His academic interests advocate for expanding the concept of 'gender identity' to include men with sadomasochistic and even pedophilic castration fantasies - something that has now been included as a Male-to-Eunuch identity in the draft Standards of Care for the World Professional Association of Transgender Health (WPATH), an international medical body that sets guidelines including those related to the transitioning of children. (substack.com)
  • His infantile castration fantasies expanded through family deaths brought by the plague and increased in adult life by public decapitations. (bvsalud.org)
  • Is the Facebook Post About Alan Turing's Life and the Apple Logo Truthful? (snopes.com)
  • Briefly, the two get engaged, which conveniently keeps Clarke at work and Turing's sexuality under wraps. (eugeneweekly.com)
  • Unveiled on Turing's birthday, the work at GCHQ was created by 3D artist Joe Hill and features 15 hidden codes. (messynessychic.com)
  • Turing's life and work provide the inspiration for Machinations , a poetic collaboration between Kinneson Lalor and JP Seabright published by Trickhouse Press . (marianchristiepoetry.net)
  • 1920. Sigmund Freud's writings about homosexuality span a broad range of his works across his long life. (glreview.org)
  • When Willem Arondeus said, "Let it be known, homosexuals aren't cowards'', on the eve of his execution in 1943, he was speaking for himself and countless others who gave and risked their lives to end the tyranny and oppression that the LGBTQ community faced under Nazi rule. (messynessychic.com)
  • So one night in 1943, they managed to break in to Amsterdam's civil registry office and destroy more than 50% of the records, around 800,000 documents, saving thousands of lives in the process. (messynessychic.com)
  • Nasio makes the provocative claim that the entirety of the psychoanalytical corpus, all of its concepts, including repression, sublimation, the theory of the drives, desire, as well as the phantasm of the phallus and castration anxiety, revolves around the idea that the child desires the parents. (sunypress.edu)
  • Are they victims of Freud's idea of castration anxiety, vicariously enacting their fears through the creation and study of these decapitation scenes? (klayperson.com)
  • Critics have condemned this novel for its unpleasantness, which range from the normal medical horrors to cannibalism, and include overeating, the Kennedy assassination, castration and abortion. (themodernnovel.org)
  • "Federal law allows women to seek abortions at military facilities only ," reports Emily Mangiaracina for LifeSiteNews , "in the case of rape, incest or life-threatening pregnancies, leaving service members bound by the laws of their state of deployment" if seeking an elective abortion. (lifeadvocacy.com)
  • I hope that every Californian joins this boycott and in doing so saves the lives of countless unborn babies who would have been killed by chemical abortion drugs purchased from Walgreens over 500 stores based in California,'" where the pharmaceutical giant has signaled it will undertake the peddling of RU-486 under the FDA's new "guidance. (lifeadvocacy.com)
  • PRO-LIFE CITIZENS IN OHIO will soon face a ballot initiative to, notes Ohio Right to Life in National Right to Life News ( NRL/News ), "enshrine abortion into Ohio's constitution. (lifeadvocacy.com)
  • The language would allow for abortion with no restrictions and possibly remove all pro-life protections for the preborn currently enacted, including parental consent. (lifeadvocacy.com)
  • Some survery participants asserted that they became sexually aroused when witnessing animal castration. (substack.com)
  • An Oklahoma has been sentenced to life in prison for secretly recording a "staggering" number of victims via hidden cameras he installed. (toofab.com)
  • People who call themselves "victims" are not being responsible for their actions and blame what happens in their life on others. (divorcemag.com)
  • It then explores current issues of sexuality and disability throughout the life course, starting with childhood and adolescence. (inreachce.com)
  • Castration Does not Exist! (sunypress.edu)
  • In simple terms, it can be said that mythorealism is a creative process that rejects the superficial logical relations that exist in real life to explore a kind of invisible and "nonexistent" truth-a truth that is obscured by truth itself. (lithub.com)
  • For Physical Education professionals, as well as those of other fields of knowledge who share our daily work routine, it is appropriate to separate the making of thinking, the practice of theory. (bvsalud.org)
  • Tens of thousands of people are seeking life-changing, irreversible medical treatments in an attempt to change their sex. (breitbart.com)
  • I outline the ways in which the new wave of theorists have addressed trans and intersex, before building on some of the theoretical work that has been done in this field. (socresonline.org.uk)
  • In 'Body, Psyche and Taboo: Vienna Actionism and Early Vienna Modernism', mumok takes yet another opportunity to display its impressive collection of works of actionism - that violent, transgressive movement from 1960s Vienna. (frieze.com)
  • The so-called real-life experience is distinct from hormone therapy," she says. (nationalgeographic.com)
  • Some endocrine facts, such as the sequelae coined the term "hormone" for this internal of castration, are deeply rooted in the past. (who.int)
  • This is the purpose of the efforts…to 'objectify' it in artistic and scientific creative work. (klayperson.com)
  • The whole "When they go low, we go high" thing doesn't work with these people. (latimes.com)
  • The book begins by detailing historical violations of the sexual and reproductive rights of people with disabilities, including forced castration and sterilization. (inreachce.com)
  • Throughout the book, the authors examine the micro, meso, and macro systems that affect the lives and relationships of people with disabilities. (inreachce.com)
  • In her speech the Queen said it was "impossible to overstate" the sense of gratitude to people who worked at Bletchley Park. (humanists.international)
  • Life is comparable to those piles of firewood-and while some people may see in life the seasons, years, and the passing of time, others may see household affairs and the troubles of life, others may see poetry and the universe, while others may see only disorder and boredom. (lithub.com)
  • But Dr. Anne Lawrence, a psychotherapist in Seattle who has studied and treated many gender dysphoric people, says that not all transgender people need to live a public life as the opposite gender. (nationalgeographic.com)
  • In Disability, Intimacy, and Sexual Health: A Social Work Perspective , Linton, Adams Rueda, and Rankin Williams compile comprehensive research and candid interviews with social workers to explore the complicated intersection of disability and sexuality. (inreachce.com)
  • Gallienus of Constantinople, a scarred soldier who used to work the city gates, enters a new phase of his life when he meets and falls in love with Misahuen of Gyeongju. (kfieldingwrites.com)
  • Brenda Martone is a board-certified adult nurse practitioner working in GU oncology at Northwestern Medicine, Chicago, IL. (cor2ed.com)
  • We are currently seeking an associate that is primarily interested in small animal and equine services, with a willingness to work with all species. (nvma.org)
  • We operate in a new, 20,000 square foot facility, with separate areas for small animal, equine and food animal work. (nvma.org)
  • Many of the works in 'Performing Society: The Violence of Gender', curated by Susanne Pfeffer, address notions of female psychological and bodily castration, whether self- or societally inflicted. (frieze.com)
  • Structural violence against women, the exhibition argues, draws faint yet impenetrable bounds around the decisions and details of a woman's life. (frieze.com)
  • The gaze and castration, violence and sublimation in Caravaggio's work. (bvsalud.org)
  • Freudianism hit the same nerve that feminism did: both at once were responses to centuries of increasing privatization of family life, its extreme subjugation of women, and the sex repressions and subsequent neuroses this caused. (versobooks.com)
  • The prominent art historians of the time treated an artist's body of work as a whole, and in this method, discussed images of Judith and other powerful women as examples to compare with contemporaneous works, usually not as special subjects to compare with other images of the same theme. (klayperson.com)
  • As lynching terror became a routine part of American life in the early 1900s, a nerdy University of Chicago educated sociologist, Monroe Nathan Work, started a lifelong compilation of African-American statistics. (splicetoday.com)
  • Produced by Greg Kurstin (known for his work with Adele and Foo Fighters), Morris' third LP uses dreamy-rootsy arrangements to frame the singer-songwriter's thoughts on romance, ambition and - impossible to ignore since she gave birth to a son, Hayes, in early 2020 - the demands and the elations of motherhood. (latimes.com)
  • But, like other Oates' characters, he carries the baggage of his early life. (themodernnovel.org)
  • Soon, Brittany took her story - "I think that children should not be allowed to make these life-changing decisions at such a young age," she said - to Tucker Carlson's Fox News show, where the right-wing host invoked the threat of unchecked castration and called Morris a "lunatic" and a "country music person who I hope leaves country music immediately. (latimes.com)
  • Anyone who has ever taken a course in 19th-century American literature has heard that the "obscure hurt" amounted to physical castration or at least severe damage to the genitals and that it accounts both for Henry's failure to fight in the Civil War (as did his younger brothers Wilkie and Bob) and, more tellingly, his lifelong disinterest in marriage. (vqronline.org)
  • A Professor Emeritus at California State University who has given academic talks on " expanding the transgender umbrella " has for over two decades participated in a fetish forum that hosts and produces extreme sadomasochistic written pornography involving the castration and torture of children. (substack.com)
  • Therefore, it is intended to foster reflection on health promotion in children with disabilities, awakening the urge of working professionals and those receiving training to extend professional commitment and recognize its importance. (bvsalud.org)
  • Regarding children with or without disabilities, 2) State University of Campinas to despise equity is a gesture similar to castration. (bvsalud.org)
  • however, it must be idealized, as every embracement is considered a game changer in the lives of children. (bvsalud.org)
  • Honestly, I read and loved JP's Fragments from Before the Fall and was just eager to find out how to put together a collection and learn from someone whose work I admired. (marianchristiepoetry.net)
  • Using their artistic talents, the group set to work producing forged documents for Jews and others who were wanted by the Gestapo. (messynessychic.com)
  • In 1961, Foster commenced Bachelor of Arts at the University of Sydney in Sydney, but he left studies after a year to work and travel. (wikipedia.org)
  • A son of slaves, Work created the Department of Records at Tuskegee Institute where he gathered data on African-American life. (splicetoday.com)
  • According to Johnson's own research , the majority of site members who participated in a survey cited sexual fantasy as their main reason for interest in castration. (substack.com)
  • So are we legally entitled to deprive them of their freedom for the rest of their lives? (blogspot.com)
  • Morrison's storytelling is a polymorphic sensory experience of story and color, as the lives of her characters are saturated with the pigments of their ascendancy and traumas. (lu.se)
  • Morrison's storytelling is a multifarious sensory experience of words and color, as the lives of her characters are saturated with the dyes of their traumas and triumphs. (lu.se)
  • Those were the facts genetics they do not want to CASTRATION MADE EASY that many cattlemen in this part with during an emergen- region were faced with. (midwestcattleman.com)
  • His pivotal work in breaking German codes has been made public. (humanists.international)
  • Toni Morrison's narratives are likewise made of composites: a chromatic patchwork of identities and peregrinations of black characters on "the stage of life", pearls made by irritants . (lu.se)
  • Nasio has written a splendid, erudite, and concise volume on what is arguably the central concept in psychoanalysis-the Oedipus complex … A welcome addition to and clarification of the significant body of work on sexual identity, this volume will be valuable across the social sciences and humanities, and appreciated for its clarity, concision, and relevance … Highly recommended. (sunypress.edu)
  • Ramey sleuthed and after five years of research launched the 'Monroe Work Today' website as a tribute to the scholar. (splicetoday.com)
  • Historians widely agree that decrypting Enigma shaved around two years and millions of lives off World War II. (umassmedia.com)
  • Use your NASW username and password to log into the Social Work Online CE Institute. (inreachce.com)
  • In order to complete this course and claim the credits, you must separately purchase and read Disability, Intimacy, and Sexual Health: A Social Work Perspective , by Kristen Faye Linton, Heidi Adams Rueda, and Lela Rankin Williams, from NASW Press , then complete an exam. (inreachce.com)
  • After you purchase the credits on the Social Work Online CE Institute, navigate to your My Products page and click the green Play button to purchase the publication from NASW Press. (inreachce.com)
  • Faced with these assumptions and resultant policies, how can social workers meet the needs of this diverse population across the life course. (inreachce.com)
  • She's also alone quite a lot, what with my working and social lives, and I had been wondering if I should get another cat for her to hang with - even if I really don't want to. (thenationalnews.com)
  • Mythorealism is not a bridge offering direct access to truth and reality, and instead it relies on imaginings, allegories, myths, legends, dreamscapes, and magical transformations that grow out of the soil of daily life and social reality. (lithub.com)
  • Body, Psyche and Taboo' shows us that the symbolic content of actionist works, and the artists' protests against their country's complicity in Nazism, was achieved only by leaving nothing to the imagination. (frieze.com)
  • Otto Muehl, Material action 8, still life: action with a female head and a pig's head, 1964, 32 photographs, each 31 x 25 cm. (frieze.com)
  • He invented computer science and using his first designs he decrypted the Enigma code -- the machine base encryption that the Nazis and the German military used to communicate secret commands to each other in world war 2 -- and hence he both saved millions of lives and brought us into the modern age of computing. (snopes.com)
  • Back in Sydney in 1972, he worked as a research officer in the Department of Medicine at the University of Sydney before abandoning science for a career as a novelist. (wikipedia.org)
  • Foster worked part-time as a musician and as an engineer at Marrickville Council while he completed his Bachelor of Science in Chemistry. (wikipedia.org)
  • If the plate readers work then just narrow the time window and look at cars that match, can get on this in an instant. (caymannewsservice.com)
  • Everyone knows that contemporary China's richness, complexity, strangeness, and absurdity vastly exceed that of its contemporary literature, and while everyone complains that we don't have any great authors and literary works that could do justice to our contemporary era, this ignores the fact that for a long time our literature has sought merely to describe reality rather than to actively explore it. (lithub.com)