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Global cost of living crisis pushing more women into sex work

Global cost of living crisis pushing more women into sex work
Oct 30 2022 Share

Various international reports are noticing a new spike in people turning towards sex work in order to address the cost of living crisis. 

Many people, with the majority being women, are turning towards sex work, with the number of calls to the English Collective of Prostitutes increasing by a third in summer 2022 (according to Sky News). 

Sky News also reported that women entering the field is leaving them vulnerable and unable to say no to violent and exploitative clients. 

Meanwhile, a Vice news report reveals that stigma around sex work is also putting women using sites such as OnlyFans at risk of being outed or targeted at workplaces as people return following the pandemic. 

The English Collective of Prostitutes also recorded a 30% jump in the number of callers seeking support for starting sex work in June. Manchester Action on Street Health also recorded more than 100 new service users between December 2021 and April 2022. 

Taking a look at the Maltese context, there are no official reports as to whether this phenomenon is taking place. However, with the rising cost of living crisis also hitting the island, it might be time to re-consider our views and open dialogues in regards to this line of work. 

In the 2022 manifesto, the Labour Party pledged a voluntary exit programme for prostitutes and the decriminalisation for prostitution. 

‘After an extensive consultation process on prostitution, we want to take decisions in favour of those who are the most vulnerable. We believe in individual liberty, but the PL believes the solution is not to incarcerate vulnerable people’ the party had said.

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Nuns watch porn too says Pope Francis as he warns of risks

Nuns watch porn too says Pope Francis as he warns of risks
Oct 30 2022 Share

Pope Francis was responding to a question about how digital and social media should be best used when he issued warnings against priests and nuns watching pornography. 

His warning concerned the ‘weakening of the priestly heart’, but acknowledged that it is a ‘vice’ that even priests and nuns often fall into. A vice which allows ‘the devil to enter from there.’ 

The church leader said that social media should be used but that priests and nuns should not waste too much time on it. 

‘The pure heart, the one that Jesus receives every day, cannot receive this pornographic information’ he said. He urged church officials and other clergy to delete such content from their phone so that there would be no temptation. 

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Are clocks going back or forward bad for you or not?

Are clocks going back or forward bad for you or not?
Oct 30 2022 Share

We might want to start here – clocks going back or forward will always mess with our heads. Just as it seeps into the unconscious, the reminder that we have to adjust our clocks always seems to make a comeback.

The research surrounding this phenomenon varies quite a bit, with many studies taking an issue with ‘Daylight Savings Time’. 

One 2016 study has highlighted how the act of winding clocks back and forth coincides with higher than usual stroke rates. The study found that stroke rates were 8% higher than usual in the two days following clock changes. 

This is due to DST transitions reportedly disrupting out circadian rhythms. Another 2021 article also points to negative impacts of sleep patterns of various test subjects (duh!).

Another 2001 study pinpointed an increase in traffic accidents and overall incidents in the US following the change in clocks. The increase was not noted in the days following the immediate change. 

Meanwhile, a neurologist revealed in a 2022 ‘The Conversation’ editorial that even having exposure to light later into the evening delays the brain’s release of melatonin, the hormone promoting drowsiness. 

Daylight Savings Time has a history dating back to the two world wars, making a massive comeback into Europe after WWII. However, even ancient civilisations like the Romans adjusted water clocks to adjust schedules according to solar time. 

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Asteroid the size of Burj Khalifa to zoom past Earth next week

Asteroid the size of Burj Khalifa to zoom past Earth next week
Oct 29 2022 Share

A massive asteroid the size of the largest building on Earth is set to zoom too close to comfort just by our planet just in time for Halloween. 

As if the universe is giving us a bit of a jump scare, the Halloween asteroid, as some nicknamed it, won’t be bothering our planet at all.

And if it happened to do so, NASA’s latest Dart achievement proves that we’d be able to divert its trajectory with our 21st century technology. And a comet like this would have had the attention of scientists for a while now. 

And to calm you down even more, a ‘close pass’ in space terms means that it’s not that extremely close to us at all. The comet will be zooming more than two million kilometres away. 

That’s around six times the distance between the Earth and the moon. It is close enough to call it ‘potentially hazardous’, but still decently safe. 

The asteroid itself is about the size of the Burj Khalifa, the biggest building in the world, and nearly twice the size of the Empire State Building. The asteroid is possibly as wide as 740 metres and it will brighten to mag 14.3, meaning telescope enthusiasts can get a peek at it. 

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