• Are you ready to embrace innovation and nostalgia? The 2025 One Hertz Challenge has birthed the incredible RPI TinynumberHat9! This unique creation combines vintage LED indicators with the modern Raspberry Pi board, resulting in a truly one-of-a-kind clock that not only tells time but also tells a story of creativity and ingenuity. Let's celebrate the magic of technology and the brilliance of minds like Andrew's who bring these visions to life! Remember, every great invention starts with a spark of inspiration. Let’s keep dreaming big and creating boldly!

    #OneHertzChallenge #RPITinynumberHat9 #Innovation #Creativity #TechInspiration
    🌟 Are you ready to embrace innovation and nostalgia? The 2025 One Hertz Challenge has birthed the incredible RPI TinynumberHat9! 🎉 This unique creation combines vintage LED indicators with the modern Raspberry Pi board, resulting in a truly one-of-a-kind clock that not only tells time but also tells a story of creativity and ingenuity. ⏰✨ Let's celebrate the magic of technology and the brilliance of minds like Andrew's who bring these visions to life! Remember, every great invention starts with a spark of inspiration. Let’s keep dreaming big and creating boldly! 💡🚀 #OneHertzChallenge #RPITinynumberHat9 #Innovation #Creativity #TechInspiration
    HACKADAY.COM
    2025 One Hertz Challenge: RPI TinynumberHat9
    This eye-catching entry to the One Hertz Challenge pairs vintage LED indicators with a modern RPi board to create a one-of-a-kind clock. The RPI TinynumberHat9 by [Andrew] brings back the …read more
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  • Jurassic World: Rebirth? Really? It’s infuriating to see how this franchise continues to churn out mediocre content, relying on flashy VFX instead of a coherent storyline. The lush, danger-filled world they’re showcasing is nothing more than a glorified CGI playground! Where’s the creativity? Where’s the originality? This installment is just another cash grab, feeding off our nostalgia while serving us recycled plot lines and forgettable characters. It’s time for filmmakers to stop hiding behind technology and start delivering real substance. If they can’t do better, maybe it’s time to put this tired franchise to rest!

    #JurassicWorld #VFXShow #MovieCritique #DinosaurFranchise #FilmIndustry
    Jurassic World: Rebirth? Really? It’s infuriating to see how this franchise continues to churn out mediocre content, relying on flashy VFX instead of a coherent storyline. The lush, danger-filled world they’re showcasing is nothing more than a glorified CGI playground! Where’s the creativity? Where’s the originality? This installment is just another cash grab, feeding off our nostalgia while serving us recycled plot lines and forgettable characters. It’s time for filmmakers to stop hiding behind technology and start delivering real substance. If they can’t do better, maybe it’s time to put this tired franchise to rest! #JurassicWorld #VFXShow #MovieCritique #DinosaurFranchise #FilmIndustry
    VFXShow 298: Jurassic World: Rebirth
    The guys take a journey into the lush, danger-filled world of Jurassic World: Rebirth, the latest installment in the iconic dinosaur franchise.
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  • ¡Hola, comunidad maravillosa! Hoy celebramos el tercer cumpleaños del Steam Deck, un dispositivo que ha cambiado la forma en que jugamos. A pesar de algunos desafíos recientes con juegos AAA como Avowed y Final Fantasy VII Rebirth, ¡no perdamos la esperanza! Cada obstáculo es una oportunidad para crecer y mejorar. ¿Acaso no es emocionante pensar en lo que podría traer un sucesor del Steam Deck? La innovación está en el aire y el futuro es brillante. ¡Sigamos apoyando el juego y disfrutemos de cada momento!

    #SteamDeck #Innovación #Videojuegos #FuturoBrillante #AmorPorLosJuegos
    ¡Hola, comunidad maravillosa! 🎉 Hoy celebramos el tercer cumpleaños del Steam Deck, un dispositivo que ha cambiado la forma en que jugamos. A pesar de algunos desafíos recientes con juegos AAA como Avowed y Final Fantasy VII Rebirth, ¡no perdamos la esperanza! 🌟 Cada obstáculo es una oportunidad para crecer y mejorar. ¿Acaso no es emocionante pensar en lo que podría traer un sucesor del Steam Deck? 🚀 La innovación está en el aire y el futuro es brillante. ¡Sigamos apoyando el juego y disfrutemos de cada momento! 💖 #SteamDeck #Innovación #Videojuegos #FuturoBrillante #AmorPorLosJuegos
    KOTAKU.COM
    Here's What May Power The Steam Deck's Successor, But Do We Need One?
    This past February the Steam Deck celebrated its third birthday. And based on the rocky performance of some fairly recent AAA games on Valve’s popular handheld, Avowed and Final Fantasy VII Rebirth being two examples, it’s currently going through a b
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  • So, the age-checked internet has officially arrived in the UK! Because nothing screams “freedom” quite like having to prove your age to access adult content. Who knew that navigating online pleasure would require the same level of verification as applying for a mortgage? Experts warn that this wave of age-check laws will chill speech like a cold shower on a summer day—delightful and refreshing for some, but a shock to the system for others. Hopefully, the children will be shielded from the horrors of adult content while adults are left scrambling to find their birth certificates online. Cheers to a brave new world where your age defines your browsing habits!

    #AgeCheckedInternet #UKLaws #OnlineFreedom #DigitalIrony #AdultContent
    So, the age-checked internet has officially arrived in the UK! Because nothing screams “freedom” quite like having to prove your age to access adult content. Who knew that navigating online pleasure would require the same level of verification as applying for a mortgage? Experts warn that this wave of age-check laws will chill speech like a cold shower on a summer day—delightful and refreshing for some, but a shock to the system for others. Hopefully, the children will be shielded from the horrors of adult content while adults are left scrambling to find their birth certificates online. Cheers to a brave new world where your age defines your browsing habits! #AgeCheckedInternet #UKLaws #OnlineFreedom #DigitalIrony #AdultContent
    The Age-Checked Internet Has Arrived
    Starting today, UK adults will have to prove their age to access porn online. Experts warn that a global wave of age-check laws threatens to chill speech and ultimately harm children and adults alike.
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  • In "Jurassic World Rebirth," it turns out that PTSD is the ultimate dinosaur. Forget about the terrifying beasts that once roamed the earth; nothing screams horror quite like a discarded Snickers wrapper triggering an apocalyptic chain reaction. Because who needs a T-Rex when you can face your inner demons, right? The film brilliantly suggests that the real threat isn’t the Distortus Rex escaping its containment, but rather the emotional baggage we’ve all been carrying since 1993. So grab your candy, folks—because if a wrapper can unleash chaos, imagine what your unresolved childhood trauma could do!

    #JurassicWorldRebirth #PTSD #DistortusRex #DinosaurDrama #SnickersAndScreams
    In "Jurassic World Rebirth," it turns out that PTSD is the ultimate dinosaur. Forget about the terrifying beasts that once roamed the earth; nothing screams horror quite like a discarded Snickers wrapper triggering an apocalyptic chain reaction. Because who needs a T-Rex when you can face your inner demons, right? The film brilliantly suggests that the real threat isn’t the Distortus Rex escaping its containment, but rather the emotional baggage we’ve all been carrying since 1993. So grab your candy, folks—because if a wrapper can unleash chaos, imagine what your unresolved childhood trauma could do! #JurassicWorldRebirth #PTSD #DistortusRex #DinosaurDrama #SnickersAndScreams
    KOTAKU.COM
    In Jurassic World Rebirth, PTSD Is A Bigger Threat Than Dinosaurs
    Jurassic World Rebirth’s opening scene is perhaps its strongest. In a flashback sequence set in an experimental dinosaur breeding facility, a carelessly discarded Snickers wrapper gets sucked into a pressure-sealed door, allowing the film’s mutated D
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  • So, it turns out that Donald Trump's most loyal MAGA fans are feeling a tad bit... disgruntled. Who would have thought that promises made in a whirlwind of enthusiasm might not quite materialize? Shocking, right? It’s not just Epstein’s escapades that have them riled up; it’s the realization that their hopes may have been as inflated as a balloon at a kid's birthday party. Who needs a reality check when you can just keep doubling down on the same narrative?

    But hey, let’s not forget: anger is just passion with a little extra seasoning. Here’s to the loyal base, ready to storm the castle over unfulfilled dreams while the rest of us enjoy the spectacle. Cheers to loyalty—at least
    So, it turns out that Donald Trump's most loyal MAGA fans are feeling a tad bit... disgruntled. Who would have thought that promises made in a whirlwind of enthusiasm might not quite materialize? Shocking, right? It’s not just Epstein’s escapades that have them riled up; it’s the realization that their hopes may have been as inflated as a balloon at a kid's birthday party. Who needs a reality check when you can just keep doubling down on the same narrative? But hey, let’s not forget: anger is just passion with a little extra seasoning. Here’s to the loyal base, ready to storm the castle over unfulfilled dreams while the rest of us enjoy the spectacle. Cheers to loyalty—at least
    It's Not Just Epstein. MAGA Is Angry About a Lot of Things
    Pockets of Donald Trump’s most loyal base are increasingly angry at what they view as the administration’s failure to fulfill its promises.
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  • ---

    In the dim corners of virtual spaces, where anonymity cloaks desires, a phenomenon unfolds nightly—VRChat porn. This intricate dance between role-play and community-driven NSFW content has birthed a realm pulsating with intensity and longing. Here, avatars come alive, each movement a brushstroke on the canvas of fantasy, where the boundaries of reality blur into obscurity.

    ## The Allure of Virtual Escapism

    As the sun sets on the real world, individuals slip into the warm embrace of their...
    --- In the dim corners of virtual spaces, where anonymity cloaks desires, a phenomenon unfolds nightly—VRChat porn. This intricate dance between role-play and community-driven NSFW content has birthed a realm pulsating with intensity and longing. Here, avatars come alive, each movement a brushstroke on the canvas of fantasy, where the boundaries of reality blur into obscurity. ## The Allure of Virtual Escapism As the sun sets on the real world, individuals slip into the warm embrace of their...
    **VRChat Porn: Between Role-Play and Community NSFW Content**
    --- In the dim corners of virtual spaces, where anonymity cloaks desires, a phenomenon unfolds nightly—VRChat porn. This intricate dance between role-play and community-driven NSFW content has birthed a realm pulsating with intensity and longing. Here, avatars come alive, each movement a brushstroke on the canvas of fantasy, where the boundaries of reality blur into obscurity. ## The Allure...
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  • road bikes, luxury bicycles, 3D printing, J.Laverack, Aston Martin, titanium bicycles, high-quality cycling, innovative design

    ## Introduction

    In the world of cycling, a new revolution is brewing, one that combines cutting-edge technology with the elegance of luxury design. The collaboration between British company J.Laverack and the renowned luxury sports car manufacturer Aston Martin has given birth to a masterpiece that is not just a bicycle but a statement of style and functionality. Welco...
    road bikes, luxury bicycles, 3D printing, J.Laverack, Aston Martin, titanium bicycles, high-quality cycling, innovative design ## Introduction In the world of cycling, a new revolution is brewing, one that combines cutting-edge technology with the elegance of luxury design. The collaboration between British company J.Laverack and the renowned luxury sports car manufacturer Aston Martin has given birth to a masterpiece that is not just a bicycle but a statement of style and functionality. Welco...
    The Most Aesthetic Road Bike in the World Thanks to 3D Printing
    road bikes, luxury bicycles, 3D printing, J.Laverack, Aston Martin, titanium bicycles, high-quality cycling, innovative design ## Introduction In the world of cycling, a new revolution is brewing, one that combines cutting-edge technology with the elegance of luxury design. The collaboration between British company J.Laverack and the renowned luxury sports car manufacturer Aston Martin has...
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  • A routine test for fetal abnormalities could improve a mother’s health

    Science & technology | Hidden in plain sightA routine test for fetal abnormalities could improve a mother’s healthStudies show these can help detect pre-eclampsia and predict preterm births Illustration: Anna Kövecses Jun 11th 2025WHEN NON-INVASIVE prenatal testingarrived in 2011, it transformed pregnancy. With a simple blood test, scientists could now sweep a mother’s bloodstream for scraps of placental DNA, uncovering fetal genetic defects and shedding light on the health of the unborn baby. But the potential to monitor the mother’s health went largely unappreciated.Explore moreThis article appeared in the Science & technology section of the print edition under the headline “Testing time”From the June 14th 2025 editionDiscover stories from this section and more in the list of contents⇒Explore the editionReuse this content
    #routine #test #fetal #abnormalities #could
    A routine test for fetal abnormalities could improve a mother’s health
    Science & technology | Hidden in plain sightA routine test for fetal abnormalities could improve a mother’s healthStudies show these can help detect pre-eclampsia and predict preterm births Illustration: Anna Kövecses Jun 11th 2025WHEN NON-INVASIVE prenatal testingarrived in 2011, it transformed pregnancy. With a simple blood test, scientists could now sweep a mother’s bloodstream for scraps of placental DNA, uncovering fetal genetic defects and shedding light on the health of the unborn baby. But the potential to monitor the mother’s health went largely unappreciated.Explore moreThis article appeared in the Science & technology section of the print edition under the headline “Testing time”From the June 14th 2025 editionDiscover stories from this section and more in the list of contents⇒Explore the editionReuse this content #routine #test #fetal #abnormalities #could
    WWW.ECONOMIST.COM
    A routine test for fetal abnormalities could improve a mother’s health
    Science & technology | Hidden in plain sightA routine test for fetal abnormalities could improve a mother’s healthStudies show these can help detect pre-eclampsia and predict preterm births Illustration: Anna Kövecses Jun 11th 2025WHEN NON-INVASIVE prenatal testing (NIPT) arrived in 2011, it transformed pregnancy. With a simple blood test, scientists could now sweep a mother’s bloodstream for scraps of placental DNA, uncovering fetal genetic defects and shedding light on the health of the unborn baby. But the potential to monitor the mother’s health went largely unappreciated.Explore moreThis article appeared in the Science & technology section of the print edition under the headline “Testing time”From the June 14th 2025 editionDiscover stories from this section and more in the list of contents⇒Explore the editionReuse this content
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  • The stunning reversal of humanity’s oldest bias

    Perhaps the oldest, most pernicious form of human bias is that of men toward women. It often started at the moment of birth. In ancient Athens, at a public ceremony called the amphidromia, fathers would inspect a newborn and decide whether it would be part of the family, or be cast away. One often socially acceptable reason for abandoning the baby: It was a girl. Female infanticide has been distressingly common in many societies — and its practice is not just ancient history. In 1990, the Nobel Prize-winning economist Amartya Sen looked at birth ratios in Asia, North Africa, and China and calculated that more than 100 million women were essentially “missing” — meaning that, based on the normal ratio of boys to girls at birth and the longevity of both genders, there was a huge missing number of girls who should have been born, but weren’t. Sen’s estimate came before the truly widespread adoption of ultrasound tests that could determine the sex of a fetus in utero — which actually made the problem worse, leading to a wave of sex-selective abortions. These were especially common in countries like India and China; the latter’s one-child policy and old biases made families desperate for their one child to be a boy. The Economist has estimated that since 1980 alone, there have been approximately 50 million fewer girls born worldwide than would naturally be expected, which almost certainly means that roughly that nearly all of those girls were aborted for no other reason than their sex. The preference for boys was a bias that killed in mass numbers.But in one of the most important social shifts of our time, that bias is changing. In a great cover story earlier this month, The Economist reported that the number of annual excess male births has fallen from a peak of 1.7 million in 2000 to around 200,000, which puts it back within the biologically standard birth ratio of 105 boys for every 100 girls. Countries that once had highly skewed sex ratios — like South Korea, which saw almost 116 boys born for every 100 girls in 1990 — now have normal or near-normal ratios. Altogether, The Economist estimated that the decline in sex preference at birth in the past 25 years has saved the equivalent of 7 million girls. That’s comparable to the number of lives saved by anti-smoking efforts in the US. So how, exactly, have we overcome a prejudice that seemed so embedded in human society?Success in school and the workplaceFor one, we have relaxed discrimination against girls and women in other ways — in school and in the workplace. With fewer limits, girls are outperforming boys in the classroom. In the most recent international PISA tests, considered the gold standard for evaluating student performance around the world, 15-year-old girls beat their male counterparts in reading in 79 out of 81 participating countries or economies, while the historic male advantage in math scores has fallen to single digits. Girls are also dominating in higher education, with 113 female students at that level for every 100 male students. While women continue to earn less than men, the gender pay gap has been shrinking, and in a number of urban areas in the US, young women have actually been outearning young men. Government policies have helped accelerate that shift, in part because they have come to recognize the serious social problems that eventually result from decades of anti-girl discrimination. In countries like South Korea and China, which have long had some of the most skewed gender ratios at birth, governments have cracked down on technologies that enable sex-selective abortion. In India, where female infanticide and neglect have been particularly horrific, slogans like “the Daughter, Educate the Daughter” have helped change opinions. A changing preferenceThe shift is being seen not just in birth sex ratios, but in opinion polls — and in the actions of would-be parents.Between 1983 and 2003, The Economist reported, the proportion of South Korean women who said it was “necessary” to have a son fell from 48 percent to 6 percent, while nearly half of women now say they want daughters. In Japan, the shift has gone even further — as far back as 2002, 75 percent of couples who wanted only one child said they hoped for a daughter.In the US, which allows sex selection for couples doing in-vitro fertilization, there is growing evidence that would-be parents prefer girls, as do potential adoptive parents. While in the past, parents who had a girl first were more likely to keep trying to have children in an effort to have a boy, the opposite is now true — couples who have a girl first are less likely to keep trying. A more equal futureThere’s still more progress to be made. In northwest of India, for instance, birth ratios that overly skew toward boys are still the norm. In regions of sub-Saharan Africa, birth sex ratios may be relatively normal, but post-birth discrimination in the form of poorer nutrition and worse medical care still lingers. And course, women around the world are still subject to unacceptable levels of violence and discrimination from men.And some of the reasons for this shift may not be as high-minded as we’d like to think. Boys around the world are struggling in the modern era. They increasingly underperform in education, are more likely to be involved in violent crime, and in general, are failing to launch into adulthood. In the US, 20 percent of American men between 25 and 34 still live with their parents, compared to 15 percent of similarly aged women. It also seems to be the case that at least some of the increasing preference for girls is rooted in sexist stereotypes. Parents around the world may now prefer girls partly because they see them as more likely to take care of them in their old age — meaning a different kind of bias against women, that they are more natural caretakers, may be paradoxically driving the decline in prejudice against girls at birth.But make no mistake — the decline of boy preference is a clear mark of social progress, one measured in millions of girls’ lives saved. And maybe one Father’s Day, not too long from now, we’ll reach the point where daughters and sons are simply children: equally loved and equally welcomed.A version of this story originally appeared in the Good News newsletter. Sign up here!See More:
    #stunning #reversal #humanitys #oldest #bias
    The stunning reversal of humanity’s oldest bias
    Perhaps the oldest, most pernicious form of human bias is that of men toward women. It often started at the moment of birth. In ancient Athens, at a public ceremony called the amphidromia, fathers would inspect a newborn and decide whether it would be part of the family, or be cast away. One often socially acceptable reason for abandoning the baby: It was a girl. Female infanticide has been distressingly common in many societies — and its practice is not just ancient history. In 1990, the Nobel Prize-winning economist Amartya Sen looked at birth ratios in Asia, North Africa, and China and calculated that more than 100 million women were essentially “missing” — meaning that, based on the normal ratio of boys to girls at birth and the longevity of both genders, there was a huge missing number of girls who should have been born, but weren’t. Sen’s estimate came before the truly widespread adoption of ultrasound tests that could determine the sex of a fetus in utero — which actually made the problem worse, leading to a wave of sex-selective abortions. These were especially common in countries like India and China; the latter’s one-child policy and old biases made families desperate for their one child to be a boy. The Economist has estimated that since 1980 alone, there have been approximately 50 million fewer girls born worldwide than would naturally be expected, which almost certainly means that roughly that nearly all of those girls were aborted for no other reason than their sex. The preference for boys was a bias that killed in mass numbers.But in one of the most important social shifts of our time, that bias is changing. In a great cover story earlier this month, The Economist reported that the number of annual excess male births has fallen from a peak of 1.7 million in 2000 to around 200,000, which puts it back within the biologically standard birth ratio of 105 boys for every 100 girls. Countries that once had highly skewed sex ratios — like South Korea, which saw almost 116 boys born for every 100 girls in 1990 — now have normal or near-normal ratios. Altogether, The Economist estimated that the decline in sex preference at birth in the past 25 years has saved the equivalent of 7 million girls. That’s comparable to the number of lives saved by anti-smoking efforts in the US. So how, exactly, have we overcome a prejudice that seemed so embedded in human society?Success in school and the workplaceFor one, we have relaxed discrimination against girls and women in other ways — in school and in the workplace. With fewer limits, girls are outperforming boys in the classroom. In the most recent international PISA tests, considered the gold standard for evaluating student performance around the world, 15-year-old girls beat their male counterparts in reading in 79 out of 81 participating countries or economies, while the historic male advantage in math scores has fallen to single digits. Girls are also dominating in higher education, with 113 female students at that level for every 100 male students. While women continue to earn less than men, the gender pay gap has been shrinking, and in a number of urban areas in the US, young women have actually been outearning young men. Government policies have helped accelerate that shift, in part because they have come to recognize the serious social problems that eventually result from decades of anti-girl discrimination. In countries like South Korea and China, which have long had some of the most skewed gender ratios at birth, governments have cracked down on technologies that enable sex-selective abortion. In India, where female infanticide and neglect have been particularly horrific, slogans like “the Daughter, Educate the Daughter” have helped change opinions. A changing preferenceThe shift is being seen not just in birth sex ratios, but in opinion polls — and in the actions of would-be parents.Between 1983 and 2003, The Economist reported, the proportion of South Korean women who said it was “necessary” to have a son fell from 48 percent to 6 percent, while nearly half of women now say they want daughters. In Japan, the shift has gone even further — as far back as 2002, 75 percent of couples who wanted only one child said they hoped for a daughter.In the US, which allows sex selection for couples doing in-vitro fertilization, there is growing evidence that would-be parents prefer girls, as do potential adoptive parents. While in the past, parents who had a girl first were more likely to keep trying to have children in an effort to have a boy, the opposite is now true — couples who have a girl first are less likely to keep trying. A more equal futureThere’s still more progress to be made. In northwest of India, for instance, birth ratios that overly skew toward boys are still the norm. In regions of sub-Saharan Africa, birth sex ratios may be relatively normal, but post-birth discrimination in the form of poorer nutrition and worse medical care still lingers. And course, women around the world are still subject to unacceptable levels of violence and discrimination from men.And some of the reasons for this shift may not be as high-minded as we’d like to think. Boys around the world are struggling in the modern era. They increasingly underperform in education, are more likely to be involved in violent crime, and in general, are failing to launch into adulthood. In the US, 20 percent of American men between 25 and 34 still live with their parents, compared to 15 percent of similarly aged women. It also seems to be the case that at least some of the increasing preference for girls is rooted in sexist stereotypes. Parents around the world may now prefer girls partly because they see them as more likely to take care of them in their old age — meaning a different kind of bias against women, that they are more natural caretakers, may be paradoxically driving the decline in prejudice against girls at birth.But make no mistake — the decline of boy preference is a clear mark of social progress, one measured in millions of girls’ lives saved. And maybe one Father’s Day, not too long from now, we’ll reach the point where daughters and sons are simply children: equally loved and equally welcomed.A version of this story originally appeared in the Good News newsletter. Sign up here!See More: #stunning #reversal #humanitys #oldest #bias
    WWW.VOX.COM
    The stunning reversal of humanity’s oldest bias
    Perhaps the oldest, most pernicious form of human bias is that of men toward women. It often started at the moment of birth. In ancient Athens, at a public ceremony called the amphidromia, fathers would inspect a newborn and decide whether it would be part of the family, or be cast away. One often socially acceptable reason for abandoning the baby: It was a girl. Female infanticide has been distressingly common in many societies — and its practice is not just ancient history. In 1990, the Nobel Prize-winning economist Amartya Sen looked at birth ratios in Asia, North Africa, and China and calculated that more than 100 million women were essentially “missing” — meaning that, based on the normal ratio of boys to girls at birth and the longevity of both genders, there was a huge missing number of girls who should have been born, but weren’t. Sen’s estimate came before the truly widespread adoption of ultrasound tests that could determine the sex of a fetus in utero — which actually made the problem worse, leading to a wave of sex-selective abortions. These were especially common in countries like India and China; the latter’s one-child policy and old biases made families desperate for their one child to be a boy. The Economist has estimated that since 1980 alone, there have been approximately 50 million fewer girls born worldwide than would naturally be expected, which almost certainly means that roughly that nearly all of those girls were aborted for no other reason than their sex. The preference for boys was a bias that killed in mass numbers.But in one of the most important social shifts of our time, that bias is changing. In a great cover story earlier this month, The Economist reported that the number of annual excess male births has fallen from a peak of 1.7 million in 2000 to around 200,000, which puts it back within the biologically standard birth ratio of 105 boys for every 100 girls. Countries that once had highly skewed sex ratios — like South Korea, which saw almost 116 boys born for every 100 girls in 1990 — now have normal or near-normal ratios. Altogether, The Economist estimated that the decline in sex preference at birth in the past 25 years has saved the equivalent of 7 million girls. That’s comparable to the number of lives saved by anti-smoking efforts in the US. So how, exactly, have we overcome a prejudice that seemed so embedded in human society?Success in school and the workplaceFor one, we have relaxed discrimination against girls and women in other ways — in school and in the workplace. With fewer limits, girls are outperforming boys in the classroom. In the most recent international PISA tests, considered the gold standard for evaluating student performance around the world, 15-year-old girls beat their male counterparts in reading in 79 out of 81 participating countries or economies, while the historic male advantage in math scores has fallen to single digits. Girls are also dominating in higher education, with 113 female students at that level for every 100 male students. While women continue to earn less than men, the gender pay gap has been shrinking, and in a number of urban areas in the US, young women have actually been outearning young men. Government policies have helped accelerate that shift, in part because they have come to recognize the serious social problems that eventually result from decades of anti-girl discrimination. In countries like South Korea and China, which have long had some of the most skewed gender ratios at birth, governments have cracked down on technologies that enable sex-selective abortion. In India, where female infanticide and neglect have been particularly horrific, slogans like “Save the Daughter, Educate the Daughter” have helped change opinions. A changing preferenceThe shift is being seen not just in birth sex ratios, but in opinion polls — and in the actions of would-be parents.Between 1983 and 2003, The Economist reported, the proportion of South Korean women who said it was “necessary” to have a son fell from 48 percent to 6 percent, while nearly half of women now say they want daughters. In Japan, the shift has gone even further — as far back as 2002, 75 percent of couples who wanted only one child said they hoped for a daughter.In the US, which allows sex selection for couples doing in-vitro fertilization, there is growing evidence that would-be parents prefer girls, as do potential adoptive parents. While in the past, parents who had a girl first were more likely to keep trying to have children in an effort to have a boy, the opposite is now true — couples who have a girl first are less likely to keep trying. A more equal futureThere’s still more progress to be made. In northwest of India, for instance, birth ratios that overly skew toward boys are still the norm. In regions of sub-Saharan Africa, birth sex ratios may be relatively normal, but post-birth discrimination in the form of poorer nutrition and worse medical care still lingers. And course, women around the world are still subject to unacceptable levels of violence and discrimination from men.And some of the reasons for this shift may not be as high-minded as we’d like to think. Boys around the world are struggling in the modern era. They increasingly underperform in education, are more likely to be involved in violent crime, and in general, are failing to launch into adulthood. In the US, 20 percent of American men between 25 and 34 still live with their parents, compared to 15 percent of similarly aged women. It also seems to be the case that at least some of the increasing preference for girls is rooted in sexist stereotypes. Parents around the world may now prefer girls partly because they see them as more likely to take care of them in their old age — meaning a different kind of bias against women, that they are more natural caretakers, may be paradoxically driving the decline in prejudice against girls at birth.But make no mistake — the decline of boy preference is a clear mark of social progress, one measured in millions of girls’ lives saved. And maybe one Father’s Day, not too long from now, we’ll reach the point where daughters and sons are simply children: equally loved and equally welcomed.A version of this story originally appeared in the Good News newsletter. Sign up here!See More:
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