This morning’s key headlines from GenerationalDynamics.com:

China’s end of one-child policy doesn’t dent Vietnamese wife trade

China announced this week a loosening in its 30-year-old one childpolicy, permitting some couples to have 2 children, rather than havingto stop at 1. Over the years, this policy has resulted in many newsstories of government officials conducting regular forced pregnancychecks of women, all the way to grabbing up pregnant women, puttingthem into a clinic, and forcing an abortion and sterilization. Theother part of this picture that women, wanting a son as their onlychild, kill their unborn daughters after getting an ultrasound, orkill their newborn daughters after birth. One trick that many womenused is to take fertility drugs, hoping that their one pregnancy leadsto twins or triplets. The result of the one-child policy is thatthere is a ratio of 1.18 males to each female in China, giving rise tosignificant social problems. 

The change to the one-child policy will not help the current crop ofyoung adult males, who are unable to find Chinese wives, many of whomare “buying” Vietnamese wives. Buying Vietnamese wives is in a legalgray zone in China — against the law, but the law is not enforced.Matchmaking brokers charge $5-15,000 to help a customer find aVietnamese wife, which covers costs such as a dowry, wedding feast,visas and travel. But this matchmaking service is coming underincreased scrutiny, as more young Vietnamese girls are being kidnappedfor sale, and more Chinese males are being defrauded. Xinhua and Global Times (Beijing)

The Hijab becomes a national problem for Russia

The recent suicide bombing in Volgograd by a female suicide bomber has focused attention on womenin the North Caucasus, Russia’s southern provinces. Russianauthorities are increasing pressure on women who wear Islamic dress,including the hijab, which covers the head, and sometimes the entirefemale body. In December 2012, Russia’s president Vladimir Putincategorically stated at a press conference that “in our culture (whenI say ‘our,’ I mean traditional Islam), there are not any hijabswhatsoever,” which is truly a bizarre statement. Putin even forcedmullahs, muftis and other religious figures to agree with Putin’sassertion. Muslims were infuriated when several Muslim girls werebarred from school for wearing hijabs. Putin hoped that announcing areturn to the use of uniforms in the country’s schools, as it wasduring the Soviet period, would resolve the issue. However, in anunexpected turn, a well-known figure in the Russian Orthodox Churchsupported the Muslims, saying that a campaign against the hijab mightend up banning Orthodox children from wearing crosses in schools.This disagreement over the hijab is just one more factor separatingthe Caucasian population from the ethnic Russia population. Jamestown

Does the Koran require a woman to wear a hijab?

The Jamestown article referenced above says that the Koran requireswomen to wear a hijab, and quotes a verse from the Koran. This was asurprise to me, because it can’t possibly be true. Some Muslimcountries require the hijab, some don’t, but they’re all Muslimcountries. Based on this, I’ve always assumed that the Koran did NOTrequire women to wear a hijab. So the reference in the last articlecaught my interest. 

I looked up the referenced verse, 33:59, and found a web pagethat gives translations from different Islamic scholars. Theresults were quite interesting: 

In all cases, the translations are telling how to appear as avirtuous, respectable Muslim woman, so she will not be annoyed ormolested. But there is a wide range. Muhammad Sarwar says thatbreast should be covered, which is pretty much the rule in Westerncountries. But Mohsin Khan tells women to cover their entire bodies,except for the eyes. In some cases, the advice only to when they “goabroad.” 

So, as in the case of everything else these days, it all depends onyour ideology. If you’re a strict Muslim conservative, you’ll pickthe full body hijab translation; if you’re more liberal, you’ll pickthe breasts-only translation, or perhaps something involving a hijab.As in the case of Christianity and the Bible, you can believe manythings, and almost always find a verse or two that can be interpretedto support your position. Quran.com

Cholera epidemic spreads from Haiti to Cuba to Mexico

Mexico is reporting 176 confirmed cases of cholera, including onedeath. Mexico had an outbreak of cholera between 1991 and 2002, whichwas finally extinguished. The new outbreak has been traced back tothe United Nations soldiers from Nepal, where cholera is endemic, whowere sent to Haiti to aid people following the huge Haiti earthquakein 2010. Since that time, the disease spread first to the DominicanRepublican, then to Cuba, where cholera hadn’t been seen in 100 years,and from there to Mexico. It’s feared that vacationers to Cuba fromChile, Venezuela, Italy, Germany and Holland are inadvertentlycarrying the disease back home. Cholera is most often spread throughfood or through the water supply. It’s believed unlikely that theepidemic will spread to the United States, because the water ischlorinated. World Socialist Web Site

Obamacare software contractor CGI reports unexpectedly high profit

CGI Group Inc., the main contractor for the Obamacare web siteHealthCare.gov, reported better than expected profits in the lastquarter, based on a 53% rise in revenues. CGI, a Canadian softwarecompany, said that bookings of U.S. government business were strong,despite the web site problems. 

Based on my decades of experience as a senior software engineer, theObamacare web site should have cost $5-10 million, and should havebeen working long before now. If you take into account the enormouswastes and screwup that are typical of any government project, thenthe Obamacare web site should have cost $10-25 million. 

Instead, I’m hearing reports, not being denied by anyone, that the website cost $300-600 million, and that it’s a software engineeringdisaster. 

So here are my questions: 

Reuters

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