
Prosperity ‘Bidenomics’ boosts blue-collar jobs and green energy. (Bonobo research has been severely limited in recent decades due to political strife in the Democratic Republic of Congo.)

The researchers identified 152 gang killings among chimpanzees in 15 out of 18 communities surveyed, and just one suspected killing among the four bonobo communities studied. If humans aren’t to blame, what drives chimpanzees to gang up on each other in ways that other non-human primates, including the nearly genetically identical bonobo, do not?įor this study, an international team of researchers compared 54 years worth of chimpanzee and bonobo research, including some new, yet to be published observations. However, a new study published Wednesday in the scientific journal Nature dismisses the idea that humans have managed to turn chimps against each other.

Goodall began to wonder if she had somehow sparked such aggression by giving bananas to chimps that visited her camp at the Gombe National Park in Tanzania.

Many believed that humans' deforestation and hunting are to blame for placing new constraints on resources. Since then, scientists have proposed a variety of theories about how chimps came to exhibit such vicious behavior. It’s been 35 years since primatologist Jane Goodall shocked the world with her account of chimpanzees brutally ganging up on lone individuals from neighboring communities. New analysis of 50 years worth of chimpanzee and bonobo research is changing the way we think about the nature of violence. King said less than a month before he was assassinated.That messaging transcends location, race, and gender – and hit home this summer in a Waffle House a few miles from my front door. King’s narrative.“Whenever you are engaged in work that serves humanity and is for the building of humanity, it has dignity, and it has worth,” Dr. “We believe that all workers deserve dignity, respect, and an opportunity to build a better future for ourselves and our families.”The video reminded me of a lesser-known speech from Martin Luther King Jr.: “All Labor Has Dignity.” Three years removed from the popularization of the term “essential worker,” our society has an opportunity to more deeply understand and revive Dr. “I am striking,” declared Keath Brown, an African American male. But what really warmed my heart was the boldness and diversity of the employees.John Schuessler, a white worker with distinctive pink hair, recalled the time an angry customer had a handgun in her waistband. The town, home to historically Black South Carolina State University, is near and dear to my heart as where my parents met.The workers’ demands included a safety plan to address a spate of fighting at Waffle Houses, an end to paycheck deductions, and a call for $25 an hour for all workers, cooks, and servers. The Instagram account of the Union of Southern Service Workers, fittingly named posted video testimonials from Waffle House workers in Orangeburg, South Carolina. Earlier this summer, while vacationing in California, I saw striking actors and writers near Universal Studios in Hollywood and in front of Comic-Con in San Diego.Yet even with increased labor activity, there was still a recent occurrence that hit me like a lightning strike. Labor protests have been practically impossible to ignore during the past few months.
