Tag Archives: Rename

WHO to rename ‘Monkeypox’ to ‘MPOX’ at Biden admin’s request

The World Health Organization (WHO) is set to change the name of the monkeypox virus to “MPOX.” 

The change in nomenclature is an attempt to destigmatize the virus at the behest of President Biden’s administration, according to a report from Politico that cited three anonymous sources with knowledge of the matter. 

WHO CHIEF SCIENTIST SOUMYA SWAMINATHAN LEAVING AGENCY

The World Health Organization maintains monkeypox’s status a global health emergency.
(REUTERS/Denis Balibouse/File Photo)

Sources said that senior Biden officials have consistently urged the WHO to make the name change and have threatened to adopt new terminology without WHO’s approval.

According to the report, Biden administration believes that the name “monkeypox” carries an unnecessary stigma for people of color.

MONKEYPOX BY THE NUMBERS: FACTS ABOUT THE RARE VIRUS THAT’S CURRENTLY SPREADING

Health officials have discovered that administering the monkeypox vaccine through intradermal injection, or injecting a small dose in between layers of skin, is just as effective and allows a single dose to be used to vaccinate five people instead of one.
(REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration)

The monkeypox outbreak continues to represent a global health emergency, which is the WHO’s highest level of alert, the U.N. agency’s Emergency Committee said at the beginning of November.

The WHO label, a “public health emergency of international concern”, is designed to trigger a coordinated international response and could unlock funding to collaborate on sharing vaccines and treatments.

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Nathan Brookes, of Agoura, gets his second shot of monkeypox vaccine at the Balboa Sports Complex vaccine site in Los Angeles on Thursday, Sept. 8, 2022. 
((Photo by Sarah Reingewirtz/MediaNews Group/Los Angeles Daily News via Getty Images))

The U.S. has seen approximately 29,200 cases of monkeypox total within its borders.

The CDC states, “At this time, data suggest that gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men make up the majority of cases in the current monkeypox outbreak. However, anyone, regardless of sexual orientation or gender identity, who has been in close, personal contact with someone who has monkeypox is at risk. Take steps to prevent getting monkeypox. If you have any symptoms of monkeypox, talk to a healthcare provider.”

Reuters contributed to this report.

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Miami Heat to cut ties with bankrupt FTX, rename arena

Miami-Dade County and the Miami Heat are ending their arena naming rights deal with bankrupt cryptocurrency firm FTX.

The county, which owns the arena, signed a 19-year, $135 million deal for the bayfront Heat homecourt’s name in 2021. After an initial balloon payment of $14 million, FTX was scheduled to make a $5.5 million payment in January.

The arena will still technically be referred to as FTX Arena for Saturday’s game between the Heat and Charlotte Hornets, but signage and the name will soon come down.

“The reports about FTX and its affiliates are extremely disappointing,” the county and team said in a joint statement. “Miami-Dade County and the Miami HEAT are immediately taking action to terminate our business relationships with FTX. We will be working together to find a new naming rights partner for the arena.”

FTX, a cryptocurrency exchange, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection Friday after a steep fall in crypto prices left the company unable to cover accounts as customers rushed to withdraw funds.

The deal in Miami was one of a number of sports marketing deals FTX had signed over the past few years, including sponsorship deals with the Golden State Warriors and Washington Wizards. Among top athletes who had FTX deals included Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback Tom Brady, Warriors guard Stephen Curry and tennis star Naomi Osaka.

FTX also entered into a deal with Mercedes for Formula One racing and a sponsorship deal with Major League Baseball, whose umpires wear the company’s logo. Earlier Friday, Mercedes said it would immediately remove FTX logos from its Formula One cars.

The Heat’s home was known as AmericanAirlines Arena from its opening in 1999 until last season.

The team was to receive $2 million a year as part of the naming rights deal with FTX. Most of the rest — roughly $90 million over the lifetime of the agreement — was to be paid to the county, the vast majority of it earmarked toward fighting gun violence and poverty.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Worries over stigma are driving a push to rename monkeypox, but the process is slow



CNN
 — 

Since the beginning of the monkeypox outbreak, scientists and activists have pushed for the name of the virus and the disease to be changed to something “non-discriminatory” and “non-stigmatizing.”

Public health experts have worried that stigma could steer people away from getting tested and vaccinated. A new name can help slow the spread of the disease, they say, but it needs to come quickly.

Globally, nearly 60,000 cases have been identified, placing the name “monkeypox” in individuals’ medical files. The World Health Organization’s director-general promised in June that a change in the name was coming “as soon as possible,” and WHO said it was working with experts to change the name of the virus, its variants and the disease it causes.

But that was months ago.

Typically, the scientist who isolates a virus gets to suggest a name. The naming of the species is the responsibility of WHO’s International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses.

Scientists have been calling this virus “monkeypox” for 64 years.

In 1958, researcher Preben von Magnus and his team in Copenhagen, Denmark, discovered two outbreaks of a “pox-like disease” in a colony of crab-eating macaque monkeys that their lab used for polio vaccine production and research.

The first human case of monkeypox wasn’t documented until 1970. Scientists discovered a case in a 9-month-old boy in the Democratic Republic of Congo. The child recovered from the monkeypox infection but died six days later from measles. After that, cases of the painful disease were documented in West and Central Africa.

Cases in other places were almost all linked to travel, according to the CDC. But in 2018, the agency noted that over the previous decade, more human cases had been reported in countries that had not seen the disease in several decades. This emergence, it said, was a “global health security concern.”

The global push for the name change started this year, when an outbreak took off in countries where monkeypox was not commonly found.

The naming process had already been underway to reconsider the names of all orthopoxvirus species, WHO said in an email to CNN, including cowpox, horsepox, camelpox, raccoonpox and skunkpox, as well as monkeypox.

According to WHO taxonomy committee member Colin McInnes, the panel has a mandate to bring “virus species nomenclature into line with the way that most other forms of life are named.”

Traditionally, poxviruses were named after the animal in which the disease was first spotted, but that created some inconsistencies, he said.

Monkeypox probably didn’t start in monkeys. Its origin is still unknown. The virus can be found in several other kinds of animals like Gambian giant rats, dormice and a couple of species of squirrels.

McInnes, who is deputy director and principal scientist with the Moredun Group, which develops vaccines and tests for livestock and other animals, studies squirrelpox – which also may be in line for a name change. He has been looking into the feasibility of producing a vaccine against the virus, which can be fatal for red squirrels in the UK.

The current species known as “monkeypox virus” and the others would then be renamed to “orthopoxvirus ‘something,’ ” he said in an email to CNN.

“It is the ‘something’ that is currently being debated,” McInnes wrote.

He said some scientists would prefer that the monkeypox name be kept in order to retain the link to 50 years of published research. Others would like a totally different name.

The WHO committee has until June 2023 to suggest changes.

In August, WHO announced that a group of experts had come up with new names for the clades, or variants, of monkeypox. Prior to more modern conventions about names, scientists would name a variant for the region where it emerged and was circulating.

Now, to remove any stigma that comes with naming a disease for a region or country, the Congo Basin clade will be called clade I. The former West African clade is clade II. A subvariant, clade IIb, is what is primarily in circulation in the current outbreak.

Many scientists say WHO needs to work with more urgency.

In July, after weeks had gone by no action, the New York City health commissioner sent a letter to WHO, urging it to “act in this moment before it is too late.” It cited “growing concern for the potentially devastating and stigmatizing effects that the messaging around the ‘monkeypox’ virus can have on these already vulnerable communities.”

Since the outbreak has largely affected gay and bisexual men and other men who have sex with men, stigma has been an ongoing concern for WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus.

“Stigma and discrimination can be as dangerous as any virus,” Tedros said when he declared monkeypox a global health emergency in July.

In the US, the virus is disproportionately affecting Black and Hispanic people, according to the CDC. Local public health data also shows that fewer members of either community are getting the monkeypox vaccine.

Experts are concerned that in addition to the barriers that make access to any kind of health care difficult, some people may not get the vaccine or get tested because of the stigma associated with the disease.

In the WHO 2015 naming conventions, the organization encouraged those who name diseases to avoid places, names, occupations and animals due to stigmatization.

In August, WHO encouraged people who want to propose new names for monkeypox to submit suggestions to its website. More than 180 ideas have been suggested, some with a wide mix of creative explanations.

Some – like lopox, ovidpox, mixypox and roxypox – had no explanation.

A handful – like rodentpox, bonopox and alaskapox – may have been facetious.

Johanna Vogl, who submitted “greypox,” wrote that the name “refers to a phenotypic mark of the disease, greyish blisters and is not associated with human skin color nor a location, group or animal.”

Other suggestions come with more robust scientific explanations. Dr. Jeremy Faust, an emergency medicine physician at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston and an instructor in emergency medicine at Harvard, suggested changing the name to opoxid-22.

“While the monkeypox virus causing the current outbreak is not a novel pathogen, I propose that due to its designation as a public health emergency of international concern, renaming it is warranted,” Faust wrote in his proposal. He added that although this particular lineage of the virus seems to have originated before 2022, using this year may “limit confusion.”

Opoxid-22 reflects what’s known about the virus while removing “monkey” from the name.

Faust said he was bothered by the inaccuracy of the monkeypox name and the stigma it conveyed. But he said he submitted the name when he was waiting for some other work to finish.

“Honestly, I was just procrastinating,” Faust said.

He said that if WHO picked his name, it could help more people seek treatment, testing and care.

“This is important,” Faust said. “The right name should sound dry, technical, boring, so people aren’t afraid to say that they have that problem, right?”

Rossi Hassad, a professor of research and statistics at Mercy College and a fellow of the American College of Epidemiology, submitted a few names including zpox-22, zopox-22, zovid-22, hpox22 and hpi-22.

His proposal argues that given the uncertainty over where the virus originated, a more general name derived from a zoonosis – meaning a disease that can be transmitted from animals to humans – would eliminate the word “monkey” and be more inclusive.

Adding “22” would reflect the year in which scientists learned about this “outbreak with unusual and worrisome human-to-human transmission,” the proposal says.

Hassad said he was motivated to submit names because the word “monkey” can carry a lot of negative connotations.

“It has been used in racial and racist slurs against certain groups. I think it will be disingenuous not to recognize the damage that that word has done,” he said. “It is also scientifically incorrect. It’s a misnomer. If we want to be scientific, we have to be correct.”

Some US health departments aren’t waiting for WHO, but the change is inconsistent.

San Francisco’s Department of Health calls it MPX. Chicago’s calls it MPV. Other cities hit hard by the outbreak, including Houston, New York City and Philadelphia, have stuck with the traditional name, as has the CDC.

Daniel Driffin, an HIV patient advocate and a consultant with NMAC, a national organization that works for health equity and racial justice to end the HIV epidemic, said he hopes the name will change. At the same time, he is disappointed that it wasn’t until this outbreak, when people outside of Africa were widely affected, that the pushing for the change started.

“It’s a name steeped in racism. It’s a day late and a dollar short. But I support the change and think it will help,” Driffin said. “Think about the populations who will continue to be impacted disproportionately with this disease. It’s been Black and brown folks, so if we can strip racist oppressive tendencies from the nomenclature, I think we have to do that.”



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WHO to rename monkeypox to avoid discrimination and stigmatization

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The World Health Organization says it’s holding an open forum to rename monkeypox, after some critics raised concerns the name could be considered discriminatory and stigmatizing.

WHO said the decision was made after meeting with the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), which helps identify best practices for naming new human diseases to “avoid causing offense to any cultural, social, national, regional, professional, or ethnic groups, and minimize any negative impact on trade, travel, tourism or animal welfare.”

In a statement Friday, the U.N. health agency said it has also renamed two families, or clades, of the virus, using Roman numerals instead of geographic areas, to avoid stigmatization. 

MONKEYPOX: WHAT YOU MUST KNOW AOBUT THE VIRUS – AND HOW TO PROTECT YOURSELF

The version of the disease formerly known as the Congo Basin will now be known as Clade one or I and the West Africa clade will be known as Clade two or II.

WHO said that the new names for the clades will take effect immediately while a new name for the disease and virus will be worked on. The WHO said that anyone who wishes to submit a name suggestion can do so on their website. 

The decision comes after a group of scientists in June proposed an “urgent” name change, calling the current name “discriminatory and stigmatizing.”

The new name, they proposed, would minimize the “negative impacts on nations, geographic regions, economies and people and that considers the evolution and spread of the virus.”

The scientists proposed a neutral name that accounts for the evolution of the virus.

“In the context of the current global outbreak, continued reference to, and nomenclature of this virus being African is not only inaccurate but is also discriminatory and stigmatizing. The most obvious manifestation of this is the use of photos of African patients to depict the pox lesions in mainstream media in the global north” they said in a joint statement. 

NEW YORK GOVERNOR: MONKEYPOX IS A ‘DISASTER EMERGENCY’

The Center of Disease Control notes that the source of monkeypox is unknown, despite the virus being named in 1958 when two outbreaks of a pox-like disease occurred in colonies where monkeys were kept for research. 

Prior to 2022, monkeypox cases almost always linked to international travel to countries where the disease is common or through imported animals. The first human case was in 1970.

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“What people need to know very clearly is the transmission we are seeing is happening between humans to humans. It’s close contact transmission. So the concern should be about where it’s transmitting in the human population, and what humans can do to protect themselves from getting it and transmitting it. They should certainly not be attacking any animals,” WHO spokesperson Margaret Harris said on Tuesday.

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WHO plans to rename monkeypox over stigmatization concerns

LONDON — The World Health Organization says it’s holding an open forum to rename the disease monkeypox, after some critics raised concerns the name could be derogatory or have racist connotations.

In a statement Friday, the U.N. health agency said it has also renamed two families, or clades, of the virus, using Roman numerals instead of geographic areas, to avoid stigmatization. The version of the disease formerly known as the Congo Basin will now be known as Clade one or I and the West Africa clade will be known as Clade two or II.

WHO said the decision was made following a meeting of scientists this week and in line with current best practices for naming diseases, which aims to “avoid causing offense to any cultural, social, national, regional, professional, or ethnic groups, and minimize any negative impact on trade, travel, tourism or animal welfare.”

Numerous other diseases, including Japanese encephalitis, Marburg virus, Spanish influenza and Middle Eastern Respiratory Syndrome have been named after the geographic areas where they first arose or were identified. WHO has not publicly suggested changing any of those names.

Monkeypox was first named in 1958 when research monkeys in Denmark were observed to have a “pox-like” disease, although they are not thought to be the animal reservoir.

WHO said it was also opening a way for the public to suggest new names for monkeypox, but did not say when any new name would be announced.

To date, there have been more than 31,000 cases of monkeypox identified globally since May, with the majority of those beyond Africa. Monkeypox has been endemic in parts of central and west Africa for decades and was not known to trigger large outbreaks beyond the continent until May.

WHO declared the global spread of monkeypox to be an international emergency in July and the U.S. declared its own epidemic to be a national emergency earlier this month.

Outside of Africa, 98% of cases are in men who have sex with men. With only a limited global supply of vaccines, authorities are racing to stop monkeypox before it becomes entrenched as a new disease.

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New York Asks WHO To Rename “Monkeypox” Because…

The WHO has declared monkeypox a global health emergency.

New York:

New York City asked the World Health Organization (WHO) on Tuesday to rename the monkeypox virus to avoid stigmatizing patients who might then hold off on seeking care.

New York has seen more cases of the disease, which the WHO declared a global health emergency over the weekend, than any other city in the United States, with 1,092 infections detected so far.

“We have a growing concern for the potentially devastating and stigmatizing effects that the messaging around the ‘monkeypox’ virus can have on… already vulnerable communities,” New York City public health commissioner Ashwin Vasan said in a letter to WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus dated Tuesday.

The WHO had floated the idea of changing the name of the virus, which is related to the eradicated smallpox virus, during a press conference last month, a proposal Vasan mentioned in his letter.

Vasan referenced the “painful and racist history within which terminology like (monkeypox) is rooted for communities of color.”

He pointed to the fact that monkeypox did not actually originate in primates, as the name might suggest, and recalled the negative effects of misinformation during the early days of the HIV epidemic and the racism faced by Asian communities that was exacerbated by former president Donald Trump calling Covid-19 the “China virus.”

“Continuing to use the term ‘monkeypox’ to describe the current outbreak may reignite these traumatic feelings of racism and stigma — particularly for Black people and other people of color, as well as members of the LGBTQIA+ communities, and it is possible that they may avoid engaging in vital health care services because of it,” Vasan said.

Anyone is susceptible to contracting monkeypox, which has long been endemic in Central and Western Africa, but so far its spread in Europe and the United States has been mostly concentrated among men who have sex with other men.

The first symptoms can include a fever and fatigue, followed a few days later by a rash that can turn into painful, fluid-filled skin lesions, which may last for a few weeks before turning into scabs that then fall off.

No deaths have been reported so far in Europe or the United States.

More than 16,000 confirmed cases have been recorded in 75 countries so far this year, the WHO said on Monday.

A limited number of doses of a smallpox vaccine found to protect against monkeypox, called Jynneos, have been administered in New York, mostly to gay and bisexual men.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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New York asks WHO to re-name monkeypox: ‘We have a growing concern for…’ | World News

New York City asked the World Health Organization (WHO) on Tuesday to rename the monkeypox virus to avoid stigmatizing patients who might then hold off on seeking care.

New York has seen more cases of the disease, which the WHO declared a global health emergency over the weekend, than any other city in the United States, with 1,092 infections detected so far.

“We have a growing concern for the potentially devastating and stigmatizing effects that the messaging around the ‘monkeypox’ virus can have on… already vulnerable communities,” New York City public health commissioner Ashwin Vasan said in a letter to WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus dated Tuesday.

The WHO had floated the idea of changing the name of the virus, which is related to the eradicated smallpox virus, during a press conference last month, a proposal Vasan mentioned in his letter.

Vasan referenced the “painful and racist history within which terminology like (monkeypox) is rooted for communities of color.”

Also Read | Second suspected case of monkeypox in Delhi admitted to Lok Nayak Hospital

He pointed to the fact that monkeypox did not actually originate in primates, as the name might suggest, and recalled the negative effects of misinformation during the early days of the HIV epidemic and the racism faced by Asian communities that was exacerbated by former president Donald Trump calling Covid-19 the “China virus.”

“Continuing to use the term ‘monkeypox’ to describe the current outbreak may reignite these traumatic feelings of racism and stigma — particularly for Black people and other people of color, as well as members of the LGBTQIA communities, and it is possible that they may avoid engaging in vital health care services because of it,” Vasan said.

Anyone is susceptible to contracting monkeypox, which has long been endemic in Central and Western Africa, but so far its spread in Europe and the United States has been mostly concentrated among men who have sex with other men.

The first symptoms can include a fever and fatigue, followed a few days later by a rash that can turn into painful, fluid-filled skin lesions, which may last for a few weeks before turning into scabs that then fall off.

No deaths have been reported so far in Europe or the United States.

More than 16,000 confirmed cases have been recorded in 75 countries so far this year, the WHO said on Monday.

A limited number of doses of a smallpox vaccine found to protect against monkeypox, called Jynneos, have been administered in New York, mostly to gay and bisexual men.

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Will NASA rename the James Webb Space Telescope? The controversy explained.

This article was originally published at The Conversation. (opens in new tab) The publication contributed the article to Space.com’s Expert Voices: Op-Ed & Insights (opens in new tab).

Alice Gorman (opens in new tab), Associate Professor in Archaeology and Space Studies, Flinders University

The first images from the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) are astounding. With its deep infrared eyes, the telescope is illuminating regions of the universe with never-before-possible clarity.

The telescope is a collaboration between NASA, the European Space Agency and the Canadian Space Agency. More than 300 (opens in new tab) universities, companies, space agencies and organizations are involved.

In the excitement, it’s easy to forget the Webb telescope has been the subject of controversy. It’s named after a NASA administrator who has been associated (opens in new tab) with the persecution of queer people in the “Lavender Scare” of the 1950s and ’60s.

See more

Read more: A cosmic time machine: how the James Webb Space Telescope lets us see the first galaxies in the universe (opens in new tab)

Who was James E. Webb?

James Edwin Webb was born in 1906 (opens in new tab) in North Carolina. He gained degrees in education and law (opens in new tab) and spent time in the US Marine Corps.

He held a senior position in the State Department from 1949 until the early 1950s.

In 1961, U.S. President John F. Kennedy appointed (opens in new tab) Webb to the position of NASA administrator, the second (opens in new tab) since the agency was established in 1958.

In this role, he was responsible for the Apollo program (opens in new tab) to land humans on the moon. He was very successful in lobbying for support from Congress, and also navigated NASA through the difficult aftermath of an incident in which three Apollo 1 astronauts lost their lives (opens in new tab) in a capsule fire on the ground.

From L to R: James Webb, Wernher von Braun, and Kurt Debus at a Kennedy Space Centre award ceremony in 1964. (Image credit: NASA)

(opens in new tab)

Webb pushed for science to be prioritized in the Cold War environment, where every space mission was a political tool. He also promoted (opens in new tab) “psychological warfare (opens in new tab)” (or propaganda).

Webb left NASA in 1968 (opens in new tab) before Apollo 11 flew to the moon. In later life, he served on various advisory boards and was involved with the Smithsonian Institution, the U.S. flagship cluster of museums, education and research centers. He died in 1992.

What was the “Lavender Scare?”

During the Cold War, Western capitalist democracies feared communist infiltration. This became known as the “Red Scare (opens in new tab).” The “Lavender Scare (opens in new tab)” was entwined with this paranoia.

Proponents of these ideas argued (opens in new tab) that because of the social stigma attached to their sexuality, LGBTQ+ people were at risk of being blackmailed into becoming Soviet spies. From the late 1940s, under the influence of Republican politician Joseph McCarthy (opens in new tab), LGBTQ+ people were purged (opens in new tab) from US government employment.

Webb’s exact role in the Lavender Scare is hotly debated. Several astronomers petitioning (opens in new tab) to have the telescope renamed have noted Webb (while at the State Department) was involved in high-level meetings about Lavender Scare policies.

In a Scientific American article (opens in new tab) last year, authors led by cosmologist Chanda Prescod-Weinstein wrote,

“The records clearly show that Webb planned and participated in meetings during which he handed over homophobic material. There is no record of him choosing to stand up for the humanity of those being persecuted.”

But according to a 2021 Nature article (opens in new tab), “David Johnson, a historian at the University of South Florida in Tampa who wrote the 2004 book The Lavender Scare, says he knows of no evidence that Webb led or instigated persecution. Webb did attend a White House meeting on the threat allegedly posed by gay people, but the context of the meeting was to contain the hysteria that members of Congress were stirring up. ‘I don’t see him as having any sort of leadership role in the Lavender Scare,’ says Johnson.”

Is it any better if Webb was passively enacting the policies rather than leading the persecution? Other government departments did actively oppose (opens in new tab) the investigation and sacking of LGBTQ+ employees.

Echoes of controversy

Space instruments are usually named via a consultation process, often with the public invited to contribute their ideas. It’s also not unusual for spacecraft names to be changed. For example, the 1991 Gamma Ray Observatory (opens in new tab) was renamed after physicist Arthur Holly Compton (opens in new tab) after its launch.

The Webb telescope’s name was reportedly chosen (opens in new tab) by NASA administrator Sean O’Keefe in 2002.

NASA’s official response (opens in new tab) to the controversy is that there is “no evidence at this point that warrants changing the name of the telescope”.

Whatever Webb’s role in the Lavender Scare, the question for some observers seems to come down to whether he was personally homophobic.

Framing the issue like this has echoes of another controversy: the complicity of German rocket scientist Wernher von Braun (opens in new tab) in the Third Reich.

Von Braun, who was a member of the Nazi Party and an SS officer (opens in new tab), played a pivotal role in the US space program.

Today, NASA mentions von Braun’s Nazi past on its website (opens in new tab). But space historian Michael J. Neufeld says (opens in new tab) “his Nazi record was not widely known until after his death.”

Many excuse von Braun’s political allegiance by arguing he just wanted to launch rockets into space.

Read more: Two experts break down the James Webb Space Telescope’s first images, and explain what we’ve already learnt (opens in new tab)

Where to from here?

The James Webb Space Telescope is a touchstone for issues that have come to the fore in recent times.

For example, there has been a backlash against the memorialization of colonial “heroes” who perpetrated violence against Indigenous and enslaved people, leading to statues all over the world being toppled (opens in new tab).

Some decry the idea of inclusivity as the ultimate in “wokeness.” Others argue maintaining historical barriers to participation in science — based on race, class, gender and disability — means we lose potential talent.

Science is meant to be objective and have no prejudice. In reality, scientists and science administrators are people like any others, with their own ideologies and flaws.

The question is whether we judge them by the standards of their time, or by those we hold today.

In the end, perhaps we should remember that the Outer Space Treaty of 1967 (opens in new tab) proclaims that space belongs to all humanity.

This article is republished from The Conversation (opens in new tab) under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article (opens in new tab).

Follow all of the Expert Voices issues and debates — and become part of the discussion — on Facebook and Twitter. The views expressed are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the publisher.



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World Health Organization to Rename Monkeypox Virus

The World Health Organization announced Tuesday it will take steps to rename monkeypox in an effort to reduce racism and discrimination toward African people. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, WHO’s director general, said Tuesday that the organization is “working with partners and experts from around the world on changing the name of monkeypox virus, its clades and the disease it causes.” Last week, 30 international scientists urged officials to rename the virus. The group also condemned media outlets for using pictures of African patients to represent cases in Europe. “In the context of the current global outbreak, continued reference to, and nomenclature of this virus being African is not only inaccurate but is also discriminatory and stigmatizing,” the scientists wrote. More information about what the new name will be is forthcoming, TIME reported.

Read it at TIME

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NASA emails reveal internal discussions over calls to rename James Webb Space Telescope: report

New documents suggest that NASA officials dismissed concerns raised by the LGBTQ community over the name of its newest observatory, the James Webb Space Telescope.

NASA was aware that discrimination against LGBTQ people took place in the agency under the leadership of 1960s administrator James Webb when it refused to remove the man’s name from its flagship mission, new documents obtained by Nature reveal.

In early 2021, a group of astronomers petitioned NASA to change the name of the space observatory of the century, the $10 billion James Webb Space Telescope, arguing that his actions contributed to the “Lavender Scare” targeting LGBTQ people in government at the time. NASA dismissed the request in September 2021, claiming it had no evidence to support the allegation, and never published a report into the investigation, according to Nature. 

Related: How the James Webb Space Telescope works in pictures

The new documents, obtained under a freedom of information request, however, tell a different story. They show that NASA was aware of a 1969 court case filed by a former NASA employee who had been fired in 1963 because supervisors thought he was gay. 

In addition, Nature found that available documents described such practices as customary in NASA during the 1960s, when James Webb was at the agency’s helm.

Among the documents obtained by Nature were email exchanges between NASA officials and an external researcher from spring 2021, which discussed the 1969 court ruling, describing it as “troubling.” The external researcher that in the ruling, which rejected an appeal of the fired employee named Clifford Norton, the judge noted that the manager who fired Norton had been told by NASA’s personnel office at the time that it was a “custom within the agency” to fire people for “homosexual conduct,” according to Nature. 

“I think you will find this paragraph to be troubling,” the external researcher wrote to Eric Smith, the James Webb Space Telescope program scientist at NASA. “‘A custom within the agency’ sounds pretty bad,” the researcher wrote, according to Nature.

The documents don’t contain evidence that James Webb personally targeted LGBTQ people. However, astronomers opposing the name posit that he played a major role in setting the culture at the agency he presided over. 

During his time at NASA, Webb oversaw the legendary Apollo program that landed humans on the moon, but also fostered the agency’s focus on science. He died in 1992; 13 years later, NASA Administrator Sean O’Keefe decided to honor his predecessor by naming the biggest, most complex and most powerful space observatory to date after him. 

James Webb (Image credit: NASA)

The modern NASA, the one that built and launched the James Webb Space Telescope in December 2021, prides itself in its commitment to diversity, equity, inclusion and accessibility. 

“NASA is entirely committed to the full participation and empowerment of a wide variety of people, organizations, capabilities, and assets because we know this best enables us to access everyone and everything we need to best accomplish our missions,” the agency’s policy states, according to Nature.

Follow Tereza Pultarova on Twitter @TerezaPultarova. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook



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