Tuesday, October 28, 2025

News from October 21, 2025

1402 articles found

Artem Lutsko wins Brilliant Trophy Open online chess tournament with perfect score
Balancing Security and Humanity: Dr. Sowatey on Ghana’s Response to Ivory Coast Crisis
Technology

Balancing Security and Humanity: Dr. Sowatey on Ghana’s Response to Ivory Coast Crisis

[14:35, 10/21/2025] Page One Wear: The upcoming presidential election in Ivory Coast on October 25 has intensified political tensions, as two prominent opposition figures, former leader Laurent Gbagbo and Tidjane Thiam, have been barred from running. The interior and defence ministries have imposed a two-month ban on all parties except the five officially approved candidates. President Alassane Ouattara, who is seeking a controversial fourth term, has faced strong condemnation from the opposition coalition, the Common Front, which accuses him of undermining democratic principles. Violence and civil unrest have followed, with protests across Abidjan and other regions met by police crackdowns. Disruptions, including road and school blockades, have severely affected daily life, while many Ivorians fearing for their safety have fled to neighboring Ghana in search of refuge. In response to the growing security concerns at the border, Western Regional Minister Joseph Nelson has called on security personnel at the Elubo border post to maintain heightened vigilance in monitoring cross-border movements. He stressed the critical importance of thorough checks to prevent any security threats from passing into Ghana undetected. The minister emphasized that no criminal elements must be allowed to slip through, underscoring the need for tight border controls given the volatile situation in Ivory Coast. Security expert Dr. Emmanuel Sowatey, speaking in an interview on Ahotor News, highlighted the importance of effective border management not only to control migration but also to enhance national security. While Ghana and Ivory Coast have historically enjoyed good neighborly relations based on mutual trust, Dr. Sowatey warned of the risks associated with porous borders. He noted that terrorist groups tend to exploit weak areas lacking police or military presence. However, with Ghana’s current strengthened security arrangements, the likelihood of terrorist groups entering through the border is relatively low. Dr. Sowatey also pointed out the intelligence value refugees can provide if their presence is well managed, which can contribute positively to Ghana’s security efforts. Drawing on his research from the 2000-2003 period at the Budumburam refugee camp, Dr. Sowatey shared insights into the complex impacts refugees can have on host communities. While refugees often face hardships, their arrival can stimulate local economies, as seen with Liberian refugees who brought increased foreign exchange through Western Union transfers. Their food preferences also created new markets, such as for cassava leaf, which became a delicacy sold by local Ghanaians. Land values in affected areas increased as landowners capitalized on the demand, generating economic opportunities. This experience evidences that refugee influxes are not solely burdens but can foster economic growth and social cohesion if managed well. On the issue of gun regulation, Dr. Sowatey urged the public to be proactive in ensuring compliance with firearm laws. He stressed that while possessing a gun legally requires licensing, many people remain unaware of the proper licensing procedures or fail to renew permits. He encouraged citizens to inquire about whether gun owners have valid licenses and to report any misuse or illegal possession of firearms to the police or media. Such community vigilance is essential for maintaining public safety, especially in a tense regional security environment influenced by neighboring conflict and displacement flows. Source: Ohemaa Adusi-Poku

Medak youth cracks eight govt exams without coaching, now eyes Group-I exam
Technology

Medak youth cracks eight govt exams without coaching, now eyes Group-I exam

Medak: In a record of sorts, a young man from Medak district has cracked eight recruitment examinations in the last seven years without attending any coaching classes. The relentless youngster, who missed the Group-I this time, was aiming to crack the Group-I service next time to land a better job. Interestingly, he cracked the recruitment examinations which demanded different sets of skills during this period. The man, Araka Ajay Kumar, the son of a farmer couple from Podichenpally in Papannapet mandal, had completed his schooling in ZPHS school in his village. He had secured a seat in IIIT-Basara as he topped the class X in the school. After completing his graduation, Ajay Kumar had started preparing for competitive examinations. Initially, he cracked the forest recruitment examination and got the forest beat officer post, but he did not join the job. Later, he was selected as panchayat secretary and joined service as secretary of Malkapur thanda in Medak mandal. However, Ajay Kumar continued to prepare for the competitive examinations while discharging duties. He again cracked railway recruitment board examination and got assistant loco pilot job. Ajay Kumar joined as loco pilot in 2019 in South Central Railway in Secunderabad. Later, he cracked the police recruitment examination bagging reserve sub-inspector and constable jobs in 2020. While working as reserve inspector in Adilabad district, he again appeared for police recruitment examination and got civil sub-inspector post in 2023. While working as an SI in Siricilla, Ajay Kumar continued to prepare for Group-II examination and passed with flying colours as he was selected as assistant section officer in the State Election Commission office. During a short span of time, Ajay Kumar worked as panchayat secretary, loco pilot, reserve sub-inspector and civil sub-inspector. Now, he says he would be working as an assistant section officer. However, he exuded confidence that it was not going to be his last post. Ajay Kumar has become a source of inspiration for many youngsters in Medak, particularly in his village.

Starfield isn't the "calibre" of Fallout or Elder Scrolls, says former dev, but "it would have been received differently" if it weren't from Bethesda
Technology

Starfield isn't the "calibre" of Fallout or Elder Scrolls, says former dev, but "it would have been received differently" if it weren't from Bethesda

Starfield managed to be both one of my favorite games of 2023 and one of my biggest videogame disappointments ever. I sank well over 100 hours into it, and enjoyed the flashes of Bethesda brilliance it exhibited, but my lofty expectations weren't matched. The developer's renowned for making some of the best RPGs ever with Fallout and The Elder Scrolls, but Starfield couldn't entirely replicate its past magic due to the sheer size of its galaxy. Now, a Bethesda veteran who's worked across all three IPs has given his verdict. While adamant it's still "a great game" that the studio should be proud of, he knows it's nowhere near "the same calibre" as Fallout and TES. Bruce Nesmith is a name Bethesda aficionados may be familiar with. After a long stint designing Dungeons and Dragons tabletop games, he worked as a quest designer on multiple Elder Scrolls and Fallout projects, including as the lead designer on Skyrim. Before leaving Bethesda in 2021, before Starfield's launch, he worked on the space game as a systems designer. An authority on all things RPG-related, then. "I think it's a good game," Nesmith says in an interview with FRVR. "I don't think it's in the same calibre as the other two, you know, Fallout or Skyrim, or Elder Scrolls rather, but I think it's a good game. I worked on it; I'm proud of the work I did. I'm proud of the work that the people I knew did on it. I think they made a great game." Resonating with my experience that I mentioned at the top, he admits that Bethesda's past reputation put huge "expectations" on Starfield that were hard to match. Nesmith also claims that "if the same game had been released by 'not Bethesda,' it would have been received differently." While outer space and alien planets have been the backdrop to so many brilliant games in the past, Starfield's approach to a galactic RPG squandered that potential. Nesmith points to its reliance on procedural generation as the main reason why players didn't click with it. "I'm an enormous space fan," he says. "I'm an amateur astronomer, I'm up on all that stuff, [and] a lot of the work I did on Starfield was on the astronomical data. But space is inherently boring. It's literally described as nothingness. So moving throughout that isn't where the excitement is, in my opinion." I'm also surprised to hear that Nesmith was underwhelmed by Starfield's approach to aliens. While he admits there are plenty of "cool" creatures to discover and fight, "they're like the wolves in Skyrim" rather than epic, challenging, memorable enemies. He also observes that "the only serious enemy you fought were people." I, like Nesmith, don't buy into the narrative that Starfield is a 'bad' game - plus, with that second DLC on the way, it has another chance to change people's perspective. However, it's interesting to hear that the same criticisms I and many others hold are shared by at least one of the devs involved with the game. If you do want to return to Bethesda's galaxy and spice things up a little, be sure to check out some of the best Starfield mods. Or to get wrapped up in some wild narratives, consult our list of the best story games. If you spent plenty of hours in Starfield, let me know what you'd change and what you love about it in the PCGamesN Discord server.

Virginia Roberts Giuffre’s Memoir, ‘Nobody’s Girl,’ Offers a Graphic Picture of a Life of Abuse
Technology

Virginia Roberts Giuffre’s Memoir, ‘Nobody’s Girl,’ Offers a Graphic Picture of a Life of Abuse

What often went unsaid at these junctures was that, in many instances, the documents in question were the product of one Epstein victim’s quest, over several years, to bring attention to the horrors she said she suffered at the hands of the late financier and his convicted accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell. Virginia Roberts Giuffre’s account of her relationship with Maxwell and Epstein is out in a new memoir Nobody’s Girl, which details some of the inner workings of their operation. After Giuffre accused Maxwell of sexual abuse in 2015, the British socialite went beyond denying the allegations and branded Giuffre a full-blown liar. That claim, in turn, prompted Giuffre to sue Maxwell for defamation, leading to the streams of discovery and depositions that animated so much of the criminal scrutiny and amateur sleuthing that followed. (The defamation suit was settled in 2017. Maxwell was ultimately charged for child sex trafficking among other infractions and is serving a twenty year prison sentence.) It was one of the many ways in which Giuffre, who grew up in Palm Beach and died by suicide in Australia in April, shaped the conversation around Epstein and Maxwell. Giuffre claimed that she was forced into sex with Prince Andrew at 17 years old after Epstein trafficked her to him among other wealthy and prominent friends. (Andrew has repeatedly denied this.) In 2022, Giuffre and Andrew settled a lawsuit she brought against him, but the allegations sent the royal family into an ongoing spiral. On Friday, just days before the publication of Giuffre’s much-awaited memoir, Andrew announced that he would no longer use his royal title. Giuffre met Maxwell while working as a spa attendant at President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago, as she recounted in an excerpt from Nobody’s Girl, which Vanity Fair exclusively published last week, and after breaking free from Epstein’s clutches, she became the foremost voice in the fight for justice for his scores of victims. Amid the current wave of outrage surrounding Trump, Maxwell, their prior relationship, and the possibility of a presidential pardon, Giuffre’s posthumous memoir may offer few surprises. Still, the book is among the fullest and most vivid pictures to date of Epstein’s and Maxwell’s modi operandi. “Writing a book with someone is always an intimate exercise,” Giuffre’s co-author Amy Wallace writes in the memoir’s foreword. Doubly so given the subject matter at hand, and the complications in this instance go even further. Shortly before her death, Giuffre claimed that her husband, Robert, was violent with her for years, and after her suicide, her family members said that she wanted to revise the book to that end. (A lawyer for Robert has said he cannot comment amid ongoing court proceedings.) Wallace mostly dispenses with this tension in the prologue, writing that the finished product represents a manuscript that Giuffre had previously approved. But as Giuffre’s many loving recollections of Robert unfurl—she portrays him as the key figure in helping her move past her time with Epstein and Maxwell—the unresolved matter inevitably hangs over the book. Maxwell’s 2021 federal trial often revolved around a grim pattern. Her victims testified about troubled childhoods involving addiction and abuse and how an elegant and cultured woman suddenly appeared in their lives to exploit them, as if seeming to smell the vulnerability. In harrowing detail, Giuffre offers her own experience of that template by describing a long trail of sexual assault that she says began when she was 7 years old and her father and a family friend took turns molesting her. (Giuffre’s father has denied this; the family friend was convicted for abusing another minor.) The intrigue around Epstein has naturally centered on his connections to the global elite, but here Giuffre tells a less sensational but perhaps more damning story of privilege. Maxwell, Giuffre recalls, taught her how to hold a knife and a fork and fold a napkin in her lap. “I’d be lucky, I thought, if I could grow up to be anything like” Maxwell, she writes. “This only makes sense, of course, when you consider how little I’d grown up hoping for. Giuffre refers to a “Billionaire Number One” to whom she says she was trafficked by Epstein. Sending her by taxi from his Palm Beach mansion to a nearby luxury resort, Giuffre writes, Epstein instructed her to “give him whatever he wants…just like you do for me.” The book does not significantly change the account Giuffre had long given of being assaulted by Andrew, but she tells it here at a more relaxed—and therefore more excruciating—pace. She also resurfaces some not altogether new but comparatively little noticed allegations about what she witnessed in her time with Epstein and Maxwell. She was trafficked, she writes, to a man whom she “also saw having sexual contact with Epstein himself.” Amid Maxwell’s boasts of her friendships with famous men, Giuffre claims, Maxwell enjoyed “repeating that once, at some random event, she’d taken the actor George Clooney into a bathroom and given him a blow job. Whether that was true or not, we'd never know.” This alleged boast of Maxwell's initially surfaced in a manuscript of Giuffre's memoir that had been submitted to the court in her defamation suit, and which the court released some years ago. (A representative for Clooney did not return a request for comment.) President Trump’s friendship with Epstein remains a fascination for the media and speculators alike. He has repeatedly denied any wrongdoing in connection with Epstein’s crimes and is suing the Wall Street Journal over its report that his name adorned a sexually suggestive contribution to a book of well-wishes that Maxwell organized for Epstein’s 50th birthday. Giuffre revisits the news-dominating dust-up from Trump’s first term, when his Labor Secretary Alex Acosta, who signed off on Epstein’s notorious sweetheart deal as a federal prosecutor in Florida in 2008, resigned over the scandal. But for the most part, Trump, the dominant character in today’s intrigue around the case, is a bit player in Giuffre’s memoir, connected to the story only insofar as his club provides the setting for her initial encounter with Maxwell. In a footnote, Giuffre even commends Trump to a degree, citing reporting that Trump banned Epstein from Mar-a-Lago in 2007 after Epstein hit on the teenage daughter of another member. In 2010, she notes, three years after Epstein became a registered sex offender, he held a party attended by Andrew, Katie Couric, George Stephanopoulos, and Woody Allen. “Only later would it become clear that Epstein had been shunned by at least one powerful person he’d previously wooed,” Giuffre writes. “Donald Trump.” The task is beyond the scope of the memoir, but it is difficult to arrive at the end of Nobody’s Girl and not be left with additional questions about the final days of Giuffre’s troubled and highly dissected life. The month before her suicide, Giuffre said on Instagram that a car accident had left her with only four days to live, a sudden development that sent Epstein conspiracists into overdrive. While in the hospital, she first made her abuse allegations against her husband. After her death, which her attorney described as not “suspicious in any way,” her father claimed that “somebody got to her.” As with so much of the broader Epstein case, the fogginess ensures that conjecture will outstrip restraint.

‘Kur takoj Zelensky, vendi im më duket parajsë’, Rama: BE për ne, hapësirë ‘paqeje’, shumë shpejt do jemi pjesë
World

‘Kur takoj Zelensky, vendi im më duket parajsë’, Rama: BE për ne, hapësirë ‘paqeje’, shumë shpejt do jemi pjesë

Kryeministri i vendit ndodhet në Londër, ku në vijim të vizitave dhe agjendës së tij, këtë pasdite ishte i ftuar në forumin ndërkombëtar të sigurisë dhe politikave globale “Future Resilience Forum 2025”. I pyetur lidhur me progresin dhe të ardhmen e vendit, Rama u shpreh optimist se Shqipëria është më pranë se kurrë Bashkimit Europian dhe se për shqiptarët, unioni është një hapësirë paqeje. Rama shtoi ndër të tjera, se gjithmonë kur takon Zelensky, vendi i tij i duket parajsë. “Sa herë takoj Zelensky dhe më thotë si shkojnë gjërat, unë i them kur të shoh ty jam njeriu më i lumtur i botës dhe vendi im është parajsa. Gjithçka është relative, sigurisht kemi prirje të harrojmë të keqen dhe nuk mjaftohemi me të mirën. Mendoj që Shqipëria është në një pozitë të mirë, tani jemi në një moment përshpejtimi të madh në rrugëtimin drejt BE, rëndësia gjeopolitike nuk është vetëm me fjalë tashmë. Ata e kuptojnë që duhet të bëjën gjithçka për të bashkuar Ballkanin Perëndimor. E kuptojnë që BE ka dy kufij, një kufi të jashtëm dhe një të brendshëm dhe brenda saj gjendemi ne Ballkani Perëndimor. Jam optimist që shumë shpejt, do të jemi anëtar të BE. Nëse gjërat ndryshojnë dhe Europa kthehet në zonën e rehatisë, gjërat mund të ndryshojnë. Vizioni ynë përcaktohet nga historia jonë, nuk kemi pasur një periudhë të jetojmë sipas zgjedhjes sonë. Duam të jemi pjesë e BE dhe për ne është aq shumë sa për etërit themelues, një hapësirë paqeje dhe qetësie. 92 për qind e njerëzve duan që njerëzit të jenë pjesë e BE. Kemi një politikë kaq të polarizuar, por kur vjen fjala për BE të gjithë duan të jenë pjesë sepse e kemi të freskët në kujtesë sesi duken gjërat brenda BE. Britanikët kanë filluar ta kuptojnë sesi është të jesh jashtë BE, por nuk e pranojnë.” / abcnews.al

Rama në Londra: Rendi shumëpalësh duhet të rishpiket, Shqipëria aspiron të zërë vendin që la bosh Britania në BE
Technology

Rama në Londra: Rendi shumëpalësh duhet të rishpiket, Shqipëria aspiron të zërë vendin që la bosh Britania në BE

LONDËR- Kryeministri i Shqipërisë, Edi Rama, gjatë një fjale të mbajtur në Londër, ka folur mbi sfidat globale të rendit shumëpalësh dhe vendin që aspiron Shqipëria në arkitekturën e re ndërkombëtare. Ai u shpreh se rendi shumëpalësh është në një moment kritik, i cili ka nevojë emergjente për t’u rishpikur. Kryeministri i ftuar në forumin ndërkombëtar të sigurisë dhe politikave globale “Future Resilience Forum 2025”. ritheksoi ambiciet e Shqipërisë për integrim në familjen e madhe të Bashkimit Evropian. “Unë besoj fort rendi shumëpalësh nuk do të zhduket, por po përballet me një moment të vështirë, por është një moment, që sigurisht rrjeti i institucioneve që përfaqësojnë objektivin e botës përreth shumëpalësh po vihen në pikëpyetje, dhe kjo të vënit në pikëpyetje do të ndihmojë që ky rrjet të rishpiket, këto institucionet të rishpiken për të sjellë rendin shumëpalësh në një nivel tjetër. Është e dukshme qartë që rendi shumëpalësh ka qenë dobiprurës në shumë drejtime, por po kështu është po kaq e qartë që kur Trump për shembull sulmon institucionet që përfaqësojnë atë çka ka qenë deri më tani rendi shumëpalësh ka një argument: përgjigjja e të gjitha pikëpyetjeve me të cilat po përballemi duhet gjetur në një rend shumëpalësh të rishpikuar. Disa gjëra duhet menduar nga e para. Në Shqipëri, ne, kemi shumë ëndrra, shumë ambicie, shumë zjarr dhe pasion për ta transformuar vendin tonë dhe për të bërë anëtar të BE me shpresë që të zëmë vendin që la bosh Britania, por nuk kemi bekimin që ju dhe demokraci të tjera kanë që të kenë universitetet më të jashtëzakonshmet, mendimtarët më të ndritur dhe që kanë një kapacitet të jashtëzakonshme për të menduar për të ardhmen”, tha ai./abcnews.al

Three Miami Dolphins veterans who could quietly make sense to trade — even amid the pressure to win in 2025
Uganda Cubs head to Dubai for another training camp
Technology

Uganda Cubs head to Dubai for another training camp

Uganda U17 Boys National Team, the Cubs, has today departed for Dubai, United Arab Emirates, to continue with their preparations ahead of the FIFA U17 World Cup Qualifiers. A Delegation of 38 people, including 26 players, left Uganda today and will spend the next ten days fine-tuning to play at the global stage. While in Dubai, the team will hold intensive training sessions and play a series of international friendly matches against top youth sides, with fixtures to be confirmed in the coming days. Uganda is in Group K alongside Canada, Chile and France. Uganda’s opening fixture is against Canada on 5th November 2025. Goalkeepers Gilbert Mazige (NEC FC), Adrian Mukwanga (Vipers SC), Ashraf Lukyamuzi (KCCA FC) and Edris (Buddo SS) Elvis Torach (Masaka Sunshine FC), Steven Oyirwoth (KCCA FC), Abdul Lukenge Ntege (Maroons FC), Hamuzza Sengooba (Masaka Sunshine FC), Jovan Nsenkero Mukisa (NEC FC) and Akiz Job Aguma (Vancouver Whitecaps FC) Midfielders Brian Jjara (KCCA FC), Abubakali Walusimbi (Vipers SC), Fred Junior Muhangi (Express FC), Isima Mulala Magala (Masaka Sunshine FC), Marvin Kabiito (Vipers SC), Brian John Owino (Express FC), Thomas Ogema (KCCA FC), Nuweagaba Kamurungi (Kitara FC), Derick Ssozi (Fort Portal Taxi Operators FC) Shakur Baggio Lucky Magogo (Namilyango College), John Asiimwe (Bukedea Comprehensive School), Richard Okello (BUL FC), Simon Wanyama (Bukedea Comprehensive School), James Bogere (Masaka Sunshine FC), Enock Bagenda (KCCA FC), Arafat Nkoola (Vipers SC)

Trad Wives, Move Over. Trad Sons Are the New Homesteading Influencers.
Technology

Trad Wives, Move Over. Trad Sons Are the New Homesteading Influencers.

Also called trad sons, or “hub-sons,” the terms describe an unapologetic generation of young men moving back in with their parents. Think of it as the masculine, muscled counterpoint to the trad-wife trend (without the sourdough starter) and with one very crucial additional detail: They’re entirely unafraid of the label “mama’s boy.” “I really threw it out there as a little joke; I don’t want to be permanently associated with the face of unemployment forever,” Liaw says, speaking from the University of British Columbia, where he’s gone on to study law. “But I think it’s fun that we get to talk about what it’s like to be a young man, navigating the labor market right now. I think it’s very different than it was for my parents or other people of other generations.” Until this summer, Liaw lived in the same Richmond townhouse he grew up in, with his childhood bedroom evolving over the years, but his books, desk, and computer staying the same.“I think whatever feelings you have about masculinity, it gets overridden by how expensive everything is,” he says. “I don’t think it’s a mark against your worth.” According to an analysis published by Rohan Shah, an economics professor at the University of Mississippi, around 1.5 million more adults under 35 live with their parents today than a decade ago—a 6.3% jump. Moving to the big city after graduation has become untenable for many, so Gen Z and millennials are lowering their expectations and settling back into their childhood homes. After all, rising housing prices and inflation have continued to outpace wage gains. One 26-year-old trad son tells VF that when he got out of a four-year relationship in December, he didn’t want to immediately start searching for a new place. “I was like, you know what? I’ll just go home,” he says. “It was a really good opportunity to spend the time with my parents that I never thought I was going to get to do again in my life.” The added bonus was, of course, that his mom is “kind of his best friend,” and his dog, Morty, had more people to give him attention. He also contributed to household chores, fixing his parents’ boat, taking out the trash, and bringing in deliveries when they came to the door. He ended up staying for almost 10 months, working from home and spending most of his time developing an app. A competitive weightlifter, he describes himself as “not too political.” He says that some “trad sons” who live at home stand outside of “normal masculinity,” as he puts it. “Is it because you’re living at home because of the pressure, you can’t go out, and you can’t live your life?” he asks. But in his case, “it’s intelligent; it’s efficient,” he says. “Things happen in your life, and if you’re doing it because you have a good opportunity, kind of like how I was, and it truly is temporary.” For other trad sons, the decision to move home was less of an afterthought and more of a choice. Take 33-year-old Luke Jonathan Parkhurst, who quit his job as a door-to-door salesman to move in with his mom, Patty, in Las Vegas. “What prompted it is, I just wanted to,” he tells Vanity Fair. “I packed up and moved home and sold my house.” Patty was entirely supportive of his decision. “We don’t know, especially men, where their mental health is; they’re always taught not to cry, be strong,” she says. “All my kids really did launch early in life, including Luke. If any of them needed a reset, I want to be that person that can be there for them.” A typical day for Parkhurst as a “hub-son,” the phrase his mom coined in an interview with The New York Post, starts with going to the gym while she walks his dog. He’ll then use her Costco card to get groceries, head home, and cook them lunch. After that, the afternoon agenda consists of lying by the pool, doing the chores, and then watching his nieces and nephews play soccer. “Even at school, when they would ask what I wanted to be when I was older, I would always write, ‘stay-at-home son,’” Parkhurst says. He used to align with the far right but didn’t vote in the last presidential election. Now he calls himself a “truth seeker,” and believes there is more to fulfilling male values than Republican culture typically promotes. Republican figureheads like the late Charlie Kirk and JD Vance have called for a return to traditional masculinity, one that centers on family, marriage, and independence. “I want more babies,” Vance said in his first speech as vice president in January, later saying, “I think our culture sends a message to young men that you should suppress every masculine urge,” at this year’s CPAC. “When it comes to building a home or running heavy equipment or farming or anything like that, I think I could outperform them,” Parkhurst says. “When they talk about, Hey, this is what a man’s supposed to do, I’m not saying they’re incorrect, but I have different perspectives on what I think a man should do as well.” For Parkhurst, much of this revolves around going to the gym, being able to fix things around the house, and caring for his mother. “I think as men or humans it is in our innate nature to progress or provide, and it seems like a step away from that,” his close friend, Tyler Jackson, tells VF. “But I love Luke regardless; he has a heart of gold and would do anything for his family.” Parkhurst, like other trad sons, has taken to documenting his day-to-day activities on social media. Sometimes he’ll post videos of his grandma, and other times, of him backflipping off the roof of one of his mom’s rental properties. Other TikTok users, like Ethan Lovell, use the format “my job today as a SAHS,” filming himself arranging flowers against the backdrop of a gorgeous kitchen. Another creator, Shaavir Noorani, in a video with almost half a million views, invites his viewers to “come and spend the day with me as a 28-year-old stay-at-home son,” while he makes coffee, unboxes packages of clothes, and walks down an elaborate, marbled staircase in what must be his childhood home. While their mothers may be delighted by the return of their sons, the men themselves are busy fending off accusations of ick-like behavior. On Fox News, Laura Ingraham called them “men in decline,” while Tomi Lahren warned of “the feminization of men.” Even the trad wives, it seems, are unamused by the trend. “There’s a reason that most women would think the idea of a trad son would be unattractive, undesirable, or not respectable,” said Janea Elizabeth, a content creator who promotes the trad lifestyle to her over 100,000 Instagram followers. “We naturally want leaders, providers, and capable men outside of the home.” But for another trad wife Gubba Homestead, as she is known to her 2 million followers, “Stay-at-home-sons isn’t a cultural regression; it’s a revival.” “Kick your son out at 18 and the world raises him,” she tells me over the phone. “Keep him home with purpose, and a family raises a man.”

Flexport Is Hiring SDRs in Chicago
Tandy excited to bring Carre in from the cold