Tag: Age

  • Home Dressing New Born Baby Soft Head Support Pillow with Mustard Seeds (New Born 0-9 Months Age Group) (Yellow)

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    In the Middle Part of Pillow the Mustard Seeds is used for maintain the shape of baby head.
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  • Smartivity Hydraulic Plane Launcher STEM DIY Fun Toy for Kids 6 to 14, Best Birthday Gift Toy for Boys & Girls Age 6-8-10-12, Science Toy, Educational Based Activity Game, Made in India

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  • ‘You Can’t Hide Things’: Feinstein, Old Age and Removing Senators

    ‘You Can’t Hide Things’: Feinstein, Old Age and Removing Senators

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    During the Trump years, administration officials reportedly discussed deploying the Constitution’s 25th Amendment, which can be invoked to remove a president deemed unfit to serve. But no similar mechanism exists for dislodging members of Congress.

    At the same time, Washington has become a gerontocracy. Match up the demographic reality with the political reality of a deeply polarized Senate and a majority so slender that the absence of a single lawmaker can mean almost nothing gets done, and the cries for reform may grow louder. That’s true even as legal scholars and those on Capitol Hill acknowledge how difficult it will be to act.

    Stephen Vladeck, a law professor at the University of Texas and an expert on constitutional law, told me that after the Sept. 11 attacks, the special Continuity of Government Commission examined the issue of incapacitated lawmakers. The panel ultimately confirmed that under the Constitution, the sole tool Congress has to oust a member is an expulsion vote, which requires a two-thirds majority.

    Expulsion has happened just 15 times in Senate history — and 14 of them were senators who sided with the Confederacy during the Civil War. Expulsion proceedings have started in other cases of alleged corruption or wrongdoing since then, but either they fell short of the two-thirds threshold, or the senator resigned before a vote. None were ousted because of health or disability.

    The only other senator expelled in all of U.S. history was for treason back in 1797. In other words, Confederate sympathizers aside, expulsion is so rare that just as many senators — one — have been kicked out as have been elected despite being dead.

    Given how many elderly senators there are nowadays, with some risk of becoming incapacitated, “this is a big problem,” Vladeck wrote in an email. “There may not be an obvious way to solve it short of (1) a more robust use of the expulsion power; or (2) a constitutional amendment.”

    The framers, of course, could not have envisioned the problem of a Senate filled with rapidly aging members. Life expectancy in the late 18th century, when the Constitution was written, was much shorter than it is now. A minimum age for senators, 30, was established, but there was no upper limit.

    Dementia was less common in those days, simply because people died of other things first. And trying to impose a maximum age at this point would be highly contentious.

    “It’s an unwieldy solution as not everyone who is older is unable to serve — and it’s also disrespectful, if not quite disenfranchisement, of older voters,” said Spelman College political scientist Dorian Brown Crosby, as it would deprive them of representation by their peers and send a message that all old people were washed up.

    And without any imminent institutional or constitutional way to address fitness and age, Brown Crosby said it’s up to lawmakers themselves to “take an internal assessment.” She noted that former Speaker Nancy Pelosi and her top lieutenants accepted that the time had come to hand off leadership to a new generation even though they continued to serve in the House.

    Under the 25th Amendment, a president can be relieved of their powers if the vice president and a majority of the Cabinet determine the president is unable to fulfil the duties of the office. Could something similar be established for lawmakers?

    Amending the Constitution is never easy, although this would be the sort of proposal that doesn’t have a built-in partisan advantage, as both Republicans and Democrats get old. Perhaps it could even gain traction among the public in today’s populist, anti-establishment moment. But for the moment, there’s no such movement bubbling up.

    Given the changes in longevity, many people — not just senators — often work past the traditional retirement age of the mid-60s. But some workplaces have mandatory retirement ages; airline pilots are a good example. And employers have other ways, gentle or blunt, of terminating a worker who no longer has the mental acuity to perform the job. Voters have the ultimate say for politicians, but what if something happens in the middle of a term?

    In the Senate, some lawmakers have stayed on the job even though their diminished capacity was increasingly apparent, even in an institution that over the decades has refined the art of turning a blind eye.

    Few octogenarian Senate brains get the attention that Feinstein receives. That’s partly because reports have circulated for several years now that she has short-term memory gaps and sometimes seems confused. Feinstein has repeatedly rejected any suggestion that she’s not fully up to the job.

    But what’s really driving the unusually public scrutiny of Feinstein’s health now is that she serves on the Senate Judiciary Committee at a particularly fraught moment. That’s the committee that decides whether President Joe Biden’s judicial nominees go to the floor for vote. It’s also the committee that would initiate any investigation of Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas amid questions of his compliance with court ethics and disclosure practices.

    Without Feinstein, the Democrats don’t have a majority on the committee to carry out their agenda — and the last thing the Republicans are going to cooperate on right now is the nation’s courts. The GOP nixed Feinstein’s request to allow a fellow Democrat to temporarily take her spot on the committee. That boxed the Democrats in. No Di-Fi, no judges.

    “Having this conversation [on aging senators] is important,” said Molly Reynolds, an expert on Congress and governance at the Brookings Institution. That’s particularly true now because the frequent use of the Senate filibuster means confirming nominees, which only requires a simple majority, is often the only thing getting done in a sharply divided Senate.

    Feinstein hasn’t been in the Capitol since late February, absent because of what her office described as a diagnosis of shingles. That condition usually resolves in three to five weeks, though some people develop longer lasting and very painful complications.

    Patience in the party is wearing thin. In an unusual break with tradition, reflecting the widespread perception of her frailty, two House Democrats declared they’d run for her seat even before she formally announced in mid-February that she wouldn’t run for re-election next year. Still, so far just four Democratic House members have called for Feinstein to step down now, before her term ends in January 2025 when she would be 91. Zero senators have followed suit, at least in public.

    And in an institution that prides itself on collegiality, and is increasingly defined by its elderly cohort, expulsion of any senator for health reasons is simply not a realistic outcome.

    In any event, scattered public calls to resign aren’t the equivalent of an institutional tool to address impairment. People — not just aging senators — don’t always recognize their own decline or have trouble accepting it.

    And if they are a senator, “they just don’t have a lot of incentive to move on,” said Victoria Nourse, a professor at Georgetown’s Law School and executive director of its Center on Congressional Studies. They have power. They get attention. Many truly value public service. And it can be a cushy gig, with aides ferrying them this way or that.

    The Senate has seen it all before, most notably with Strom Thurmond, who served from 1954-2003, and didn’t retire until he was 100. For a good number of years, it was clear to anyone watching that he was taking directions from his staff, rather than the other way around. Nourse worked on the Hill in those days and recalled, “I was there with Strom, and he did reasonably well because he had a senior staffer who was the shadow senator.”

    Sen. Robert Byrd, the longest serving senator ever, stepped down as majority leader in 1989 at age 71 but remained in the Senate for two more decades, chairing the Appropriations Committee for part of that time. He finally surrendered his gavel in November 2008, at the start of the economic crash that would become known as the Great Recession.

    He had periods of illness and long hospitalizations. His colleagues treated the old man, who gave flowery speeches laced with references to Roman statesmen, with a mix of respect and indulgence. But his absences meant Majority Leader Harry Reid “basically ran the Appropriations Committee while also serving as leader,” recalled former Reid aide Jim Manley. Byrd refused to resign though, and died, in office, in June 2010. He had served 51 years, 5 months and 26 days.

    And that’s basically how it works. Senate leaders fill in, work around and quietly advocate for retirement in conversations with a chief of staff or family members.

    Leadership would “work with the chief of staff and probably with the senator’s spouse as well and try to talk through the issues and figure out what, if anything, to do,” Manley said. If a senator had a decent chance of recovery, for instance from a stroke or after treatment for cancer, they’d figure out how to make do in the short-term. If the decline was irreversible, they might try to persuade them that resignation was the best course.

    It’s all handled very discreetly, and the senator in question doesn’t necessarily budge. None of the surviving Senate leaders of the past quarter-century, contacted via email or through aides, responded to requests for comment.

    In Feinstein’s case, allies have rebuffed pressure for her to retire early. In fact, POLITICO reported last month that some confidants are saying the senator, who has been in California for the last few months, might even finish her term without ever returning to Washington, though there is some hope she could return next week.

    One former Republican leadership aide, granted anonymity to speak frankly about his former boss’ behind-the-scenes interactions with lawmakers, said that, historically, party leaders tended to leave health and resignation decisions up to the senators themselves, particularly when one party had a big enough majority that the presence or absence of one individual wouldn’t make a big difference. That has changed somewhat in recent years, the former aide said, but when “health comes up, it’s usually carefully couched in a discussion about the energy, drive and commitment to run and serve another six-year term.”

    Politics, of course, can also play a role. A party leader may be less likely to urge someone to retire if the governor would appoint someone from the other party to fill the seat, or if voters in a special election would likely vote for the other side.

    That’s not a question in heavily Democratic California, where the Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom would appoint a senator to serve until the next election.

    But as Feinstein’s situation illustrates, it’s increasingly hard for a lawmaker to hide from the glare — other than with prolonged absences that bring their own attention. Mental fumbles are more readily seen, whether it’s on C-SPAN or YouTube or a committee’s own webcast. The press corps, and certainly social media, are less likely to be protective or reverential than in bygone eras.

    “There are ongoing changes in society, in media,” said Manley. “You can’t hide things.”

    But unless major institutional or constitutional changes occur, you still can’t do much about them either.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • “Tamil Cinema is moving towards golden age”: Kamal Haasan praises Mani Ratnam’s ‘Ponniyin Selvan 2’

    “Tamil Cinema is moving towards golden age”: Kamal Haasan praises Mani Ratnam’s ‘Ponniyin Selvan 2’

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    Chennai: Veteran actor Kamal Haasan who lent his voice to Mani Ratnam’s Ponniyin Selvan 2’s narration on Monday heaped praises on the ace filmmaker and cast of the film.

    Speaking exclusively to ANI, Hassan talked about his friendship with Mani Ratnam and praised his film.

    He said, “I am an artist, film producer, director and all of that. Secondly, my first proclaimed identity is that I am a cinema fan. And I am a Tamilian. So I am so proud that the technical expertise and unique talent of Tamil are now for everyone and the world to see. And altogether, I am not talking just about the stars incorporated or played for the story and I think the credit goes to Mani Ratnam”.

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    He further added, ”Mani Ratnam takes a lot of valour to do a film of this size like a production. Mr Mani Ratnam, the team the cinematographer, the musician, everybody they have worked together to make Tamil cinema international. And this is people that have embraced which is a good sign that Tamil Cinema is probably moving towards the golden age and expected to go in that direction. It’s a very moving moment for two friends who started speaking about cinema and he has gone ahead and done it.”

    ‘Ponniyin Selvan 2’, directed by Mani Ratnam, is the sequel to the 2022 film. Actor Kamal Haasan has lent his voice to the film’s narration. Oscar-winning music composer AR Rahman composed the music for the film. The period drama is all set to hit the theatres on April 28. ‘Ponniyin Selvan 1’, the period saga has already earned over Rs 150 crore at the box office worldwide.

    Actors Vikram, Karthi, Jayam Ravi, Aishwarya Rai Bachchan, Trisha, Aishwarya Lekshmi, Sobhita Dhulipala, Prakash Raj, Jayaram, Prabhu, R Sarathkumar, Parthiban, and Vikram Prabhu reprise their roles in the second instalment of the epic drama that narrates the story of the Chola Dynasty.

    The film is an adaptation of Kalki Krishnamurthy’s five-part novel series of the same name.

    Oscar-winning music composer AR Rahman composed the music for the film.

    Ponniyin Selvan Part 1 covered one-third of the novel series and the rest was told in the second part.

    ‘Ponniyin Selvan 1’, the period saga has already earned over Rs 150 crore at the box office worldwide.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

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  • ‘Are You There, God?’ Reminds Us Why Books Are Still Banned, Even in the Digital Age

    ‘Are You There, God?’ Reminds Us Why Books Are Still Banned, Even in the Digital Age

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    At the time the book came out, some critics seemed surprised at how deeply it drilled into the anxious self-centeredness of a growing child. “The world may be in serious trouble, but for Margaret Simon and her friends, the real crises have to do with breast‐growth and the competition to see who menstruates first,” sniffed an otherwise positive New York Times children’s book reviewer in November 1970. Well, yes, for a standard 12-year-old, that sounds about right.

    It didn’t matter what the Times thought, anyway; the kids handled the publicity themselves, making the book a viral hit before viral hits were a concept. Blume had fortuitous timing, Leonard Marcus, a children’s book historian, told me: Margaret came out just as publishers were starting to issue children’s books in inexpensive paperback form, and mall stores like B. Dalton were starting to sell books outside of the watchful eyes of librarians and traditional bookstore clerks.

    And a forbidden book will always have appeal. Almost as soon as Margaret was published, it was banned in certain corners; Blume has said her own children’s elementary school principal wouldn’t shelve it in the school library because it mentioned menstruation. In the 1980s, conservative warriors Phyllis Schlafly and Jerry Falwell made Margaret and other Blume books a target of their ire. Schlafly’s Eagle Forum put out a pamphlet titled “How to Rid Your Schools and Libraries of Judy Blume Books.”

    The bullseye on Blume’s work remains today. This spring, Forever was one of 80 books banned from Florida’s Martin County school system, along with Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale and Toni Morrison’s The Bluest Eye. Last year was a record year for book bans in the United States, with 60 percent of the bans directed at school libraries and classrooms. Some objections to books have evolved since 1970 — many of 2022’s banned books were targeted for LGBTQ themes, including Gender Queer, a graphic memoir by Maia Kobabe about explaining nonbinary and asexual identity to friends and family. But a common thread to book bans, then and now, is discomfort about frank discussion of sexuality.

    In that context, the movie version of Margaret doesn’t feel like something that would rile up the Phyllis Schlafly set. It’s a gentle, charming period piece, an exercise in nostalgia — so reverent of Blume, who served as a producer, that it starts with footage of her reading the entire first chapter aloud. Florida legislators might also be pleased to know that, as much as Margaret and her friends talk about getting their periods, the film treats the actual event with 1970s-era restraint: not a drop of blood appears onscreen.

    In other words, the movie is safe — more so than the book felt, when it left a monthly flow to your preteen imagination. And while it’s sweetly faithful to the Margaret text, the fact that it’s emblazoned on a giant screen, in a public setting, seems to me to undermine its spirit. Sitting in the theater, I imagined a version that might actually make people squeamish — like the period jokes that show up now in Michelle Wolf’s comedy routines and edgy TV shows like “Broad City.” In her time, Blume was that kind of fearless, says Anita Diamant, the author of Period. End of Sentence, a book about destigmatizing menstruation. That’s why “she became this legend.”

    But if the kids in my theater seemed unfazed, watching sanctioned fare in the company of adults, they clearly still had secrets of their own. One group of girls slipped down the aisle just as the lights went down and ran in and out together, whispering, over the course of the screening. They looked to be 11 or 12, Margaret’s age, wearing matching cat-ear headbands, taking part in a private scheme that adults wouldn’t understand. Who knows what book they’re passing among themselves.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Biden pushes back on concerns about age and low approval amid 2024 reelection bid: ‘I feel good’

    Biden pushes back on concerns about age and low approval amid 2024 reelection bid: ‘I feel good’

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    But voters will be the ultimate decider about whether he’s too old for office, he added. His answer marks his first public comments on the 2024 race after Tuesday’s launch — and his first addressing the obstacles hovering over his reelection bid.

    “I respect them taking a hard look at it. I’ve taken a hard look at it as well — I took a hard look at it before I decided to run,” Biden said. “I feel good. And I feel excited about the prospects, and I think we’re on the verge of really turning the corner in a way we haven’t in a long time.”

    Biden also said he has seen the poll numbers and is in a similar position to past presidents running for reelection.

    “What I keep hearing about is that I’m between 42 and 46 percent favorable rating. But everybody running for reelection in this time has been in the same position. There’s nothing new about that. You’re making it sound like Biden’s really underwater,” he said.

    The president then touted specific legislative accomplishments and economic growth.

    “And the reason I’m running again is there’s a job to finish.”

    Of the three presidents who failed to win a second term in recent decades, two had approval ratings roughly equal to Biden’s. But former Presidents Barack Obama and Ronald Reagan also hovered around Biden’s numbers, and both were reelected.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Torres: Biden’s age isn’t ideal but ‘best hope’ to win

    Torres: Biden’s age isn’t ideal but ‘best hope’ to win

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    NEW YORK — Rep. Ritchie Torres (D-N.Y.) on Tuesday faulted Democrats for not doing more to cultivate the “next generation of leadership,” adding it wasn’t ideal that President Joe Biden was mounting a reelection bid at age 80.

    “He has a powerful record on which to run for reelection,” Torres said at a Manhattan event hosted by the Association for a Better New York, a pro-business civic group. “But is it ideal that we have an 80-year-old running for president? No. But he’s the best hope we have for beating Donald Trump or Ron DeSantis.”

    Torres has backed Biden’s reelection bid.

    Biden, who is already the oldest person to be elected president, has had to confront difficult questions about whether he’s mentally fit for four more years of grueling schedules. If elected, Biden would turn 86 at the end of his second term.

    Torres, 35, made the remarks as part of a wide-ranging conversation on his first term in Congress alongside colleagues who have gotten significantly older than they were decades prior.

    “I’m like an embryo in Congress,” the Bronx Democrat joked.

    He faulted Democrats for not setting term limits for committee chairs like their Republican counterparts, a setup he said emboldens lawmakers to “feel they have a right to die with their gavel.”

    “That stifles, I believe, the development of the next generation of leadership,” Torres said. “We have to be much more effective at building a bench rather than benching our young talent.”

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Biden gears up for Trump rematch with age and approval front and center

    Biden gears up for Trump rematch with age and approval front and center

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    Legend has it that when the artist Benjamin West told King George III that George Washington, the first US president, had decided to resign, the king replied: “If he does that, he will be the greatest man in the world.”

    Some urged Joe Biden, the 46th president, to follow suit and, at the age of 80, hand power to a new generation. Who were they kidding? The worst-kept secret in Washington is out: Biden is running for re-election next year.

    There was an air of inevitability around the announcement. Biden coveted the job for decades, mounting failed campaigns in 1988 and 2008 then succeeding in 2020, motivated by a need to rescue “the soul of America” from Donald Trump. He relishes the most powerful office in the world. He is having too much fun.

    But is his announcement good for Democrats and America?

    On the pessimistic side, Biden is already the oldest president in US history and would be 86 at the end of a second term. Whereas the coronavirus lockdown allowed Biden to campaign with limited public appearances, this time he will face a gruelling schedule.

    Expect rightwing media to make much of what would happen if Biden were incapacitated or died: President Kamala Harris. Republicans who have struggled to turn Biden into a bogeyman as they did Hillary Clinton might feel they have a better chance with his deputy.

    Another problem: there is a dangerous gap between Democratic officials and public sentiment. The party has failed to offer a credible alternative: Harris is too unpopular, Pete Buttigieg too young, Bernie Sanders too old, Gavin Newsom too California and the declared challengers, vaccine conspiracy theorist Robert Kennedy Jr and self-help guru Marianne Williamson, too fringe.

    “The dynamics that made Biden the nominee in the first place, his moderate branding and just-left-enough positioning, still protect him from a consolidated opposition on either flank,” the columnist Ross Douthat wrote in the New York Times. “And he’s benefited from the way that polarization and anti-Trumpism has delivered a more unified liberalism, suffused by a trust-the-establishment spirit that makes the idea of a primary challenge seem not just dangerous but disreputable.”

    Yet seven in 10 Americans, including 51% Democrats, do not want Biden to run, nearly half citing his age, according to an NBC poll. That survey found Biden’s overall job-approval rating had fallen to 41%. He trailed a generic Republican by six points.

    Joe Biden confirms 2024 re-election bid in video announcement – video

    The level of dissatisfaction implies turnout trouble. There have been disappointments over abortion rights, gun safety, immigration reform, racial justice and voting rights. Some progressives are tired and might stay home.

    Norman Solomon, national director of RootsAction.org, sponsor of the Don’t Run Joe campaign, says: “Disaster is foreseeable if Biden is the Democratic nominee. In 2024, he would represent the status quo at a time when polling shows discontent in the US is now more widespread than at any other time in the last several decades. Biden’s approval numbers are notably low – now more than 10 points underwater – yet the arrogance quotient at the White House is exceedingly high.

    “Biden’s recent policy decisions, grimly affecting climate for example, have seemed calculated to ingratiate himself with the corporate establishment while undermining enthusiasm from large numbers of grassroots Democrats, particularly young voters. This is no way to defeat the neo-fascist Republican party, and this is no way to advance a progressive agenda.”

    Now the good news. Biden supporters can argue he is one of the most underrated presidents, Lyndon Johnson to Barack Obama’s John F Kennedy: less elegant or eloquent but more substantially productive.

    In 2020, he met the moment. As the nation grieved the Covid dead, his personal losses gave him empathy Trump lacked. When Vladimir Putin waged war on Ukraine, Biden’s devotion to alliances and institutions was the right approach at the right time.

    At home, with a narrow majority in Congress, Biden achieved big legislative wins: coronavirus relief, a bipartisan infrastructure law, legislation boosting computer-chip production and a historic climate, healthcare and tax plan.

    In January, Ron Klain, the outgoing chief of staff, wrote to the president: “You passed the most significant economic recovery legislation since FDR; managed the largest land war in Europe since the Truman era; enacted the most sweeping infrastructure law since Eisenhower; named more judges in your first year than any president since JFK; passed the second-largest healthcare bill since LBJ; signed the most significant gun safety bill since Clinton; and enacted the largest climate change law in history.

    “You did it all in the middle of the worst public health crisis since the Wilson era, with the smallest legislative majority of any newly elected Democratic president in a century.”

    While these accomplishments have not translated to polling, they did appear to help Democrats in last year’s midterm elections, a campaign Biden closed with speeches about abortion and democracy. The party defied historical trends to retain the Senate and narrowly surrendered the House. This is another argument for Biden: proven electoral success.

    He beat Trump by 7m votes. Trump is the Republican frontrunner. Democrats’ instinct to play safe with a proven winner, rather than gambling everything, is understandable.

    Biden is fond of saying: “Don’t compare me to the Almighty. Compare me to the alternative.” Trump, 76 and weighed down by legal baggage, is even more unpopular. The NBC poll found that just 35% believe he should run again while 60% oppose it. This time, Biden has the advantage of incumbency.

    But the octogenarian also personifies the nation in its fragility. Republican brinkmanship over the debt limit could lead to economic calamity. The war in Ukraine could take a turn for the worse, raising fresh questions after the Afghanistan debacle. A campaign Trump has dubbed “the final battle” is sure to throw up challenges.

    Biden knows depending on anti-Trump sentiment may not be enough. To retain the soul of America, he has to prove he is more than the least worst option.

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    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )