Tag: cancel

  • Cleartrip Introduces “CancelForNoReason” Feature, Offering Unprecedented Flexibility to Travelers

    Cleartrip Introduces “CancelForNoReason” Feature, Offering Unprecedented Flexibility to Travelers

    one of India’s leading online travel platforms, has announced a game-changing feature for travelers with the launch of “Cancel For No Reason.” This innovative offering allows customers to cancel their travel plans without any specific justification, providing a new level of flexibility and peace of mind in these uncertain times.

    Key Features of Cleartrip’s “Cancel For No Reason” Option:

    • No Questions Asked: Customers can cancel their bookings without providing any reasons, making it stress-free to change plans.
    • Full Refunds: Cleartrip ensures that customers receive full refunds for their canceled bookings, promoting financial security.
    • Flexible Timelines: This option can be exercised up to 24 hours before the scheduled departure or check-in time.
    • Multiple Travel Services: “Cancel For No Reason” is available for flights, hotels, and holiday packages, enhancing its utility.
    • Booking Assurance: Cleartrip guarantees that customers won’t face any booking fees or penalties when they opt for this feature.

    The new feature comes at a time when the travel industry is adapting to the changing dynamics of the global landscape. With the ongoing uncertainty related to the pandemic, travelers often hesitate to make plans due to the fear of sudden changes. Cleartrip’s “Cancel For No Reason” option addresses this concern directly, providing travelers with the confidence to book their next adventure.

    In addition to offering flexibility, Cleartrip is determined to continue its focus on safety and hygiene. The platform strictly adheres to all government guidelines and collaborates with partners to ensure that travelers have access to the most up-to-date information and safety measures.

    Travel experts have lauded Cleartrip’s initiative, citing it as a significant step in making travel more accessible and less stressful for customers. Rahul Mehta, a prominent travel industry analyst, commented, “The introduction of ‘Cancel For No Reason’ is a groundbreaking move by Cleartrip. It not only addresses a long-standing concern of travelers but also sets a new industry standard for flexibility and customer-centric services.”

    Cleartrip’s “Cancel For No Reason” option is available to customers immediately and can be selected during the booking process. This feature is set to redefine the way travelers plan and experience their journeys.

    As travel enthusiasts eagerly embrace this new offering, Cleartrip is poised to remain a frontrunner in providing innovative solutions for travelers worldwide.

  • ‘The Kerala Story’: 2 Kochi theatres cancel shows; only one to screen film

    ‘The Kerala Story’: 2 Kochi theatres cancel shows; only one to screen film

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    Kochi: Two theatres in Kochi city have cancelled the screening of the controversial film ‘The Kerala Story’ which will be released in cinema halls today.

    Although PVR Cinemas in Lulu Mall and Oberon Mall, and Cinepolis in Centre Square Mall have cancelled the screening, no reasons were stated for the decision.

    There is only one theatre ‘Shenoys’ remaining in Kochi city which is set to screen the movie from 10.00 am.

    MS Education Academy

    Earlier, theatres reached an agreement with distributors to screen the film on 50 screens in Kerala, but many backed out just before the release.

    Later, the film agreed to screen on only 17 screens. However, as of now, it is not clear how many theatres will be screening the film.

    In the meantime, there are only three theatres which are going to screen this movie in Ernakulam district. Shenoys in Kochi city, Carnival Cinemas in Kariyad and Dharshana Cinema Complex in Piravom will be screening ‘The Kerala Story’.

    The show’s cancellation comes amid protests against the movie for allegedly propagating a false narrative of Islamic conversion.
    Helmed by Sudipto Sen and produced by Vipul Amrutlal Shah, the film has triggered a massive political row with various leaders reacting to the movie releasing today.

    Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan, recently said in a statement that the movie was deliberately made with the aim of communal polarisation and to spread hate propaganda against Kerala.

    The statement reads, “The trailer of the Hindi film, ‘The Kerala Story’, which appears to have been deliberately made with the aim of communal polarisation and to spread hate propaganda against Kerala was released last day. It is indicated from the trailer that this film is trying to spread the propaganda of Sangh Parivar, which has established itself as the centre of religious extremism in the land of secularism, Kerala.”

    Congress MP Shashi Tharoor on Sunday tweeted, “It may be your kerala-story”>Kerala story. It is not our kerala-story”>Kerala story.”

    ‘The Kerala Story’ stars Adah Sharma, Yogita Bihani, Siddhi Idnani and Sonia Balani in the lead roles.

    The trailer of Sen’s film ‘The Kerala Story’ came under fire as it claimed that 32,000 girls from the state went missing and later joined the terrorist group, ISIS.

    Leader of Opposition in Kerala Legislative Assembly VD Satheesan recently said that the film ‘The Kerala Story’ should not be granted permission for screening.

    “The film ‘The Kerala Story’ which falsely claims that 32,000 women in Kerala converted and became members of the Islamic State, should not be granted permission for screening. The trailer clearly shows what the film intends to say”, Satheesan said in a Facebook post.

    After controversy sparked over the same, the makers of the film took a U-Turn and changed the number from 32000 women to 3 women in the description of their trailer.

    He also alleged that the film is part of an attempt to implement Sangh Parivar’s agenda and create a social divide by casting a shadow of doubt over the minority groups.

    “This is not an issue of freedom of expression but part of an attempt to implement the Sangh Parivar agenda to create a divide in the society by casting a shadow of doubt over the minority groups”, he said.

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    #Kerala #Story #Kochi #theatres #cancel #shows #screen #film

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Revanth demands govt to cancel ORR tenders

    Revanth demands govt to cancel ORR tenders

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    Hyderabad: TPCC president A. Revanth Reddy on Thursday demanded the state government to immediately cancel ORR tenders.

    Addressing a press meet, he said any bank would give Rs 15,000 crore as a loan if the state government pledged the ORR project. He asked the state government as to why it was showing haste in selling government properties. He alleged that the state government had ignored the objections of NHAI over the tenders. He asked the state government how a black listed company got the tender.

    He asked CM KCR and state minister KTR as to why they were silent on the issue. He said that they would lodge a complaint on the issue with investigative agencies. He said that the loan of Rs 6696 crores obtained by HMDA had expired on March 31, 2022.

    MS Education Academy

    He said that the ORR project has Rs 1 lakh crore properties now and added that the state government would get an income of Rs 22,000 crores in a span of 30 years. He said that he was ready to get the loan of Rs 15,000 crores to the HMDA.

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    #Revanth #demands #govt #cancel #ORR #tenders

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Telangana court dismisses plea to cancel BJP chief’s bail

    Telangana court dismisses plea to cancel BJP chief’s bail

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    Hyderabad: A court in Telangana on Thursday dismissed the petition by the police to cancel the bail of state BJP president and Karimnagar MP Bandi Sanjay Kumar in the Class 10 question paper leak case.

    Hanamkonda district court dismissed the petition by the police, which had sought cancellation of the bail on the ground that Sanjay was violating bail conditions.

    After hearing arguments of both the sides for the last two days, the court ruled that there are no grounds for cancelling the bail of Sanjay.

    MS Education Academy

    The court had on April 6 ordered Sanjay’s release on bail subject to certain conditions.

    The Karimnagar MP was arrested amid high-drama from his in-laws’ house in Karimnagar on the night of April 4.

    Warangal police had named Sanjay as the main accused in the leakage of the Hindi question paper of Secondary School Certificate (SSC) exam from an exam centre at Kamlapur in Warangal district.

    After the arrest, Sanjay was taken to a police station in Yadadri Bhuvanagiri district and then brought to Warangal in the evening. He was produced at the residence of the First Class Magistrate in Hanamkonda on April. The magistrate had remanded him to judicial custody till April 19. The court granted bail the next day.

    Police alleged that Sanjay hatched a plan with other accused to leak the Class 10 question paper.

    Sanjay and nine other accused were booked under Indian Penal Code (IPC) sections 120B (criminal conspiracy), 420 (cheating), 505 (circulating any report or statement with an intent to cause alarm to the public)

    Police had also invoked sections 4 (A), 6 of TS Public Examinations (Prevention of Malpractices) Act and 66-D of Information Technology Act.

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    #Telangana #court #dismisses #plea #cancel #BJP #chiefs #bail

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • 4% Muslim quota: Karnataka Congress chief vows to cancel BJP’s call

    4% Muslim quota: Karnataka Congress chief vows to cancel BJP’s call

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    Karnataka: Karnataka Congress chief DK Shivakumar on Friday said that if the grand old party came to power in the assembly elections, it would cancel the scrapping of 4 percent Muslim quota by the ruling government.

    In March, the Karnataka government decided to scrap the four per cent quota for minorities and add it to the existing quota of two dominant communities of the poll-bound state.

    The 4 per cent reservation given to Muslims under 2B classification of the OBC category will now be divided into two equal parts and added to the existing quota of Vokkaligas and Lingayats for whom two new reservation categories of 2C and 2D were created during the Belagavi Assembly Session last year.

    MS Education Academy

    While talking to ANI, Shivakumar said, “Without any complications, we raised our two lists. BJP could not raise its list yet…More lists will come…As soon as our government comes, we will cancel the reservation issue and will protect the minority interest.”

    On Thursday, Congress released the second list of 41 candidates for the upcoming Karnataka Assembly Election 2023 and also marked a seat for the regional outfit Sarvodaya Karnataka Party. The announcement was made following the meeting of the Congress Central Election Committee.

    On Tuesday, Chief Minister Basavaraj Bommai said that the Bharatiya Janata Party’s Parliamentary Board would finalise and release the list of candidates for the upcoming Assembly elections in the state on April 8.

    The Chief Minister added that the selection of the candidates has been done based on winnability.

    The Congress had on March 25 announced its first list of 124 candidates, which included names of former CM Siddaramaiah and State Party chief DK Shivakumar.

    The Assembly election in Karnataka is scheduled to be held on May 10 and the counting of votes will take place on May 13.

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    #Muslim #quota #Karnataka #Congress #chief #vows #cancel #BJPs #call

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Pak court rejects FIA’s plea to cancel Imran Khan’s bail in prohibited funding case

    Pak court rejects FIA’s plea to cancel Imran Khan’s bail in prohibited funding case

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    Islamabad: A Pakistani court on Wednesday rejected the country’s top investigating agency’s plea to cancel former prime minister Imran Khan’s bail in the prohibited funding case, a media report said.

    Khan, the chief of the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party was granted bail by an Islamabad-based banking court in a prohibited funding case.

    The Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) in October last year filed a case in the banking court against Khan, 70, and other members of his party for allegedly receiving prohibited funding.

    The prohibited funding case was filed by PTI’s estranged founding member Akbar S Babar in the Election Commission of Pakistan in 2014.

    A two-member bench comprising Justice Mohsin Akhtar Kayani and Justice Tariq Mehmood Jahangiri conducted the hearing on the plea in the Islamabad High Court (IHC) on Wednesday, according to the Express Tribune newspaper.

    The court also rejected the request to cancel the bail of co-accused Tariq Shafi, the report said.

    The FIA filed an application in the IHC on February 28 against the banking court’s decision to grant bail to the PTI chief and appealed to the court to annul the decision as it was “against the law”.

    In 2022, Pakistan’s Election Commission said the allegations of taking prohibited funds from overseas Pakistanis against Khan were proven.

    It issued a new show-cause notice to PTI asking why these funds should not be confiscated.

    During Wednesday’s hearing, FIA Special Prosecutor Rizwan Abbasi argued that Khan has not yet been interrogated by the agency in the case, and urged the court to cancel his bail, the report said.

    IHC Chief Justice Mohsin Akhtar Kayani asked if the money laundering allegations in the FIR were against Arif Naqvi and Imran Khan or if PTI was the recipient of the funds.

    The FIA counsel argued that Khan in a recent interview admitted that he received funds for charity purposes but used them for political activities, according to the report.

    Justice Kayani inquired if the funds were used by a political party and then how they became personal belongings, it said.

    Justice Kayani asked the FIA counsel to submit the letter from the State Bank of Pakistan that the investigation agency received during the investigation.

    “You did not include the employee of the State Bank in the investigation. Changing the name of a bank account is not a crime. Has the State Bank taken any action to change the name or nature of the account?” the judge asked.

    Khan, the cricketer-turned-politician, was granted interim bail by a special court in Islamabad after being shot during an assassination attempt in November last year.

    He was ousted from power in April after losing a no-confidence vote in his leadership, which he alleged was part of a US-led conspiracy targeting him because of his independent foreign policy decisions on Russia, China, and Afghanistan.

    Khan, who came to power in 2018, is the only Pakistani Prime Minister to be ousted in a no-confidence vote in Parliament.

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    #Pak #court #rejects #FIAs #plea #cancel #Imran #Khans #bail #prohibited #funding #case

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Bihar Police cancel leaves of all personnel ahead of Holi

    Bihar Police cancel leaves of all personnel ahead of Holi

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    Patna: Bihar Police on Tuesday cancelled the leave of all personnel ahead of Holi.

    ADGP, Law and Order, Jitendra Singh Gangwar said that the measure was taken with the view of maintaining peace in all parts of the state.

    The decision came after Chief Minister Nitish Kumar called up state DGP R.S. Bhatti and Patna SSP Rajiv Mishra and asked them to take security measures. After rumours of attack on labourers from the state in Tamil Nadu, Bihar Police are taking extra precautions to avoid any incident of violence.

    Adequate police has been deployed in districts like Patna, Bhojpur, Rohtas, Kaimur, Gaya, Darbhanga, Munger, Samastipur and other places.

    The department has also identified sensitive places. “We have deployed Quick Response Teams (QRT) and Fire Brigade in every district and asked them to stay alert. Bihar police also deployed reserve forces and 2500 Home Guard Jawans in the sensitive areas to deal with any eventuality,” Gangwar said.

    “We have also canceled the leave of women police as well. Besides, we are appealing to common people through social media to avoid passing lewd comments on women. We are also keeping eyes on vulgar songs played in the localities,” he added.

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    #Bihar #Police #cancel #leaves #personnel #ahead #Holi

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Cancel Both Papers For ‘Level Playing Field’, Prosecuting Officer Aspirants To JKPSC 

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    SRINAGAR: Aspirants for Prosecuting Officers on Thursday urged Jammu and Kashmir Public Service Commission to cancel both papers instead of the one and conduct a fresh examination to provide “a level playing field” for all.

    JKPSC on Wednesday canceled “paper-II” which is qualifying with the further announcement that the examination for it will be conducted on March 16. However, several aspirants called the news agency GNS since the announcement was made close-of-day Wednesday, alleging that the cancelation of only paper II will provide an advantage to those aspirants who have scored better marks in paper-I and that decision “rides roughshod” over others.

    “As per the scheme of examination, both the papers have the importance of their own. The paper-I score will count only after one qualifies Paper-II,” the aspirants said, adding, “Had the JKPSC not canceled the paper-II ab-initio, those who are having a better score at present in paper-I would not make it to merit list and selection was to be made among those who qualified by having required numbers in paper-II.” Now that JKPSC has chosen to cancel only paper-II, it was providing undue advantage at the cost of others to some aspirants, they said.

    “This is clear injustice and unfair with most aspirants,” they said, adding, “It smacks of arbitrariness or to put it in other words, it is irrational and offends the basic requirement of Article 14 of the Constitution.”

    They said that with the announcement, the JKPSC was setting a “wrong precedent.”

    “The examination scheme is such that an aspirant has to first qualify the paper-II by getting a score as provided under the notification,” they said, adding, “By allowing somebody who has fared better in paper-I two chances is plain injustice. Does someone who has fared better on paper II and not so good on paper-I, also deserve two chances at paper-I?” This clearly, they said, was “unfair”.

    As per the JKPSC, its decision to cancel paper-II followed representations from the candidates through the J&K High Court Bar Association Jammu and others, claiming that the standard of the qualifying paper was higher than the level prescribed in the notification.

    “The JKPSC itself has admitted that representations received by it requested for re-conducting the examination, meaning both papers, or allowing the aspirants to appear in the main examination,” the aspirants said, adding, “The JKPSC has chosen to set a wrong precedent and we request the Commission to revisit its decision of only examining Paper-II, thereby allowing two chances to some aspirants and denying same opportunity to others.” (GNS)

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    #Cancel #Papers #Level #Playing #Field #Prosecuting #Officer #Aspirants #JKPSC

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • Cancel Both Papers For ‘Level Playing Field’, Prosecuting Officer Aspirants To JKPSC

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    Asks Commission Why Allow Two Chances To Some And Denying Same To Others

    Srinagar, Mar 2 (GNS): Aspirants for Prosecuting Officers on Thursday urged Jammu and Kashmir Public Service Commission to cancel both papers instead of the one and conduct fresh examination to provide “a level playing field” for all.

    JKPSC on Wednesday cancelled “paper-II” which is of qualifying nature with further announcement that examination for it will be conducted on March 16. However, a number of aspirants called GNS since the announcement was made close-of-day Wednesday, alleging that cancelation of only paper-II will provide advantage to those aspirants who have scored better marks in paper-I and that decision “rides roughshod” over others.

    “As per the scheme of examination, both the papers have importance of their own. The paper-I score will count only after one qualifies Paper-II,” the aspirants said, adding, “Had the JKPSC not cancelled the paper-II ab-initio, those who are having better score at present in paper-I would not make it to merit list and selection was to be made among those who qualified by having required numbers in paper-II.” Now that JKPSC has chosen to cancel only paper-II, it was providing undue advantage at the cost of others to some aspirants, they said.

    “This is clear injustice and unfair with most aspirants,” they said, adding, “It smacks of arbitrariness or to put it in other words, it is irrational and offends the basic requirement of Article 14 of the Constitution.”

    They said that with the announcement, the JKPSC was setting a “wrong precedent.”

    “The examination scheme is such that an aspirant has to first qualify the paper-II by getting score as provided under the notification,” they said, adding, “By allowing somebody who has fared better in paper-I two chances is plainly injustice. Does someone who has fared better in paper-II and not so good in paper-I, also deserve two chances at paper-I?” This clearly, they said, was “unfair”.

    As per the JKPSC, its decision to cancel paper-II followed representations from the candidates through the J&K High Court Bar Association Jammu and others, claiming that the standard of the qualifying paper was higher than the level prescribed in the notification.

    “The JKPSC itself has admitted that representations received by it requested for re-conducting the examination, meaning both papers, or allowing the aspirants to appear in the main examination,” the aspirants said, adding, “The JKPSC has chosen to set a wrong precedent and we request the Commission to revisit its decision of only conducting examination for Paper-II, thereby allowing two chances to some aspirants and denying same opportunity to others.” (GNS)

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    #Cancel #Papers #Level #Playing #Field #Prosecuting #Officer #Aspirants #JKPSC

    ( With inputs from : thegnskashmir.com )

  • Opinion | NASA Refused to Cancel James Webb. Good.

    Opinion | NASA Refused to Cancel James Webb. Good.

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    Kameny’s story is worth revisiting in light of a recent controversy concerning the legacy of the Lavender Scare within the space program. Late last year, NASA announced that it would not reverse its decision to name its deep-space telescope after James Webb, the administrator who led the agency throughout the 1960s. The announcement came after years of lobbying by a group of young scientists who claimed that Webb, first as a high-ranking State Department official during the Truman administration and then as NASA chief, had been complicit in the firing of gay employees while serving at both agencies. A petition demanding NASA rename the telescope earned nearly 2,000 signatures, and the Royal Astronomical Society in Britain insisted that astronomers submitting papers to its journals use the acronym “JWST” when describing the telescope, Webb’s disrepute reducing him to the level of the fictional Lord Voldemort, “He Who Must Not Be Named.”

    Webb’s contributions to the cause of space exploration were vast. Taking the reins of NASA at the outset of the John F. Kennedy administration, he spearheaded the Apollo program that fulfilled the president’s mission of landing a man on the moon by the end of the decade. And while he stands accused of purging gay people from NASA, Webb put the agency at the forefront of government efforts on behalf of another marginalized minority. Under Webb’s direction, NASA was the leading federal agency to promote racial integration, aggressively recruiting and promoting Black scientists. In 1964, when Alabama’s segregationist governor George Wallace attempted to block the hiring of African-Americans at the Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Webb threatened to remove personnel from the facility. That same year, he declined to speak at the Jackson, Mississippi Chamber of Commerce after two Black activists were denied entry to the event.

    In March 2021, NASA assigned its chief historian to investigate the claim that Webb was responsible for the firing of gay employees. In an 89-page report released late last year, for which he surveyed some 50,000 documents spanning a 20-year period, the historian found no evidence to substantiate this allegation. On the contrary, at least during his tenure at State, Webb could actually be credited with reducing the damage wreaked by the Lavender Scare. The crusade to cleanse the federal government of “sexual deviants” was led by Senator Joe McCarthy, who blamed “communists and queers” at the State Department for a series of early Cold War setbacks. According to the report, as under secretary of state, Webb’s “main involvement” in this episode “was in attempting to limit Congressional access to the personnel records of the Department of State” by claiming executive branch privilege over personnel matters. As for his time at NASA, though Webb presided over the agency when a budget analyst fired on account of his homosexuality, Clifford Norton, sued the Civil Service Commission, according to the NASA historian, “No evidence has been located showing Webb knew of Norton’s firing at the time.” Citing this study, the Royal Astronomical Society announced last month that it would no longer require authors to use the abbreviation “JWST.”

    The NASA investigation absolving Webb is a welcome contribution to the historical record. But it also obscures several important points about the severity of the Lavender Scare. For even if Webb cannot be tied to the dismissal of an individual gay employee, he occupied positions of authority in a government that was firing gay people left and right. While Webb may not have been aware of Norton’s situation, there were surely many more gay NASA employees who were terminated yet whose cases received less attention because, unlike Norton, they did not want to assume the risk to their reputations that going public with a lawsuit would entail. “It is highly likely that [Webb] knew exactly what was happening with security at his own agency during the height of the Cold War,” four leaders of the campaign to wipe Webb’s name from the telescope wrote last year. “We are deeply concerned by the implication that managers are not responsible for homophobia.”

    And yet, no matter how well-intentioned, to single out a bureaucrat like James Webb for the Lavender Scare would accomplish the opposite of what it intends by minimizing just how vast and ruthless was our country’s policy of anti-gay discrimination — a policy so vast and ruthless that it mandated the outlay of massive amounts of money and manpower in a whole-of-government effort aimed at firing patriotic and highly-educated employees just because of whom they loved. If Webb’s level of involvement in this decades-long purge is to be the threshold by which we cancel an historical figure, then we are going to have to rename everything named after pretty much anyone who served a role in the federal government from 1947 (when the State Department began firing gay employees) until at least 1975 (when the Civil Service Commission lifted its ban on gays), or even 1995 (when Clinton removed homosexuality as a cause for denying a security clearance). Every president, cabinet officer, deputy assistant secretary of housing — all were in some sense complicit in the structural oppression of gay people that existed during the second half of the 20th century.

    Ultimately, the primary argument against renaming the James Webb Space Telescope is the same argument against renaming buildings and other landmarks honoring historical figures — George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Abraham Lincoln — who espoused views that we rightly consider abhorrent by today’s standards, which is that these men also accomplished great things deserving of our recognition and praise. To argue otherwise, to contend that there is nothing worth venerating about morally complex individuals from our past, is to fall victim to presentism, the narcissistic penchant for imagining oneself morally superior to those who came before.

    Those defending Webb have faced blowback themselves. In January 2021, Dr. Hakeem Oluseyi, the president of the National Society of Black Physicists, published the results of his own investigation exonerating Webb from the charge of homophobic bigotry. Later that year, after Oluseyi was hired by George Mason University, a leader of the anti-Webb campaign tweeted that he had championed a “homophobe.”

    According to the New York Times, that July, a professor at another university told an astronomy professor at George Mason that Oluseyi had sexually harassed a woman and mishandled a government grant. (Officials at Oluseyi’s former employer, the Florida Institute of Technology, launched an investigation and found nothing to substantiate the charges.) Last year, while Times reporter Michael Powell was working on an article about the Webb controversy, he received accusations from an anonymous person about Oluseyi. “Several of these claims were demonstrably false, and others could not be substantiated,” Powell wrote.

    The debate over whether NASA should honor the legacy of James Webb offers us an opportunity to consider how best to commemorate a dark episode in our nation’s past. While our country has made valiant efforts at atoning for its abhorrent treatment of other minorities, we have barely begun the process of recognizing the oppression its gay and lesbian citizens endured. I cannot think of a better way for NASA to do this than to name its next space telescope after Frank Kameny.

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    #Opinion #NASA #Refused #Cancel #James #Webb #Good
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )