Tag: enemies

  • Fall in line or be destroyed: In Budget speech, AAP govt warns ‘enemies of Punjab’

    Fall in line or be destroyed: In Budget speech, AAP govt warns ‘enemies of Punjab’

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    Chandigarh: Days after the siege of the Ajnala police station by supporters of a pro-Khalistan preacher, the state government on Friday asked “enemies of Punjab” to fall in line or be destroyed.

    The warning was delivered by Finance Minister Harpal Singh Cheema during his Budget speech in the state assembly.

    In its first full budget, the Aam Aadmi Party government has allocated Rs 10,523 crore for maintaining law and order — up 11 per cent from the previous year.

    “Some evil forces are always looking for opportunities to disturb peace and order in our border state,” Cheema said, adding that such attempts in the past were thwarted by “our brave police forces”.

    “I, on behalf of my government warn the enemies of Punjab to fall in line else our government shall destroy them from the root,” he said.

    Punjab’s ruling AAP has been under flak from the opposition over the “deterioration” of law and order.

    The minister did not directly refer to the incident in Ajnala near Amritsar on February 23, when radical priest Amritpal Singh’s supporters barged into a police station complex, forcing authorities to agree on the release of an arrested man.

    Cheema said the state government has set aside Rs 40 crore in the 2023-24 Budget to strengthen the security infrastructure in border districts. This includes CCTV cameras in areas close to the international border, lights and high-end police vehicles.

    He said the state government is preparing its law enforcing agencies and police forces for all odds.

    The counter-intelligence wing of the force is being fortified with the latest equipment and infrastructure, he said. An outlay of Rs 40 crore has been sanctioned for this.

    He said Rs 64 crore will be spent on modernisation of the police force and Rs 30 crore on combating cybercrime in the coming year.

    Cheema said the Anti-Gangster Task Force had arrested 567 criminals and killed five gangsters, busted 156 modules, and seized 563 weapons and 125 vehicles till February-end.

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    #Fall #line #destroyed #Budget #speech #AAP #govt #warns #enemies #Punjab

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • María Fernández: “The enemies in cancer prevention are misinformation and tobacco marketing”

    María Fernández: “The enemies in cancer prevention are misinformation and tobacco marketing”

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    Scientific findings take time to land on the street. About 17 years old, the researchers calculate. And when the evidence does come into practice, it does not always penetrate satisfactorily. “The impact of an intervention depends on the effectiveness of the intervention and the reach of the population,” explains María Fernández, director of the Center for Health Prevention at the University of Texas School of Public Health, during a scientific seminar organized by the Catalan Institute of Oncology, in Barcelona. The researcher (Washington DC, 56 years old), an expert in the development and evaluation of health promotion interventions, spoke to EL PAÍS after recounting, in front of a room full of young researchers, the challenges of implementing science in prevention of cancer.

    Ask. In his conference, he talked about the gap between what they know and what it costs to put it into practice. Regarding cancer, what example is there of something that you know works, but it hasn’t made it to the street?

    Answer. In the United States, for example, we know that the use of physician reminders works to increase colorectal cancer screening, but it is not being used in clinics and many physicians may not remember. And patient reminders work too. We also know that there are interventions that increase children’s physical activity, such as active learning, in which those interventions teach teachers to teach while moving the children around. Another example is that we know that if the doctor recommends the papilloma vaccine while he is recommending the other vaccines, it works better than giving a separate recommendation.

    Q. In his conference, he also mentioned fear as a factor that can play a double role: it can be used to get citizens to participate in some strategies, such as screening, but if you go too far, they can reject these measures. How is balance achieved?

    R. With this example I was hitting the key point that it is very important to work with expert patients because people identify with other patients. But it is also important to work with people who know about health psychology because there are different things that influence whether or not a person listens to a message and whether or not the message motivates them. One way to handle it is to be realistic with the risk there is, but give hints about what they can do: never just give a message of fear.

    Q. Is the population being scared too much with cancer?

    R. I don’t know… I think it’s important that people know they’re at risk, but that they know there are things they can do. A person is not going to make an effort to do something if they think that “it will not happen to me” or that “if it happens to me, there is nothing I can do, I cannot survive”.

    Q. What barriers are there to improve prevention?

    R. In cancer, there are several things that can reduce your risk and others that you can do to detect it early. People perhaps do not pay attention to the recommendations or do not believe them and think that it does not matter what they do because it will not happen to them or it will happen to them anyway: that determinism, that fatalism, can be a barrier. But the most important thing, without a doubt, is tobacco: if a person does not smoke, eats well, and takes the tests that are due, it is the best way to prevent cancer.

    Q. It has long been known that smoking is very bad for health and causes cancer. Why hasn’t tobacco been removed from the equation?

    R. One of the problems is that there are programs that work, but they are not integrated as much as possible and that means that people do not have access to them. The programs have to be powerful, they have to work; it is not worth giving pamphlets. In the United States we have a telephone line to help people quit smoking: they give advice and access to medicines.

    In lifestyles it is something in which we are failing: people eat worse and worse, exercise less and continue to smoke”

    Q. Precisely in tobacco consumption there is a gradient of social inequality: people with fewer resources smoke more. How much does social inequality weigh in the fight against cancer?

    R. It weighs a lot. In Spain you have it much better in terms of access, there are not as many inequalities as in the United States, but they still exist. Sometimes it is inequality in the sense that educated people understand more about the risks or where they have to go to access it. [al sistema]; this, for a migrant or person with less education or resources, is very difficult. And then the day-to-day influences: if a person is thinking about how to pay for food this week, it is much more difficult, because of that day-to-day struggle, for them to say: ‘I’m going to take care of myself, I’m going to the doctor or I’m going to to participate in this community program’.

    Q. It is more difficult for them to worry about their health.

    R. Clear. But what frustrates me, sometimes, when we talk about inequality, is that the controversy always goes to the person, to what they care about or to their motivation. And this seems super unfair to me. It is not that the person does not care about their health, it is that what they have to solve that day is more urgent.

    Q. Regarding tobacco and other risk factors, the scientific community says that around 40% of tumors could be prevented. What is wrong with citizenship?

    R. In lifestyles it is something in which we are failing: people eat worse and worse, exercise less and continue to smoke. But there are also screenings that can prevent cancer and we have to use them. Accessibility and motivation must be increased.

    Q. How is he motivated?

    R. This depends on what are the reasons or determinants of that behavior. And there are different. Some may not feel susceptible; others may think that the tests are not effective or that they do not want to know if they have cancer… The knowledge and beliefs in each population must be understood to focus education on the barriers they have.

    Q. About the importance of the information that is given, how much do the fake news to prevention strategies?

    R. It affects us a lot. She went through a lot with the covid. In the United States they say ridiculous things, like that vaccines are made with aborted fetuses or that vaccines cause autism. The fake news they create fear and a certain fear of vaccines and that is very worrying: the vaccine against the papilloma virus, for example, is incredible technology and that we have a vaccine that prevents cancer is something we dreamed of. But that people don’t like it because they say it’s very new, worries us.

    Q. What is the great enemy for you, who are dedicated to cancer prevention? What is the most difficult for you to fight?

    R. The enemies in this are misinformation and marketing of the tobacco industry. It is very difficult to combat this and public health does not have the resources to do so.

    The ‘fake news’ creates fear and a certain fear of vaccines and that worries a lot”

    Q. Does the tobacco industry put a lot of pressure on you?

    R. Yes, but I think it is much worse in other countries than in the United States because in the United States there are more rules: you cannot have signs, for example, near schools, although this is different in each state.

    Q. Even if it is more regulated, how far does its power reach?

    R. They still have quite a bit of power. What the tobacco companies have done is diversify and sometimes you don’t know who you’re dealing with. I think they still have a lot of influence and although certain things are regulated, the marketing is strong. What seems worst to me is the approach [que están haciendo] in developing countries, which have fewer resources, to get people hooked and also expanding the types of products they use.

    You can follow THE COUNTRY Health and Well-being in Facebook, Twitter and instagram.

    #María #Fernández #enemies #cancer #prevention #misinformation #tobacco #marketing



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    ( With inputs from : pledgetimes.com )

  • At BJY’s culmination in Sgr, Rahul reveals dress code secret: ‘Wore White T-shirt to give enemies a chance to change its col

    At BJY’s culmination in Sgr, Rahul reveals dress code secret: ‘Wore White T-shirt to give enemies a chance to change its col

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    Srinagar, Jan 30: Donning the Kashmiri traditional gown (pheran), Congress leader and Member Parliament (MP) Rahul Gandhi Monday said he deliberately wore a white T-shirt to give chance to his enemies to change its colour but he received endless love instead of grenades. He said the message Bharat Jodo Yatra(BJY) was to see the end of phone calls giving the message of deaths in the Valley.

    Addressing a rally on the last day of BJY at SK Stadium, Sonwar, Srinagar, amid heavy snowfall, Rahul, as per news agency—Kashmir News Observer (KNO) said that much was talked about his T-Shirt. “I wore (white) T-Shirt to give chance to my enemies to change its colour, but instead I received lots of love and warm wishes instead of grenades,” Rahul thundered from the stage amid slogans from the participants: “Jodo, Jodo Bharat Jodo”

    Rahul said he can well understand the pain and agony of Kashmiris. “Every Kashmiri I met during my Yatra had tears in his/her eyes. The main message of BJY is to see the end of phone calls giving messages of deaths. What would be the fate of the families including soldiers, CRPF men and Kashmiris when they get phone calls with messages of deaths/killings of their loved ones? Who else can understand that other than me? I have received phone calls about my father’s death and even my grandmother’s death and thus I could realize the pain of families of those killed in Pulwama,” he said as snowflakes filled the air.

    Rahul dared Home Minister Amit Shah and other BJP leaders to conduct or hold Padyatra in the Valley like the one he did. “I am sure they can’t do it as they are afraid and have fear in their hearts,” he said and accused Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Union Home Minister Amit Shah, National Security Advisor (NSA) Ajit Doval, and the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) of “instigating violence”.

    Rahul said that Kashmiriyat was a thought and Kashmir was a home for him. “In fact, the thought Kashmiriyat presents is a home for me. For me, the home is not just four-walls but the thought Kashmiriyat gives and presents,” he said.

    While speaking on the occasion, Rahul said that he has not carried out this yatra for himself or for the party, but for the people of the country.

    Speaking on the occasion, Rahul’s sister, Priyanka Gandhi said that the main message of BJY was to spread love and call for the end of hatred by bringing the hearts together. “Finally, we have succeeded,” he said.

    Former J&K chief ministers including Omar Abdullah and Mehbooba Mufti while speaking on the occasion said that they see a ray of hope in Rahul Gandhi.

    Earlier in the day, Rahul unfurled the national flag at the yatra’s campsite at Cheshma Shahi in Srinagar. He later hoisted the national flag at PCC office here following which the main culmination event was held in which the former chief minister’s of J&K including Omar Abdullah and Mehbooba Mufti also participated—(KNO)

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    #BJYs #culmination #Sgr #Rahul #reveals #dress #code #secret #Wore #White #Tshirt #give #enemies #chance #change #col

    ( With inputs from : roshankashmir.net )

  • ‘I have no enemies, at least’: Where Santos really stands in the House GOP

    ‘I have no enemies, at least’: Where Santos really stands in the House GOP

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    congress 45154

    “To my knowledge, hardly any of the New York members speak with him,” said first-term Rep. Nick LaLota (R-N.Y.), the first GOP member to call for Santos to resign. “There’s really nothing to speak about. He’s a totally untrustworthy individual who has broken the public’s trust … He’s become an embarrassment. He’s become a joke.”

    Santos himself demurred when POLITICO asked about his standing in the conference: “I’m not gonna say they’re all my friends … I have no enemies at least,” he said, adding he has “confidantes” but noting it is “too soon” in his term for “special relationships.” He quipped that he’s in more of a “relationship” with the political press.

    His status as a man on an island could prove politically risky, particularly if the consequences of his apparent fabrications continue to pile up and prompt more resignation calls. For the moment, Santos’ biggest ally may be the speaker who needs his vote in a slim majority, even though Kevin McCarthy’s famous freshman has done little but cause PR problems.

    Rep. Kelly Armstrong (R-N.D.) agreed, when asked, that most House Republicans are keeping their distance from Santos.

    “A number one thing in this town is, people don’t like being criticized for what they do. They really don’t like answering questions about what somebody else has done,” Armstrong said. “If nothing but out of political expedience, people are gonna avoid him.”

    Santos tends to flash a smile as he bounces around the Capitol halls, often encircled by an aggressive barrage of news cameras and persistent press questions. This week he took the practice of catering to the spotlight rather literally,laying out Chick-fil-A and Dunkin’ Donuts for the reporters waiting outside his office.

    Few of his colleagues expect that glare to dim quickly. Asked whether Santos’ seat on the House Science, Space, and Technology Committee would cast a brighter light on a typically wonky panel, Chair Frank Lucas (R-Okla.) laughed and replied: “The Science Committee in recent times has a reputation for being a rather calm, focused, some people almost would say sedate existence. We’re gonna get livened up.”

    Lucas projected little concern about Santos becoming a distraction to his committee, observing that “every member has strengths, every member has weaknesses” and adding that he would have to “figure out, in this particular case, what those are, and work with it.”

    But other Republicans are less copacetic about the Santos Show that’s taking shape this Congress. Those who saw his ascension as a blatant manipulation of the party apparatus, from the National Republican Congressional Committee to the staffers on his campaign payroll, are particularly alarmed that he’s managing to hang on despite lacking major allies.

    Rep. Pete Sessions (R-Texas), a former NRCC chair, said that “I don’t know what he told” the campaign arm, but “if he deceived them, he deceived our conference. … You always have to be sensitive to who are going to be your candidates.”

    Two Republicans close to Santos’ team say they, too, were completely in the dark about his fabrications, recalling that he often mentioned stories unprompted that later proved inaccurate, such as his claims to have played volleyball for Baruch College.

    “This was not an inside job. We were all duped here,” said one of the Republicans close to Santos’ team, before referring to a famed con woman who inspired a Netflix TV series: “We got Anna Delvey’d.”

    Santos’ campaign had assembled its own opposition file to review the candidate’s vulnerabilities, according to these two Republicans, both of whom were briefed on its contents. They said the file included parking tickets, details about his ex-wife and questions about his education — but that Santos was quick to explain away the questions about his schooling, attributing them at times to recording errors based on multiple names he had used and to his frequent moves.

    At one frenetic point in the campaign, according to the two Republicans, Santos declared to a room of aides that he needed a moment to collect himself because he had just learned that his cancer had returned — he’s asserted a brain tumor occasionally in the past but avoided follow-up questions about it. His team immediately pulled back their demand to express support, underscoring what both Republicans close to his team referred to as a genuinely high level of kindness between the candidate and his staff.

    But the issue of his cancer faded from the conversation on the trail almost as quickly as it materialized.

    One of the Republicans close to his team said that some donors have urged Santos to stay in office amid the GOP’s thin margins and the reality that his district would be tough for another Republican to win.

    Santos’ office did not respond to a request for comment about his health claims or questions about the internal opposition file.

    Weeks before the first reports brought Santos’ misrepresentations to light, the House GOP was already catching on to his future pariah status. After then-Rep. Rodney Davis (R-Ill.) finished giving GOP members-elect a Capitol tour in November, Davis remarked in an interview that Santos would trigger the next Congress’ first special election.

    Now that Santos is a full-fledged House GOP conference member, fellow Republican lawmakers are tied to his falsehoods as they push for accountability and transparency in their pending oversight of the Biden administration. And they’re not certain whether he has any path to redemption inside the party.

    “I don’t know the answer to that question,” one House Republican said, speaking candidly about Santos’ standing on condition of anonymity. “I think it’s just going to depend on what [the] Ethics [committee] and [the Justice Department] find.”

    Gaetz and Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.), themselves at odds during McCarthy’s speakership battle, have stuck up for Santos in public by arguing that he should receive committee assignments. The Floridian, who got a taste of ostracism during a federal sex trafficking probe that ensnared him before he was cleared last year, told CNN earlier this month that Santos shouldn’t be “subject to shunning” by his colleagues.

    Asked why he would defend Santos, Gaetz spoke on principle, saying that his colleague “represents 700,000-plus people … if they voted for him and sent him here, they don’t deserve to have their representative ignored on substance.”

    That doesn’t quite mean Santos is considered a friend. When that question came up, Gaetz cheekily replied: “We take all sinners on my row.”

    Santos, for his part, brushed off the calls for him to resign, arguing that “everybody’s entitled to their opinion and to their prerogative, but at the end of the day, we’re all working here in this body.” But even if he can finish his term, his time in office may be limited to two years: He’d face an incredibly steep climb to reelection, with the Nassau County GOP and New York Conservative Party already pushing for his departure.

    So for the time being, Washington might find him next seeking relationships across the aisle. Santos also said in an interview that he “can’t wait to start talking to Democrats.”



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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Kerala CM accuses Sangh Parivar of treating minorities as ‘enemies’, BJP hits back

    Kerala CM accuses Sangh Parivar of treating minorities as ‘enemies’, BJP hits back

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    Thiruvananthapuram: Kerala Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan has accused the Sangh Parivar of treating Muslims and Christians as ‘enemies of the nation’ and urged everyone to unite against such divisive actions, drawing sharp criticism from the BJP.

    Vijayan said the Constitution, which was the best weapon to fight against caste discrimination and religious hatred, was presently under attack.

    The CM alleged the Sangh Parivar and the RSS had made it clear that their aim was to turn India into a ‘Hindu ashtray.

    He also accused the party in power at the Centre of being followers of a political group that did not take part in the freedom struggle.

    “They are attacking the very roots of our country, its democracy, and the Constitution,” he said while speaking after inaugurating the Constitution Protection Conference and Secular Meet here on Thursday.

    In his speech, Vijayan said that if the Constitution was destroyed, everything — from an individual’s dignity to the sovereignty of the country — would be lost, he said.

    Meanwhile, the BJP hit back, saying the CM has no moral right to utter a single word on the Constitution.

    BJP state president K Surendran alleged that Vijayan does not give any importance to the Constitution and accused him of ‘whitewashing’ extremist and terror groups.

    The Kerala CM also alleged that besides the attacks on the Constitution, there were also attempts to rewrite history.

    Examples of the same that he mentioned were — the terming of Mahatma Gandhi’s assassination as a ‘death’ and the claims from certain quarters that B R Ambedkar was not one of the drafters of the Constitution.

    Apart from that, in some parts of the country Muslims are being termed as the opposite of Hindus, he claimed.

    Vijayan claimed that not only religious minorities, but Dalits and tribals were also under threat and were being attacked and exploited in various parts of the country.

    The Constitution was one of the best weapons to fight against caste discrimination and religious hatred and therefore, it should be protected against the attacks on it and the values upheld by it.

    He further alleged the Constitution was under threat from those duty-bound to protect it.

    Those who take oath on the Constitution were airing dangerous views that were contrary to it.

    Vijayan said even persons in the highest Constitutional positions were making statements that could derail Constitutional principles.

    One example of the same, according to Vijayan, was the Indian Vice-President Jagdeep Dhankhar’s recent statement which in effect meant that the Supreme Court decision of 1973, upholding the ‘basic structure doctrine’, was not correct and that the Parliament was sovereign and Judiciary will not be allowed to encroach upon it.

    “It is the country which is sovereign and the Constitution ensures it,” he said.

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    #Kerala #accuses #Sangh #Parivar #treating #minorities #enemies #BJP #hits

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )