Tag: portrait

  • A new portrait of American teenagers in crisis

    A new portrait of American teenagers in crisis

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    Broadly, the national survey, which is conducted biennially, revealed two important shifts in high school student demographics: Just over 49 percent of respondents identified as being part of a racial or ethnic minority group, compared to 48.9 percent in 2019 and 46.5 percent in 2017, and about 25 percent of students identified as LGBQ+, compared to just over 11 percent of students who identified as lesbian, gay or bisexual in 2019 and 10.4 percent in 2017.

    Researchers also asked students several questions for the first time, including how much their parents or adults at home knew about their whereabouts, how connected they felt to people at school, the stability of their housing situation, their exposure to violence outside the home and their mental health during the pandemic.

    While the number of male students who said they had considered, planned or attempted suicide was stable between 2019 and 2021, females reported a significant increase in all three, with 30 percent having seriously considered suicide in the last year, 24 percent having made a suicide plan, and 13.3 percent having attempted suicide.

    Black female students were more likely than white female students to report having attempted suicide, and American Indian/Alaska Native and Black male students were more likely to report having attempted suicide than white male students.

    Students also reported higher rates of sexual violence and higher rates of having been forced into sex at some point in their life, with female students experiencing overall higher rates of interpersonal violence than their male counterparts.

    Just under 3 percent of students said they had recently experienced unstable housing, with Native Hawaiian and other Pacific Islander, American Indian or Alaska Native, Black and LGBQ+ students more likely to report housing insecurity than their peers.

    Though the number is relatively small, those students were dramatically more vulnerable. Kids experiencing housing insecurity were three times more likely to have used illegal drugs and 19 times more likely to have injected drugs in the last month. They were also significantly more likely to have experienced physical and sexual violence.

    Similarly, experiencing community violence had negative impacts on kids. Researchers found that for the 1 in 5 students who said they witnessed community violence, it was “consistently associated” with increased odds of “gun carrying, substance use, and suicide risk for both males and females and when comparing Black, White, and Hispanic students.”

    There were a few bright spots.

    The number of students who said they were currently using alcohol, marijuana or binge drinking was down from 2021, though about 1 in 3 still reported having used a substance in the previous 30-day period.

    In the first national assessment of parental monitoring, more than 86 percent of students said that their parents or other adults in their family “know where they are going or with whom they will be all or most of the time.” Students who said their parents knew where they were going, and with who, had fewer sexual risk behaviors, less substance use, less experiences with violence, less mental health challenges, and fewer suicide attempts.

    And 62 percent of kids said they felt “connected” to others at school, which also had positive impacts on their health, with a lower prevalence of poor mental health, prescription opioid misuse, experiencing forced sex, and missing school because of feeling unsafe.

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    #portrait #American #teenagers #crisis
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Prosecutors say newly aired Chansley footage paints misleading portrait of his Jan. 6 conduct

    Prosecutors say newly aired Chansley footage paints misleading portrait of his Jan. 6 conduct

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    capitol breach rioters claims 92661

    “Prior to that time, Chansley had, amongst other acts, breached a police line at 2:09 p.m. with the mob, entered the Capitol less than one minute behind Pezzola during the initial breach of the building, and faced off with members of the U.S. Capitol Police for more than thirty minutes in front of the Senate Chamber doors while elected officials, including the Vice President of the United States, were fleeing from the chamber,” they continued.

    The footage aired by Carlson earlier this month showed Chansley walking through Capitol hallways accompanied by police officers, who at some moments appeared to be facilitating his movements — even opening a Senate-wing door for him at one point — and certainly weren’t trying to subdue him. But the clips didn’t indicate what time of day the footage came from or any of the context about the interactions.

    Nevertheless, the episode — billed by Carlson as a refutation of the prevailing perception of the events of Jan. 6 — ignited a firestorm among allies of former President Donald Trump, who have long sought to downplay the Jan. 6 riot and the threat it posed to the transfer of power. Separately, Twitter’s owner, Elon Musk, came out in favor of freeing Chansley over the weekend. Chansley’s current attorney, William Shipley, has indicated he intends to take a “creative” action to aid his client’s legal fight.

    But Carlson omitted footage of Chansley’s entry into the Capitol, which came amid the earliest wave of rioters overrunning police, as well as footage from a lengthy standoff with police outside the Senate, and Chansley’s own trip inside the Senate chamber, where he stood on the Senate dais, recited a prayer and wrote an ominous message to then-Vice President Mike Pence: “It’s only a matter of time. Justice is coming.”

    “In sum, Chansley was not some passive, chaperoned observer of events for the roughly hour that he was unlawfully inside the Capitol,” prosecutors wrote.

    Prosecutors emphasized that U.S. Capitol Police officers had been overwhelmed at that point in the riot, resorting to triage to minimize the damage of the riot.

    “For a period that afternoon, those defending the Capitol were in triage mode — trying to deal with the most violent element of those unlawfully present, holding those portions of the Capitol that had not yet been seized by rioters, and protecting those Members and staffers who were still trapped in the Capitol,” prosecutors wrote.

    Chansley’s defenders have noted that he garnered outsize attention for his role in the riot, in part by his outlandish attire — he strode shirtless through the Capitol, wearing a horned helmet and full face paint, while carrying a flagpole with a sharp finial that led the judge in his case to conclude he was carrying a dangerous weapon.

    Chansley is not accused of violence and has contended that he had positive interactions with officers inside the Capitol and encouraged other rioters not to loot the building. He became one of the earliest rioters to plead guilty to obstruction after about eight months in pretrial detention — which was ordered by a magistrate judge in Arizona and upheld by D.C.-based U.S. District Court Judge Royce Lamberth. Lamberth sentenced him to 41 months in prison in November 2021.

    Chansley is currently incarcerated and slated for release in July.

    Chansley’s allies say the footage aired by Carlson might have changed the case against him. In Sunday’s filing, however, the Justice Department contended that it had shipped all but 10 seconds of the footage to Chansley’s attorney by Sept. 24, 2021 — about three weeks after Chansley pleaded guilty but more than a month before his sentencing.

    Pezzola’s defense seized on the flap over the Carlson footage to urge the dismissal of the entire case against the Proud Boys, contending that it proved there had been prosecutorial misconduct and that the crowd inside the Capitol was nonviolent.

    “Once tethered to facts and reality, defendant Pezzola’s arguments quickly unravel,” the Justice Department wrote.

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    #Prosecutors #newly #aired #Chansley #footage #paints #misleading #portrait #Jan #conduct
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Video: Dubai’s Crown Prince son kiss portrait of UAE Prez on his birthday

    Video: Dubai’s Crown Prince son kiss portrait of UAE Prez on his birthday

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    Abu Dhabi: Of all the birthday wishes for the President of the United Arab Emirates (UAE) Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan one stands out as the most heart-warming – his grandson kissing his portrait.

    The Crown Prince of Dubai Sheikh Hamdan bin Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum shared an Instagram post of his son Rashid kissing the portrait of the president on his 62nd birthday on Saturday.

    Sheikh Hamdan is heard saying “Thank you” but for little Rashid, one tap wasn’t enough. He turned to the portrait and gave another kiss.

    This adorable video clip was widely shared on social media platforms and garnered over 238,046 likes.

    Watch the video below

    Sheikh Mohamed was born on March 11, 1961, in Al Ain, the third son of the founding father of the UAE, the late Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan.

    He played an active role in the development of the Emirate of Abu Dhabi for more than three decades which witnessed an accelerated economic and social transformation. He was elected as president in 2022 following the death of his father.

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    #Video #Dubais #Crown #Prince #son #kiss #portrait #UAE #Prez #birthday

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Probe into removal of Shivaji portrait from UP’s KMC University

    Probe into removal of Shivaji portrait from UP’s KMC University

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    Lucknow: Students of the Khwaja Moinuddin Chishti (KMC) Language University on Wednesday continued to demand the removal of the warden, who allegedly stopped them from celebrating Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj Jayanti on February 19 even as the university authorities formed a panel to probe the matter.

    The students on protest alleged that warden Azam Ansari forcibly removed Shivaji’s portrait from the hostel premises.

    Ansari’s plea was that the students had not sought permission from the competent authority and hence he was against such celebrations in the open space of the hostel.

    Deputy Chief Minister Brajesh Pathak took note of the incident and said in a tweet, “I have been told about it. Students have the right to celebrate it. We will look into it.”

    Meanwhile, vice chancellor Prof Narendra Bahadur Singh has set up a three-member inquiry committee which will submit its report to him within a week. He has also removed Ansari from wardenship for the time being.

    “We are probing the matter. For free and fair inquiry, Ansari has been relieved from warden’s responsibility till the pendency of the probe. The version of the students will be recorded and Ansari will also be given a chance to explain his point of view. We are not against celebrating the birth anniversary of our heroes,” the vice chancellor added.

    A video of the incident has also gone viral on social media in which students are seen preparing to celebrate Shivaji Jayanti by putting up his big portrait in the common area of a hostel.

    In the video, Ansari was purportedly seen asking students to get proper permission before organising such celebrations.

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    #Probe #removal #Shivaji #portrait #UPs #KMC #University

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Sonu Sood ‘at a loss for words’ as fan makes 87K-sq-ft portrait of actor

    Sonu Sood ‘at a loss for words’ as fan makes 87K-sq-ft portrait of actor

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    Mumbai: Bollywood actor and humanist Sonu Sood was pleasantly surprised after he got to know that an astounding 87,000 square feet portrait of him had been created in Kolhapur city of Maharashtra as a part of Republic Day celebrations.

    It took the artist and fan of the actor Vipul Shiripad Mirajkar a few days to make this astounding portrait at a public park, using over 7 tons of rangoli powder.

    Overwhelmed by the work of art, the actor said: “I am at loss for words and humbled for the love shown by people, I thank Vipul from Solapur who achieved this feet of setting a world record of biggest Rangoli of 87,000 sqare feet and I’m proud of him.”

    The rangoli is now attracting thousands of visitors every day. The work of the actor through his foundation Sood Charity Foundation started with helping migrants reach home during Covid lockdown and is now into multiple endeavours across fields like public health and education.

    On the Bollywood front, Sonu will next be seen in ‘Fateh’, which is inspired by real-life incidents and will feature high-octane action sequences.

    The action-thriller is helmed by Abhinandan Gupta, who earlier worked as an assistant director on films such as ‘Bajirao Mastani’ and ‘Shamshera’.

    After ‘Fateh’, he will begin work on another movie ‘Kisaan’.

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    #Sonu #Sood #loss #words #fan #87Ksqft #portrait #actor

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )