Tag: praise

  • Beau is long: in praise of the expanded movie runtime

    Beau is long: in praise of the expanded movie runtime

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    It might be tempting to call Ari Aster’s new movie Beau Is Afraid a therapy session. It clearly addresses the writer-director’s parental anxieties, allowing him to vent and visualize a series of dreams-turned-nightmares related to guilt, repression and inherited trauma. (It is an A24 sort-of horror movie, after all.) But ultimately, describing Beau as therapy would be inaccurate, or at least incomplete: therapy sessions are rarely this long.

    Including its end credits (which technically run over the lingering final scene of the film), Aster’s movie lasts for two hours and 59 minutes, a runtime that seems like the result of a contractual obligation, or possibly a bet. Someone must have told Aster his movie couldn’t go over three hours. For better or worse, Beau Is Afraid feels like the type of movie that, lacking that kind of specific limitation, could easily last forever.

    Beau is the latest in a parade of seat-stretching cinematic endeavors. Bloated running times, the conventional wisdom goes, are everywhere, and it’s easy enough to back up that assertion with numbers from across a variety of genres. The action sequel John Wick: Chapter 4 is 169 minutes long. Last year’s biggest worldwide hit, Avatar: The Way of Water, is 192 minutes; it was in theaters simultaneously with the Oscar hopeful Babylon, not far behind at 189 minutes. Indian sensation RRR, a surprise hit in the US, comes in at 187 minutes (though that one has a built-in intermission). Hell, Scream VI is the longest-ever installment in that series, albeit by just barely crossing the two-hour mark. Martin Scorsese made some headlines recently when a series of breathless reports kept us posted on the possible length of his next film, Killers of the Flower Moon. It turns out the movie will not be four hours long. It will, however, be three hours and 26 minutes long, nearly matching the supersized length of his previous project, The Irishman.

    Lily Gladstone and Leonardo DiCaprio sitting at a table with empty plates in front of them
    Lily Gladstone and Leonardo DiCaprio in Killers of the Flower Moon. Photograph: AP

    Are these expanded running times film-maker flexes, status symbols at a time when franchises get more attention than directors or stars? Or are the extra minutes just keeping pace with said franchises, which are under pressure to deliver eye-catching spectacles to justify their theatrical releases? Maybe it’s both of those things, locked in a battle of escalating hubris. Whatever the reasons, expanded running times are too often treated like a dangerous plague. This expansiveness, newfound or not, is actually fine. Let movies be long.

    Obviously, running time is as individualized as editing, acting or writing, all of which come together to create that decidedly non-magic number. There’s no particular time-based metric that determines a movie’s quality. But honestly, if you were to try correlating length with quality, movies that crest the 165-minute mark would be winning, at least recently. The fourth John Wick has room for several of the most stunning action sequences in recent memory to play out with extra grace notes and laugh-out-loud moments. The Avatar sequel has a similar sense of spectacle, and the extra time to really sink into its characters and world. Damien Chazelle’s Babylon may be long, but it sure isn’t slow, and uses its runtime to ricochet through an impressionistic fake history of cinema’s first few decades.

    Aster’s Beau Is Afraid is the most trying of this recent crop. It’s the kind of nightmarish extended journey into a film-maker’s psyche that would seem more appropriate after we’ve spent 9 or 10 movies getting to feel like we know the guy, rather than a handful of movies into a promising career. (Amazingly, Aster once thought it might serve as his feature debut.) Yet even this uneven and potentially self-indulgent movie takes advantage of its long sit. As the title character (Joaquin Phoenix) makes his way through passages of dark comedy, childhood memory and warped reality, it builds a whole world out the contents of Beau’s head, turning some potentially claustrophobic locations into psychological landscapes. The nagging panic that seems to take over viewers asked to sit still for longer than two hours is part of the movie’s strange, wandering momentum. All together, it’s an immersive experience – especially in Imax.

    “Immersive experience” is also a buzzword in the pop-art world, describing stand-alone exhibits that aim for something more interactive, Instagrammable, tactile experiences than a typical museum. Movies can’t really offer those qualities, not without fundamentally altering their DNA. But they can, to a certain extent, bend time to their will, in ways that will always be more dramatic than letting five hours of binge time fly by on the couch as you smash that “next episode” button. Of course, all of these long movies will ultimately be seen by plenty of people on their couches. But first they play in movie theaters, which is where an epic runtime becomes part of that dark, weird immersion – and where I went back for seconds of Wick, Avatar, Babylon and The Irishman, among other epic-length undertakings. There’s plenty of 160-minute tedium out there, but a good long movie offers a certain fullness of escape (and then lets you escape that experience back into the real world, whether you want to or not).

    Keanu Reeves with a gun behind a car
    Keanu Reeves in John Wick: Chapter Four. Photograph: Album/Alamy

    Searching for examples of how this immersion might have changed over the decades, I looked back to the box office charts for 20 years ago, did some quick calculations, and found that yes, the average running time for the top ten movies at the US box office in mid-April 2003 was about 100 minutes, shorter than the top ten’s average for the same time in 2023 by nearly 15 minutes (although the top ten for the same period in 2013 averaged 9 minutes longer than 2023, indicating how these fluctuations can be relatively arbitrary). 2003 was helped along by a number of sub-90-minute movies: The concise real-time thriller Phone Booth, yes, but also the forgotten Jamie Kennedy vehicle Malibu’s Most Wanted and the poorly reviewed romcom Chasing Papi. April 2003 also boasted beloved, under-two-hour classics such as, ah, What a Girl Wants and Bringing Down the House.

    Which brings to mind many of my most tedious recent movie-watching experiences – almost none of which were movies that got past 105 minutes. Cocaine Bear supposedly takes up just 95 minutes of your time, but I could have sworn I was in the screening room, trying and failing to have fun with its strained, self-conscious shock value, for at least two days. Renfield isn’t especially brisk at 93 minutes; rather, it feels as if it was hastily chopped up in a desperate attempt to pointlessly shave five or six minutes from its clock. And surely we’re all familiar with the pain of settling in for a Netflix comfort-watch like the romcom Your Place or Mine, and finding that it somehow feels relentlessly bloated or padded without ever crossing the two-hour Rubicon.

    This is all to say that of course there are virtues to snappy pacing, and of course there are instances where an 85-minute-and-change runtime is a great asset (two creature-feature thrillers, Crawl and The Shallows, come to mind). But Babylon, Avatar and Beau Is Afraid were never candidates for a tight 85. These are movies that want to do more – and won’t work for everybody, especially an intentionally off-putting head-trip like Beau. Don’t blame the minutes that pass by, the time that the film-makers supposedly steal from innocent moviegoers. Any runtime can be wasted; any given three hours can turn into a glorious reverie, an endless slog, or forgettable blip. There’s no need for constraints on the popular artistic medium that most closely resembles time travel.

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    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Saudi woman soldier carrying sleeping toddler during Sudan evacuation wins praise

    Saudi woman soldier carrying sleeping toddler during Sudan evacuation wins praise

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    Riyadh: In an image that represented the highest meanings of humanity and human cohesion, a Saudi woman soldier appeared embracing a sleeping boy after his arrival at King Faisal Naval Base in Jeddah as part of the evacuations from Sudan.

    An image circulated on social media showed a baby boy wearing a white and yellow shirt and shorts clinging to a Saudi Ministry of Defense soldier as she got off the ship.

    Arabic channel Saudi Al-Ekhbariya published the video clip and captioned on it by saying, “A female employee of the Ministry of Defense embraces a child the moment he arrives in Jeddah as part of the Saudi evacuation from Sudan.”

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    Watch the video below

    The soldier’s act of compassion has won praise from many social media users, who see the image as a representation of humanity and compassion at its best.

    The Kingdom has been working for days to evacuate citizens and nationals from Sudan, against the background of the battles taking place between the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and the Rapid Support Forces (RSF).

    On Wednesday, the Saudi Ministry of Foreign Affairs announced that it had succeeded in evacuating about 2,148 people from Sudan. Of them, 114 are Saudi citizens, and 2,034 are from 62 nationalities; To translate its humanitarian and influential role globally.

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    #Saudi #woman #soldier #carrying #sleeping #toddler #Sudan #evacuation #wins #praise

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Aamir Khan all praise for PM Narendra Modi’s Mann Ki Baat

    Aamir Khan all praise for PM Narendra Modi’s Mann Ki Baat

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    New Delhi: Terming “Mann Ki Baat” an example of a people’s movement, actor Aamir Khan on Wednesday said the monthly radio programme is an important piece of communication through which Prime Minister Narendra Modi has built a trusted relationship with citizens.

    Khan was in the national capital to attend the ‘National Conclave on Mann Ki Baat @100’, a daylong programme inaugurated by Vice President Jagdeep Dhankhar with Union Minister for Information and Broadcasting Anurag Thakur as the guest of honour.

    “People want to believe in him (Modi) and follow him. They trust him and he has built this relationship with the public. Trust does not come automatically, it has to be earned. And clearly he has earned it,” Khan said at a panel discussion called “Awahan Se Jan Andolan”.

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    He said Modi is invested in the “Mann Ki Baat” programme at a personal level.

    The 100th episode of the prime minister’s monthly radio programme is scheduled to be broadcast on April 30. Modi started the monthly radio programme after becoming prime minister in 2014.

    “It’s a very important piece of communication that the leader of the country does with the people, discussing important issues, putting forward thoughts, giving suggestions, leading…

    “That is how you lead by communication. You tell your people what you’re looking at, how you’re seeing the future, how you want your support in that. (It’s an) important communication that happens in ‘Mann Ki Baat’,” Khan told PTI on the sidelines of the event.

    Asked if Modi only talks about his “mann ki baat” (what he wants to talk about) in the radio programme, the Bollywood star said, “I think it’s his prerogative because he’s doing it… It is his method of hearing what the people have to say connecting with people across the country. I think it’s a very important initiative.”

    During the panel discussion, the 58-year-old actor said the programme is “one of the examples of a people’s movement, which has been successfully spearheaded by the prime minister”.

    “… he has conducted himself with so much success that he has the support of the people. It is because he has tried to connect with people. I believe this effort is quite significant and important for any society in the world.

    “It is very important for a leader to communicate and take people into confidence about what he is planning so that the people also know how they should conduct themselves. They get a vision, they get a direction to follow. And that is something which is a huge concept and is actually the start of a huge people’s movement.”

    Being able to communicate and present thoughts in front of the public is a fundamental requirement from any leader, he added.

    “If you’re not able to talk with your citizens who have elected you, then how will you understand them and they understand your ‘mann ki baat’ and what you’re thinking,” he said.

    The prime minister, Khan said, touched on various topics, be it citizen issues or economics, in the monthly radio programme.

    “When we think of an idea for the country, a whole campaign is built around it. Like the polio campaign, it was such a big campaign and it had Amitji (Amitabh Bachchan) in it… But here (‘Mann Ki Baat’), the PM just had to speak about an issue.

    “There was no need for a campaign around it. He has such a big reach and plus, he is talking about it himself. He doesn’t need anyone to do it for him,” he added.

    He referred to his talk show “Satyamev Jayate”, which ran for three seasons from 2012 to 2014.

    “I had the same experience when I was doing ‘Satyamev Jayate’ because it was a similar kind of a programme. We were talking about issues and I was meeting people from all over the country and interacting with them. So, that was a time that I experienced it a little more which is similar to this more than my filmmaking,” he said.

    In his message to listeners of “Mann Ki Baat”, Khan said he just wanted to send his love to them.

    “We are all on a unique journey and we should all be connected like this,” he said.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Senators praise Feinstein’s decision to step down from Judiciary Committee

    Senators praise Feinstein’s decision to step down from Judiciary Committee

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    “Dianne will get better. She will come back to work. And she’s already told Senator Schumer … that he can replace her on the judiciary committee if it’s urgent for these hearings for judges,” Gillibrand said, referencing Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, during an interview on CNN’s “State of the Union.”

    “She’s a team player, and she’s an extraordinary member of the Senate,” Gillibrand said. “It’s her right. She’s been voted by her state to be senator for six years. She has the right, in my opinion, to decide when she steps down.”

    Sens. Tammy Baldwin (D-Wis.) and Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) also praised Feinstein’s decision to step down from the committee and supported her decision to remain in the Senate.

    “I wish her well. I hope she returns to the Senate very soon,” Baldwin said on NBC’s “Meet the Press.”

    And Feinstein’s colleagues should “take her at her word,” that she intends to return to the office, Klobuchar said.

    “I think she made the right decision to step off the Judiciary Committee. I serve on that committee, and we cannot advance judges or legislation with a missing person because of the close vote,” Klobuchar said on ABC’s “This Week.”

    But if her absence continues for an extended length, “then she’s going to have to make a decision with her family and her friends about what her future holds,” Klobuchar said. “Because this isn’t just about California, it’s also about the nation. And we just can’t — with this one vote margin — and expect every other person to be there every single time.”

    Democrats will need Feinstein’s vote, Klobuchar said, especially as Congress readies itself for a debt-ceiling standoff.

    Feinstein, who was first elected in 1992, has already said she will not seek another term in 2024.

    Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.) called for Feinstein to step down last week, as Senate Democrats face an ongoing struggle to confirm President Joe Biden’s judicial picks without her vote.

    Khanna doubled down on his call for Feinstein to step down immediately during an interview on “Fox News Sunday.”

    “Only in Washington would you get criticized for saying something so obvious,” he said to host Shannon Bream. “I have a lot of respect for Senator Feinstein, but she’s missed 75 percent of votes at this year. She has not been showing up and she has no intention. We don’t know if she’s even going to show up. She has no return date.”

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    #Senators #praise #Feinsteins #decision #step #Judiciary #Committee
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Deepika slaying with her new tattoo, fans praise her beauty

    Deepika slaying with her new tattoo, fans praise her beauty

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    Hyderabad: In addition to being a gifted actress, Deepika Padukone also serves as a major source of inspiration for millions of people all over the world. Her beauty line, 82°E, is proof of her unwavering dedication to skin care. She has been a trailblazer in promoting mental, physical, and emotional well-being.

    The Bollywood diva’s vintage Hollywood glamour look at the 95th Academy Awards lit up the red carpet. She resembled Audrey Hepburn of today in her off-the-shoulder black Louis Vuitton gown, sparkling diamond jewelry, and sleek hairstyle. On the other hand, everyone was taken away by her new neck tattoo, which read 82°E. It was a lovely dedication to her company’s line of high-end, high-performance self-care products, which make using them simple, efficient, and enjoyable on a daily basis.

    The beauty industry has been forever changed by Deepika Padukone’s success as an entrepreneur. Her brand is a movement that encourages people to embrace their true selves and make self-care a priority in their daily lives, not just a business venture. Millions of people follow her because of her commitment to this cause, which has motivated them to live healthier, happier lives.

    The actress’s tattoo collection is a reflection of her creative soul and her profound understanding of the human journey. She has a lotus tattoo on her ankle and a, which stand for spiritual enlightenment, self-improvement, and the beauty of nature. She is expressing her personality and her love of life through these tattoos, which are more than just body art.

    The life of Deepika Padukone is a testament to the strength of determination, hard work, and self-belief. She has repeatedly shown that success is a result of having the right attitude and mindset in addition to having the necessary talent. She has inspired millions of people all over the world to follow their dreams and live their best lives.



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    #Deepika #slaying #tattoo #fans #praise #beauty

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • High praise for Telangana from Foxconn chairman at T-Works launch

    High praise for Telangana from Foxconn chairman at T-Works launch

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    Hyderabad: Hon Hai Technology Group (Foxconn) chairman Young Liu in the presence of Telangana IT minister KT Rama Rao, inaugurated T-Works, which is India’s largest prototyping centre on Thursday.

    Speaking on the occasion, the Foxconn chairman said that he was very impressed by the speed of things in Telangana. “I think it’s very likely that with Telangana, within four years we will double the revenue of Foxconn, it will be possible with the speed of Telangana,” he added.

    KTR said that with the partnership of Hon Hai Technology Group (Foxconn), Hyderabad can be made into the ‘Shenzhen’ of India.

    Shenzhen, a city in southern China, is one of the world’s billionaire capitals. Several of China’s wealthiest people live in the city, many of whom built massive tech enterprises.

    KTR further said that Taiwan as a country ‘amazes’ him. “A small country of 23 million people but almost a 750 billion GDP,” he added.

    The minister had announced that Foxconn is going to ‘mega’ invest in the state which will lead to the creation of one lakh jobs.

    “Foxconn is a company with a 205 billion dollar turnover and is in the top 20 in Fortune 500 companies list. Creating a million jobs, kudos to the team of Foxconn for making this magic happen. What you have done in Shenzhen and in China, let’s do that in Hyderabad and make Hyderabad the Shenzhen of India,” said the minister.

    KTR went on to say that India and Taiwan together can synthesize beautfiul things for the world. “IT is not Information Technology, IT, in my mind is India and Taiwan. India is the powerhouse of software, and Taiwan is doing wonders in hardware,” he said.

    The IT minister said that T-works was the idea of Sujai Karampuri, the CEO of T-works, and said that “Sujai has made it happen with the support of principal secretary Jayesh, my team, and the T-works team. My compliments to the entire family of T-works, they have done a truly terrific job”.

    The 78000 sq. ft. prototyping centre, located at Raidurg IT corridor, is said to have cutting-edge facilities and equipment to support innovation and prototyping.

    The new prototyping facility is set to encourage design thinking in the hardware field. The facility houses machinery and capabilities to carry out metalworking, woodworking, 3D printing, electronics test and assembly, environmental testing, laser cutting and engraving, and ceramics.

    “We are organising T-works, T-hub, and Image Tower in a facility that sprawls about 18 acres in the Raidurg IT corridor” said KTR on Wednesday talking about T-works.

    He said that more than Rs 110 crores were used to organise 200 state-of-the-art machinery in the newly inaugurated facility.

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    #High #praise #Telangana #Foxconn #chairman #TWorks #launch

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • In praise of the ‘15-minute city’ – the mundane planning theory terrifying conspiracists | Oliver Wainwright

    In praise of the ‘15-minute city’ – the mundane planning theory terrifying conspiracists | Oliver Wainwright

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    There’s an international socialist conspiracy afoot, and it wants to make it easier to walk to the shops. Fringe forces of the far left are plotting to take away our freedom to be stuck in traffic jams, to crawl along clogged ring roads and trawl the streets in search of a parking spot. The liberty of the rush-hour commute, the sanctity of the out-of-town shopping centre and the righteousness of the suburban food desert is under threat as never before. The name of this chilling global movement? The “15-minute city”.

    Westminster can often seem like a badly scripted spoof of itself, but rarely has parliament descended into parody as far as it did last week, when the Conservative MP for the South Yorkshire constituency of Don Valley, Nick Fletcher, launched a plucky tirade against the concept of convenient, walkable neighbourhoods. “Will the leader of the house please set aside time for a debate on the international socialist concept of so-called 15-minute cities and 20-minute neighbourhoods?” he asked, in an ominous tone. “Sheffield is already on this journey, and I do not want Doncaster, which also has a Labour-run socialist council, to do the same.”

    It is not the first time that an online conspiracy theory has made it into the Commons chamber, but it may be one of the most surreal. Simply put, the 15-minute city principle suggests you should have your daily needs – work, food, healthcare, education, culture and leisure – within a 15-minute walk or bike ride from where you live. It sounds pleasant enough, but in the minds of libertarian fanatics and the bedroom commentators of TikTok, it represents an unprecedented assault on personal freedoms.

    “Creepy local authority bureaucrats would like to see your entire existence boiled down to the duration of a quarter of an hour,” warned a furious presenter on GB News last week, as if describing a plot line from Nineteen Eighty-Four. The 15-minute city, he suggested, was a “dystopian plan”, heralding “a surveillance culture that would make Pyongyang envious”.

    Never before has a mundane theory of urbanism been such a lightning rod for outrage. It’s like suggesting that public parks are part of a sinister plant-worshipping plot to demolish our homes and replace them with grass. Or that public transport is the work of a satanic bus cult. Some online forums have claimed that the 15-minute city represents the first step towards an inevitable Hunger Games society, in which residents will not be allowed to leave their prescribed areas. They see it not as a route to a low-traffic, low-carbon future, but as the beginning of a slippery slope to living in an open-air prison.

    As one irate TikToker shrieked, while jumping around his room in disbelief: “You’re going to have to apply for a fucking permit to leave your zone!” (Although he also ascribed the 15-minute city plans to the Tories, so it’s not quite clear which deranged Reddit forum he got his information from).

    A protester at a demonstration against 15-minute cities, London, 10 December 2022.
    A protester at a demonstration against 15-minute cities, London, 10 December 2022. Photograph: Martin Pope/SOPA Images/REX/Shutterstock

    There are lots of good reasons to interrogate the cute logic of the 15-minute city – could it actually lead to further social segregation? Would wealthy residents, and their money, remain in the prosperous enclaves? Who is providing the services and where do they live? – but the threat of our rights being curtailed by travel permits isn’t one of them.

    The conspiracy theory pot was given a powerful stir in December, when the Canadian rightwing culture warrior Jordan Peterson decided to get involved. “The idea that neighbourhoods should be walkable is lovely,” he tweeted, in a post that has since clocked up 7.5m views. “The idea that idiot tyrannical bureaucrats can decide by fiat where you’re ‘allowed’ to drive is perhaps the worst imaginable perversion of that idea,” he continued, “and, make no mistake, it’s part of a well-documented plan.” Peterson quoted a tweet that featured the telltale hashtag #GreatReset, referring to the World Economic Forum’s post-pandemic economic recovery plan – widely used in the stranger corners of the internet as a byword for a shadowy global conspiracy intent on robbing us of our freedoms. The anti-vaccine, pro-Brexit, climate-denying, 15-minute-phobe, Great Reset axis is a strong one.

    So where did the fear come from? Many of the UK conspiracy theorists highlight that these “un-British” ideas of urban walkability emanate from France, so they must be distrusted on principle. Worse than that, they point out, the ideology has been driven by a bearded Colombian scientist with radical roots. The ideas had been around since the 1920s, but the 15-minute city phrase was coined by Carlos Moreno, esteemed professor at the Panthéon-Sorbonne in Paris, who was once a member of a leftwing guerrilla group in the 1970s. And now he’s coming for your cars.

    “Their lies are enormous,” Moreno said in a recent interview , describing some of the claims made by his critics. “You will be locked in your neighbourhood; cameras will signal who can go out; if your mother lives in another neighbourhood, you will have to ask for permission to see her, and so on,” adding that they “sometimes post pictures of concentration camps.”

    Moreno first promoted his concept of la ville du quart d’heure in 2016, but it gained international attention when the mayor of Paris, Anne Hidalgo, adopted it as part of her re-election campaign in 2020. She promised she would close off roads and turn them into public plazas, plant more trees and turn schools into the “capitals of the neighbourhood”, open to everyone for sports and recreation in evenings and at weekends.

    The pandemic proved to be a powerful trial for how a 15-minute city might work in practice, and led to bodies such as UN Habitat, the World Economic Forum, the C40 Global Cities Climate Network and the Federation of United Local Governments championing the cause – which also helped to boost unhinged fantasies that it is all part of a grand global scheme of totalitarian oppression.

    More recently, the principles have gained traction in the UK, with Oxford, Birmingham, Bristol, Canterbury and Sheffield councils considering 15-minute city ideas. Cue outrage from those with no other cause left to flog. “The climate change lockdowns are coming,” tweeted Nigel Farage, in response to Canterbury’s innocuous traffic filtering scheme, while Oxford’s plans triggered similar ripples of incredulous fury.

    “Oxfordshire County Council yesterday approved plans to lock residents into one of six zones to ‘save the planet’ from global warming,” screamed one alarmist headline. “The latest stage in the ‘15-minute city’ agenda is to place electronic gates on key roads in and out of the city, confining residents to their own neighbourhoods.” The claims had zero basis in fact, but they poured further fuel on the fire of those battling low-traffic neighbourhoods, and their fellow band of assorted culture warriors.

    It seems fitting that a leaflet drop warning against Oxford’s traffic filters plan was organised by Not Our Future – a new pressure group led by none other than Fred and Richard Fairbrass of 1990s band turned anti-vaxxers Right Said Fred. Too sexy for their car? Maybe they could try cycling to the shops instead.

    • Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.



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    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • BJP leaders praise BBC when it suits them: Owaisi on IT raids

    BJP leaders praise BBC when it suits them: Owaisi on IT raids

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    Hyderabad: AIMIM president Asaduddin Owaisi on Wednesday attacked the central government over the I-T department’s survey operation at BBC offices, saying when it suited the BJP during the Emergency period (1975-77) their leaders used to praise the foreign broadcaster.

    He stressed that the freedom of press was very important for a functional democracy, while concurring with the statement issued by the Editors Guild of India, condemning the raids.

    The AIMIM chief expressed hope that BBC will not be pressurised and will continue to tell the truth.

    “When it suited the BJP during Emergency period, their leaders used to praise the BBC. I am sure that the BBC will continue to tell the truth to the people. The timing is absolutely wrong and that is why the Editors Guild issued a right statement condemning the raids,” the Hyderabad MP told reporters here reacting to queries on the I-T survey against BBC India.

    The Income Tax department survey against BBC India continued for the second day today with sleuths understood to be making copies of electronic and paper-based financial data of the organisation.

    The tax department had launched surveys on Tuesday at the Delhi and Mumbai offices of the media house along with at least two linked premises as part of a probe into alleged tax evasion against the British broadcaster in India.

    The action comes weeks after the broadcaster aired a two-part documentary, “India: The Modi Question”.

    Reacting to another query on Centre’s decision to appoint retired Supreme Court judge S Abdul Nazeer, who was part of the 2019 Ayodhya verdict, as Governor of Andhra Pradesh, Owaisi said there is no constitutional bar on appointing anyone to the honourable post of Governor, but wondered why the retired judge accepted the post.

    “Now if some doubts arise in the minds of common people that the biggest litigant in this country is the government. Now, after your retirement, you are given a post by the same government, who is the biggest litigant and you were presiding over that litigation… so, some doubts might arise in the mind of a common man. I don’t know whether those doubts are genuine or not,” he said.

    “So, these doubts should not have arisen and this will lead to so many questions in future. I don’t know why the honourable retired judge has accepted this post because as a judge he was allotted a house and every facility. It is for the BJP to answer this question.”

    Justice (retired) Nazeer was part of the five-judge Constitution bench which had in November 2019 cleared the way for the construction of a Ram temple at the disputed site in Ayodhya (Uttar Pradesh) and directed the Centre to allot a five-acre plot to the Sunni Waqf Board for a mosque in a different location.

    Owaisi also welcomed the top court’s appointment of its former judge Justice L Nageswara Rao to oversee the upcoming elections of the office bearers of the Hyderabad Cricket Association (HCA).

    “It is a good thing. HCA elections should be held at the earliest. If elections are held genuinely, meritorious young cricketers of Hyderabad who are performing well will get opportunities,” he added.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Turkish chef Salt Bae comes to aid earthquake survivors, earns praise

    Turkish chef Salt Bae comes to aid earthquake survivors, earns praise

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    Salt Bae, the popular chef and social media personality, has made headlines for his philanthropic efforts following a devastating earthquake in Turkey. Seeing the suffering of the earthquake survivors, Gokce decided to arrange a mobile kitchen that could serve 5,000 people a day.

    The video of the mobile kitchen with his name on the side packing up and heading out from a warehouse quickly went viral. However, some people criticized Salt Bae for posting close-up and slow-motion shots of the kitchen, suggesting it was a publicity stunt. Nonetheless, most people applauded his efforts and praised him for his charitable work.

    Upon arriving in the disaster zone, Salt Bae and his team of chefs worked tirelessly to prepare bulk meals in large cauldrons and containers. The survivors lined up in the freezing cold outside the lorry, eagerly waiting to receive their hot meals. Salt Bae and his team served meals to people of all ages, spreading hope and kindness during a time of darkness.

    Despite the mixed reactions on social media, Salt Bae’s efforts have been celebrated by many people who have been inspired by his charitable work.

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    #Turkish #chef #Salt #Bae #aid #earthquake #survivors #earns #praise

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Turkey: Chef Salt Bae comes to aid earthquake survivors, earns praise

    Turkey: Chef Salt Bae comes to aid earthquake survivors, earns praise

    [ad_1]

    Salt Bae, the popular chef and social media personality, has made headlines for his philanthropic efforts following a devastating earthquake in Turkey. Seeing the suffering of the earthquake survivors, Gokce decided to arrange a mobile kitchen that could serve 5,000 people a day.

    The video of the mobile kitchen with his name on the side packing up and heading out from a warehouse quickly went viral. However, some people criticized Salt Bae for posting close-up and slow-motion shots of the kitchen, suggesting it was a publicity stunt. Nonetheless, most people applauded his efforts and praised him for his charitable work.

    Upon arriving in the disaster zone, Salt Bae and his team of chefs worked tirelessly to prepare bulk meals in large cauldrons and containers. The survivors lined up in the freezing cold outside the lorry, eagerly waiting to receive their hot meals. Salt Bae and his team served meals to people of all ages, spreading hope and kindness during a time of darkness.

    Despite the mixed reactions on social media, Salt Bae’s efforts have been celebrated by many people who have been inspired by his charitable work.

    Subscribe us on The Siasat Daily - Google News

    [ad_2]
    #Turkey #Chef #Salt #Bae #aid #earthquake #survivors #earns #praise

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )