Tag: question

  • Sending F-16s ‘a question for a later time,’ national security adviser says

    Sending F-16s ‘a question for a later time,’ national security adviser says

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    russia ukraine war biden 81742

    Sullivan elaborated on the president’s comments Sunday, saying the United States is “taking a very hard look at what it is that Ukraine needs for the immediate phase of the war that we’re in.” Right now, those needs include “tanks, infantry fighting vehicles, armored personnel carriers, artillery, tactical air defense systems” Sullivan said — but not the advanced warplanes Ukraine has requested.

    “F-16s are a question for a later time,” Sullivan said during an interview on CNN’s “State of the Union.” “And that’s why President Biden said that, for now, he’s not moving forward with those.”

    When pressed by CNN’s Dana Bash about whether that means the U.S. ruling out sending F-16s later on, Sullivan reiterated Biden’s Friday comments.

    “What President Biden said is what goes across the administration. And he was very clear. He said: ‘I’m ruling them out for now.’”

    Rep. Michael McCaul (R-Texas) argued Sunday that the Biden administration shouldn’t wait, since Ukraine has “a window of time” to launch a successful counteroffensive that could soon close.

    “When we slow-walk and slow-pace this thing, it drags it out,” he said on ABC’s “This Week.”

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    #Sending #F16s #question #time #national #security #adviser
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Opinion | The Bigger Question Behind the Fox News Debacle

    Opinion | The Bigger Question Behind the Fox News Debacle

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    Why does this matter? Because — barring a powerful rebuttal from Fox — it means that Dominion has met a very high bar in defamation law. Because it’s in the public arena, Dominion has to prove that Fox knew they were airing lies, or “recklessly disregarded” the truth or falsehood of their reports.

    It’s tempting to celebrate a verdict against Fox; “reckless disregard” might as well be its slogan. But a blow to the loudest media voice on the right would come at a time, ironically, when other conservatives have launched a fundamental attack on the free press that hits directly on the issue of defamation. At risk is a 58-year-old Supreme Court case that is a powerful protection of First Amendment rights: New York Times v. Sullivan.

    In 1960, the NAACP took out a full-page fundraising ad in the New York Times, which criticized the Montgomery, Ala. police department’s treatment of protesters. The ad made a few minor factual errors — how many times Martin Luther King Jr. had been arrested, what songs the protestors sung. Montgomery County police commissioner L.B. Sullivan, who was not mentioned in the ad, sued the newspaper and won a judgment of $500,000 — the equivalent of nearly $5 million today. It was part of a wave of defamation suits brought across the South by public officials who were clearly intending to silence or bankrupt critics in and out of the press.

    It was against this background that a unanimous Supreme Court overturned the verdict in 1964. But it went much further. The case, Justice William Brennan wrote, had to be framed in the context of “a profound national commitment to the principle that debate on public issues should be uninhibited, robust, and wide open, and that it may well include vehement, caustic, and sometimes unpleasantly sharp attacks on government and public officials.”

    To protect that principle, the court set down a new standard: When it comes to public officials, they had to prove not just that a statement was false and injurious, but that it was made with “actual malice” — an inartful term that meant not “ill will,” but that it was published with willful knowledge that it was false or with “reckless disregard.” (An example: We got an anonymous tip that the governor was beating his children, so we broadcast it.) That standard was not enough for Justices Hugo Black, Arthur Goldberg, and William Douglas, who argued that the First Amendment protection was absolute and unconditional — even lies were protected. The court later expanded the media’s protection from defamation suits so that “public figures” meant pretty much anyone in the public eye, from celebrities to business executives.

    In recent years, New York Times v. Sullivan has gotten new scrutiny by powerful conservatives. In 2019, Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas argued for a reassessment, amid consideration of a libel lawsuit from a woman who accused Bill Cosby of sexual assault. In 2021, Justice Neil Gorsuch pointed to the radical change in the media landscape as a reason to reconsider the law: “What started in 1964 with a decision to tolerate the occasional falsehood to ensure robust reporting by a comparative handful of print and broadcast outlets, has evolved into an ironclad subsidy for the publication of falsehoods by means and on a scale previously unimaginable.”

    While these justices did not make an explicitly ideological or partisan point, Federal Appeals Judge Lawrence Silberman did. In a remarkably blunt dissent in 2021 where he called for overturning New York Times v. Sullivan, Silberman wrote:

    “Although the bias against the Republican Party — not just controversial individuals — is rather shocking today, this is not new; it is a long-term, secular trend going back at least to the ’70s. (I do not mean to defend or criticize the behavior of any particular politician). Two of the three most influential papers (at least historically), the New York Times and the Washington Post, are virtually Democratic Party broadsheets. And the news section of the Wall Street Journal leans in the same direction. The orientation of these three papers is followed by the Associated Press and most large papers across the country (such as the Los Angeles Times, Miami Herald, and Boston Globe). Nearly all television — network and cable — is a Democratic Party trumpet. Even the government-supported National Public Radio follows along.”

    The call for weakening New York Times v. Sullivan is also emanating from conservatives in the more explicitly political arena. Trump, no stranger to litigation on both sides of the defamation issue, has argued for its overturn. It’s also now part of Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ nascent presidential campaign. In a roundtable discussion earlier this month, DeSantis said the ruling served as a shield to protect publications that “smear” officials and candidates. Indeed, the governor has gone further. A bill he proposed that has now been refiled in the Florida legislature would leave the press wide open to lawsuits, including by stating that comments made by anonymous sources would be presumed false in defamation suits.

    In other words, if Woodward and Bernstein did not identify “Deep Throat,” or their countless other anonymous sources in Watergate reporting, their stories would have been presumed false under this bill. It would make the effective end of whistleblowers as a tool of investigative reporting. The bill’s sponsor told POLITICO it was also explicitly intended to spur a legal challenge to New York Times v. Sullivan¸ with the goal of overturning it.

    None of this is to say that Fox News should escape judgment if its defense team cannot rebut the damaging evidence that is now on the record. But it doesn’t eliminate the need for great caution about the protection the Supreme Court gave the press nearly 60 years ago. In New York Times v. Sullivan, the court took away from public figures the power to bankrupt or intimidate their critics with a storm of litigation. We cannot put that power back in the hands of the powerful again.

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    #Opinion #Bigger #Question #Fox #News #Debacle
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Bengal: English question paper appears on social media; state board rules out leak

    Bengal: English question paper appears on social media; state board rules out leak

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    Kolkata: Purported image of a few pages of the English second language question paper was circulated on social media, sometime after the class 10 state board examinations began in West Bengal on Friday, the second day of the exams.

    The image of the question paper was uploaded on WhatsApp from an exam centre in Malda district, Education Minister Bratya Basu said.

    West Bengal Board of Secondary Education (WBBSE) President Ramanuj Ganguly said it cannot be termed a leak as only three of the 16 pages of the question paper were circulated on WhatsApp one and a half hours after the three-hour-long exam started at 12 noon.

    “How can it be called a leak? The candidates were inside the exam centres and the exams were already in progress. You can describe it as an attempt by someone to sabotage the smooth conduct of the examination process. The board will not treat the issue lightly,” he said when contacted by PTI.

    Ganguly, who is touring exam centres in various districts since Friday, said the board has requested the state administration to trace the origin of this WhatsApp post which was later forwarded many times.

    “The image of the question paper was circulated from an exam centre in Malda district. As stated by the Board president, I also think it is an act of sabotage. The board President will probably submit a report by tomorrow,” the education minister told reporters on the sidelines of an event.

    A guardian of an examinee in a north Kolkata school, who got the image on her WhatsApp number, said it was forwarded from one of her acquaintances in Murshidabad district.

    Altogether 6,98,627 candidates are writing papers in 2,867 centres in the Madhyamik Examination conducted by the WBBSE. The exams began on February 23 and will continue till March 4.

    In 2022, a purported image of the English question paper similarly surfaced on social media but the Board had said it was fake with no resemblance to the original one.

    In past editions of the Madhyamik exams between 2017 and 2019, there had been similar instances when images of purported question papers of English, Physical Science and other subjects circulated on social media after the start of the exams. However, each time they did not tally with the original.

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    #Bengal #English #question #paper #appears #social #media #state #board #rules #leak

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • K V Sangathan attempted question paper of various Posts

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    K V Sangathan attempted question paper of various Posts

    Dated: 22-2-23

    For attempted question paper of various Posts click link below:

    Click here for download attempted question paper of candidates for the post of PRT (Music) – 2022 in KVS. – Details – 20/02/2023 – 

    Click here for download attempted question paper of candidates for the post of Assistant Commissioner, Principal & Vice Principal – 2022 in KVS. – Details – 20/02/2023

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    [ad_2] #Sangathan #attempted #question #paper #Posts( With inputs from : The News Caravan.com )

  • ‘Vulgur content’: Internet slams Pak university over incest question

    ‘Vulgur content’: Internet slams Pak university over incest question

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    A professor was fired and blacklisted by Islamabad-based COMSATS University after he set a question regarding incest in an examination of Bachelor of Electrical Engineering (BEE) students in December last year.

    The question asked students to write an essay about a particular passage involving an incestuous relationship between siblings Julie and Mark.

    “Julie and Mark are brother and sister. They are traveling together in France on summer vacation from college,” reads the question.

    “One night they are staying alone in a cabin near the beach. They decided that it would be interesting and fun if they tried making love. At the very least, it would be a new experience for each of them,” it read.

    “Julie is on birth control while Mark uses a condom and they both enjoyed being intimate together although they vowed never to do it again,” the passage concludes.

    Students were asked to share their views about the scenario and if it was fine for Julie and Mark to “make love”. They were also asked to give reasons and “include some relevant examples”.

    A screenshot of the question paper was shared on the social media platform Twitter raising concerns and condemnation. Many, including celebrities and student bodies, termed it as ‘vulgar content’ and demanded the chancellor, as well as the vice-chancellor, be questioned.

    The professor has been identified as Khair ul Bashar, according to New York Post.

    The university has released a statement regarding the issue stating, “The content of the quiz is highly objectionable and totally against the curriculum laws of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan and caused unrest amongst the families of the students.”



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    #Vulgur #content #Internet #slams #Pak #university #incest #question

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • The West Is Avoiding the Big Question About Ukraine

    The West Is Avoiding the Big Question About Ukraine

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    biden us ukraine 04498

    In its time, the “Polish question” tore Europe apart. When the Poles started an uprising against Russia in 1830, after partitions had erased their country from the European map a generation before, Tsar Nicholas I laid out the choice: “Poland or Russia must now perish.” Free Poland and authoritarian Russia couldn’t coexist. Nicholas put down the Polish insurrection, consigning Russia — as the Russian writer Peter Chaadayev, who saw the uprising firsthand, wrote — to “her own enslavement, and the enslavement of all neighboring peoples.” A century later, Hitler started World War II to enslave his eastern neighbors; after Yalta, Stalin got Poland and the region as his prize.

    Poland became the cause célèbre in Western capitals the way Ukraine has become in the past year. In his “Sentimental Education,” Gustave Flaubert describes the feverish revolutionary mood in Paris inspired by the Polish January Uprising of 1863. He names the leaders of that failed insurrection who were executed by the Russians — among them, I should disclose, was a relative of mine. The Solidarity movement of the 1980s again stirred the Western imagination.

    The fall of the Berlin Wall didn’t settle for good the question of where the borders of freedom and autocracy are in Europe. Poland only came off the map as a prize to be fought for in 1999, when it joined NATO, and, five years later, the European Union. Those decisions stabilized Central Europe.

    Now, here we are with Ukraine. The similarities are bracing. Both the national anthems of Poland and Ukraine begin with the same line, that their nation “has not perished yet.” The Ukrainian question is shaping the Europe of the 21st century for the same reason the Polish one did: Its position in Europe, its future as a nation that desires freedom against the violent wishes of a tyrant next door, is at its heart what this conflict is about. The outcome, as the Polish experience shows, isn’t by any means certain.

    The Russia-Ukraine split

    The Ukrainian question didn’t emerge last year when Russian troops flooded over the Ukrainian borders. Nor when Vladimir Putin, breaking a taboo of the post-Cold War world ‘order’ (now coming with scare quotes), annexed Crimea in 2014 and pushed his proxies into the Donbas region of eastern Ukraine.

    You can better pinpoint its birth to the changing of the clock, and the century, on Dec. 31, 1999. On that day, the ailing Russian president, Boris Yeltsin, handed power over to his young and largely unknown prime minister, Vladimir Putin. In his near-decade at the Kremlin, Yeltsin had balanced reformers and revanchists. He had bad instincts, shelling the Russian parliament in 1993 and launching the Chechen war a year later, mixed with good. His Russia was on a slow, ugly and circuitous path toward the West. He made a critical call early on, overruling his deputy, Aleksandr Rutskoi, who pushed for military action to keep Ukraine within the Russian fold in 1991, the year the Soviet Union collapsed. He made peace with Ukraine over Crimea and struck up a close relationship with Bill Clinton. Putin was a sharp departure, the KGB Lieutenant Colonel as 21st-century Tsar. Early on, he suppressed his internal opponents. Then he turned his attention to recreating an empire.

    It was far less noticed that the rise of Putin coincided — and at first without any direct connection to what was happening in Russia — with the flowering of a civic democracy in the second largest and most important of the former Soviet republics. At that time, many Ukrainians spoke Russian not just fluently but as a first choice. But scratch off the Soviet veneer, and their political values were grounded in a culture and history of heroic opposition to oppressors going back to the 17th century. Through the worst years of official corruption and government dysfunction, the democratic impulse was the most vivid feature of its politics. The first free election was held in 1991, in which 90 percent backed independence. Voters bounced the first president of independent Ukraine, after a single term, in 1994. When the ruling party tried to subvert a free election in 2004, and Putin, for the first time, directly sought to impose his will on Ukraine, millions rose up in the Orange Revolution and secured their right to a free vote. They changed presidents in 2010, in 2014, and yet again, with Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s election, in 2019. Six freely elected presidents in three decades of independence. Only one incumbent won a second term. Ukraine is different: The other two Eastern Slavic states — Belarus and Russia — have had the same ruler this whole century.

    What’s Putin’s problem with Ukraine? It’s not NATO as such. The Kremlin shrugged when Finland — of Cold War-era Finlandization! — decided last year to join the alliance. It has little to do with Ukraine’s efforts to sign trading arrangements with the European Union that Putin forced a corrupt Ukrainian president in 2013 to tear up, sparking the protests on the Maidan. In reality, Ukraine’s outreach to NATO and the EU is just a manifestation of something far more unacceptable to an authoritarian Russia: That a democratic Ukraine would naturally seek alliances with other European democracies. Or really, since views on NATO were sharply split in Ukraine until last year’s invasion, that a democratic Ukraine could never be an ally or a vassal of an authoritarian Russia. The problem, at its heart, is Ukrainian democracy — and genuine independence.

    Free Ukraine is a rebuff to Putin’s repeated denial of its existence, as a country or people separate from Russia. But its existence presents an existential threat to a Russia ruled by a single man that sees itself as an empire. Regime survival is the top priority for any autocrat. If people who are such close cousins of Russians build a vibrant democracy that regularly chucks out leaders, someone like Putin rightly fears contagion. An independent Ukraine sets back Russia’s ambitions for control over this region.

    Now, many in the West would have preferred for the Ukrainians to slink on their way into Russia’s messy, authoritarian, pseudo-imperial world (Russkiy mir, as Putin calls it). The EU had trouble digesting the Central European countries and slow-walked their membership in the block. The West seems fine to abandon the Belarusians to Putin. But the Ukrainians never gave the West that option. Not only that, they’re showing it up, bleeding for values that, for generations, people in free countries haven’t had to fight for.

    Biden’s choices

    The U.S. and its allies have mobilized with speed to support the Ukrainians. The generosity and continued unity in Europe and America on Ukraine surely took Putin by surprise.

    But the “Ukrainian question” hangs out there, largely unanswered. The discussions in Washington, Berlin and Kyiv are consumed by what weapons to send or which extra sanctions to impose. Yes, on Javelins and eventually HIMARs, no for Patriots, then yes. The Ukrainians asked for Leopard and Abrams tanks, and after much drama, last month will receive them, though perhaps not in time for a Russian advance in the Donbas. Ukrainians want more, possibly F-16s and long-range rockets. Joe Biden says no, for now; maybe he’ll change his mind later.

    This incremental approach has some merits. American and European officials who are firm backers of Ukraine say this kind of “calibration” keeps the alliance together. It reflects the approach favored by Biden, who, above all, doesn’t want to suck America into a direct clash with Russia. Equally concerned supporters in the West, echoing Ukrainian anxieties, say the weapons are coming too slowly, that time is on Putin’s side. The Russian strongman won’t stop, they say, until he sees the West deliver overwhelming firepower to destroy, not just diminish, his military.

    This debate avoids the one thing that requires a clear answer: What outcome does the West want for Ukraine and, for that matter, Russia? We know how Ukrainians would wish this to end. Same goes for Putin, who can’t let them win. It’s the West that sometimes looks lost in the fog of war, lacking a vision for what victory looks like.

    There are plenty of good reasons for that. Look closer and divisions in the alliance become clearer. The North Americans, British, Poles and Balts are pushing hardest for Ukraine. These countries — most of which are members of NATO but not the EU — account for the bulk of the arms and economic sent to Ukraine. It’s the old Atlantic bloc, plus the “new Europeans.” The Continental powers (Germany, France, Italy) are less generous and more circumspect. As a share of its GDP, Germany gives roughly half what America has and a quarter of what Poland has last year in military aid to Ukraine. Hence the creative ambiguity in the alliance about where this is going.

    Ambiguity and risk-aversion with Putin’s Russia has a poor track record. At the 2008 NATO summit in Bucharest, Germany stopped the U.S. push to give Ukraine and Georgia an eventual path into the alliance, not wishing to offend Russia; Putin invaded Georgia four months later. In 2014, after Putin seized Crimea, President Barack Obama kept talking about “off ramps” for Putin and refused to send the Ukrainians even defensive weapons, so as not to provoke the Russian leader; Putin moved on from Crimea right past those “off ramps” into the Donbas. Before last year’s invasion, the U.S. and Europe were reluctant to spell out the costs to Putin. The pattern was familiar from the Bucharest meeting: The West has been better at deterring itself than at deterring Russia.

    These are hard decisions. The EU would be looking at many billions of euros in commitments to Ukraine. NATO would be looking to extend a formal security guarantee, possibly creating another Korea-style DMZ along Ukraine’s eastern frontier with Russia. Russia, and let’s not forget China, would be deterred from aggression elsewhere. Victory also means a Russia without Putin. “This man cannot remain in power,” Biden ad-libbed in Warsaw last March, before his cautious aides walked back this rare expression of clarity. The debate is moving, incrementally but clearly in that direction. The most famous realist of all, Henry Kissinger, now thinks Ukraine should be brought into NATO.

    Until the “Ukrainian question” of this century is answered, presumably with an unambiguous statement of ultimate objectives followed by determined action, it’s hard to imagine enduring peace in Europe. This path carries grave risks for Europe and its American patron, but the alternative may be more unappealing. As the physical scars of the Continent remind us to this day, the failure to address the Polish question left it in ruins in 1945 and divided until 1989. This is another key moment where the future of Europe will be decided.

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    #West #Avoiding #Big #Question #Ukraine
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Will consider the question of rehabilitation, says SC on night shelter demolition

    Will consider the question of rehabilitation, says SC on night shelter demolition

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    New Delhi: The Supreme Court on Wednesday said it will now have to examine the rehabilitation issue, after it was informed about the demolition carried out by authorities of a night shelter located at Delhi’s Sarai Kale Khan earlier in the day.

    Advocate Prashant Bhushan mentioned the matter before a bench of Justices Hrishikesh Roy and Dipankar Datta, saying that the night shelter, being availed of by over 50 people, has been demolished and that authorities carried out the demolition at 10 a.m.

    The bench said if the night shelter has been demolished, then it would have to examine the question of rehabilitation.

    Bhushan had mentioned the matter while the bench was in the middle of hearing a case. After the hearing of the case was over, Bhushan said that authorities have come there with bulldozers and the homeless matter is pending before this court, and this issue is about a night shelter for homeless people.

    He contended that without providing alternative accommodation, a night shelter is being demolished by the authorities. Bhushan said matter regarding homeless people is scheduled to be taken up by the court on February 22 and his application on the issue pertaining to demolition of night shelter at Sarai Kale Khan may be heard along with it.

    The bench told Bhushan it could hear the matter on February 22, and asked him to incorporate the subsequent developments in the matter.

    Recently, the Delhi Police had asked the Delhi Urban Shelter Improvement Board (DUSIB) to shift the Sarai Kale Khan night shelter before the scheduled G20 summit in September, in view of concerns that it is being used by criminals and miscreants.

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    #question #rehabilitation #night #shelter #demolition

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • The billion-dollar question: what will Adidas do with all those Yeezys?

    The billion-dollar question: what will Adidas do with all those Yeezys?

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    Melt them down and turn them into Crocs? Scrape off the label and hope no one notices?

    What Adidas should do with all its unsold Yeezys is a €1.2bn ($1.3bn, £1bn) question that no one seems to have a very good answer for. The brand is in danger after it cut ties with Kanye West in October over his antisemitic comments.

    The rapper, who now goes by Ye, was a huge profit driver for the company. A pair of his signature chunky rubber Yeezy 350 V2s went for about $220 (and was often resold for many times its retail price). Ye rescued Adidas, freshening up the brand’s image and allowing it to compete with heavy hitters like Nike’s Air Jordans. Following Ye’s series of pro-Nazi tirades, that image is a shambles, with Adidas shares plunging 10% last week after the company announced its potential loss of revenue.

    It’s also ignited an ethical dilemma. How does Adidas discard the items that caused a PR nightmare without triggering another outrage over waste? It’s the first major test of leadership for the company’s new CEO, Bjørn Gulden, who is fresh off a job at Puma.

    “The numbers speak for themselves. We are currently not performing the way we should,” Gulden, who started in January, said. “2023 will be a year of transition to set the base to again be a growing and profitable company.”

    man bends over and looks at sneakers
    Ye in Beverly Hills, 2015. Photograph: Valérie Macon/Getty Images

    Adidas drew widespread criticism last fall for taking over a week to sever the deal with Ye, after he said on a podcast: “I can say antisemitic things, and Adidas can’t drop me. Now what?”

    Experts say what the brand does with the sneakers could be a chance to make up for its perceived lack of action. “They cannot simply discard the shoes,” said Charcy Evers, a social impact and sustainability advocate. “Adidas could use this as an opportunity to set a new standard of practice by being 100% transparent and owning this unique predicament.”

    Evers said that the “common industry practice” for getting rid of excess stock was simply destroying it, but Coach, H&M and Urban Outfitters have been called out on such policies.

    What else can be done with such a unique-looking sneaker with a design unavoidably linked to Ye? Alden Wicker, a journalist who covers sustainable fashion, says the shoes should be recycled responsibly. The company has launched products that aim toward repurposing waste, such as the Adidas Terrex Futurecraft Loop anorak, made out of recycled ocean plastic. Wicker suggests that Adidas use the Yeezys to test new projects. “It would be the perfect source material for testing, especially since Adidas knows exactly what the material composition is, and that is crucial information for the recycling process,” she said.

    Shelton Boyd-Griffith, a contributing style editor at Essence, recommends a hybrid donation-recycling approach. “I think it would be great to repurpose the shoes to be used by other designers, or even in-house to create other shoes,” he said. The bases, or other non-identifying materials from the shoes, could be used in existing Adidas designs. “I know it’s very Frankenstein, but it could work.”

    The problem with this strategy is that the value of Yeezys is tied up in the branding rather than the raw materials. If they are simply used for other projects, it may be hard to recoup the majority of the investment. Also, the sheer amount of stock might make it hard to find enough alternative gear.

    One risky strategy could be to try to reclaim the narrative. If “transparency” is the true goal, some say Adidas should not shy away from tying the sneakers to Ye’s comments, or hiding its own brand history. (Though the founding of Adidas predates Nazi Germany, the two German brothers who started the company ended up playing active roles in the party, with one coaching Hitler youth sports).

    Rachel Weingarten, a brand strategist and founder of the non-profit RWR Network, which supports Holocaust survivors, thinks the brand should start a charity that allocates items to survivors of disasters. The Yeezy shoes could be the first products donated, with the idea of adding more for future events. “Adidas can set up a new collection that addresses their history and Kanye’s comments, and not shy away from that,” she said. “They can rename the collection in a way that shows they are allies, and not some tarnished brand.”

    Could Yeezys be branded as Holocaust memorial shoes? It’s a strategy bizarrely close to one delivered in an episode of Nathan Fielder’s parody business advice show Nathan for You. After discovering the jacket he’s been wearing on screen was made by a company that had proud links to Holocaust deniers, Fielder created his own line of jackets that he described as “the first outdoor apparel company to promote the true story of the Holocaust”.

    Weingarten says it’s not such a crazy idea, and that Adidas needs to do more than just release another statement standing against a blanket idea of hate. “There is so much Holocaust misinformation out there, history is being rewritten as we speak, and by not addressing it, many see Adidas as condoning it,” she said.

    woman crosses street
    Anna Winter wears Yeezy sandals in Berlin, 2021. Photograph: Jeremy Moeller/Getty Images

    It’s a near impossible line for Adidas to tread; one wrong move could be a PR disaster. One bellwether to consider is what people who already own lots of Yeezys are doing with their sneakers.

    Zeke Hannula is a San Francisco-based sneakerhead who owns about 80 pairs of Yeezys . He doubts that a recycling project on this scale could ever be sustainable, and he says that plenty of fans would buy the products if they ever hit shelves again. He think Yeezys aren’t really about Ye any more.

    “The vast majority of people who wear Yeezys don’t really care about Ye having anything to do with the sneakers,” Hannula said. “In the last few years, they’ve become really mainstream. You see parents wearing them because they’re comfortable.”

    Half of Hannula’s family is Jewish, and he was “really disappointed” by Ye’s bigoted comments. That hasn’t stopped him from wearing the sneakers himself. “I don’t feel like it’s a political statement to wear them – Yeezy’s are pretty nondescript, and not flashy, and most people don’t really notice them,” he said. “I know a lot of the designers behind the shoes, and I am sad for the people I know who worked at Yeezy, lost their jobs and don’t get to see their designs come out.”

    Anyone who wanted to get rid of their Yeezys after Ye’s comments could sell them – Hannula said he had not seen angry fans burning or destroying their shoes in protest, as some Dolce & Gabbana shoppers did after the Italian label weathered its own racism scandal in 2018. “I’ve seen some people make customs, or paint over the labels,” he said.

    That’s a move many sneaker collectors are trying out. On the resale site StockX, Yeezys continue to sell at pace – more than 200 pairs of bone-colored Yeezy slides have sold in the past three days, often for about three times as much as the original price ($60). Though expensive, it is significantly less than what the shoes would sell for before Adidas dumped Ye. And 150 of the shoes are listed as “below retail price” – meaning resellers are not making a profit.

    Hannula believes the easiest thing to do would be for Adidas to just sell the shoes, “but for a discount, and make no profit off of them. Just so they don’t have that massive stock. I think they are going to lose money no matter what.”



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    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Download Class 11th Question Paper Series C – Download PDF – Kashmir News

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    Download Class 11th Question Paper Series C

    Good news for the candidates who are preparing for the JKBOSE Class 11th annual regular Examination 2023. Download JKBOSE Class 11 previous year exam papers which are available in the PDF formats below in this article.

    Date sheets for conduct of annual/regular examinations for classes 10th, 11th and 12th

    JK Board 10th, 11th & 12th Exam Day Instructions

    1. Carry JKBOSE 10th, 11th Or 12th admit card, pen and other stationery to the exam hall.
    2. Reach the exam centre at least 30 minutes before the time mentioned on JKBOSE date sheet 2023 and check sitting arrangements.
    3. Do not carry any electronic gadgets like mobile phone, calculator, headphones, etc. to the exam hall as these are not allowed in the exam hall.
    4. As per JKBOSE date sheet, using chit or any other unfair means are unethical. If any candidate is found using unfair means then he/she can be disqualified in the exam.
    5. Solve the easy questions prior to the difficult questions.
    6. Spare 15 minutes in the last to revise your answer script.


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  • Download Class 11th Question Paper Series B- Download PDF Here – Kashmir News

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    Download Class 11th Question Paper Series B

    Good news for the candidates who are preparing for the JKBOSE Class 11th annual regular Examination 2023. Download JKBOSE Class 11 previous year exam papers which are available in the PDF formats below in this article.

    Date sheets for conduct of annual/regular examinations for classes 10th, 11th and 12th

    JK Board 10th, 11th & 12th Exam Day Instructions

    1. Carry JKBOSE 10th, 11th Or 12th admit card, pen and other stationery to the exam hall.
    2. Reach the exam centre at least 30 minutes before the time mentioned on JKBOSE date sheet 2023 and check sitting arrangements.
    3. Do not carry any electronic gadgets like mobile phone, calculator, headphones, etc. to the exam hall as these are not allowed in the exam hall.
    4. As per JKBOSE date sheet, using chit or any other unfair means are unethical. If any candidate is found using unfair means then he/she can be disqualified in the exam.
    5. Solve the easy questions prior to the difficult questions.
    6. Spare 15 minutes in the last to revise your answer script.


    Post Views: 64

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    #Download #Class #11th #Question #Paper #Series #Download #PDF #Kashmir #News

    ( With inputs from : kashmirnews.in )