Tag: stops

  • Biden stops the Dem bedwetting … for now

    Biden stops the Dem bedwetting … for now

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    It wasn’t only that the 80-year-old, gaffe-prone president had avoided any serious misstep. It was that Biden showed he was up for a fight and, frankly, had a few uppercuts left in him.

    “The energy of the speech, particularly the joyful jousting with the Republican hecklers, was a powerful rejoinder to those who question his mental acuity,” said David Axelrod, the former Barack Obama adviser, and someone not prone to hold back on Biden skepticism. “The speech,” he added, gave “Democrats a messaging road map.”

    For months, uneasiness among Democrats about the president had centered on fears that it would be much harder for him to run in 2024 against any younger, less objectionable Republican nominee than Donald Trump.

    But in his sparring with heckling House members Tuesday evening, Biden demonstrated that there was an entire constellation of Republicans beyond the former president whom he could turn into a foil. Doing so had long been the plan of Biden’s advisers, but watching it actually happen in front of one of his largest audiences in recent memory was a different dynamic entirely.

    “It doesn’t have to be Trump being the boorish rude jerk if the rest of them are doing the work for him,” said Matt Bennett, a co-founder of the center-left group Third Way.

    One day after the State of the Union, Bennett said, “It’s a good day to be a Biden Democrat.”

    That one evening could provide such profound relief and zest is a testament to the psyche of the Democratic Party. By most measures, Biden has proven to be one of the most effective Democrats in modern history: defeating a sitting incumbent, enacting historic legislation and scoring major midterm victories even while his approval rating hovered in the low 40s. And yet, the party — as it is wont to do — laments.

    Members are concerned about Biden’s age. And they note that despite his successes, he is still with major liabilities. Few Americans — just about three in 10 — think the country is heading in the right direction. According to an Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research poll this week, just 37 percent of Democrats want Biden to run for re-election.

    That’s hardly a vote of confidence. In a preview of how Republicans will go after him, Arkansas Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders, in her GOP response to the State of the Union, cast Biden as an aged creature of the “woke” left.

    But it was the GOP’s uprising in the House chamber that offered Biden a contrast that Democrats were still reveling in hours later.

    “If [House Speaker Kevin] McCarthy had better control over his caucus, which he doesn’t, he would have prevented the caucus from walking right into the president’s hands,” said Julie Roginsky, a Democratic strategist and former top adviser to New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy. “But when you have Marjorie Taylor Greene becoming the story of the Republican opposition, much more so than Sarah Huckabee Sanders, who gave the actual rebuttal, that can only benefit the White House.”

    For Biden’s allies, Tuesday evening wasn’t a revelation so much as an affirmation of their long-held belief: that the party worries too much and too often about him and can’t seem to accept that he’s been a success.

    “He’s the master of lowering expectations and then clearing them by a mile,” said one Democrat close to the White House. “Whether that’s the press or Republicans lowering the bar for him, when it matters he just keeps knocking it out of the park. It’s something you can’t teach. You can only claim luck so many times. It’s working. It’s just working for him.”

    Biden’s goading of Republicans on Social Security and Medicare on Tuesday night (getting them to publicly take cuts to the programs off the table) was, for many party allies, the evening’s crowning achievement. It amounted to what Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers, called a “brilliant master class.” Bennett said Biden “set a trap and the Republicans walked right into it. It was incredible.”

    And yet, even in a moment of triumph, caveats abound. The bar for Biden on Tuesday was extraordinarily low, and the State of the Union is a controlled environment designed to benefit a sitting president. The afterglow, the concern went, may not last very long.

    “These speeches,” Axelrod said, “have a limited half-life, time marches on and the issue of age won’t disappear. He’s going to have to continue to bring it, as he did last night.”

    House Republicans certainly weren’t eager to dwell on the night that was. They moved quickly on Wednesday to hearings on the Hunter Biden laptop incident, hoping to reorient Washington D.C.’s focus. The GOP’s presidential primary, once it begins in earnest, will do more to define the Democrats’ opposition in 2024 than any off-year State of the Union speech.

    Democrats, too, may not remain as sanguine. In a divided Congress, much of Biden’s high-profile legislative agenda is unlikely to pass, and the glow of Tuesday night may soon turn to restlessness.

    Joseph Geevarghese, executive director of the Bernie Sanders-aligned group Our Revolution, said the president had missed an opportunity to “up the ante” on Republicans by threatening to govern more on a range of issues by executive action.

    But as a table-setting address for Biden’s likely re-election campaign, Tuesday could hardly have gone better.

    “People continually underestimate Joe Biden,” said Kelly Dietrich, a former Democratic fundraiser and founder of the National Democratic Training Committee, which trains candidates across the country. “I know people worry about him being too old, but he’s crushing this job right now.”

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Watch – Karan Kundrra stops speech for Azaan, wins hearts

    Watch – Karan Kundrra stops speech for Azaan, wins hearts

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    Mumbai: In a heartwarming display of respect for religion, actor Karan Kundrra recently stopped his speech to listen to the call to prayer or Azaan during the promotional event of his most-anticipated upcoming show Tere Ishq Mein Ghayal. Sharing the video on his Instagram, Karan Kundrra’s fan page wrote, ”Being respectful towards other religions is a quality of a good human being.”

    In the video that is going crazy viral on social media, Karan Kundrra is seen saying, ”Should we just pause for two minutes”. He explains that the reason for this is because the call to prayer, or Azaan, was being recited. After the Azaan concluded, Karan resumed his speech. After he finished his speech, someone in the audience thanked Karan for pausing his speech after hearing Azaan.

    Fans heaped praises on the actor and lauded him for his gesture. His act of respect and religious sensitivity has won millions of the hearts of fans and has been widely praised on social media.

    One of the fans wrote, ”Alhamdulillah… Aap ne kiye uske liye word kum hai.. respect bahot hai…lekin jaisa unhone kiye waise sab ne karna chahiye…koi bhi ho kisi bhi cast ka ho …samne wale ki izzat mai 1 min agar chup reh kar respect dege to kuch bhi nahi hota …ulta izzat badhti hai.’ (The words ‘thank you’ are not enough to express the respect due. However, everyone should act in the same way as he did, regardless of their caste or religion. If we show respect by being silent for just one minute, nothing happens, and instead, respect increases)”.

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    Another user wrote, ”Thanks for respect us , dusre k religion ko izzat dene se kisi ka deen nahi change hota thank u from the kore of my heart india mai aapke jese azeem insan bohut kum ,paye jate hai good job.”

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    Fans are flooding the comments section with messages. Check out here more comments

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    Tere Ishq Mein Ghayal is a romantic fantasy show and it stars Karan Kundrra, Gashmeer Mahajani and Reem Sameer Shaikh in lead roles. The show will premiere on February 13 and air Monday to Wednesday from 9 pm to 10 pm on Colors.



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    #Watch #Karan #Kundrra #stops #speech #Azaan #wins #hearts

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Rahul Gandhi stops Yatra to pay tribute to CRPF jawans killed in 2019 Lethpora attack

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    Pulwama, Jan 28: Congress leader and Member of Parliament Rahul Gandhi who is in the last leg of Bharat Jodo Yatra in Kashmir on Saturday paid tributes to CRPF jawans killed in Lethpora attack in 2019.

    An official told the news agency—Kashmir News Observer (KNO) that Gandhi, who resumed his Yatra today from Awantipora, stopped his Yatra for a while at Lethpora and laid a flower bouquet at the spot where over 40 CRPF jawans were killed in a militant attack.

    Gandhi resumed his Yatra today morning after a day’s halt due alleged security lapse in Qazigund area on Friday.

    The Bharat Jodo Yatra, which started from Kanyakumari on September 7 will conclude in Srinagar on January 30 with Rahul Gandhi hoisting the national flag—(KNO)

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    #Rahul #Gandhi #stops #Yatra #pay #tribute #CRPF #jawans #killed #Lethpora #attack

    ( With inputs from : roshankashmir.net )

  • JNU stops BBC documentary screening by cutting internet, electricity

    JNU stops BBC documentary screening by cutting internet, electricity

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    Even after the Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) management issued a statement advising students to refrain from screening the banned BBC documentary on Prime Minister Narendra Modi, a few of them decided to ignore the university. However, their plans were ruined when both the internet and electricity went out in the students’ union office.

    The screening that was to begin at 9 pm on Tuesday could not start.

    In a statement released the previous day, the JNU administration said that no prior permission was taken from the administration.

    “The concerned students/individuals are firmly advice to cancel the proposed programme immediately failing which strict disciplinary action may be initiated as per the university rules,” the JNU administration statement said.

    “This is to emphasise that such an unauthorised activity may disturb peace and harmony of the university campus,” the university said.

    What is the BBC documentary on Modi?

    The new two-part documentary series of the BBC (British Broadcasting Corporation) ‘India: The Modi Question‘ focuses on the 2002 Gujarat riots that killed thousands and left millions homeless, especially in the Muslim community, and the role played by the then chief minister Narendra Modi’s government.

    The two-part documentary which is aired only in the United Kingdom looks at the escalating tension between the Muslim community and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) as well as Hindu right-wing organisations – Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP) and the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS).

    The first part of the two-part series, reportedly reveals ‘never-seen-before’ or ‘restricted’ documents in detail. These reports were never published to the public.

    It states that “Modi is directly responsible” for the riots that killed millions of people and displaced many, mostly Muslims. It also said the “violence was politically motivated” and the aim “was to purge Muslims from Hindu areas”. The riots were impossible “without the climate of impunity created by the state government.”

    Speaking to the BBC, former foreign secretary, Jack Straw (2001-2006) said he was personally involved in the investigations as the data and results provided were alarming.

    “I was very worried about it. I took a great deal of personal interest because India is an important country with whom we (the UK) have relations. And so, we had to handle it very carefully,” Straw told the BBC, adding, “What we did was establish an inquiry and have a team go to Gujarat and find out for themselves what had happened. And they produced a very thorough report.

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    #JNU #stops #BBC #documentary #screening #cutting #internet #electricity

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • As JNU stops power, internet; students watch BBC documentary on phones, laptops

    As JNU stops power, internet; students watch BBC documentary on phones, laptops

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    Protests broke out when students from the Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) were disallowed to watch the screening of the banned BBC documentary on Prime Minister Narendra Modi as university management cut out electricity and internet.

    However, this did not deter the students as they decided to watch the documentary on their phones and laptops, reports said.

    In a statement released the previous day, the JNU administration said that no prior permission was taken from the administration.

    “The concerned students/individuals are firmly advice to cancel the proposed programme immediately failing which strict disciplinary action may be initiated as per the university rules,” the JNU administration statement said.

    “This is to emphasise that such an unauthorised activity may disturb peace and harmony of the university campus,” the university said.

    What is the BBC documentary on Modi?

    The new two-part documentary series of the BBC (British Broadcasting Corporation) ‘India: The Modi Question‘ focuses on the 2002 Gujarat riots that killed thousands and left millions homeless, especially in the Muslim community, and the role played by the then chief minister Narendra Modi’s government.

    The two-part documentary which is aired only in the United Kingdom looks at the escalating tension between the Muslim community and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) as well as Hindu right-wing organisations – Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP) and the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS).

    The first part of the two-part series, reportedly reveals ‘never-seen-before’ or ‘restricted’ documents in detail. These reports were never published to the public.

    It states that “Modi is directly responsible” for the riots that killed millions of people and displaced many, mostly Muslims. It also said the “violence was politically motivated” and the aim “was to purge Muslims from Hindu areas”. The riots were impossible “without the climate of impunity created by the state government.”

    Speaking to the BBC, former foreign secretary, Jack Straw (2001-2006) said he was personally involved in the investigations as the data and results provided were alarming.

    “I was very worried about it. I took a great deal of personal interest because India is an important country with whom we (the UK) have relations. And so, we had to handle it very carefully,” Straw told the BBC, adding, “What we did was establish an inquiry and have a team go to Gujarat and find out for themselves what had happened. And they produced a very thorough report.

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    #JNU #stops #power #internet #students #watch #BBC #documentary #phones #laptops

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )