Tag: thought

  • No one thought Scindia, Azad would speak such low level language against Rahul: Gehlot

    No one thought Scindia, Azad would speak such low level language against Rahul: Gehlot

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    Jaipur: Hitting back at Union minister Jyotiraditya Scindia and former Congress leader Ghulam Nabi Azad for targeting Rahul Gandhi, Rajasthan Chief Minister Ashok Gehlot on Thursday said no one had thought that the duo would start speaking such a low level language against the Gandhi scion.

    He said the BJP leaders are tired because Gandhi has not shied away from raising the voice of people despite so many attacks.

    “That is why, a task has been given to these leaders who left the Congress. The ideology they had sworn to fight throughout their lives, today they have stood with the same fascist ideology at the behest of BJP leaders,” Gehlot said.

    MS Education Academy

    Launching a sharp attack on Gandhi and the Congress, Scindia alleged the party has been left with no ideology, except the one of a “traitor who works against the country”.

    He attacked the Congress for giving Gandhi a “special treatment” following his conviction in a defamation case. He accused the party of pressuring the judiciary and doing everything possible to stay relevant.

    Scindia, who was once considered close to Gandhi, left the Congress following differences with the leadership and joined the BJP in 2020.

    Similarly, Azad, who quit the Congress last year, said Gandhi was the primary reason why he and many others were not in the Congress today and claimed that one had to be “spineless” to remain in the grand old party.

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    #thought #Scindia #Azad #speak #level #language #Rahul #Gehlot

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Never thought BJP govt will give me Padma award; PM proved me wrong, says Ahmed Quadri

    Never thought BJP govt will give me Padma award; PM proved me wrong, says Ahmed Quadri

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    New Delhi: Veteran Bidri craft artist from Karnataka Shah Rasheed Ahmed Quadri, who received Padma Shri from President Droupadi Murmu on Wednesday, told Prime Minister Narendra Modi that he was wrong in believing that the BJP government would not honour him with the prestigious civilian award.

    After the ceremony to confer the Padma award was over at the Rashtrapati Bhavan, the prime minister along with Union Home Minister Amit Shah interacted with the awardees.

    When Modi wished Quadri and shook hands, he told the prime minister: “I was expecting a Padma award during the UPA government, but I did not get it. When your government came, I thought now the BJP government will not give me any award. But you have proved me wrong. I expressed my sincere gratitude to you”.

    MS Education Academy

    The prime minister reciprocated Quadri with namaste and a smile.

    The home minister also witnessed the interaction with a smile.

    (Except for the headline, the story has not been edited by Siasat staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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    #thought #BJP #govt #give #Padma #award #proved #wrong #Ahmed #Quadri

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Saudi Arabia Thought Golf Could Save Its Image. It Whiffed.

    Saudi Arabia Thought Golf Could Save Its Image. It Whiffed.

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    But as LIV begins its sophomore season — and as the battle royale of political, legal and public relations scrums involving the upstart league also enter their second year — an unlikely counterargument is emerging: It’s hard to call something sportswashing if nearly every LIV news cycle seems to dirty up the kingdom’s reputation.

    The latest set of unhappy headlines landed late last month, when a federal judge ruled that Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund would have to answer questions and produce evidence as part of the discovery process in a legal battle between LIV and the rival PGA golf tour. The ruling could wind up pulling back the curtain on how decision-making works at the secretive state fund, whose governor holds ministerial rank in the MBS-dominated government.

    “It is plain that PIF is not a mere investor in LIV,” Magistrate Judge Susan Van Keulen wrote, using the Saudi fund’s familiar abbreviation. “It is the moving force behind the founding, funding, oversight, and operation of LIV.”

    LIV is appealing. But whatever the legal merits, the news reports about the decision — a controversial foreign government claiming immunity against the Americans its company had tried to sue — fit what’s become a familiar pattern: With an assist from armies of Washington lobbyists, communications pros, lawyers and strategists, a golf story that began with splashy hires of top sports talent has evolved into a minefield of hot-button, distinctly non-athletic Beltway issues, from antitrust, foreign influence-peddling and human rights to 9/11, national sovereignty and Donald Trump.

    And, in most of these matters, the storylines have played out in ways that give problematic aspects of Saudi Arabia’s public image more attention, not less.

    It’s not exactly the result you’re going for if you’re spending billions of dollars to rebrand your kingdom.

    Consider the lawsuit that kicked off much of the legal-political warfare. The antitrust case was filed last summer by 11 golfers who complained that the dominant PGA was trying to punish them for having the temerity to do business with a better-paying competitor. At first, it seemed like a potential David-and-Goliath tale pitting an energetic startup against a staid incumbent. The Justice Department was investigating antitrust allegations against PGA, too.

    But by fall, LIV had joined the suit, the PGA had countersued, and news accounts treated it as a story about national sovereignty and foreign power. No matter who winds up winning, it hasn’t generated the sort of headlines that reset a national image.

    Worse still, from a reputation point of view, is that some of the arguments LIV’s team made in their unsuccessful effort to keep PIF Governor Yasir Al-Rumayyan from being dragged into the case could soon reignite another unflattering line of criticism of LIV: That the golf league is a foreign influence campaign whose stateside employees could therefore be subject to the U.S. Foreign Agent Registration Act, or FARA.

    Last summer, Roy, a Texas Republican, called for the Justice Department to investigate the golf league for potential violations of FARA, suggesting that even the golfers themselves were effectively part of a foreign influence operation due to PIF’s ownership. At the time, LIV’s spokesperson pooh-poohed the idea. But that was before LIV’s lawyers started saying in court that PIF was an essential part of the Saudi government and hence protected by sovereign immunity. Even though the judge didn’t buy the argument, it’s the sort of thing that could prick up the ears of some federal FARA prosecutor.

    According to Matthew Sanderson, a leading Washington FARA attorney, the law requiring registration for agents of foreign governments is a tricky one, with significant exceptions for ordinary commercial businesses that happen to be government-owned. But when we spoke this week, he noted a particular irony to the case: The Justice Department’s FARA unit, he says, doesn’t actually have subpoena power. So their investigators often rely on things that get introduced into the public record by some other means — like, say, a court filing that forthrightly asserts that an owner has sovereign immunity.

    “Litigation shedding light on LIV and the relations with PIF, those are revelations that could have consequences and the Department of Justice may be interested in the details of the litigation as they come out” Sanderson told me.

    Already, some of the contracts with golfers that have been unearthed as part of the legal maneuvering have details that fit the conspiratorial depiction of LIV as having an agenda, including sharp restrictions on contacts with media and a prohibition on saying things that could bring ridicule or harm the reputation of people including the shareholders — which in this case means the Saudi regime.

    Does that boilerplate language mean golfers need to register under FARA? Who knows. There’s a reasonable argument that the WWII-era law has an excessively shady-sounding name and has been weaponized to smear people unfairly. But if sportswashing is the goal, that nuance doesn’t matter. A news cycle that features allegations that LIV has secretly turned American athletes into “foreign agents” is not going to help the cause.

    Still, as far as bad-optics court entanglements go, a possible FARA fight is small potatoes compared to a legal action LIV launched late last year against the Washington public relations firm Clout. As part of its antitrust fight, the new league is seeking to subpoena the PR firm for evidence that it had organized or underwritten protests by 9/11 survivors in order to gin up anti-Saudi sentiment as part of an “astroturf” campaign on behalf of the PGA.

    Indeed, organizations representing families of victims had protested at LIV tournaments and trailed LIV golfers during a notably unsuccessful Capitol Hill visit last year. Now LIV is arguing that those protesters were essentially sock puppets on behalf of a powerful golf organization trying to protect its monopoly.

    Is it a plausible theory of the case? Sure. Anyone who’s watched the dark arts of Washington PR knows that legitimate groups of victims can be deployed, sometimes unwittingly, by all sorts of political players. And if LIV was backed by the government of Bolivia or Norway or South Korea, going to court over the claim would be a perfectly logical move. But PIF belongs to the country that was home to 15 of the 19 hijackers. Even if the filing ultimately helps prove that LIV is a victim of monopolistic bullying, it guarantees a bunch of coverage that includes the words “9/11” and “Saudi Arabia” in close proximity. Which is probably not a great outcome if you’re looking to boost the kingdom’s image.

    And then there’s Donald Trump, whose courses hosted two of the inaugural LIV season’s tournaments. As my colleague Hailey Fuchs noted last fall after attending one of them, Trump’s presence had in short order fractured golf along the same lines as the rest of society, a divide that boils down to what you think of the 45th president. LIV’s Trumpy vibe extended from its populist style to the politics of fans and golfers. (It didn’t help that the PGA had dropped one of Trump’s properties amidst sponsorship controversies in 2016.)

    For a normal startup, a strategy that makes you the favorite of 42 percent of a 350 million-person population seems like a decent move. But if the goal is to win the goodwill of the whole country — and not stoke further suspicion on the part of the many Americans who already didn’t like the former president’s affection for oil-rich autocrats and his commingling of personal and national business — it’s a more dubious proposition, something that made life tougher for LIV’s own marketing apparatus.

    Yet when the season 2 LIV schedule was released, it turned out that the number of stops at Trump properties had actually gone up, from two to three.

    LIV declined comment for this column. The league has always denied that its goal had anything to do with Saudi Arabia’s international reputation. It was always about a good investment in a disruptive business opportunity, something that could thrive if only it were able to beat back a competitor’s monopolistic behavior. Given that their efforts to do so have led to so many stories reminding people about Saudi Arabia’s image problems, perhaps it’s time to believe them.

    But whether the goal was straight-up publicity, cold-blooded business or the in-between place occupied by legions of U.S. billionaires who want to become social big shots by owning a sports franchise, it’s also clear that once the battle with PGA was joined, there was almost no way it could fail to generate stories about subjects Saudi supporters would rather not discuss.

    LIV has deployed significant Washington muscle since the start: the PR giant Edelman, the lobbying firm of former GOP Rep. Benjamin Quayle, former White House Press Secretary Ari Fleischer, the McKenna & Associates consulting firm that previously worked with the National Rifle Association. A New York Times report from December revealed that McKinsey & Co., which had worked on the crown prince’s Vision 2030 plan to diversify the Saudi economy, had done a lengthy study on the golf scheme, code named Project Wedge. According to a 2021 FARA filing, the consulting firm Teneo also contracted that year with PIF for early work on Project Wedge.

    The prospect of competition was real enough that the PGA muscled right back, paying DLA Piper $380,000 last year to lobby Congress on matters including the “Saudi golf league proposals,” according to lobbying disclosure filings, a jump of more than 50 percent above the prior year’s spending. Once the issue hit the political bloodstream, it’s hard to imagine a scenario where LIV’s critics on Capitol Hill and beyond didn’t start invoking the Khashoggi murder or decrying a brutal autocracy’s dirty money.

    Late last year, amid reports of struggles to break through with sponsors, LIV parted ways with a number of the sports and communications veterans who had launched the league, notably Chief Operating Officer Atul Khosla, franchise director Matt Goodman, and Jonathan Grella, a Washington veteran who led communications. The league vowed to assemble a “world-class team” for the second season of golf competitions.

    They’ll need it. Back in Washington, the more fraught political competition continues: PGA’s newest lobbying hire is Jeff Miller, the GOP power broker and one of the closest associates of House Speaker Kevin McCarthy.

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    #Saudi #Arabia #Thought #Golf #Save #Image #Whiffed
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Lamakaan, a space for thought, speech and activity should be encouraged to function

    Lamakaan, a space for thought, speech and activity should be encouraged to function

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    Ham ko yaaN dar dar phiraya yaar ne/La-makaaN meiN ghar banaya yaar ne

    This Urdu couplet defines what La-makaaN means. It is place without boundaries or the place where God lives. It roughly means, God has made his abode in Lamakaan and making us look for Him here and there.

    This name was picked by some enthusiastic Hyderabadi to dedicate his house in high profile Banjara Hills off-road number One near GVK mall and dedicated it as an open cultural space. It serves people thirsty for knowledge and quality entertainment. Within a short span of 13 years it has made a place in the hearts of Hyderabadis and also people from other parts of the country.

    For instance, read the programme shee that has been lined up for later this week.

    Come Eat with Me: March 10th. It a unique performance by Vamsi that blends theater with food and audience and the performer eat together and explore dalit food cuisine, diversity. As food is available in limited quantity, this event requires preregistration from our website or https://forms.gle/uyosYWPjZrYp2PZ97

    We Push the Sky: On Match 11th. Qabila presents stories of friendships in the times of turmoil and communal rhetoric written and performed by Niha Abulla. The play is an affirmation of our ability to forge belonging from the sharp edges of our differences.

    Rich Media : Poor Journalism : March 12th
    Hartosh Singh Bal, writer, journalist talks about the growing schism between media that is increasingly polarized and polarizing and journalism that needs to speak to the Truth.

    Listening to Thumri : March 14th. Viday Rao, the award-winning thumri maestro will introduce Thumri singing, its tradition, history and nuanced appreciation in a lecture and listening session.

    Purane Gaane with Yaseen Khan : March 15th.

    Yaseen Khan is a violinist, rabaab player and composer. He has played for India’s top music directors and films that range from Zanjeer to Umrao Jaan and from Naushad to Bhappi Lahari.

    Dance and Dialogue : March 16th. Haleem Khan the famous Kuchipudi dancer, breaks conventions around the art traditions of dance forms in an interactive performance

    Ashhar Farhan, a multi-talented entrepreneur and literature enthusiast, is one of its founder members. He says, “Now that this space has begun to bubble with activity after recovering from the destructive effects of CORONA-19, it is attracting attention from some intolerant elements. Some of them are said to be threatening the visitors directly and a few others are visiting it in the garb of security personnel…It hardly matters as long as the sensible citizenry of the city is with us.”

    Lamakaan has 14 accomplished persons as its curators who have so far organised hundreds of events such as film shows, seminars, exhibitions. “Lamakaan is truly a successful experiment and model for creating infrastructure for open cultures in urban centres across India,” he added.

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    #Lamakaan #space #thought #speech #activity #encouraged #function

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Immense joy for the champion who has just become a father for the third time: “I thought I was used to it by now but I was

    Immense joy for the champion who has just become a father for the third time: “I thought I was used to it by now but I was

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    Immense joy for the Juventus goalkeeper Matthias Perin and for his wife Giorgia Miatto. Their already beautiful family has in fact expanded further. Vittoria and Leonardo, the couple’s first two children, welcomed little Virginia into their home. The announcement, as often happens in these cases, arrived on Instagram.

    Credit: grgina – Instagram

    These are very happy days for several well-known personalities of the Italian sport. Just recently, in fact, the champion of blue basketball and of the Boston Celtics in the NBA, Daniel Gallinari and his partner Eleonora Boi have announced the imminent birth of their second baby.

    In December 2023, the basketball player and the journalist model had already become parents with the birth of the little girl Anastasia and now I am eagerly expecting another child.

    A few days earlier, precisely on January 20, life decided to give a beautiful gift to Mattia Perin too, Juventus goalkeeper.

    The 30-year-old from Latina, married since 2019 to his historic partner Giorgia Miattohas in fact become a father for his third time.

    The two already had two beautiful children who often appear in their posts on social media and whose name was Victory And Leonardo. The newcomer, however, is called Virginia.

    Mattia Perin’s announcement

    Mattia Perin dad
    Credit: grgina – Instagram

    As often happens when a well-known entertainment or sports figure becomes a father or mother, the announcement of the birth of the baby is given up Instagram.

    Mattia Perin dad
    Credit: grgina – Instagram

    The Juventus goalkeeper, who has been gaining more and more support lately and is slowly gaining a owner’s shirthas published several photo of her baby just born, to then accompany them with these sweet words:

    2023-02-20 11:25 PM, Welcome to our crazy little Virginia family. Vitto and Leo can’t wait to cuddle you 🫶🏼 thank you @grgina you were wonderful ❤️ I thought I was used to it by now but I was wrong. Feeling live the energy that releases a new life produces emotions that are impossible to get used to!

    Very many current or former teammateswho wanted to comment on Mattia’s post for to congratulate with him and his Giorgia for this beautiful event. Among the many appear those of Angel Di Maria, Dusan Vlahovic, Ciro Immobile, Miralem Pjanic, Nicolò Fagioli, Antonio Candreva and Adrien Rabiot.

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    #Immense #joy #champion #father #time #thought
    ( With inputs from : pledgetimes.com )