#Why Shobha De Calls
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leakstime · 4 years ago
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Why Shobha De Calls 'Three Crack Investigating agencies' Which Are Involved in SSR Case ?
Auto Draft #Investigatingagencies #SSRCASE #WhyShobhaDeCalls
This latest video/Vlog live streamed/telecast today from YouTube/daily motion channel which name is ” Ujjawal Trivedi “ YouTube/Daily motion live channel but now you’ll be able to watch this video/Vlog/clip full hd episode from this website via online.
Today’s program Topic/agenda : ” #rheachakraborty #shobhade #sushantsinghrajput Why Shobha De Calls ‘Three Crack Investigating agencies’ Which Are…
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like2in · 6 years ago
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Video: Sonam Kapoor reveals what made her react to Shobha De's brutal comments
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Video: Sonam Kapoor reveals what made her react to Shobha De's brutal comments - The makers have released another interesting episode featuring the fashionista of Bollywood, Sonam Kapoor. Arbaaz Khan's chat show Pinch that revolves around a unique concept wherein Bollywood celebrities open up about their social media interactions, has been making headlines. Now, the makers have released another interesting episode featuring the fashionista of Bollywood, Sonam Kapoor. During the interaction, Arbaaz pointed out to Sonam that she keeps reacting to people on social media and he also brought up the infamous Shobha De's controversy. He said, "You have reacted to certain comments and statements on social media, you have reacted to Shobha De at one time and then you realised and you were sat down by your dad Anil Kapoor who told you..." https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NqccwVCC_-c Sonam quickly cut off Arbaaz and added, "No it was not my dad who sat me down actually, it was my sister. Shobha De has very strong opinions, sometimes they can get extremely personal, sometimes they are intelligent and then sometimes they are just plain provocative. I that time thought that if she has an opinion then I am allowed to have my opinion about her.” “I was very hot-headed, ready to jump the gun and very defensive when I was young but my sister turned around and said that 'why do you want to stoop to her level' and I don't necessarily think I was stooping to her level but I was twenty-years-old, it was a reaction, it obviously hurts,” she adds. “There is something called constructive criticism and there is something called personal criticism. I felt at that time that her criticism was very personal, it was like a double-edged sword. She said something very nice about me and at the same time, she said I was ordinary. She said she's a good actress but she is the girl next door ordinary looking. Simple, no sex appeals,” she concludes. Produced by QuPlay, Quick Heal Pinch by Arbaaz Khan has 10 episodes of approximately 20 minutes each and will be streamed online once a week on QuPlay’s YouTube channel. The show is written and directed by Abbiy Obheroii. Other celebrities on the chat show include Karan Johar, Sonam Kapoor, Sonakshi Sinha, Nawazuddin Siddiqui, Sunny Leone, Kareena Kapoor Khan, Varun Dhawan, Kapil Sharma to name a few. Video: Sonam Kapoor reveals what made her react to Shobha De's brutal comments Read the full article
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Why one man in Singapore was not allowed to adopt his child
Image copyright PA
Image caption Noel was born to a gay couple who have been together for more than a decade
Gleaming Singapore is every bit the modern city, but the struggles of one father to adopt his child has shown how modern values are butting up against traditional concepts of family, writes the BBC’s Yvette Tan in Singapore.
The first sound his parents ever heard him make was a loud cry.
After a six-hour labour, Noel was safely delivered in a US hospital by his surrogate mother, on behalf of two hopeful parents.
The parents cried together as they cut his umbilical cord, bonded as they fed Noel his first bottle of milk, and later, proudly took him home to his new life in Singapore.
Noel’s life since then has been as typical as that of any other boy his age in Singapore, except for the fact that under Singaporean law, he is an illegitimate child, a status that could have implications throughout his life.
Image copyright Getty Images
Image caption Both James and Shawn say their “desire to have their own children” grew as they aged
James and Shawn – all names have been changed to protect the child’s identity – had been a couple for a decade before deciding they wanted to have a child together.
They considered adoption, but were told by people with personal experience that instances of gay men being allowed to adopt were rare.
While single men are allowed to adopt male children, they didn’t want to apply as individuals, and didn’t want to have to conceal their relationship during the adoption process.
So they instead turned to the idea of surrogacy.
Surrogacy is illegal within Singapore, so the couple decided to travel to the US, as many couples have before.
An egg donor was picked through an agency, and the egg fertilised with James’s sperm through in-vitro fertilisation (IVF).
They met a surrogate who was paid 200,000 Singapore dollars (£110,900; $149,880), and after nine months, they flew back to the US to witness the birth of their child.
“It felt surreal that we finally had our own child,” James told the BBC. “We were bursting with so much love and joy, and suddenly it felt like there was so much more meaning to our lives.”
He said he “did not know of any existing laws prohibiting overseas surrogacy at the time”.
‘Where would he go?’
But upon their return to Singapore, reality struck.
Because Noel’s biological mother and father were not married, he was considered illegitimate in the eyes of the law. Additionally, as his birth mother was foreign, he was not automatically a Singaporean citizen.
An application for Singaporean citizenship for Noel was turned down, meaning he was not entitled to any governmental benefits or assistance, and risked not inheriting anything from his father.
Image copyright Getty Images
Image caption Gay sex is still criminalised in modern Singapore
James is still recognised by the law as Noel’s biological father, so the now four-year-old is still allowed to live with him.
Noel was instead granted a Long Term Visit Pass (LTVP), which is valid for six months and has to be renewed periodically.
The LTVP can be rescinded and is not a permanent solution.
“[If it were rescinded] he would have to leave Singapore. Where would he go?” James said.
“Singapore is the only home he’s known. He has a special bond with his grandparents, aunts and cousins… it would devastate us.”
Adoption conundrum
Towards the end of 2014, James decided to apply to adopt his biological son, to shake off his “illegitimate” status.
Adoption would not automatically lead to citizenship, but according to James’ lawyer, Ivan Cheong of Eversheds Harry Elias LLP, it was likely that it would help their cause.
They had to wait until December last year before hearing back from the Family Courts – the bid had been rejected.
When this became public, many saw it as a judgement by the state on the couple’s sexuality and relationship.
Sex between men is illegal in Singapore, and same-sex marriages are not recognised in law – Noel could never be considered legitimate as the child of two men.
Singaporean LGBT campaign group Pink Dot said the ruling was based on “an outdated view of what a family should constitute”.
The group said it was “a cruel thing” to deny a child legitimacy to his own biological father, and that the law was “falling behind society’s evolving nature”.
Judge Shobha Nair, in her ruling, had insisted the decision was not based on the court’s view of what “a family unit ought to be”.
“This case has very little to do with the propriety and/or effectiveness of same-gender parenting,” she said, but was about the ethics of commercial surrogacy.
That the couple paid S$200,000 for the child “reflects the very thing the Adoption Act seeks to prevent – the use of money to encourage the movement of life from one hand to another,” she said.
Mr Cheong agreed, telling the BBC it “was clear that the dismissal of the application was not because my client is in a same-sex relationship with his partner”.
Singaporean authorities have said their role is to encourage “parenthood within marriage” and that “planned and deliberate parenthood” by singles – as James is in the eyes of the law – “runs contrary to this”.
Image copyright SPL
Image caption The use of IVF is limited in Singapore
Dr Mathew Mathews, a senior research fellow at the National University of Singapore, says there is still “much support for parenthood to happen within the context of the ‘traditional family’ in Singapore”, but that views are starting to change.
“More Singaporeans today accept that some children will be raised in contexts which differ from their idealised conceptions of family, though they might be hesitant of this becoming the norm.”
No regrets
On 4 January, the couple filed an appeal against the decision.
They are still awaiting its outcome, but said they knew adoption would “not be an easy process”.
“We had hoped that the courts would see the merits of our case, we are very sad and disappointed this wasn’t [so],” said James.
Currently, James has no legal rights to the child, but still remains his de facto parent due to their biological link, and is allowed to make all decisions on behalf of Noel.
Image copyright Getty Images
When asked if they would consider migrating moving overseas should the appeal fail, James said: “Singapore is our home. My partner and I are true-blue Singaporeans, born and bred here. We received our education here. We served in the Singapore Army.
“Our families and lives are rooted here in this country we love. We’ve never been made to feel different, or been discriminated against, except when dealing with the authorities.
“Having to leave…is not a decision we will make lightly.”
The couple add that they have no regrets having Noel, who is currently “oblivious to the ordeal”, despite the challenges it has presented.
“The four years of joy my son brought to us cannot be adequately measured or put in words. He knows he has two fathers – he calls me Papa and my partner Daddy,” James explains.
“Our neighbours, extended family – they’ve all embraced him and often tell him how lucky he is to have two caring fathers. We have no regrets having him.”
The post Why one man in Singapore was not allowed to adopt his child appeared first on dailygate.
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vulturo · 8 years ago
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On Tubs Of Lard and Snarky Socialites
No other socialite disgusts me as much as Shobha De, but quite honestly the backlash against her because she fat-shamed a cop is quite beyond me.
I'm hardly the hallmark of fitness myself but, it's not as if I'm proud that I'm out of shape. Its up to me to get my health back on track, and it's a goal that I'm trying to work towards.
That said, what's reprehensible is the culture of 'safe spaces', which actually encourages people to remain in an unhealthy state of being and be damn well proud of it. Instead of encouraging fat people to get in shape, you quite simply redefine fat as beautiful, so that nobody has to do anything. That's lazy.
While I agree that 'shaming' and being deliberately hurtful to someone is not necessarily nice, subject in question wasn't shamed personally, but was called out for being out of shape in his capacity as a cop.
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Did you even see that picture? The entire department is taxpayer funded and I would imagine a part of their role involves being physically fit in order to carry out their duties efficiently. Would the Army tolerate someone so morbidly obese, let alone defend them? Why must cops of all people get a free pass?
Maybe I’ll join in the hate on Shobha De, because why not? Now if only taxpayers in general would be a little less accepting of government employees that are unfit for the job. 
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