Rcbq Meet the Man Behind Oregon s New Legal Pot Market
By Maya RhodanSeptember 5, 2015 9:33 AM EDTBeauty Tips by Reshma starts off like any typical beauty tutorialmdash;a woman facing a camera shows a viewing audience how to apply the perfect red lip.Reshma walks viewers through the simple-steps to perfecting one pout: exfoliate, moistu
stanley cup rize, line lips with a coordinating color, and then apply lipstick. But the video ends with a twist. Reshma face, scarred by an acid attack, straightens as she says that in too many places buying acid is as easy as buying a tube of lipstick.You ;ll find a red lipstick easily in the market, just like concentrated acid, she says. This is the reason why, every day a girl becomes a victim of an acid attack.Reshma video is a public service announcement for Make Love Not Scars, a movement led by acid-attack survivors who are hope to ban the sale of acid, which can go for as little as 100 rupees according to the group. Reshma video, which was featured as AdWeek Ad of the Day on Friday, links to a petition urging the Prime Minister of India to ban the sale of acid to the common man. The petition has a little over 77,000 signatures as of this posting.Watch the entire ad below.More Must-Reads from TIMEHow the Economy is Doing in the Swing StatesHarris Battles For the Bro VoteOur Guide to Voting in the 2024 ElectionMel Robbins Will Make You Do ItWhy Vinegar Is
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Voters wait in line at a polling station on August 11 in Minneapolis during the Minnesota state primary.Joshua Lott鈥擳he Washington Post/ Getty ImagesBy Lissandra VillaUpdated: November 24, 2020 2:11 PM EST | Originally published: August 28, 2020 11:06 AM E
converse DTBrian Corley, the supervisor of elections in Floridarsquo Pasco County, realizes this is not a normal election year.Anxiety over mail voting, the Covid-19 pandemic, and the on-going national reckoning over systemic racism already create something of a tinderbox, and the country growing polarization may set the stage for the most high-stakes election yet. It not hard to imagine, Corley says, a minor squabble over a face mask devolving into a confrontation between voters of di
hoka fferent political persuasions.Even the perception of voter intimidation is the last thing we need, he says. Anything that lends itself towards a perception or outright voter intimidation is just not appropriate.A lot of the misinformation and perceived voter intimidation isn ;t just coming from dark corners of the Internet; it coming directly from the White House. President Donald Trump suggested, without evidence, that mail voting will lead to massive fraud, discredited physical ballot drop boxes, and promised to deploy law enforcement to polling places on Election Day. Wersquo;re going to have everything. Wersquo;re going to hav
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