Lifestyle
No Ikea Shelves, No Levis: The Retail Exodus From Russia Is On
Ms. Townsend mentioned that luxurious manufacturers can also be nervous about promoting in Russia as a result of, more and more, lots of the wealthiest folks within the nation had been topic to sanctions.
“Usually, once you go in to spend some huge cash on a really costly luxurious model, you don’t anticipate the shop to take your passport and see if you happen to’re on a sanctions record,” she mentioned. “In the event that they had been to do this, they might lose prospects.”
The escalating disaster coincided with a string of style reveals in Milan and Paris this month, occasions that not way back had entrance rows closely populated with the younger wives of oligarchs, who had been lauded as influencers and proved catnip for photographers.
The Russia-Ukraine Struggle and the World Financial system
Now almost all luxurious executives had been fast to say their primary concern was for his or her staff in Russia, fairly than to sentence the Russian authorities’s actions, although over the course of the final week, designers moved from refraining from any remark to virtually universally — and publicly — professing their help for peace within the type of voice-overs at reveals or addendums to their present notes.
Most main retailers and types, together with Ikea and Apple, have introduced donations to assist Ukrainian folks pushed from their houses by the battle. On the Givenchy present, a notice left on each seat acknowledged that the model had made a donation to the Ukrainian Purple Cross and provided a QR code for friends to donate too. At Stella McCartney, the present notes mentioned that the model was “devoted to the folks affected by the warfare in Ukraine,” and that it had donated to emergency disaster help for Ukrainians.
Each manufacturers are owned by LVMH, although the largest runway assertion was made by Balenciaga, which is owned by Kering, and the place a large T-shirt within the colours of the Ukrainian flag was positioned on each seat, together with a private assertion by the designer, Demna, who had fled Georgia as a baby. Salma Hayek Pinault promptly donned her T-shirt and her husband, Francois-Henri Pinault, the chief govt of Kering, draped his over his shoulders. The present itself, which featured fashions clutching rubbish luggage and trudging right into a snowstorm, was the one one to immediately confront the plight of refugees. There was some criticism of the designer on social media, nonetheless, for dramatizing the ravages of warfare in what’s, in the long run, a industrial context.
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In excerpt from new memoir, Melania Trump says women have the ‘right to choose’ abortion
Former first lady Melania Trump says in a self-titled memoir set to be released next week that she supports women’s autonomy and the right to control their own bodies — including abortion, if they choose.
“Without a doubt, there is no room for compromise when it comes to this essential right that all women possess from birth,” she said in a brief video released on Thursday to promote her new book.
Melania Trump shared her views on abortion in coordinated messages across several social media outlets, from her husband’s Truth Social platform to Instagram.
Her stance adds another jolt to a presidential campaign season rife with dramatic events, with Melania Trump weighing in on a topic that is a central issue in her husband’s bid for reelection.
“It is imperative to guarantee that women have autonomy” when deciding when and whether to have children, Trump writes in her book, according to an excerpt cited by The Guardian. The newspaper says it obtained an early copy of the book.
Those decisions, she said, should be based on women’s personal convictions, not on “intervention or pressure from the government,” according to the excerpt.
According to the The Guardian Melania Trump also writes:
“Why should anyone other than the woman herself have the power to determine what she does with her own body? A woman’s fundamental right of individual liberty, to her own life, grants her the authority to terminate her pregnancy if she wishes.
Restricting a woman’s right to choose whether to terminate an unwanted pregnancy is the same as denying her control over her own body. I have carried this belief with me throughout my entire adult life.”
NPR has reached out to the Trump campaign for comment about Melania Trump’s writings, and is seeking independent verification of the excerpt from the book’s publisher.
Abortion has long been a key issue in U.S. political campaigns, but the 2024 race comes two years after the Supreme Court’s decision in Dobbs v. Jackson that found there is no constitutional right to abortion.
Democrats have used that controversial ruling as a rallying call, emphasizing that pivotal votes on the high court’s decision came from justices nominated by then-President Donald Trump.
The former president’s position on abortion has been closely analyzed as he seeks to regain the White House.
“After 50 years of failure, with nobody coming even close, I was able to kill Roe v. Wade, much to the ‘shock’ of everyone,” Trump said last year on his Truth Social platform.
But this year, Trump has seemingly sought to portray a more nuanced position on abortion, including saying that abortion laws should be left for states to decide.
As NPR’s Sarah McCammon reported after the 2022 midterm election:
“Advocates for bans on most abortions — including a wave of state laws passed in recent years that prohibit the procedure within the first several weeks — are at odds with public opinion, according to many years of polling. While most Americans support some restrictions on abortion, most support access earlier in pregnancy.”
Melania Trump’s memoir, titled Melania, has a release date of Oct. 8, by Skyhorse Publishing, with distribution by Simon & Schuster.
In its summary of the book, the publisher said of the former first lady: “She shares behind-the-scenes stories from her time in the White House, shedding light on her advocacy work and the causes close to her heart.”
The former first lady was born in Slovenia in 1970, three years before the landmark Roe v. Wade decision. She moved to the U.S. in 1996 and became a U.S. citizen in 2006.
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