کیا آپ جانتے ہیں کہ سارا دن کرسی پر بیٹھنا آپ کو موت کے قریب لے جا سکتا ہے ؟

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کیا آپ جانتے ہیں کہ سارا دن دفتر کی کرسی پر بیٹھنا آپ کو موت کے قریب لا سکتا ہے؟  کیا آپ جانتے ہیں کہ سارا دن دفتر کی کرسی پر بیٹھنا آپ کو موت کے قریب لا سکتا ہے؟ جی ہاں، یہ قدرے چونکا دینے والا ہے لیکن تحقیق سے پتہ چلتا ہے کہ ڈیسک جاکی کی زندگی گزارنے سے آپ کی جلد موت کا خطرہ 16 فیصد تک بڑھ سکتا ہے۔  JAMA نیٹ ورک اوپن میں شائع ہونے والی تحقیق، جو تائیوان میں 480,688 شرکاء کے ساتھ 13 سال کے دوران کی گئی تھی، نے انکشاف کیا کہ جو لوگ اپنا زیادہ وقت کرسی پر بیٹھ کر گزارتے ہیں ان کے دل کی دھڑکن کم ہوتی ہے۔ دل کی بیماری سے مرنے کا خطرہ 34 فیصد زیادہ ہے۔  اکثر ماہرین کا مشورہ ہے کہ دفتری ملازمین کو وقتاً فوقتاً تھوڑی سی چہل قدمی کرنی چاہیے تاکہ جسم کے تمام حصوں کی حرکت اور دوران خون معمول پر رہے۔  جب ہم بغیر کسی جسمانی سرگرمی کے طویل عرصے تک اپنی نشستوں پر بیٹھتے ہیں تو اس سے صحت کے سنگین مسائل جیسے موٹاپا، ہائی بلڈ پریشر، ہائی بلڈ شوگر، کمر کے گرد جسم کی اضافی چربی اور کولیسٹرول میں خطرناک اضافہ ہو سکتا ہے۔ یہ دل کی بیماری اور کینسر جیسی بیماریوں کا باعث بن سکتا ہے۔ ...

The absurd claim that Trump hopes keeps him on the ballot

 The former president is arguing that the 14th Amendment ban on insurrectionists holding office doesn't apply to former presidents.


'Our democracy is at stake': Lawyer who won case to kick Trump off ballot in Colorado warns

The absurd claim that Trump hopes keeps him on the ballot

The former president is arguing that the 14th Amendment ban on insurrectionists holding office doesn't apply to former presidents.

Zaka

There are many issues that the Supreme Court can address at Thursday’s hearing over Donald Trump’s presidential eligibility. But there’s one that Trump himself focused on in his final reply brief this week: the argument that the president isn’t an “officer of the United States” who’s subject to disqualification under Section 3 of the 14th Amendment. 

Zaka

It’s not a strong claim — and its implications are absurd — but it’s worth understanding heading into the oral argument, because Trump’s counsel apparently thinks there’s something to it. Indeed, he may think that it’s the best shot at staying on the ballot.


As you’ll see from the text of Section 3, it doesn’t specifically mention presidents: 


No person shall be a Senator or Representative in Congress, or elector of President and Vice-President, or hold any office, civil or military, under the United States, or under any State, who, having previously taken an oath, as a member of Congress, or as an officer of the United States, or as a member of any State legislature, or as an executive or judicial officer of any State, to support the Constitution of the United States, shall have engaged in insurrection or rebellion against the same, or given aid or comfort to the enemies thereof. But Congress may by a vote of two-thirds of each House, remove such disability.

Zaka

From that absence and the way the term “officer of the United States” is used elsewhere in the Constitution, Trump’s lawyers argue that the disqualification clause therefore doesn’t cover presidents. It would amount to a Trump-specific exception, because every other former president besides George Washington previously swore a constitutional oath in holding state or federal office.

Zaka

But in the ruling under review, the Colorado Supreme Court rejected that position for four reasons. First, because the normal and ordinary use of the term “officer of the United States” includes the president. Second, because Section 3’s drafters and their contemporaries understood the president to be such an officer. And third and fourth, the state court cited both the structure and purpose of the section. On the latter point, the justices wrote that it would be “flatly unfaithful to the Section’s purpose” to let a former president who broke his oath not only participate in the government again but “run for and hold the highest office in the land.”


Likewise in their high court brief, the voters who brought the case wrote that “given Section 3’s focus on insurrectionist leaders, it would make no sense to read Section 3 as disqualifying all oath-breaking insurrectionists except the one holding the highest office in the land.” 

Zaka

The amicus briefs from outside groups that have lined up to further demolish Trump’s claims also make clear that Section 3 covers presidents. To take one example, historians with expertise in the Civil War era that produced that provision explained to the justices how congressional debate from that time “demonstrates directly that backers of the 14th Amendment included the Presidency.” 


Despite all of that, will the Supreme Court nonetheless rule for Trump on that ground and condone the election of insurrectionist presidents?


Thursday’s hearing should indicate what the justices are thinking about this and other issues. If the court is looking for a way to rule in Trump’s favor that settles the eligibility matter nationwide — as opposed to a ruling focused on Colorado-specific procedure — then the “officer” issue could be an attractive one. But to reach that result, the court would need to go against history and common sense. That this result may be Trump’s best hope, or even one of them, shows that he has his work cut out for him — as do the justices, if they're intent on overturning the Colorado ruling in a way that settles the issue nationwide.

Zaka

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کیا آپ جانتے ہیں کہ سارا دن کرسی پر بیٹھنا آپ کو موت کے قریب لے جا سکتا ہے ؟