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PostPosted: Fri 4:39, 20 Sep 2013    Post subject: jimmy choo outlet ,jimmy choo sale ,http://www.dtv

Style magazine, the Guardian reports.(MORE: Bling-Free Beijing: China Bans Ads That Promote Luxurious Lifestyle)The ASA said it received four complaints following its magazine premiere. The magazines involved and Coty UK,[url=http://www.dtvtk3.com/]jimmy choo outlet[/url], which produced the ad, said they did not receive any complaints.The advertising watchdog deemed the ad offensive, arguing that because Fanning looks like she is actually under the age of 16, the ad sexualizes children. Coty contends that the targeted demographic for the campaign is actually readers over the age of 25 and that the image is similar to other edgy pictures in the publications that ran the ads. But the ASA thinks otherwise.(LIST: Top 10 Tasteless Ads)“We considered that the length of her dress, her leg and the position of the perfume bottle drew attention to her sexuality,” the ASA said. “Because of that, along with her appearance, we considered the ad could be seen to sexualise a child. We therefore concluded that the ad was irresponsible and was like to cause serious offence.”This is the first ASA ruling since last month when the watchdog published a new guide for advertisers in order to curb sexual imagery in outdoor campaigns. The new suggestions came in conjunction with Prime Minister David Cameron’s Downing Street summit on reducing the sexualization of advertisements, television and products. The summit included magazine editors,[url=http://www.dtvtk3.com/]jimmy choo sale[/url], trade and advertising companies and broadcasters to discuss the issue.MORE: Ice Cream Company Fights Back After Controversial Ads BannedDalai Lama: Osama bin Laden Deserves CompassionAfter delivering a lecture on “secular ethics” at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles just days after the U.S. raid on Abbottabad,http://www.dtvtk3.com/, the Dalai Lama was asked of his thoughts about the killing of Osama bin Laden. A headline in the Los Angeles Times claimed the great spiritual leader in exile thought bin Laden’s death “was justified,” quoting the Dalai Lama: “If something is serious and it is necessary to take counter-measures, you have to take counter-measures.”But the Dalai Lama’s camp responded almost immediately, claiming this was not at all the gist of his remarks, emphasizing his appeal for us to distinguish between “the action” and “the actor” and stressing that, as a fellow human being, even bin Laden deserves our compassion and forgiveness. But, he stressed, “forgiveness doesn’t mean forget [sic] what happened.”It’s a footnote to the aftermath of bin Laden’s death, which was met by raucous scenes throughout American cities. As that visceral euphoria faded, it’s fair to say that now’s more the time for sober inquiry and reflection.But what of the Dalai Lama? His trip to the U.S. was his first since officially stepping down as the political leader of the Tibetan movement in exile — it was a move many see as a sad resignation. For decades, he has tried to push for greater autonomy in Tibet, the homeland now under tight Chinese control to which he and hundreds of thousands of other Tibetans will likely never return. His quiet, pacifist approach seems in keeping with the sentiments he invoked when talking about bin Laden — moderated by spirituality and that admirable sympathy for all mankind that has won the Dalai Lama so much respect around the world. But it has done little to help his movement’s cause. The Chinese government has long heaped scorn and insults on the Dalai Lama, labeling him, among other things,[url=http://www.dtvtk3.com/]jimmy choo shoes sale[/url], “a wolf in monk’s robes.” The acclaimed travel writer Colin Thurbon sums up the aging exile’s plight in his latest book, To a Mountain in Tibet:His apostleship  of peace has brought his country a refracted holiness, but no Chinese concession. The West fetes and wonders at him. As for China, his distrust of material institutions, even of his own office, renders him all but incomprehensible.You may find it difficult to feel compassion for bin Laden, but as this venerable holy man
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