Louis Vuitton破天荒推出老花腳踏車台灣也買得到!超豪華LV BIKE 單車設計細節+價格一次公開

]

LV Bike:自行車上也有經典Monogram印花

為了向路易威登傳統致上最高敬意,LV Bike上最不可或缺的當然是經典的Monogram印花圖案!我們在牙盤坐墊、LV造型車架、把手、剎車線等重要位置上都可以看到用LV精選皮革包覆的樣式。而我們從這裡也可以發現為了增加騎乘時的舒適度,Louis Vuitton還在精緻皮革坐墊下加入避震彈簧,讓我們可以更放心地出遊。

Louis DeJoy, USPS, and Trump: Why Biden can’t fire the postmaster general.

]

During his first weeks in office, President Joe Biden has ousted a number of powerful officials appointed by Donald Trump. One controversial figure from Trump’s presidency, however, remains in office: Louis DeJoy, the notorious postmaster general who almost sabotaged mail voting in the fall and continues to gut the agency, creating catastrophic delays throughout the country. Progressives are furious that DeJoy has kept his post, but Biden’s hands are tied: While the president can fire other high-ranking executive officials at will, federal law bars the president from terminating the postmaster general under any circumstances. Biden can attempt to oust DeJoy indirectly, but that option is fraught with legal uncertainties, and certain to trigger Republican complaints of norm busting. Unless the president is willing to take a significant legal risk, DeJoy will remain in control for months or years to come.

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

It’s easy to see why progressives want DeJoy gone: He is an unqualified Trump donor who seems to have done everything in his power to ruin the Postal Service. USPS slowdowns have been a recurring issue since the summer, when DeJoy implemented a slew of cost-cutting measures that suddenly and severely degraded delivery services. His policies prohibited delivery trucks from waiting for late mail or making extra trips, dismantled sorting machines, cut overtime, and reduced hours at retail post office locations. Predictably, these changes created massive backlogs and rapidly diminished on-time delivery rates. During the 2020 presidential election, a USPS filing showed major slowdowns in swing states for first-class service, the delivery status assigned to mail ballots. NBC found that between 25,000 and 50,000 ballots likely came in too late to be counted due to poor USPS service.

Advertisement

Advertisement

If DeJoy served at the pleasure of the president, Biden surely would’ve fired him on Day One. But he doesn’t. The problem, ironically, originates from Congress’ desire to insulate USPS from politics. For most of American history, the Postal Service played an integral role in the spoils system, and postmaster general was a plum post for an ally of the president. In 1970, Congress overhauled the structure of the Postal Service to end this sordid tradition of patronage by giving the agency substantial independence. To oversee USPS’s activities, Congress established a nine-member board of governors who are nominated by the president and confirmed by the Senate. No more than five members of the board may belong to the same political party. Once confirmed to the board, governors can only be removed by the president “for cause”; that means their jobs are safe unless the president can show that they engaged in malfeasance or extreme neglect of duty. The board of governors, in turn, selects the postmaster general, who is not subject to Senate approval. And once appointed, the postmaster general can only be removed by the board, though it need not justify its decision.

Advertisement

This structure, in short, is why Louis DeJoy remains postmaster general under Biden. The board of governors is dominated by Trump appointees; Senate Republicans refused to confirm President Barack Obama’s nominees to the board, leaving vacancies that Trump promptly filled. Today, there are four Republicans and two Democrats on the board, plus three vacancies. One Democrat, Ron Bloom, is serving a holdover term, which means Biden can replace him at any time. Thus, Biden can fill four seats on the board of governors—a move that would flip the board, giving Democrats a 5–4 majority. The new president can then urge the Democratic members to remove DeJoy, which they can do by a majority vote.

Advertisement

Advertisement

Filling these vacancies is the simplest way for Biden to get rid of DeJoy, though there is no guarantee that it will actually work. The new board would include five Democrats—but one of them, Donald Lee Moak, is a Trump-appointed moderate who voted for DeJoy in the first place. It appears unlikely that Moak would choose to oust a postmaster general whom he supported less than one year ago. And if Moak declined to join Biden’s nominees in firing DeJoy, the postmaster general would retain his position indefinitely.

Democrats who fear this scenario have pushed Biden to fire some or all of the current board members, allowing him to install a whole new slate of governors committed to removing DeJoy. This plan faces a major hurdle: Federal law allows Biden to terminate governors “only for cause.” Democratic Rep. Bill Pascrell has argued that the president already has cause to fire the current board because it violated its legal duty to “represent the public interest.” According to Pascrell, the governors’ “refusal to oppose the worst destruction ever inflicted on the Postal Service was a betrayal of their duties and unquestionably constitutes good cause for their removal.”

Legal experts question whether this theory would hold water in court. “To fire board members ‘for cause’ requires an individual showing that the particular member did something repugnant,” said Rena Steinzor, a professor at the University of Maryland School of Law. “Allowing a president to decide that he doesn’t like what the agency as a whole is doing as a justification for firing its entire board would be a very hard sell in court.” Steinzor added that “as urgent as this situation is, I don’t think the mass firing decision would hold up.”

Advertisement

Peter Shane, a professor at Ohio State University Moritz College of Law, agreed. “For cause removals of independent agency administrators are so rare,” Shane said, that “there’s no real body of precedent on what it takes to justify such a discharge.” To shore up the inevitable legal challenge, Shane suggested that Biden would need to “offer a pretty detailed bill of particulars as to deficiencies in performance that had been brought to the board’s attention, which they then neglected to address in a timely fashion.”

If Biden fails to provide sufficient cause for termination, he has another, riskier route: He can argue that the board’s job protection is unconstitutional. In 2020’s Seila Law, a 5–4 decision, the Supreme Court’s conservative justices ruled that the president may fire the director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, striking down the rule that she can only be removed “for cause.” Because the CFPB director wields executive power that is effectively borrowed from the president, the court held, the president must be able to fire her for any reason. Three justices in the majority limited their holding to agencies led by a single director and declined to say whether their reasoning also invalidated the independence of multimember commissions (like the board).

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

By firing the USPS board of governors without genuine cause, Biden would be testing the limits of Seila Law—in effect, daring the Supreme Court to let the president fire the heads of any agency. This dare could have devastating consequences across the executive branch. There are scores of independent agencies, including the Federal Reserve System, the Federal Trade Commission, and the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. Like the board of governors, the leaders of these agencies are protected from presidential termination without cause. Progressives generally support this independence, because it limits partisan interference in the everyday administration of government. If Biden persuaded the Supreme Court to eradicate agency independence, the next president could purge every federal agency, replacing experts and civil servants with loyalists and hacks.

Advertisement

Given these potential ramifications, Biden might prefer to let the current governors’ terms expire rather than fire them immediately and trigger a catastrophic SCOTUS ruling. One Trump appointee, John McLeod Barger, will leave the board in December, giving Biden an opportunity to appoint another anti-DeJoy member by early 2022. But it is not clear whether the country can wait that long. USPS service continues to deteriorate: Lawmakers in Illinois, Maryland, Virginia, and other states have reported over the past week that their constituents are complaining about severe delays for important mail like bills and prescriptions. In the week of Dec. 26, the last period for which USPS publicly disclosed its delivery rates, only 63.87 percent of first-class mail made it to its destination on time across the U.S. The on-time delivery rate was even worse during that week in certain localities: It was only 29.97 percent in Baltimore, 32.32 percent in Central Pennsylvania, and 27.82 percent in Northern Ohio. Overall, in the fourth quarter of 2020, USPS never came close to the 96 percent on-time delivery standard that the agency sets for itself.

Advertisement

Advertisement

These awful performance metrics don’t seem to have dissuaded DeJoy from trying to further cut costs. The Washington Post reported that the postmaster general is expected to announce plans as soon as next week to implement “more service cuts, higher and region-specific pricing, and lower delivery expectations.” At the same time, he’s moving to convert 10,000 temporary workers into full-time employees, which postal unions say is encouraging but not enough to alleviate the stress on the overtaxed workforce.

Improving the Postal Service would have an immediate, beneficial impact on almost every American’s life. But it can’t happen while DeJoy is in charge, and there’s no easy way for Biden to get him out of office. The new president will remain saddled with Trump’s postmaster general for at least a year—unless he decides that rescuing the Postal Service is more urgent than respecting its independence.

Louis Vuitton unveiled a $1,366 ‘Jamaican Stripe Jumper’ inspired by the island’s flag, but the pullover features the wrong colors

]

Louis Vuitton released a “Jamaican Stripe Jumper” for more than $1,300 on its website.

The sweater was inspired by the Jamaican national flag but featured the wrong colors.

People on Twitter blasted the fashion house for being culturally insensitive.

Visit Insider’s homepage for more stories.

Louis Vuitton is under fire for selling a pullover sweater inspired by Jamaica’s national flag — but the expensive item featured the wrong colors.

The luxury fashion house kicked off Black History Month with a fashion gaffe that upset fans and stirred accusations that it used Jamaica’s culture for profit.

The sweater’s incorrect design was flagged by the fashion critic Twitter account @PAM_BOY, who shared screenshots of the sweater, description, and a photo of the Jamaican flag.

Louis Vuitton’s $1,366 sweater, knitted from lightweight Japanese cotton yarn, “channels the collection’s Jamaican Parade theme, with a striped design inspired by the Caribbean island’s national flag,” according to a screenshot of the description shared by @PAM_BOY.

It featured three large stripes of green, yellow, and red. However, Jamaica’s national flag is green, yellow, and black.

“I cannot stress enough how important it is to implement diversity as a value and not a symbol within fashion companies,” PAM_BOY wrote.

As of Sunday, the sweater was noticeably absent from its website, and the word “Jamaica” now pulls zero results when entered into the search bar. Links to the sweater’s page end with a “404 page not found” error message.

The Jamaican Stripe Jumper was not available on the website Sunday, and a “404 page not found” error message appeared on the site. Louis Vuitton

However, photos of the sweater were spotted on BuyMa, a Japanese personal shopping website for rare and limited-edition fashion items.

Louis Vuitton did not immediately return Insider’s request for comment.

Social media commentators flamed Louis Vuitton over the mix-up

After screenshots of the sweater’s product page were circulated online, commentators on social media didn’t hold back in criticizing the brand for what many called carelessness.

“The flag literally pops up if you type Jamaica into your phone. How little effort can people go to and still not get checked or corrected!” one user wrote.

—Elly 🌿 Take It Up Wear It Out (@Takeitupwearit) February 2, 2021

“Louis Vuitton is selling a $1730 Jamaican Stripe Pullover, with the wrong flag, and absolutely no business using Jamaica in this way,” one user said, before referencing the Men’s Artistic Director for the brand, Virgil Abloh. “Also, why is it out of stock already? Someone call Virgil.”

One person suggested that Louis Vuitton “donate the proceeds to the schools in Jamaica as an apology cuz this is EMBARRASSING for us.”

“So no one at Louis Vuitton googled the Jamaican Flag?” another said.

A few users snapped additional screenshots of the description of the sweater, which appeared to change online after the backlash unfolded. The new description claimed the design was instead inspired by “the Caribbean island’s cultural heritage.”

“Can somebody tell @LouisVuitton this is NOT how to handle the issue? Changing the description doesn’t erase the disrespect to Jamaican people and culture,” one tweet said.

Twitter users pointed out that the pullover appeared to draw inspiration from the Rastafarian flag, which refers to the religious movement often symbolized by green, yellow, and red.

Read more: Louis Vuitton artistic director Virgil Abloh is being criticized for flexing a $50 donation to a bail fund

“I also want to point out to @LouisVuitton - because they obviously don’t know - that Jamaica ≠ Rastafari. That’s very obviously the cliché they wanted to send across, and this is even more disrespectful than not caring enough to check the colors of the flag for profit,” a user wrote.

—Armelle Aurelya Ferguson (@armelleferguson) February 3, 2021

A small group of people, including Bob and Rita Marley’s daughter, suggested the flag resembled the Ethiopian flag.

“Bob says that’s the Ethiopian flag @louisvuitton,” wrote Cedella Marley on Instagram.

A post shared by Cedella Marley (@cedellamarley)

The tweets mark the most recent incident in which Louis Vuitton and other luxury fashion houses have been criticized for culturally insensitive ensembles in recent years.

In 2019, Gucci was forced to apologize after people noted that its $900 sweater suggested blackface. That same year, Burberry faced backlash for presenting a hoodie that had a noose tied around the neck. Comme des Garçons received heat after Paris Fashion Week because its models donned cornrow wigs.