Thursday, December 17, 2015

Love’s Philosophy by Shelley

Just remembered this poem.... :)

The fountains mingle with the river
   And the rivers with the ocean,
The winds of heaven mix for ever
   With a sweet emotion;
Nothing in the world is single;
   All things by a law divine
In one spirit meet and mingle.
   Why not I with thine?—

See the mountains kiss high heaven
   And the waves clasp one another;
No sister-flower would be forgiven
   If it disdained its brother;
And the sunlight clasps the earth
   And the moonbeams kiss the sea:
What is all this sweet work worth


   If thou kiss not me?

Friday, August 14, 2015

Say Yay to Bikini Power!

Lavu Mamledar, a legislator of the conservative Maharashtrawadi Gomantak Party, also said that bikinis were an impediment to India becoming a superpower.
(this line is selected from an article on ibnlive on  Goa Minister caught in Bikini War)

How do we even take this line up for discussion .... hmm.... 

Monday, August 10, 2015

Feudalism - redefined

I was reading an article on Feudalism and this image captured it so well!!!




The article is available on

http://bizshifts-trends.com/2014/08/13/mutation-medieval-feudalism-modern-business-capitalism-rise-neofeudalism-corporate-governance/

Thursday, July 23, 2015

An Indianness that needs no Aadhar - The Hindu

An Indianness that needs no Aadhar - The Hindu by Shiv Visvanathan



Sometimes when you get up in the morning and reach for the newspaper wondering what the world has in store, you occasionally savour a moment which is more heart-warming than having a cup of coffee. I just read a report about Maryam Asif Siddiqui, a 12-year-old school student in Mumbai, having stood first in the “Gita Champions League” contest, where the participants were tested on their knowledge and understanding of the Bhagavad Gita. It was not the fact that she is a Muslim but her reverence for all religions and the wisdom of religions that warmed one’s heart.
Such news is a perfect counter to the vitriol of Giriraj Singh, a Union Minister, who was in the limelight recently for his controversial and racist remarks on Congress president Sonia Gandhi. The contrast between Singh and Siddiqui is deep. One celebrates difference while the other seeks to subjugate it. One throbs with intelligence while the other breathes mediocrity.
Today, Christians are being targeted but if anyone is stereotyping Hinduism, it is the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). Their Hindutva is a sign of envy, of a mediocrity that wants to imitate the West.
A sense of siege

People like Mr. Singh create and leave behind a trail of anxiety where the minorities feel pressure on themselves to realise their identity. This became especially poignant in two instances; the first, in an essay/article by former police officer and diplomat Julio Ribeiro, and the second, in an interview of Indian political psychologist, social theorist, and critic Ashis Nandy. Both are Christians but what is interesting is that both are true Indians, not in a nationalist sense, but as a part of the culture. Ribeiro is proud of being a Christian and Indian and his career as an officer. It is his Christianity that has made him a part of India and made him aware that Christianity in India is older than it is in the West. But now he claims, “communities were being targeted, a sense of siege affects a peaceful people”.
Both Ribeiro and Nandy express the confidence of a community which does not see itself as a minority. It feels it is a part of India’s pluralistic culture, where identities are many, and affiliations open-ended. Ribeiro wonders what his Indianness means when his Christianity is being threatened. Earlier, being Christian and Indian was never contradictory to each other.
Challenge to democracy

While the BJP may have shattered Ribeiro’s confidence, it still has not dented Ashis Nandy’s. He sees it as representing the lowest common denominator of democracy. Nandy is proud of Kolkata and he knows that his city will never harass Christians. He sees it in the logic of its culture and his pride is not so much in his ‘Christian Identity’ but in his syncretic Calcuttan past which celebrates the multiverse called the city.
Nandy has an additional advantage. While Ribeiro sees society within the categories of law and order, Nandy’s sensibilities tell him that most Indians believe in a panoply of disorderly things. Hindus attend church services, Muslims are custodians of temples and our culture oozes with this syncretism. From Saadat Hasan Manto’s Bombay Talkies to the Bollywood of the 21st century, a church was part of the everydayness of an Indian.
Watching Ribeiro, Nandy and Maryam, one realises that majoritarianism is a challenge to democracy. The codes of the two systems are different. In one, citizenship is legal, culture is syncretic and politics democratic.
For example, as a person, one celebrated the greatness of one’s neighbourhood of identities. As a Hindu, I loved Christian festivals and enjoyed Sikh langars. My pluralism made me more Hindu. Yet, by contrast, the BJP’s Hindutva now makes our culture uniform, politics, majoritarian and citizenship, a matter of loyalties. Citizenship in Hindutva’s vision is reduced to a conditional status. The former celebrates the politics of difference, the other can think only in impoverished absolutes.
Listening to these debates, I realise that the BJP government suffers from a failure of imagination at several levels. First it speaks like corporate companies. It speaks a language where one hears more about the Adanis and the Ambanis and little about rural issues .
Second, it shows a preference for the Indian abroad than the resident Indian because the latter is capable of reworking identities while the diaspora has limited choices. Third, in the inclusive vision, culture is all about the availability of alternatives, while for Hindutva , it is about a space that needs to be policed. Deep down, the BJP has only one monolithic and monotheistic god, the nation state .
The glue that binds us

Ribeiro makes this point subtly; that Hinduism is a belief, while Hindutva is an ideology. Belief, especially religious beliefs, are protean, while ideology is procrustean (enforcing uniformity). Religion can be syncretic while ideology is restrictive. This difference, he realises, is vital as ordinary Hindus celebrate his presence. They see him as a first-rate officer and honour him.
For Nandy, Hinduism is manifold, while the RSS preaches about one nation, one state, one culture, one religion. It is a formula for encouraging mediocrity. Nandy is equally clear that Christianity does not need conversion.
This logic becomes clearer in a story recounted by writer and intellectual U.R. Ananthamurthy, another icon who Mr. Giriraj Singh hated. UR recounts the story of an Arab intellectual being perplexed by noting that his community has one language, one religion but 22 states, while India has dozens of languages, myriad religions but is still united as a single nation. It is our similarities, and not our differences, that have glued us together.
There is a difference in what I call the politics of anxiety and identity. Ribeiro and Nandy are confident of their selves. Giriraj Singh on the other hand uses identity to complain about history. Mr Singh, in trying to explain his comment on the Congress president, reveals that he has no self-confidence. Nandy and Ribeiro are happy to be in India while Singh is unhappy with ‘his India’. Even his majoritarian confidence is in fact a colonial one which does not know how to deal with someone who is of foreign origin.
In fact, what is ironic is the critique of Ribeiro’s fears by Jagdish Bhagwati, Professor at Columbia University in an article recently. Bhagwati begins with a list of the people who are close to Christianity in his family. Yet, when faced with majoritarian violence and policing, there is little to choose between Bhagwati and the illiberal Mr. Singh. Both seem to wish away the violence of the time by creating apologies for the government. In fact, the question one must ask is what is it that Prime Minister Narendra Modi adds to Indians abroad that a large part of the diaspora treats him as the equivalent of a cultural testosterone shot? It is as if the nationalist bluster of Mr. Modi compensates for their sense of inferiority and their embarrassment about India’s deficiencies.
Self-confident cultures

Despite their reading of the situation, Nandy and Ribeiro make a fascinating pair. What they find intriguing is the fact that the majority behaves like a minority even now. In fact, one must comment on Union Transport Minister Nitin Gadkari’s interesting response when he said he felt “very sad” after reading Ribeiro’s article about his growing insecurity as a Christian in India. Gadkari assures Ribeiro that he is an icon and a role model for the country. He is also virtually telling Ribeiro that he has passed the loyalty test, adding that it is the Opposition that is creating such misperceptions.
India’s minorities, especially Sikh, Christian and Parsi, have been self-confident cultures. As Ribeiro remarks, many of them have punched far above their numerical weight, in achievements versus their population. One does not have to create a who’s who of those from these cultures to create testimonials for them.
Our religious communities need no certificates. Many of them have a confidence that many in the majority lack. Nandy goes on to claim that there is a Hindu within him but which does not make him less Christian. In fact, his statement reminds me of the Dalai Lama’s wisdom.
Listening to U.S. President George Bush once, the Dalai Lama commented: “He brings out the Muslim in me.” Beyond empathy for Islam, what the Dalai Lama was claiming was that President Bush’s behaviour, his treatment of Islam and the Muslim was unfair, untrue and almost barbaric. Similarly, listening to Mr. Singh brings out the Christian, the Muslim and the Buddhist in me, without making me less Hindu. That to me is the beauty of India that no Hindutva envy can destroy. Being all and yet being one is what makes me Indian. No Bajrang Dal or Vishwa Hindu Parishad can deprive me of this confidence. I do not need their Aadhar cards of identity to testify to my Indianness, and that is enough for me.
(Shiv Visvanathan is a professor at Jindal School of Government and Public Policy.)

Tuesday, July 14, 2015

And one more just for the sake of it!

A politician is an arse upon which everyone has sat except a man - EE Cummings

As the saying goes :

Only two things are infinite: the Universe and human stupidity, and I am not so sure about the former - Albert Einstein

Friday, July 3, 2015

Women like Kavitha Krishnan should leave India!

No I didn't make this statement...

We, a group of 2 men and 2 women,  were having a rather loud discussion in our office cafeteria on women, women in India, women making decisions in family... 

The topic suddenly took a sharp turn to the recent tweet by Kavitha Krishnan on the #selfiewithdaughter campaign... and this was a statement made y my colleague - it seems women like her (sic) are the reason why NGOs/ peoples movements are viewed with distrust in India now... 

Medha Patkar, Teesta Setalvad, Kavitha Krishnan  ... the virulence against women creating awareness, working on civil liberties and social issues ... in particular, the virulence and hatred against women who have created strong identities for themselves sans' Industry/ government backing, is so strong that I am actually taken aback.

Whereas women to be emulated or who receive appaluse are Sudha Murthy (of Infosys Foundation fame), Nita Ambani (reliance Foundation fame) etc...

The former are abused as commies (and that is the mildest abuse), "nautanki", bitch etc... The others are championed as ideal women leaders. 

A woman's dissent should be such that she is heard in the sweetest of voices, appear in softest/ fariest light and ofcourse be complimentary of men in general, men in her life... :) 




Friday, June 26, 2015

Oil Prices

The International crude oil was $ 110/ barrel in June 2014. It is $ 63 / barrel in June 2015.

In Chennai the petrol price was Rs 75/ litre in June 2014. It is Rs 70/ lit in June 2015.

Hmmm...


Thursday, June 25, 2015

Majoritarianism - The solution to Democracy!

From an article by Gopalkrishna Gandhi:

"The question takes us back to Nicholas I and Indira Gandhi. Like those two historical figures, Prime Minister Modi has a sense of ‘order’. He backs that up with an attentiveness to his own fitness, punctuality, ‘turnout’. By personally leading, like an adept instructor, the phalanx gathered on the Rajpath lawns, he has choreographed yoga into an opera of mass power. But not just of power as in wholesome personal strength. Rather, power as in a collective mission, a mass drill that goes beyond personal well-being into a national nostrum, a national mission that bears an unmistakable family resemblance to the drills by the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh. And what is the mission’s message?

Quite simply, this: ‘We have been a weak nation, a nation of do-gooders and pacifists, of men who are afraid of the noise of crackers, the smell of smoke. Men of withered wills and sunken chests. It is time we built up our sinews, physical and mental, time we toned up our tissues, tightened our tendons. We must retrieve Bharat from the shambles that our so-called liberal leaders of the last six decades have left us…They were not leaders but mis-leaders who tell us that being muscled-up is mean, being belligerent is bullying. In fact such peacemakers and liberals are dangerous anarchists. Let us march, not saunter, stand and sit in neat rows, not haphazardly, observe mauna rather than chatter away and if we have to speak, let us speak on the glory of Bharat Mata…’

Forty years ago, the Emergency spoke the same script. There were no Yoga Day type drills organised at the time but ‘spontaneous’ rallies were called to hail the proclamation, hail the Emancipator. Even as mass leaders were jailed, sections of the middle class welcomed a sudden improvement in the punctuality of train movements, attendance in government offices, the check on profiteering that followed. ‘Honesty’ at shopfloors and workplaces became visible. But all ‘for the present’, because it was imposed by fiat, monitored by fiat, by fear, by bhayayoga.

A person who has recovered from a stroke values the faculties of motor ability, mental comprehension and speech more than one who never lost it.
The Constitution as amended in 1978 has made a proclamation of the 1975 type National Emergency impossible. What we have to be wary of is something as bad — the robotisation of our minds into a ‘yogic’ acceptance of one drill — majoritarianism — and its masterful drill-master.

Wednesday, June 24, 2015

Cutting the Food Act to the bone - The Hindu

Simple definition - Food Security means having reliable access to a sufficient quantity of affordable, nutritious food.



Why are we backing away from implementing National Food Secuity Act? Is it that in order to maintain a docile workforce for the Industry - you need a hungry society?



Revolution happens when people demand change - when your workforce remains hungry the worry is about the next square meal and not about rights - like equality, freedom of thought etc. 



Cutting the Food Act to the bone - The Hindu 

Yes, there’s sexism in science

Sexism in work area,
disrimination based on gender has been talked about since - EVER!

Since 1901 more than 500 men have won a Nobel Prize in the
sciences. Only 15 of them—about 3 percent—have been women. 

Nobel
Prize-winning scientist Tim Hunt 
is supposed to have said
this “Three things happen when they are in the lab.... You fall in
love with them, they fall in love with you, and when you criticize them, they
cry."  He won the 2001 Nobel Prize in medicine for his work
on cell division and was talking about women. (Ref: Article in Washington Post)

A
study conducted by Yale University highlighted the unconscious gender
biases in hiring processes for women in science academia. When they
controlled for all other variables, the researchers found out what was holding
these fake women back from their dream jobs: All other things being equal, the
academic hiring squads were rating the women as less competent than the men.


Now the discussion turns to the tech icons of the last 2 decades - we have heard of Steve Jobs, Zuckerberg etc.... Today's tech icons are all men - the nerd is pictured as a white man...



Well a link to Indian scientists into the repository of all knowledge under the Sun online 



https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Indian_scientists lists about 140 scientists  - 139 Men and 1 woman (social scientist)! kindly note this list has names of Aryabhatta, Mahāvīra, Varāhamihira


I read this article in The Hindu ... wanted to share it 

Rape accused granted bail by Madras High Court to 'mediate' with victim - Seriously!

This is one of the most ridiculous judgement - I have read! In what cuckoo land is the judge living??

Picked this from  CNN-IBN - I don't know how authentic the news is - need to read about before I conclude that the news is true... 

In an unusual development, the Madras High Court has granted bail to a rape accused so that he could participate in a mediation process with the victim in the case.
According to a report in The Indian Express, the victim was a minor when the incident happened, and has now lost her parents. The victim also gave birth to a child after the rape.
The decision by the Madras High Court to release the accused on bail came after the alleged culprit filed an appeal and a bail petition.
The judge who granted bail to the accused claimed that he had referred a similar case for mediation and the result of it was...
Now to an unusual judgment in a rape case "happy conclusion" as the accused had agreed to marry the victim.

Monday, June 22, 2015

Hot Pursuit - Nation-State

This is one of the best articles I have read on the topic 'Hot Pursuit.'



We seem to be loosing our ability to think rationally - in the face of growing redefintion of India as a nation-state of homogenous identity.



M. K. Narayanan on India’s current foreign policy on its neighbours - The Hindu 

Friday, June 19, 2015

Ghettoisation!

Its about saftey in numbers! Its also about easily finding the other!


Uprooted from Mumbai after the 1992-93 riots, thousands of Muslim families found safety in Mumbra on the city’s outskirts. Visiting it over a few days, Basharat Peer discovered islands of progress amid large seas of neglect in the township that nine lakh people call home.

In India’s largest Muslim ghetto - The Hindu 

Police have filed an FIR against a Councillor. The councillor locked a Muslim family out of
their own house and continues to be defiant about not letting them stay in the locality.

Evicting a Muslim family out of a Hindu-dominated area

Wednesday, June 17, 2015

International Yoga Day!

Did you know that the UN observes the following
  • 27 January - International Day of Commemoration in Memory of the Victims of the Holocaust
  • 4 February - World Cancer Day
  • 6 February - International Day of Zero Tolerance to Female Genital Mutilation 
  • 13 February - World Radio Day 
  • 20 February - World Day of Social Justice  
  • 21 February - International Mother Language Day  
  • 1 March - Zero Discrimination Day 
  • 3 March - World Wildlife Day 
  • 8 March - International Women's Day
  • 20 March- International Day of Happiness 
  • 21 March - International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination 
  • 21 March - World Poetry Day 
  • 21 March - International Day of Nowruz 
  • 21 March - World Down Syndrome Day  
  • 21 March - International Day of Forests 
  • 22 March - World Water Day  
  • 23 March - World Meteorological Day 
  • 24 March - World Tuberculosis Day  
  • 24 March - International Day for the Right to the Truth concerning Gross Human Rights Violations and for the Dignity of Victims 
  • 25 March - International Day of Remembrance of the Victims of Slavery and the Transatlantic Slave Trade  
  • 25 March - International Day of Solidarity with Detained and Missing Staff Members
  • 2 April - World Autism Awareness Day 
  • 4 April - International Day for Mine Awareness and Assistance in Mine Action 
  • 6 April - International Day of Sport for Development and Peace
  • 7 April - International Day of Reflection on the Genocide in Rwanda
  • 7 April - World Health Day 
  • 12 April - International Day of Human Space Flight
  • 22 April - International Mother Earth Day
  • 23 April - World Book and Copyright Day  
  • 23 April - English Language Day 
  • 24 - 30 April - World Immunization Week [WHO]
  • 25 April - World Malaria Day
  • 26 April - World Intellectual Property Day
  • 28 April - World Day for Safety and Health at Work
  • 29 April - Day of Remembrance for all Victims of Chemical Warfare
  • 30 April - International Jazz Day
  • 3 May - World Press Freedom Day
  • 8-9 May - Time of Remembrance and Reconciliation for Those Who Lost Their Lives During the Second World War  
  • 9-10 May - World Migratory Bird Day 
  • 15 May - International Day of Families 
  • 17 May - World Telecommunication and Information Society Day  
  • 21 May - World Day for Cultural Diversity for Dialogue and Development
  • 22 May - International Day for Biological Diversity
  • 23 May - International Day to End Obstetric Fistula 
  • 29 May - International Day of UN Peacekeepers
  • 31 May -World No-Tobacco Day
  • 1 June - Global Day of Parents 
  • 1 June - "Vesak", the Day of the Full Moon
  • 4 June - International Day of Innocent Children Victims of Aggression 
  • 5 June - World Environment Day  
  • 6 June - Russian Language Day at the UN 
  • 8 June -World Oceans Day 
  • 12 June - World Day Against Child Labour
  • 13 June - International Albinism Awareness Day 
  • 14 June - World Blood Donor Day 
  • 15 June - World Elder Abuse Awareness Day 
  • 17 June - World Day to Combat Desertification and Drought 
  • 20 June - World Refugee Day  
  • 21 June - International Day of Yoga 
  • 23 June- United Nations Public Service Day 
  • 23 June - International Widows' Day 
  • 25 June - Day of the Seafarer  
  • 26 June - International Day against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking
  • 26 June - United Nations International Day in Support of Victims of Torture 
  • 4 July (first Saturday in July) - International Day of Cooperatives
  • 11 July - World Population Day  
  • 15 July - World Youth Skills Day  
  • 18 July - Nelson Mandela International Day 
  • 28 July - World Hepatitis Day 
  • 30 July - International Day of Friendship 
  • 30 July - World Day against Trafficking in Persons 
  • 9 August - International Day of the World's Indigenous Peoples
  • 12 August - International Youth Day
  • 19 August - World Humanitarian Day 
  • 23 August - International Day for the Remembrance of the Slave Trade and Its Abolition  [UNESCO]  
  • 29 August - International Day against Nuclear Tests
  • 30 August - International Day of the Victims of Enforced Disappearances 
  • 5 September - International Day of Charity  
  • 8 September - International Literacy Day 
  • 12 September - United Nations Day for South-South Cooperation 
  • 15 September - International Day of Democracy
  • 16 September - International Day for the Preservation of the Ozone Layer 
  • 21 September - International Day of Peace 
  • 25 September (last week of September) - World Maritime Day 
  • 26 September - International Day for the Total Elimination of Nuclear Weapons  
  • 27 September - World Tourism Day
  • 1 October - International Day of Older Persons
  • 2 October - International Day of Non-Violence 
  • 5 October - World Teachers’ Day 
  • 5 October (first Monday in October) - World Habitat Day 
  • 9 October - World Post Day 
  • 10 October - World Mental Health Day 
  • 11 October - International Day of the Girl Child 
  • 13 October - International Day for Disaster Reduction 
  • 15 October - International Day of Rural Women 
  • 16 October - World Food Day 
  • 17 October - International Day for the Eradication of Poverty  
  • 24 October - United Nations Day  
  • 24 October - World Development Information Day  
  • 27 October - World Day for Audiovisual Heritage 
  • 31 October - World Cities Day 
  • 2 November - International Day to End Impunity for Crimes against Journalists  
  • 6 November - International Day for Preventing the Exploitation of the Environment in War and Armed Conflict  
  • 10 November - World Science Day for Peace and Development
  • 14 November - World Diabetes Day  
  • 15 November (third Sunday in November) - World Day of Remembrance for Road Traffic Victims
  • 16 November - International Day for Tolerance  (Resolution 5.61 of the 28th session of the UNESCO General Conference)
  • 19 November - World Toilet Day 
  • 19 November (third Thursday in November) - World Philosophy Day
  • 20 November - Africa Industrialization Day 
  • 20 November - Universal Children’s Day
  • 21 November - World Television Day 
  • 25 November - International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women  
  • 29 November - International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People 
  • 1 December - World AIDS Day
  • 2 December - International Day for the Abolition of Slavery
  • 3 December - International Day of Persons with Disabilities  (A/RES/47/3)
  • 5 December - International Volunteer Day for Economic and Social Development 
  • 5 December - World Soil Day 
  • 7 December - International Civil Aviation Day 
  • 9 December - International Anti-Corruption Day
  • 10 December - Human Rights Day
  • 11 December - International Mountain Day 
  • 18 December - International Migrants Day 
  • 20 December - International Human Solidarity Day 

To understand how we observe few these Days in India: - 
The World against child labour day - In India we are amending laws so that children below 14 years of age to work in family enterprises or entertainment industry... 
The Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women  - The concept of marital rape does not apply in India as marriage is treated as sacred here... 
The World Toilet Day  - India launched the Swachch Bharat Abhiyan with a budget allocation to build toilets. We are so there.
The International Day of Democracy- hm... yes ... we will commomerate this shortly!
The Human Rights Day - hm... well... we will commomerate this also, shortly!
The Anti - Corruption Day - hm...
The International Yoga Day  - And Wow! the money, time and effort spent by Indian Government to promote is phenomenal!  
 - Childern asked to come to school on the weekly holiday at 6.30 AM to be photographed doing Padmasana
 - Media houses encouraged to promote the Day to ensure maximum success
 - Industries encouraged to organise the day in factories and work places - ostensibly to promote healthy living and working conditions :)
- The PM is going to demonstrate some special Asanas! :)
Afterall, we have to get into the Guiness Book of World Records...