I met a traveller from an antique land
Who said: Two vast and trunkless legs of stone
Stand in the desert. Near them, on the sand,
Half sunk, a shattered visage lies, whose frown
And wrinkled lip, and sneer of cold command
Tell that its sculptor well those passions read
Which yet survive, stamped on these lifeless things,
The hand that mocked them and the heart that fed.
And on the pedestal these words appear:
"My name is Ozymandias, king of kings:
Look on my works, ye Mighty, and despair!"
Nothing beside remains. Round the decay
Of that colossal wreck, boundless and bare
The lone and level sands stretch far away
Friday, December 18, 2009
OZYMANDIAS - Percy B Shelley
Sunday, November 29, 2009
The Need for Farce
I've been wondering on the need for overwhelming pounding of media over trivial issues...
I have just seen a documentary on genetically modified foods & read Next (by late Michael Crichton) again. Both talk about the inherent problem underlying patenting of living organisms or their genes / parts.
Now, we generally see our parliamentarians arguing about trivial issues & the media showing similar stupid issues all day interspersed with ads by large corporations. I used to wonder why somebody doesn't tell both these guys to go find something more sensible to do. Then again, after going through the above two items, it has dawned on me that maybe that is what the hidden agenda is: to keep the public at large running around their life & be bombarded by senseless issues rest of the time, so that the real & important issues are hidden behind the screens.
If one were to just read through the list of acts passed in the parliament without so much as an hour's discussion, one would understand. Increasingly, countries are passing laws that profits larger corporations. What is the largest source of money controlled by the least concerned people? It is inevitably the public funds. Any subsidy, grant, loan is provided from the public corpus and accountability is minimum - not just in India - but worldwide.
So what do large corporations do? They dont market products like consumer goods- they market items for public body consumption - health, arms, agriculture, public services, etc. What do the largest corporations sell us? They sell us fighter jets without accountability, vaccines & emergency medicine procured by the government without adequate tests or assurance, genetically modified food sold through government gene banks, public services like consultancy, water supply & waste management, electricity, etc that no person is able to question directly. It is simply the money that is taken from the public in form of taxes, and not given accountability of. The public is not in direct control of this money, and the people entrusted with this money can be easily bribed or provided stake in the corporations in order to gain access to the money.
If we see around, there are a million examples - Dabhol Power Project, Bhopal gas tragedy, Submarine scam, Bofors scam, etc etc...We are being systematically robbed (yes, that is the correct word) of our earnings, and the corporations are getting more powerful using the same money, and eventually even control what rules apply to them. Its a vicious circle that will end in the slavery of a general person to larger corporations - the future kings / dictators of the world.
This is where all the farce comes in - caste politics (a la Mayawati), regional politics (a la Thackereys), saas bahu serials, pointless arguments on news channels (both funded by ads of larger corporations, and hence dictating what should be shown), reality shows, and in extreme cases even acts of terrorism - in short anything that distracts or disrupts the normal persons life enough to take his or her attention away from what is happening to public funds, public rights and opinion on things that are actually affecting the world at large...
Saturday, October 24, 2009
Glory to the inglorious!
every once in a while, one sees a work of art being portrayed on the cinema screen - and it is so intense, that one does not realize how much time has passed absorbing it... This is exactly what happened to the 4 of us who went to see the Inglorious basterds tonight. It was a 10pm show & we realized it was 1pm after we came out!!
Now, I've heard somewhere that it took Quentin 12 years to write the complete screenplay. I can only imagine how he must have perfected each of these scenes by playing them over again & again in his mind - polishing each moment - each nanosecond of the movie. I was left not only breathless with wonder, but also hoping that the movie would never end- even after 3 hours of playing time!
The Inglorious Basterds is not a typical Quentin movie..in fact its a Bollywood style movie that beats Bollywood movies black & blue by simply concentrating on one simple thing: attention to detail ....
Its a simple screenplay that Quentin would have ripped from any Bollywood movie - action, love, war, thrill & loads of comedy - all of that combined! But the mastery of the director lies in ignoring the story completely!! Yes, truly that is what happens - I did not care whether the story would go one way or the other! What I craved for with each longing moment was the dialogues & depth of scenes... The complete narration is held together by 7-10 scenes, but each of this scene is brilliantly composed - each speck of dust & each monosyllable, each movement by the actor / actress contributes to the moment in the scene... If you miss the smallest of gestures, you are bound to be left confused.
Now, I've heard somewhere that it took Quentin 12 years to write the complete screenplay. I can only imagine how he must have perfected each of these scenes by playing them over again & again in his mind - polishing each moment - each nanosecond of the movie. I was left not only breathless with wonder, but also hoping that the movie would never end- even after 3 hours of playing time!
Coming to the director's attention to detail - each word spoken by the actor is made to work hard along with physical movements, music & photography in order to contribute fully to the meaning. The language provides a loud charactersketch for each actor, while long climaxes (some even 2 mins long) are held together by expert movements, ever so subtle to catch the corner of one's eye, but not appear in the conscious view of the scene. All of this - together - makes the movie an unforgettable experience.
Look out for Col. Hans Landa (played by Christopher Waltz) - the scripting of the character & his potrayal by Waltz are a true work of art!
And yes, we laughed, we shuddered, we waited for the climaxes, we cheered the action - in short we did it all!!!
Final word, go see it for yourself - though some of you would dismiss it as stupid... & yes - BEWARE - there isn't any story!!
Saturday, October 17, 2009
Diwali Greetings!
Greetings for a joyous Diwali &
Happy New Year with a plenty of Peace and Prosperity.
Happy New Year with a plenty of Peace and Prosperity.
Friday, October 09, 2009
A noble piece prize
Obama wins the Nobel Prize! Thats one of the most shocking news i have ever heard to date.. My belief in the nobels is completely shattered! I agree that Mr. Obama is much better than Mr. Bush. But no president of the US of A can be given a nobel peace prize! For the head of a country that lives off by waging wars, the nobel peace committee has either gone bonkers or is trying to wag tails to the most powerful office on earth. I am still not able to make any sense of it as i still read the news, but one thing is certain: the nobel peace prize can NEVER be given to an office that is directing wars in 2 countries (Iraq & Afghanistan) and threatening 3 others in full world view (Libya, Iran & North Korea). The very act of waging a war should be the sole reason to deny the peace prize - & the nobel committee- by giving it to the person currently holding that office, is degrading its own integrity....
Monday, September 21, 2009
A few words about the performance reality shows
Mufaazaa is disgusted with the level of Indian reality / performance shows... I am appalled by the concept of a performance / reality show where one is judged by the laypersons. Its exactly the democratic ideal, where the consumer feels the power to keep or remove somebody. It is a sorry sense of power over somebody that one relishes in exercising due to lack of any control over one's own pathetic life, held together by a self-inflicted combination of social duties & career demands.
To make my point louder, I haven't come across a single reality / performance show that has third-party checks / audit for the amount of sms - votes that come in from public.. Get a grip guys!!! They can as well manipulate anything, based on what is convenient and more glamorous / TRP catching to show...However, it doesn't disturb me, since it solves the general purpose mentioned above - hypothetic power to the powerless.
A more disturbing fact is that the participants actually believe in these shows - parents groom & force their children to participate. We are trashing the sacrosanct relation of guru-shishya and deciding our skillset based on laypersons' perception. Now, the word of our teachers doesn't suffice, we need to prove ourselves by monkeying around on the stage!!! Please remind me how many of these people last in the public accredited careers for more than a couple of years?
There was something like Sa Re Ga Ma, where industry stalwarts would come to judge people. That was good for exposure & talent search. Today, there are too many shows & hence, unrestricted opportunities to participate in any one of these drills and see oneself on TV. While the judges vary from good to absolutely pathetic, they hardly have any power over the outcome. The public vote is given an equal rating over the word of an expert. I'm not saying that the expert cannot be wrong, but the probability of an expert going wrong over a layperson going wrong is much much lower. & public opinion is always clearly expressed in the way the person is able to deliver in later life as a professional, buy listening / seeing him or her...
Why do we need public endorsement for what we do? Are we really an insecure generation? Do we not believe in ourselves enough to just go ahead & do what we think right, instead of getting public opinion beforehand?? That, I think, is the crucial difference between the achievers & the followers....
Monday, August 10, 2009
are we for real?
i was just discussing with my friends...
my parents have a few photographs, but are able to relive the exact moment in each one of them..
i have thousands, but dont remember most of the moments..
my parents go on trips once a year or less, but can remember all their days on the outing..
i go out every weekend, but am unable to register any of it..
my parents used to see movies once a month in their youth, & the memories lasted a lifetime.
i see one every other day, but fail to get entertained by any one..
this seems to be the case with an entire generation - the one living in excess: excess of money, food, entertainment, time, & what not... there is no real struggle, no need to conserve anything: time, energy, money, environment... we are just big time spenders.
the worst part is that all this excess fails to make us happy, & maybe one great proverb says it all: KEEP IT SIMPLE, STUPID!
I am not sure of this lifestyle anymore - the more i have, the more i crave for. Its an unending abyss of demand & supply, one into which the entire world seems to be spiralling. Happiness is a commodity beyond the means of an entire generation for the first time. We seem to be trading it in futures, and the future is always tomorrow! never today, never now.
I remember a poem from my childhood, where i thanked God for the food, my parents, my friends, my life.. Today, i dont believe in God, i take food for granted, my parents as a given, my friends as ever-changing travellers in a journey, and my life - i don't even know the meaning of my life... am i here to accomplish something? anything? does my life mean anything?
everything interests me as does everything bore me.. its a self-defeating aim to want something, to get it and to want something else after that... its a self-contradictory happiness to reach somewhere and then to want to be somewhere else...
To my reader, don't dismiss me as a sadistic / depressed guy. I feel perfectly happy on most days of my life, but i don't remember it! What use is a happiness that i cannot recollect, cannot relish, cannot preserve in my memories.. a dialogue in Ghajini says: SHORT TERM MEMORY LOSS! Is that what we are suffering from? memory loss- short & long term both? or is it just a dissatisfied & spoilt lot of kids turned into adults but havent realized that yet?
Is maturity at stake or has the its definition changed? Is satisfaction unattainable or are we unable to feel satisfied? is the pace of life too fast & blinding or are we insecure in our own world? are we all accomplished beings or is success just a beta phase?
In many ways, Dev-D is an apt portrayal of a generation at a loss of understanding itself, forget understanding the world around them...
maybe im an old-timer to say that our ancestors had enough time & peace of mind to understand not just themselves, but their surroundings & the necessity of convserving them. We are just a bunch of brats bent upon destroying everything that comes to our notice..
let me say no more, R.I.P.
www.patilsandip.co.nr
www.sandylief.blogspot.com
Friday, July 31, 2009
against order / consistency / equity / globalization...
"Consistency is the last refuge of the unimaginative" - Oscar Wilde reads a friend's fb status... & ive been thinking of the same. I'm reading the Organic Farming Reader - a collection of articles on organic farming. It leads me to a conclusion that I have repeated arrived on previous readings & thinking : globalization is stupidity! I am not against the availability of all things everywhere on earth, the whole point of localization is not closing oneself, but to have something unique - something that suits the local environment, culture, climate, etc etc etc...
Talking about farming, experiments & hereditary knowledge proves that each region has a unique environment (composed of climate, soil, geology, ....) and hence needs a native plant variety to survive. Bring in plants from elsewhere & either they die or kill... The authors say we have gone down from about 10,000 varieties of wheat in India to just a few hundred in less than a century! Each of these varieties have come down through generations and are suited to their specific local environment. Each variety gives not just optimal harvest & protection against local pests, but also proves more digestion friendly & nutritive for the local environment!!
Now combine this train of thought with Robert Pirsig's Zen & the Art of Motorcycle maintenance: we are talking about quality of a material that is marketable only in a certain region. The quality is dynamic for the same material based on geographical location!! & this is just agriculture! Why are we buying polyester clothing in India, which is not at all friendly in the hot & humid weather, or using agricultural methods more suited to temperate soils, where organic matter is in mineral form, whereas it is stored in plant life in the tropic & the soil is mineral poor..
Why do we take shelter in aping western systems when our own are as efficient? Why should an imported item be more valuable than local one of the same quality? Is it just globalization or our mentality?
& finally, freedom is not in globalization, stupid! Thats just a marketing strategy!!! LOCAL IS THE NEW GLOBAL!! albeit a few years hence, & that i can predict with confidence!
ps: im trying to shorten my posts after an avalanche of complaints against my ramblings!
Wednesday, July 01, 2009
Perfection: a few musings
I'm reading Lila by Robert Pirsig (of Zen and the art of motorcycle maintenance). I haven't yet fathomed the ideas on quality presented in the book, but the concept of dynamic & static got me thinking. At this stage, Im not sure whether Im talking of quality or perfection. But for my & your sake, lets consider the concept of perfection, where we strive to achieve the best possible in any given task / field/ etc.
The biggest defeating hindrance is the very idea of achieving perfection. Since the world around us is a dynamic entity, we cannot aim to achieve a static state. Hence, perfection should be a dynamic state. In other words, one should live perfectly in all walks of life / tasks / fields, etc. One should literally breathe perfection! That is the only way to achieve it...
Lets take a simple example. I bit my tongue the other day, and was badly in pain for 2 days. But after that the pain subsided. However, there was a nagging feeling sometimes, and I decided to go to the doctor. He told me that the wound had worsened, as I had not taken any medication. When I told him the reason for not coming - the pain receding, he told me that the body adapts to anything. If one part pains repeatedly, the nerve will send the same signals faithfully, but the brain will learn to suppress them from the conscious mind. Hence, one feels the nagging only when idle.
In the same manner, the world & we are continuously adapting to the ongoing events, leading to change in situation at any given moment of time. Hence, the definition of perfection is also changing with every moment. The change could be either in the course or higher or lower levels of achievement. But of all things: it can never be static!
So, when we decide to be perfect, we are actually assigning ourselves to a lifelong task. For this very reason if we try to extract happiness from one act, we lose it over some time as the world has changed and the situation has changed. Our past achievement does not hold any value in the new order of things!
So, if the reason for perfection is to be happy: our rishi-munis were right in professing detachment, the only way to stay away from the dynamics of the world, and set one's own order of things. If the reason is achievement, you are doomed to a life of struggle!!! Its not so bad! Some people enjoy struggle!!!!
Whenever I finish a post to my satisfaction, Muffazza's words come ringing at the back of my head: what is the essence of this post? Is there a conclusion?
So my two cents worth: perfection is about trying the best of one's ability at every step of life, either that or nothing!
I'm sure Jun's gonna butcher this one!!!!!!
Mom's poem: निरंकुश माणूस (The Unbridled man )
Presenting my mother's poems, starting with this one (about the modern amoral & ever-dissatisfied man). the poem is given above & the line wise translation given below it. My mom is a published poet (in some local marathi magazines during the late 70s & early 80s). This is her latest poem. However, I'm trying to locate her older works & put them online some time. I should acknowledge that this is my first exposure to marathi literature, & I'm enjoying it thoroughly!
हरवलय माणसाच माणूसपण
धरुनिया सुखाची अतृप्त लालसा
बांधलय वेठीला स्वतःच स्वपण
असू जरी आम्ही हक्कासाठी अधाशी
नसे मात्र सोयरसुतकही कर्तव्याशी
दडपली सारी आधुनिकतेच्या आवरणात
आपल्याच चारित्र्याची सखोल संस्कृती
वरकरणी जरी दाखवत असू पुरोगामी
दिसुन येई नेहमीच प्रसंगी अधोगती
कशास जगलो, का जगलो कोणी बरे सांगावे
उठता बसता मात्र दोष नशिबाला द्यावे
तुडविली सारी बंधने आज माणसाने
म्हणून का फिरविली पाठ निसर्गाने?
Translation
NB: I would like to say that any weakness in language while translation is mine, the poem reads well - those of who can read marathi fluently will agree with me..
निरंकुश माणूस The Unbridled man
भौतिक सुखाच्या ह्या गराड्यात
In this great heap of worldly joys, हरवलय माणसाच माणूसपण
man's humanity is lost धरुनिया सुखाची अतृप्त लालसा
having the ever unquenched greed of these joys बांधलय वेठीला स्वतःच स्वपण
one has even bet one's self-esteem असू जरी आम्ही हक्कासाठी अधाशी
if we are greedy for our rights नसे मात्र सोयरसुतकही कर्तव्याशी
but there is no consciousness of one's duties दडपली सारी आधुनिकतेच्या आवरणात
in name of modernity we have bundled away आपल्याच चारित्र्याची सखोल संस्कृती
the entire culture of our morality वरकरणी जरी दाखवत असू पुरोगामी
even if we display our sophistication outwardly दिसुन येई नेहमीच प्रसंगी अधोगती
when the occassion comes, seen is one's regress कशास जगलो, का जगलो कोणी बरे सांगावे
for what did we live, why did we live, who will tell us उठता बसता मात्र दोष नशिबाला द्यावे
time and again (literal: sitting & standing) cursing (putting responsibility on) one's fate तुडविली सारी बंधने आज माणसाने
broken all ties today has man म्हणून का फिरविली पाठ निसर्गाने?
is that why nature has turned its back on us?
Blog: www.sandylief.blogspot.com
Blog2: www.sanventure.blogspot.com
web: www.patilsandip.co.nr
Tuesday, June 30, 2009
Song on trying hard...
This was written a few days ago while listening to country music- im not sure as yet whether i want to call it complete:
idle we rust -
fiddle we must:
edison the great -
exhibited this trait:
a million failures-
lit his success!
cross your comforts-
to achieve new landmarks
einstein says:
One who has never made a mistake-
idle we rust -
fiddle we must:
edison the great -
exhibited this trait:
a million failures-
lit his success!
cross your comforts-
to achieve new landmarks
einstein says:
One who has never made a mistake-
has not tried any new ways...
hard work
smart stuff,
not just the muscle
its also the mind..
as both are brought together -
a new strength we find..
hard work
smart stuff,
not just the muscle
its also the mind..
as both are brought together -
a new strength we find..
Saturday, June 20, 2009
मेरे साँसों की आवाज़..
तुझ संग बिताये पल जैसे एक ख्वाब -
तुझ से थी रौशनी -
और तुझ से ही ज़िन्दगी हसीन.
तेरी मीठी आवाज़ से होता सवेरा -
ढलती तेरी आँखों में शाम.
तेरे जाने से जो
हुआ ज़िन्दगी में अँधेरा,
सोचता हूँ
कब आएगा अब सवेरा.
तुझ सी ना कोई कभी
न थी, न होगी मेरे लिए.
इस कलम से जलाता हूँ
अपनी गुजरी ज़िन्दगी के दिए
खो गया हूँ जालिम दुनिया के सागर में
न कोई कश्ती
और न कोई किनारा
ढूँढ रहा मैं
कोई सहारा.
Thursday, June 18, 2009
Radicalism...
I've been reading Al Qaeda by some Mr Burke & simultaneously witnessing two events:
- Racism against Indians in Australia
- radicalism in India, (almost) single party government elected in India & the internal strife in one of the largest Hindutva parties...
Al Qaeda is a blandly written book, but an interesting (though I dont know how true) resource on terrorism & radicalism in Middle East & Pakistan. The author puts Pakistan in the centre of the entire terrorist movement, something I have never come across before. The birth of terrorism arising from the discontent of local peoples with the rulers who are willingly or unwillingly allowing western countries to control their resources & eventually lives is documented well in the book. The entire burden of the rise of terrorism is attributed to the cold war between USSR & USA in Afghanistan, subsequently spreading to other nations due to western corporate interests in Middle Eastern oil & business opportunities. The author appeals that local people have been uprooted from their traditional lifestyles & regions due to western intervention and that is the root of terrorism. The people have lost the only ideology they lead their lives with & do not connect to the western society, hence, they try to forge a pseudo-society based on the ideals that they should have followed - be it religious, social, geographical or cultural. When Westerners look at these definitions, they brand them as pagan, derogatory and even blasphemous. The entire problem lies in the increasing interaction between people of different cultures.
I tried to apply this perspective to the Indian scenario, and unsurprisingly, it works well. The urban youth is born in a Western style society and does not relate to the traditional idioms. On the other hand those living in non-westernized parts of the country are being forced to live in increasingly western / foreign societies as people migrate from rural to urban & native to westernized areas, torn from the culture that they have always known & seeing it disappear. The word western here is used in the social context (& has no geographical attribute). When these two different kinds of people are put in the same place, there ought be a friction. Those who fear the foreign cultures then try to create a pseudo-ideology that they want to cling to, in absence of their original one. When they find they cannot live on that ideology in isolation, they try to force it on others,and thus result attacks on discos, morally correct dress codes, etc. Truth be told, its just a wrong-headed attempt to assimilate oneself in a modern Indian urban society.
Apply this example to modern day Australia and one can see the frustration of the local unemployed youth at the Indian students who (usually from higher middle class families) flaunt latest gadgets while working at lesser pays. The Indian lifestyle is distinctly different, and somehow the students manage to save for things they aspire, by saving on daily rations (thats what i know, & i may be wrong). Whatever the reason, local youth increasingly feel they are unemployed and pushed lower in the class order due to such foreigners. Thus they try to rebel, bully, etc etc. The Indian students have some kind of an association, is there one for locals???? There is no representation, and that i believe is the underlying flaw, denying any chance of a civilized dialogue.
So how does one assimilate people from two or more drastically different cultures? Its a very tough question, but one of prime importance. I think the first step is to avoid alienization of any culture. People rise voilently when threatened, and that must be avoided at all costs. It is important to note that different people feel threatened in different ways, and that needs to be studied well by anthropologists / sociologists / psychiatrists.
The second point is to have complete representation of all kinds of people. Unless that is achieved, one cannot hope for a dialogue, as the Australian example might show.
If the people feel they are being represented / heard, the tendency to resort to violence is reduced. One can easily see the opposite in terrorist activities where people feel their leaders are not representing them, and hence attack them & their collaborators.
Again, this is just one angle of the story. Ofcourse terrorism has arisen due to various other political & social factors. But the very idea of instigation lies at the root of every revolt. In a democracy like India, it is necessary (& quite easy) to provide a platform for equality. I can only imagine if the radicals who push north Indians out of Mumbai, attack discos in Mangalore are asked to help in law-making for application of their views, they will have to face a much larger issue of actually listening to the other side - something they evade during violent interactions.
Sunday, May 24, 2009
Midway review - Naomi Klein's The Shock Doctrine
As I delve deeper into Klein's rantings about the Chicago school agenda on how the capitalist systems undermines democracy by concentrating power into the hands of the rich, which impoverishing rest of the citizens, I was suddenly struck by a revelation that Klein is constantly avoiding. By giving examples of Chile, Argentina, Brazil, Poland, South Africa and China Klein repeatedly concludes that the Chicago schoool capitalist system supports autocracy and oligarchy.She asserts that Friedman propagates the use of shock therapy for complete & swift application of the free-market theory in any given system, which in turn leads to large scale privatization of industries / basic infrastructure and concentrates power in the hands of the rich few, while also inreasing their monetary power.
Luckily, at the same time I'm also reading Narayana Murthy's Better India, better world - a capitalist's perspective of India's change from a socialist to a capitalist (controlled) market. He too, supports the principle of free-market theory, but strongly supports the importance of philantrophy at the same time.
After comparing both approaches / descriptions, I realized that it is a particular thought of capitalism (namely, the Chicago school) that Klein is so stubbornly opposing. She goes on to say that the Chicago school thought has penetrated IMF, World Bank, etc and hence is being implemented the world over. It becomes clear that she is confusing the political agenda with the economic one. While both go hand in hand,the idea that an economic agenda can destroy democracy cannot be concluded. In each case, the leaders have willingly chosen to go with the free-market theory because it empowers & enriches them at the cost of other citizens. This is a glaring example of a high-level corruption and not that of free-market theory. Klein fails to conclude that the Chicago school theory encourages corruption instead of providing actual free-market movement.
The idea of free-markets is democratization of the economy - providing power to the people to conduct business, choose products & services in a competitive market, and encourage a global competition instead of restricting the market to local products. In each of Klein's examples, the market has promoted foreign investors at the cost of local ones, leading to large scale unemployment and capital & resource flight from the host country to the investors. Many countries, especially India & (to an extent) China have provided examples of a balanced outlook. While foreign investors are free to invest (in certain sectors), they are not free to take the profits to their own country. The profits must be re-invested in the host country, or there should be a technology transfer. Technology transfer is the more lucrative & important aspect of inviting foreigners. Most or all of the countries taken by Klein for the study are third world nations lacking technologies to use their resources or increase quality of living.
It is only logical to invitie global leaders (corporations) to invest in their country & provide technology transfer that will allow the host country to introduce its own services. If a free-market economy is not established, the end result will be like India's telephone system before 1991, so distraught with stone-age technology & lack of management understanding that it was impossible to think of more advanced servies like internet. However, as the foreign investment was opened up, India is now a thriving telecom market with the cheapest service offerings (compared to anywhere in the world), and the rates keep falling every year. Also, all companies find it lucrative to introduce the latest technologies as there is a large consumer base ready to use those. They are currently held back only due to a lacksidal government attitude. The more important fact is the telecom revolution has empowered all individuals from all walks of life without discrimination - anybody from a vegetable vendor or taxi driver to a professional can buy a cell phone service complete with internet, fax, etc to start working & connecting -thus increasing his or her business prospects exponentially. I see this at work daily as my father works from the ease of our home, compared to 3-4 years earlier when he had to run about the whole day connecting with various people. I also see it in my own office where emails are the fastest way to send & receive drawings, get opinion from experts and send changes to the site, without moving from my seat!
I do believe Klein's hypothesis that the Chicago school interpretation of free-market economics has led to large-scale corruption. But to draw an analogy that the free-market theory itself is at fault is not an acceptable conclusion. conclusion. While i have not yet read the entire book and hope that the conclusion doesn't go the way most of the book is, I think the book could really be a misplaced attack on a theory instead of its proponent. Moreover, if the book intends to attack a proponent, it does not deserve critical acclaim, since it is the theory that matters not a single school of thought. Klein would have done better to show the positive side of the free-market theory that Chicago school approach lacks. All said & done,Kleins's book is an important eye-opener in the recent global events and the resultant depression that we are facing. I have been lucky to be provided with such thought provoking reads by Mufaaaza in the line of Chomsky, Economic Hitman & Klein.
Thursday, May 21, 2009
Bureaucracy - the unaccountable public service?
In the last post I was arguing the existence of public accountability in government services. However, there is one large hindrance to the same- bureaucracy. It is a parallel system (gifted by the ingenious Brits) of government, that provided the elites with a just escape from accountability while staying in the system. The elites proved that while democracy is a good way of empowering voters, they also chided the inability of elected representatives to handle specific tasks / concepts / policies. Thus they promoted the rise of the experts, who were capable of "aiding" the elected representatives in governing the nation by providing expert advise, micro-managing daily affairs & policies, etc. These experts or bureaucrats were selected by a so called competitive exam system, but had no accountability whatsoever to the voters. While the elected representatives came & went, the bureaucrats became the true bearers of power influencing the policies (depending on their interpersonal skills).
The government /voters did try to create a barrier by providing compulsory transfers every few years, change of posts, etc etc. However, the voters failed to realize that it was a larger nexus - while the bureaucrats had different individual views, their common minimum policy was to maintain power within the bureaucracy & ensure increasing profits for their kind. They did not shirk from providing carrots to the politicians by giving them a taste of wealth that could be acquired from the public position of power. While the politicians were re-elected or thrown out based on their performance, the bureaucrats who were elites formerly, were able to forward their agenda without much deterrence from the public. They are, today, the true elites & power-bearers, deciding the fate of everyone from the rich to the poor, while enriching themselves limitlessly....
One has to only imagine a public system in their absenoe, or one where the bureaucrats are also elected / directly accountable to understand that the fear of being removed from their position completely can be the only deterrent to their power & money games. Accountability is a great threat to the responsible, but the public has been denied the right to use it on the largest control group - the bureaucrats... Time we changed this?
Bureaucrat- capitalist nexus
A day after the election results, I was sitting with my dad & watching the events unfold on the TV when he remarked: " Why do we need two set of people to do the same thing?" I asked him what he meant & he replied:"Well, there is this national highway development program for example. There is one set of govt employees / bureaucrats who sit in NHAI & similar & decide which roads to develop & so on. Then they dole out these lucrative earning opportunities to (so to say) the lowest bidders (namely the contractors). The contractors then construct these roads. Earlier, in the 60s & 70s, the govt used to build the roads by directly employing labour, thus guaranteeing proper wages to the lowest workers while ensuring quality. Then, as corruption increased, the babus formed a nexus with the material suppliers & supplied sub-standard materials to the roads. As a result the roads were no longer reliable. The govt suddenly decided that it was incapable of building roads & should divest itself of this responsibility. Thus were the road contractors born. Earlier, they provided quality as they had a name to keep & the roads were fine again. But the babus formed another nexus with the contractors & again the quality suffered. Now, we are in the third phase where the government passes on the build-operate-transfer/own rights to contractors & they are free to do what they like. Initially, this worked too, as the contractors owned the roads & collected toll. So they maintained the stretches well. Again, the babus have formed a nexus, and the roads (even expressways) are back to the poor lamentable conditions. The rot has set in, and there is no further hope unless we remove the roots of the rot first!"
I took the opportunity to compare this to Klein's description of events in South American countries during the 1970s. A small problem was magnified hugely by private capital hungry for resources & sources of exponential earning to show that the then current system didn't work. They kept proposing free market policies privatizing all forms of services, and earning enormous profits from the same, while the general condition continued to deteriorate.
In the same manner, as just one example of such a policy, private capital in our country has kept insisting the govt is unable to develop & maintain quality roads by itself, freeing the entire operation from the government step-by-step, ultimately owning the roads, bullying people to pay toll even as the quality of roads deteriorates to earlier (or worse) levels. Put this example to comparison in other policies like power, air transport, water works, urban infrastructure, etc etc & you get the point. The whole aim of the exercise is to keep fooling the public into believing that the govt is incapable of doing things itself & private capital / corporations are the only answer to quality development. As each small step fails, another more radical alternative is presented as a hope. If this continues, we will effectively privatize all our essential services to no end, & lose whatever control we have over our basic rights as citizens.
While I am not a supporter of leftist / socialist policies i do not believe that democracy entails complete corporatocracy. Certain basic services / rights have to be ensured by the government & the best (though less efficient) way of doing it is for the government to control the production & distribution of these services. Private capital is not answerable to the public & in effect creates oligarchy, since essential services are not liable to competition. While grossly inefficient, the government machinery is atleast answerable to the voters & thus (marginally) in their control.
This raises an important question regarding bureaucracy, which i shall discuss in the next post.
Corporatocracy v/s democracy
I have been reading Naomi Klein's Shock Doctrine. She talks about corporatocracy a la Milton Friedman & its impact on the world. The American policies that have allowed free reign of private capital around the world have led to the collapse & deterioration of many countries around the world. I have been exposed to the idea with Chomsky's writings, although he never used the term or explained the concept in the book I read. However, subsequent reads of Klein & Confessions of an economic hitman brought home the idea that private capital is dangerously bent on gaining profits from the crisis in other nations. In a worse turnaround, private capital creates crises to be able to generate new profits.
Its a very interesting case for India too, while Klein's book does not mention India except a short sentence on Tsunami. Since the last 5 years we have turned socialists again, introducing public funded policies that seek to resdistribute taxes earned by the govt to the poor through farm loan waivers, NREGA and the likes. However saintly it may look, the government is still guilty of misguiding the general public: the largest amount of tax comes fromt the middle classes & not the exceptionally rich. While they pay a good amount of personal tax, most of their wealth lies in corporations which are cross-subsidized by the government through various tax-waivers, import-export subsidies, SEZ system (the largest tax break system in our country to date), etc. If one is to even calculate off-hand, it is easy to notice that the amount of revenue the government loses (& in effect subsidizes) from corporations is many times more than what it doles out towards pro-poor policies.
So, is this just a way of covering up the corporatist agenda? The earlier government (NDA) wasn't even covering up - they were blatantly doling out subsidies to the rich while ignoring the poor. However, whether the former or latter, the middle class takes the burden of financing most of this powerplay. In the end, its about our money as taxpayers, that the government conviniently pushes across various spectrums, leaving us high & dry.
This is just the first in a series of posts, where i wish to explore the concepts of corporatocracy, democracy & the status of our country within the same.
Sunday, May 17, 2009
Movie: Letters from Iwo Jima
It was my first night at the movie club that Anuj hosts, and we were to see the screening of "Letters from Iwo Jima" - a movie about the American- Japanese battle for a small island in the Pacific during the second world war. The movie, produced in 2006 (along with its sequel The Flags of our Fathers) by Clint Eastwood won many awards. Here is my review of the same:
I believe that Letters from Iwo Jima is not a war movie. It is a dual charactersketch of two personalities - a general who has lived in the US before the war, & a baker dragged into the war due to conscription. The director has taken a conscious decision to not show the actual battle along with tactics. Instead, he concentrates on the mindset of the Japanese soldiers, their life and the state in which they struggle to protect the island. It also provides one important insight into the imperial Japanese society, pushing its subjects into desperate situations beyond its own control. The social fabric which hails patriotism above all else overlooks the discomfort and breaking morale of the commoners. That, I believe is the most important lesson of the movie. The letters that the baker hides at the end of the battle talk about a general's thoughts of US to his children, the baker's continued longing for his wife in the backdrop of an impending suicidal battle. Important dialogues show how the Japanese army discounts American technological prowess & ends up losing its infantry to arrogance, ignorance and misguided sense of patriotism. The very idea of committing harakiri instead of retreating to one's base & providing much needed manpower seems untactful - a strong statement about a medieval army facing a modern battle.
Thursday, May 14, 2009
The alchemy in my life...
When i was a kid, i thought i was a dreamer.... so, i used to imagine a hundred million things & draw some of them.... then i came to rigid formal teaching & discovered im good at math & science. So, i took up math & science... when i faced the boards i found hundreds better than me.. then i thought atleast i drew better, and had some sense of imagination... so i joined architecture... there i found hundreds better at sketching & imagination... i found i have a better appreciation for planning, so i took up a job in planning... i found many better than me... i realized i appreciated environment & nature much more... so i took up landscape... & there i found nature lovers more fanatical than me, environmentalists more obsessed than me... so im back here, wondering what is it i am good at...
Now, i think im a better dreamer than anything else... conjuring up the future (imagined) before my eyes... well, i will find another hundreds better at that too....
but the truth is, there are hundreds better than me at any one given thing...its the combination of some math, some science, some imagination, some bit of drawing, some bit of environmental attitude that makes me - ME
am i upto my own expectations? do i value myself? do i believe in myself? well, the answer can only come when i go back to the roots... the alchemist found the treasure back where he started... & i must go back to my dreaming... combined with my experiences in math, science, imagination, architecture et al, ... maybe ill realize what niche i have...where i excel... and what i can contribute to the world....
happy journey to myself!!!!
oh ps: i absolutely adore to travel.. there may be others better,but i havent yet found anyone as hell-bent on exploring even when not having slept in last 24 hours (apropos my trip to mt abu...)
Wednesday, May 13, 2009
Er.. that marriage thing....
I've seen people choosing their own partner & living with them their whole life & I've seen others choosing their own & having flings the next year onwards..
I've seen people getting into arranged marriages & living happily ever after, & I've seen too many not feeling alive ever after....
As you can understand, I'm quite undecided on which bench I should sit.. but there is one positive thing about arranged marriages that I may have discovered. & it reflects not just the marriage & social customs, but also the general state of mind of individuals in the society. The first group wants freedom & chooses their own, the second gives that to their families to choose. Now the arranged marriage system is a good web of checks & balances, not withstanding the fact that I have seen it fail more times, but then success stories are too common & hence are never mouthed.. every successful arranged marriage is yet another good marriage, but a disastrous one is an agenda for the freedom of choice group.
Anyways, the discussion being about checks & balances - the family keeps the web tightly knit, with frequent gatherings & festivals allowing the couple to feel needed everywhere & keep close to each other in the first year. Then onwards, each family takes care of the newlyweds, with economic & social extensions of their own family, thus tightening the web. In the end, we have about 3 loosely nuclear families moving together. If any one of the newlyweds wavers, the bonds around are a moral deterrent, as well as physical when needed.
Now, I have always kept wondering why is this needed? Which brings us to the state of mind question. While most of us want freedom of choice, is every individual in the society qualified enough to make his or her decisions? I do believe in freedom for every individual as the cornerstone for liberty, but most examples in society are that of irresponsible use of the freedom... How do we bring about a balance. I would like to believe that such informal checks & balances systems are helpful. The state can only make blanket laws for everyone, since we have not been able to achieve a personalized democracy - different for every individual according to need. Blanket laws are necessary for some but oppressive for most, or helpful to most but deterring for some. There is no single right way in a country of a billion plus people. Hence, it is necessary to understand the concept of formal v/s informal, legal v/s social laws / customs. Somewhere, this leads me (for now, & to be honest - quite grudgingly) to believe that our system of personal laws (separate for each community - rephrased culture) is better than having a single national law. It may unite us, but narrow our freedoms & tear apart our social fabric.
Next is what Mr Prime Minister?
I've been reading A better India, a better world by Narayana Murthy. In one of his articles written on 15 August 2007, he outlines eight outstanding achievements of India: green revolution, white revolution, space programme, telecommunications, nuclear programme, economic changes (1991), IT revolution and Independant media. I mentally arranged some of these into our nation's decadal achievements or lets say 10 year unintended & unplanned achievements! Now, I haven't researched the actual dates, so kindly ignore the precision. I am trying to get a jist of the direction of our movement. So here goes:
Mr Murthy stresses that each of these needed a visionary: Be it Mr Swaminathan Iyer or Verghese Kurien or Mr Sam Pitroda... a single individuals or a group of individuals have struggled to lead the programmes. Well, we all know there are teams of people struggling to work on schedule behind each leader / visionary, but the vision is necessary for development. Now, to go on....
1. 50s & probably halfway 60s we were abysmally socialist, trying to develop resources & mega-infrastructure for water, power & transport.
2. halfway 60s & 70s was the green revolution that made us food independant (mostly we weren't self sufficient till after Indira Gandhi's time, but the revolution was happening fast around this time & problems of logistics were higher than problems of actual production)
3. 70s & 80s was the white revolution that made us a self-sufficient milk country, even one of the largest exporters. It was also the advent of telecommunications & large scale space technology
4. 90s was ofcourse the financial revolution, delivering us from socialism to capitalism....
Mr Murthy stresses that each of these needed a visionary: Be it Mr Swaminathan Iyer or Verghese Kurien or Mr Sam Pitroda... a single individuals or a group of individuals have struggled to lead the programmes. Well, we all know there are teams of people struggling to work on schedule behind each leader / visionary, but the vision is necessary for development. Now, to go on....
5. (this is beyond Mr Murthy's words) i believe 2000s is about infrastructure rather than IT. Yes, IT is there, but its a global changemaker, not just limited to India. & it wouldnt have happened if we had not put satellites into space or spruced up our antiquated communications. The 2000s is a continuing legacy of improving urban & rural infrastructure - urban development programmes under JNNURM, rural development & gram sadak yojnas, the cellphone which is the single largest impact on Indian economy - larger than all of Sam Pitroda's infrastructure since it has empowered every subziwallah & rickshaw wallah to better deliver his / her services.
But this is all ongoing & has been set into a cycle. Not a single political party has outlined the vision for the next 10 years. Now I have hardly any qualifications to direct anywhere, but if I were to choose, I would choose sustainability over anything else...
The global environment is dying (although for no fault of our own.. even today the US is the largest polluter, even though China uses a full 50% of global resources today, the US is still in denial) and we are bearing the burden of the western development. We should regulate ourselves before we are down on our knees begging for the last drop of oil.. So who should be our role model: Suzlon wind power, the public transport system promoters, solar power engineers at TERI? well i wouldnt care who is the visionary as long as somebody does take up the axe and chop every inefficient technology out of the country.
We need development that does not cost us our precious resources, wildlife, flora, the pristine beauty of nature, our culture (i.e. our traditional technologies, items, handicrafts, etc) sustainability does not mean just energy efficiency- it also means skillset efficiency. If we can make the best pashimino shawls (one part of India), why should we manufacture stupid jeans for half the world.. well we may do that, since there's too many of us, but why put pashimino to extinction... it sells like hotcakes & we should encourage it.. It should not be ONLY the government's job to do so, we need visionaries who are futurists too - what will sell (since we are capitalists now) in future needs to be understood today & thats where our next 10 year plans will come from..
Any answers our future prime ministers??
Insanity, stupidity - a communal perspective
Day before yesterday I saw a shocking incident... Now, I've seen Hindu Muslim riots before my eyes, and I've seen Godhra happen. But I would attribute those to mob mentalities in general. I have only heard, but never seen racisim / communalism happen before my eyes.
So I was standing at a traffic signal on IIM Junction, Ahmedabad and a rickshaw with a Muslim driver drew up beside me. A guy got down from it (in his fifties perhaps) & blatantly refused to pay the rickshaw driver!!! In addition, he started hurling abuses saying: " I won't let you enter Vastrapur again... I am a Kathiawadi, I will kill you..." and all this with hundreds of expletives in between. The rickshaw walla (in his sixties or seventies) was bold enough to give back verbally.
But there's more... The passenger started hitting the rickshaw wallah!!!! He smacked him 4-5 times while the rickshaw wallah kicked about trying to loosen the guy's grip. A few people tried to get the passenger away, but the signal had gone green & vehicles started moving about... I was too shocked to move, but left the scene as everyone around was honking like crazy.
Sadly, neither me (shamefully), nor the cops (who were hardly 10m away & watching), nor others around stood up for the rickshaw wallah. I experience tremendous shame as i confess witnessing this shameful act in front of my eyes without doing anything about it...
Are we even humans? Is this the way to treat a fellow human being? Are we taught this, or learn this somewhere? What drives us to this? It is all so stupifying.....
Sunday, April 19, 2009
Just another brick in the wall....
This post is sort of in continuation to the last one, albeit on a very different topic. Edward Luce, author of IN SPITE OF THE GODS (about the rise of India) argues that India has two distinct growth rates due to its skewed education outlook. The budget for higher education is equal to or more than the budget for primary education. So say many others, chiding our abysmal literacy rates. Has anyone stopped to think whether education is actually upto any standard for the future.
I will quote two sources here: Alvin Toffler & Sir Ken Robinson, the first being a futurist & the second being an educationist.
Toffler discusses the idea behind the current education system. Before middle ages, most professions were either hereditary or learnt through an existing practitioner. There wasn't a formal education system. With the advent of mechanization & industrialization, the need for people involved in rote tasks increased. The requirement was for hands & not the brain, the skill being largely mechanical. Those who could apply their brains shrewdly climbed the industrial hierarchy, while others languished on factory floors. Hence an education system was created to cater to the industrial needs: kids were taught importance of time & punctuality, given rote tasks for improvisation& the like. However, the world is changing rapidly, and we are back to multi-tasking since each person is a walking organization now. SoHos are changing the way we work, & in spite of having a great amount of automation, we are required to have varied skill sets for changing demands.
Sir Ken takes the argument further by saying that the industrial school system was meant to prohibit creating in order to amplify repetitive skills. Hence the school system concentrates on developing the brain & hands while the lower half of the body is left out. He emphasizes the importance of multi-tasking to creativity & varied knowledge to problem solving. The more we concentrate our knowledge & narrow our spectrum, the more unaware we are of the impacts in other fields. As a result, our solutions are half-baked or require large amounts of co-operative activity, which is quite time consuming.
The idea behind education should be to nurture one's creativity, encourage problem solving & out-of-the-box thinking, instead of being given repetitive no-brainers. So the question we, as Indians, should be asking ourselves is not how much to give to whom, but whether to give anything to these ruins of the past? They have no future to nurture us or our next progeny; they are OBSOLETE.....
slipping forward... pessoptimism
Im reading IN SPITE OF THE GODS by Edward Luce which tells the weird growth story of India, inspite of all the drawbacks it faces. I havent formed any opinion on the book.
But a series of related events & articles have been observed by me lately:
- Mulayam's English hatao, computer hatao
- Shobha De's article against him in today's Times
- Sri Rama Sene attacks & an interview by the founder to Outlook
- A friend's shock at seeing a temple in front of a 1000 year old cave complex
- BJP & Congress circulars promising PDS grains at 2-5 Rs./ kg
- a friend's narration of wheat imports from Australia lying unattended on some port
- BJP & CPM's anti-nuclear stand
- Maoist attacks on election booths
- Lack of leadership by any party
- Criticism of new candidates from the corporate world
These are in no particular order. My observation is that while most of us are happy at the post 90s liberalization, we cannot make up our minds whether to move forward with the world or go back to pre-industrial world (a.la. Pol Pot). Luce talks about modernization reducing no of jobs in industries, Mulayam of the same due to computer related automation, & so on...
I cannot comprehend how one can miss the point that the world has always been changing. I can only imagine a Neanderthal walking upto me & saying I have extinguished his foraging lifestyle & job due to agricultural inputs. In the same sense, mechanization of agriculture has led to reduction in jobs available in rural areas. Modernization of machinery has the same impact on industrial & service sectors.
At any point in time, one type of profession is going out while the other is being born. The difference today lies in the speed of change. Earlier professions changed at the rate of a few generations; now they change atleast 3 times within the same generation. I wanted to be an architect, but after coming out I realized I couldn't achieve all my dreams being just an architect. So, I specialized into landscape architecture. A few years down the line, maybe I'll specialize in landscape planning exclusively. I am ready for the change & I think everyone should be.
We do not live in a Nehruvian world where job security was paramount. The nature of the profession changes every 5 years today & there is no way we can provide lifetime job assurance. Even for the farmers, job definition has changed from subsistence farming to edible foods to cash crops to exclusive oil crops to contract farming with industry to demand based farming & cold chain management & so on.....
The question again, as has been raised in my last post, lies in whether we can provide requisite infrastructure to everyone. Unless we can do that, we will never solve our unemployment problem.
Saturday, April 18, 2009
Infrastructure as the critical component of change...
I recently watched a TED talk by Shai Agassi on introducing electric cars on a mass scale. He concentrates on the infrastructure aspect more than technological imporvisation. His premise is simple: the battery is like an oil well; if we buy oil today & not the well itself, why should we buy a battery. So, the solution is to sell electricity & not the battery itself. He plans to create a network of electric stations (like gas stations) which will replace used batteries with new ones. The batteries will be owned by the provider & not the owner, and hence the owner has to pay only for electric use. His calculations show that this will allow an electric car to run at 8 cents a mile compared to 60 cents a mile for petrol!!!
Whether his calculations & planning holds true or not, i'm impressed by the fact that he has used infrastructure as a tool for improvisation. It is true that we take for granted our huge oil refineries & millions of gas stations as integral infrastructure to run our car. Today, the electric car is expensive not because of its basic cost, but because it does not enjoy infrastructure support at par with gasoline vehicles! To create that will allow a level competition... I think we have started to see this in India with the rise of CNG & LPG pumps everywhere, gas is increasingly supplanting petrol / diesel & public transport is encouraged to use these fuels!
It raises more important questions for me. Many technologies that we do not find economically prudent today, but more sustainable nonetheless may be victims of infrastructure support rather than anything else. We need to relook at our planning & infrastructure to see whether we are really planning for the future or just pushing our present? Imagine living without the internet today, & yet if India had not embraced the famous STD PCO with satellite linking and rise of last mile connectivity, we would still be internet disabled!No Infosys, no BPOs, just plain old industry....
Please watch the video here
India hosts TED!!!!!
Whoa! its news to me..i just read on the TED website..
TED will have a SPECIAL INDIA EDITION on nov 4-7 2009 at Infosys Campus Mysore!!!
Whats more? Its open to members & non-members both! The registration fee is a whopping $2400 (including accomodation, meals & airport transfer from Bangalore), but for those who can afford it...
WHAT THE HELL!! JUST DO IT!
This is one of the rare events where global creative thinkers come together to display their research / projects / ideas. Please visit http://conferences.ted.com/TEDIndia/ for further details. & for those who haven't looked at TED, www.ted.com
Friday, April 17, 2009
Standing in the summer sun....
Today's article in Times of India discusses Intelligent traffic control systems vs manned traffic. The author talks about how an intelligent traffic system will not only take away jobs, but also be redundant in the Indian scenario. He also claims that manned traffic is the only solution to Indian problems.
I dont know if the gentleman has ever seen a traffic cop standing in the middle of a tarred road on an Indian summer afternoon. Appalled would be an understatement. These men risk their lives (to unruly drivers) and health (to sun, rain, name it) to just maintain some sanity on our roads!!! Ahmedabad has a lot of road rage & traffic cop beating incidents. These people merit a better life.
To say that the intelligent traffic system will take away their jobs is absolutely rubbish. Besides, it feels like the Mulayam manifesto of removing computers so that more people can be employed to do the same work!!
The intelligent traffic system monitors traffic on a real time basis, by counting vehicles & adjusting traffic cycles to the flow in any given direction, much like a traffic cop does. However, it is but a dumb computer & needs to be supervised. Hence, cities like London have central control room where 10 operators manage about 80 intersections!
We have the advantage of manpower to our side. We can install on-site traffic monitoring booths, where the cops can stay inside & supervise the traffic at ease. They may come out when needed only, eg in case of an accident or major traffic jam.
Another advantage of the system is that it can capture an offender's number plate photo & send the fine directly to his / her house. This reduces the stress on the cop, who does not have to run after offenders, or argue unnecessarily with them.
These are just two examples I gave off my head. The IT system can aid us much more, by giving real time traffic data for better management & planning, while serving the needs of our large cities.
please vote
Today's paper shouts: "Maoist attacks on many booths, yet polling (average) at 62%..."
While we urbanites are too lazy to move ourselves (myself being a culprit) to vote, leaving the shelter of our airconditioned offices & standing in a queue to vote; rural India is voting, even in places where it costs them their lives. 8 people have died at poll booths (in addition to kidnapped election officials & injured & dead army / police personnel). In Kandhamal (where Christianity related riots took place), a large number of tribals have come forward under army / police convoy protection to vote. Some booths, where firing & landmine blasts took place did report 0% turn out. But then, even with the probability of such events happening elsewhere, many people turned out.
I have discussed earlier with Rooney, the futility of voting in a democracy, including ours (& even the great USA). However, if these simpletons can believe in democracy & turn out to vote, i must exercise my right, whether useful or not....
to buy or not to buy...
We have zipcar now... for those who came in late:
zipcar is a company that rents car, A la Hertz; however the difference is that one subscribes to it like a monthly rental or similar & can ask for any car in their stable. Obviously all cars have different rents, but the convinience is amazing!
To put an analogy, you can go to downtown office in public transport & then order a BMW to reach client lunch meeting, which you can drop anywhere. You can order a family wagon on a weekend for your trip, or a 4wd for off-roading.. The idea is you buy the timeshare of the car, not the car itself. It is cheaper in the long run as you pay only rent (like EMI), and you dont have to maintain it or look for replacements when your car malfunctions!
I don't know if I would like to use this, but if I were to apply this analogy to automobile manufacturers, maybe they could come out with a system where you buy timeshare of their particular model or segment & they provide you latest upgrades for free. For this, you dont pay them the whole amount, but a continued EMI. This concept has partly taken off with second hand car market, where you can drive in your old car & drive out in a brand new one!
However, the issue is that in the current economy, we are paying out loans to banks for all our capital investments. If we pay the auto company a fixed (or variable, depending on scheme) amount every month, & get a fully functional automobile in return (the amount including services, repairs & replacement car during service), why would we ever want to BUY a car?
The whole idea of ownership is changing, we need to change too...
Freak...aaaaaahhaauuggh...onomics...
I read (rather flew over) Freakonomic a few days ago. The book is a totally captivating read, but it left me nowhere at the end! The authors claim that the book is not meant to lead anywhere, just make the people aware of the economic problems in modern society. It is a collection of articles written by the authors in some dailies in US. Interesting as they are, the book should have been released as a collection, with a less glamorous title. I believe they have shirked from the responsibility of editing & compiling a meaningful document, which is what it could have been.
The authors demonstrate (Using simple economics / math) how:
- real estate agents dont care how much more we could get on our property, while they sell their own for the best prices
- Ku klux klan is a money laundering / frustrated people's society
- Drug dealers at the lower heirarchy dont earn enough to live while their bosses are filthy rich
- Your name can make or break your life
- Parents have no active role to play in a child's life (but a lot genetically)
- Crime rate in US has dropped due to legalizing abortion
etc etc etc
Each of this is simple to read, although stretched beyond its reading length. The economist, I feel, should have been more responsible to atleast demonstrate some of his skills beyond data collection & basic manipulation (which any statistics student can easily do...)
If data is what they were trying to manipulate, i suggest one look at the graphic work of Hans Rosling (www.ted.com) who shows the differences & similarities in growth patterns of countries around the world, birth rates, infant mortality, etc. More importantly, he teaches a method of graphic interpretation for laypersons, which Freakonomics overshoots completely!
Capitalism as parasitism...
I just finished "Confessions of an economic Hitman" by John Perkins, & Im indebted to Mufaazaa for gifting me the amazing book! While I cannot make up my mind whether it is fact or fiction, the book does cover the most widely debated topic today: American imperialism.
The author claims to be an Economic Hitman (EHM) for a private company(that was sold off to another company subsequently). His sole aim is to create lucrative economic projections about third world countries, justify world bank / IMF investments into them, and then gain contracts worth billions of dollars for his own company. The larger aim is to make the country so indebted in the long run that it defaults its payments & accedes to US power by allowing military bases on its soil, opening its natural resources & workforce to US companies & voting as per US instructions in the UN. Thus US gains a slave without spending a dollar, since all the money is funnelled back to the States by its companies.
The author denies this being a conspiracy; rather its just a set of minds that methodically go about getting richer by sucking dry the resources of other countries. Perkins claims to have worked in Panama, Ecuador, Colombia, Indonesia, etc. He also puts forward another way of supremacy for countries that are cash rich: the middle eastern nation-states. Here the US asks the countries to buy US bonds and use the interest to finance infrastructure development in their countries.
The greatest ease for US is that the dollar is a universal currency & it isnt backed by a gold standard. Hence, it can print any amount as long as the world is confident of the American economy. The book is written just before the depression set in & has important lessons to teach.
Perkins also talks about American dollars funnelled to terrorist organizations & CIA assassinations of top global leaders, not for political motives, but purely for greed. He also points out that most of American bureaucrats & politicians are, in fact, on the payroll of large American Corporations. To sum it all he has coined the word: "Corporatocracy". It think its says a lot.
I read Chomsky some time earlier, & coudlnt convince myself about what he wrote. He seemed leftist to me. Perkins, however, is a capitalist who has grown to despise the system which gains its riches by killing & starving others.
For the first time in my life, even if momentarily (until i do further research), I am glad that India has not bowed to American pressure in that last 50 years & opened up its economy only in the 90s, a time when American power is either declining or concentrated in numerous wars elsewhere.
Perkins also points out that America is the only country (other than Iraq) to have invaded other countries in name of justice / democracy (Vietnam, Korea, Panama, Iraq, Afghanistan) while the sole aim was economic greed. It is, the modern East India trading company. Instead of being one company, its an informal consortium of the largest corporations in the US.
I will write more posts on this topic as i reflect & research more, I hope to start a dialogue with the readers... & we thought our politicians are corrupt!!!!
Sunday, April 12, 2009
Na...aah....No...oh!!!!!
There's this big moral battle & im unable to take sides! I just keep wondering & arguing with myself: to be or not to be!
Im talking about Ms Nano by the Tatas. While tech-geeks are hailing a great Indian invention (almost), the transport planners are up in arms against the probable exponential increase in congestion that she will create.
The geeks have retorted that Nano pollutes less than a two-wheeler, and will make travel more orderly, as the great two-wheeler riders are responsible for rash driving most of the time. The transport planners agree with the latter, but cannot reconcile to the former...
So where am I? I agree there will be increase in congestion, and increase in cars. So less people will use public transport & since we cannot come to terms with congestion taxes as a nation, we will create endless traffic jams.
But there is another side: the sheer willpower and simplicity in invention! The Tatas have succeeded in creating a car that is technologically at par with the best luxury cars, while being sold at a pittance. They have created a complete car at the cost of an auto-rickshaw! & the most accomplishe heavy-weights have contributed to its advanced engineering.
My inspiration is in the fact that if we can create a low cost- hi end car, why are we still using archaic techniques / technologies in other parts of our lives? Why do we have manned signals, buses that look like a walking dumpyard, camel carts, polluting two-wheelers or cars, & so much more?
If each of us aims to create one such great technology, we would all be much better off, be it transport planners or tech-geeks. Forget the argument guys, LEARN FROM IT!!! & now that Nano has already arrived, think of how to live with her....
Wednesday, April 08, 2009
In sanity.... A million little pieces
I recently read A MILLION LITTLE PIECES by James Frey (borrowed from Pranav). I was initially quite skeptical of reading the book, since the back cover said it was a story of a drug addict's rehab time. Frankly, i thought he would banter about the difficulties of rehab & ways of doing it, blah blah. Interestingly the book is controvertial: the author has listed it as non-fiction but changed a some incidents to suit the story. The publisher has written a note to the same effect, as the fact came up after publishing the first print.
Frey describes his journey through rehab almost like a fiction story, the whole drama is continous & catchy. Starting with his beaten up image to his time through rehab & his disbelief in the entire program, the pace is quite comfortable. While accurately describing most of the symptoms & rehab programs, Frey manages to weave together a small romance, some drama & a lot of retrospection into the story.
I was caught by his self-talks around halfway through the story where he starts wondering why AA (alcoholics anonymous) works or doesnt work, why the success rate of de-addiction is so low as less than 15% , and who is responsible for the larger ill prevailing in the society.
While Frey takes complete moral responsibility for his own drug addiction and state of mind, he hates the support programs which try to channel his addiction towards belief in god, social support, confessions, etc. His musings over belief in god being just another addiction to run away from responsibility & life are quite thought-provoking. Also, he talks about how some doctors are trying to prove that addiction may be a genetic disease & why he wants to reject the possibility (even though his grandfather was an alcoholic), and take moral responsibility.
However, the climax about the start of his addiction - the reason he runs away from life, hates his parents (even though he knows they love him & support him all the time) and hates society / wants to die takes away the prize. It comes at the end of the story, and is quite unexpected as it does not affect the story from point of its continuity, but makes an important point all the same.
One should read the book to understand the perils of addiction, the feeling when addicted, to know about addicts & their thought process in general & the state of society & the world that leads people to drug abuse & addiction.
I felt that the story was most part fiction, and the romance (which takes up quite a lot of the story) could have been completely avoided to make the story crisp & precise. But its a good read nonetheless.
Monday, March 30, 2009
(h)our earth....
Saturday was earth hour & i religiously switched off my electricity for an hour, eating by candle-light... Looking out of my house, though, i was aghast... the rest of the world was lit as usual..
Inspite of our media taking up the issue with great fervour, i could see it had little impact. So what went wrong? Why were all those people completely insensitive to the earth hour? I haven't seen much of the media campaign other than excerpts from last year's sydney earth hour. I believe they completely missed (though i cant confirm this, as i couldnt have seen tv all the time) the concept of earth hour. If we are trying to save some CO2 pollution by switching our lights, then was the whole idea even conveyed?
Also, i was hardly a willing partner to the whole idea. My skepticism arises from the fact that there may be better ways to reduce CO2 consumption on a regular basis, rather than such rare mass-movements. Our government does try hard to advertise use of CFLs over incandescent bulbs, switching off engines at traffic lights, switching off electronic items on standby and the likes. I believe the campaign is true at heart, but for some weird reason, nobody (in the media) wants to take it up voluntarily. Maybe, it has no "scoop" value. Anything that is regular becomes too ordinary to discuss & unfortunately our media thrives on new scoops.
So, how about an earth year? How about we decide that for the next 365 days we will:
1. switch off our electricity for half hour (one hour is too much, & those with power cuts are exempted)
2. switch off our engines at intersections
3. switch off all electronic items that have standby mode, and move our bums to start them only when we need them, rather than use the remote (aka tv, audio systems, laptops, etc etc)
4. remove chargers from sockets when not in use & switch off the plugs
5. drive at optimal speeds (upto 60km/h i believe) & not accelerate too fast & brake too hard
6. use the stairs atleast once daily instead of using the elevator (even downstairs helps!)
7. switch off our computers when not in use / atleast switch off screens when leaving the desk (even laptops have buttons to switch off screens)
8. promote (& use if possible) solar heating & lighting
9. close doors / windows when using air conditioners (ensure place is almost air-tight) & draw curtains to reduce heat load on the room (those with glass walled offices may demand partitions / dark +thick curtains)
10. reduce daylighting by using / creating ventilators in the room to allow ambient sunlight
These are things that hardly need an effort & yet can save enormous amounts of electricity & subsequently reduce CO2 pollution. For those of you who are really concerned, please go ahead & try these out! One radical point that i missed out : "Bicycle your way to the office / use public transport!!"
Dont look at me, i'm not the one who wants to save the world! Dont expect me to do this for the next 365 days! Besides, advice is always free! :P
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