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Archive for the ‘Issues’ Category

This post is a direct consequence of the ridiculous drama that has been going on in the Parliament regarding a not so innocuous TV show which has taken the country by storm. The show in question here is called “Sach Ka Samna”, an Indian version of the American reality show, A Moment Of Truth. The Show is unique in its format, as it tests neither your intelligence nor your physical prowess, but your mental fabric and the ability to speak the truth, come what may. The game poses a series of questions ranging from personal to highly intimate, some of which might actually end up breaking relationships, for these questions are asked in  front of the very people you love, and the truth has to be spoken right on their faces, irrespective of the consequence. So, the format is simple, you answer 21 difficult questions, and if you speak the truth (the answers are verified by a Polygraph test), you win a handsome amount (1 crore Indian rupees in this case).

Now, rarely has a TV show generated as much interest among the common mass, as this one. And this is because people get to see someone from among them, come up on stage and blurt out their feelings on various topics which are considered taboo in our highly-vexed society.  Since few of the questions were a little uncomfortable, keeping in mind that even kids might watch it, the show was given a late-night slot by Star, so that only the adults in the house could watch it, without having to worry  about their kids, who would be in their dreamlands by that time.  Now the entire furore started when a moron, whom we hand-picked to represent us in the Parliament, raised his eye-brows regarding this non-controversial show. According to him, the show was destroying the moral fibre of the society. Strike one. He pointed out that since, there was a big difference in the cultures of India and United States of America, something that works in America might not work here. Strike two. He also went on to suggest that there should regulation of the content that goes up on the television. Strike three.

Before beginning my refutations, I would like to point out that I am not a big fan of the TV show either, but our revered MP was suggesting was absurd, bordering more on the ridiculous than anything  else.  Let me first provide a snapshot of some of the questions that were asked on the show.

  • This was asked to a woman. “Would you like to sleep with another man, if you knew that your husband wouldn’t ever find out about it?”
  • Urvashi Dholakia, a popular TV-artist, was asked, “Were you asked to drop out from college because of you became pregnant while still in college?”
  • Another popular TV artist, who apparently had 3 wives, was asked, “Have you ever visited a prostitute?”

Now these are few of the more personal questions that were asked on the show. Now going back to the refutations.

  1. The producers of the TV show or the Channel itself has not forced anyone to watch the show. They have not used any sort of the vulgar tactics that the politicians use to win seats in elections, like paying money in order to buy seats, in order to increase the TRP ratings of the show.  The show is not aired at the prime time slot (it is aired at 10:30 in the night). Now it is but common sense to avoid watching things that might not suit your palate, like a lot of people do not watch horror movies because they get scared after watching it and cannot even visit the loo to answer their nature’s call at night. But if you still insist on watching it, nobody is responsible for the consequences. So where does the question of destroying the culture come in here. If people are watching what they want to, and are mature enough to digest it, where is the bloody problem? And exactly what is it about the show that is destroying the fragile culture, which came into being much before you or I even existed. Is it the question regarding cheating on your partner, or is it about teen-pregnancy or something as basic an emotion as greed.  All this is very common in our day-to-day society, so why approach it with a closed mind still? And even if you do insist on approaching it with a pea-sized brain (as one of my friends would say) why emphasize and force your judgements on others, or worse an entire culture itself. This is all so relative for something which might disgust me, might actually appear interesting to someone else. So how does anyone decide, that this particular thing is vulgar and is breaking the moral code of the society. I say, blatant irrationalism.
  2. Agreed, that there is a big difference in the cultures of India and America. But are we trying to say that infidelity, teen-pregnancy, adultery exist only in America and not in India, and that they are not a part of our day-to-day society. I would only be kidding myself if I said yes to this superficial question. With changing times, the trends and patterns in our society have changed.  Adultery was looked down upon long back, but now a section of the society indulges in it. I’m not saying that it is the right thing to do, but then it is something that we have to learn to deal with and not shy away from.  Frequenting sex workers is something that is in a way Omni-present, for the Zamindars made it so famous and generations have continued it. So why raise a hue and cry if a person reveals that he did indeed visit a prostitute.  What is the big deal about satisfying your carnal needs (ironically the person in question already had enough resources to satiate his needs, but who am I to question). Without nit-picking too much, what I am trying to say here, is that there a lot of things that happen in today’s society that did not happen back in lets say the 60s or the 50s. So why cringe if people come out and talk about it. What is exactly the harm in talking about it? If talking about such things, breaks relationships, then it is the person
  3. Why should there be a regulation on anything that is not under the control of the Babus. Regulate content of Television, Media, and Films. Why?? Why regulate? Why not give the freedom to the masses to watch what they want to watch, to read what they want to read, to listen to what they want to listen. Why not ensure that the common masses have the means to these ends so that they can grow with the rest of the world, rather than being an end to these means itself. If someone needs regulations, it is these babus who make a mockery of our culture, who make a joke of our governing systems and who make a joke of the country itself. Every year, we see at least one video making it to BBC where they show the members of the House going on rampage, hitting each other with chappals, tearing each other apart, in short, making a fool of themselves and the people they represent. We need regulations for the self-anointed Moral Police which beat up women just because they dared to venture some god-forsaken pub. We should have regulations for these stupid political bodies that incite people to fight against their own kin only to fatten their vote-base.  Even if I were to be pragmatic here, how can there ever be regulations on TV, when there are already 400 channels that air shows 24*7. And even if there were a body to regulate all this still, it would have to be autonomous, for corruption has its roots spread out far and wide, which means an additional expense on the government again.

This debate can go on and on and even then there would be a lot of people who blessed with gift of the gab and the pen would write out suitable arguments to each of my points. But that is not my intention. What I intend to say here is, that the Parliament has bigger issues facing it than fighting over a stupid TV show.  Politicians have bigger tasks on their hands, like solving the drought and rain-crisis and deflation and what not than deciding what destroys our indestructible culture.  How can culture be destroyed, if it is we who form the basis of the culture?  As far as I know, I haven’t come across a book where-in the rules and various interpretations of Indian culture have been laid down, and as long as I am in my senses, I wouldn’t come across one in the future too.  So let us all urge our revered Babus to stop fretting over something which changes as we change(Read: Culture) and focus on important, difficult tasks on hand which might change the face of the nation in the years to come.

India is well on its way to throw a metal cage buzzing with armoured circuitry and its own complete electronic ecosystem, into orbit around the moon. A place were barely a few people have walked, barren, stark, harsh and unforgiving. One mistake could mean crores of rupee in waste.

And yet, till now, we’ve kept it going. Faced with adversities, trade blockades, technology transfer held back, our country has actually gone ahead and taken a giant step. Putting a satellite around the moon requires great coordination and planning, after all!

But why do it? Thats actually my main question – was it really worth all that “Indian pride” that we get? Yet another statistic that would only land up as email forwards, just about bat a few eyelids before this great fact disappears into the vast pages of history? Or just simple, great, smart and effective business sense? The fact that India has geo-stationary payload delivery vehicles that have proved their worth twice than others and at half the price, is good enough. But its the key driver in earning money for ISRO, and in turn, the Indian government. So the PSLV and the GSLV are easily understandable as great investments by the government.

But a trip to the moon?

We get a few rock samples, great, then what? We discover what was already discovered earlier? Get a man on the moon, then what? Gain knowledge about space flights thats already known by the space-faring few? That actually brings us to the bigger question – who invests in scientific research? (Atleast scientific research that doesn’t directly mean huge amounts of savings for some business). Who invests in spending all those crores building that satellite to only get back some rock samples from the moon? The government, sure, pumps in the money – but you really need to have strong lobbies to be able to make the government machinery disperse large sums of money!

The museum? It would still take a few centuries of visitors paying the entry fee for that museum to get back its investment!

The underground mafia? So that finally that rock lands up at some uber-rich idiot’s house, so that he can show off to his friends that he actually got some moon-rock?

National Geographic? Yup, they’ve got money, but is there enough interest in moon-rock amongst the public that has been over-exposed to it during the Cold War proxy-fighting?

Certainly the moon-trip isnt a real instant RoI for the government. They’re thinking about the future – a future when this early headstart could make the difference between big or bust. No matter what you think is wrong with this nation – I somehow feel this was a timely investment, but a lock-in period of around a century or so!

After all, if you want some moon-rock, we’ve got it at half-price for you!

EDIT: I found this on their website: “This will lay the foundation for bigger missions and also open up new possibilities of international networking and support for planetary programmes … It would actually spur the Indian scientific community with the presence of India’s own moon-rock.”

Right …

Not an original piece, but found it quite interesting. Thought it needed to be shared.

Move over 9/11. 9/10 could be our worst nightmare: the end of the world. That’s if one goes by those opposed to the largest science experiment ever that will be conducted on Wednesday.

Come September 10, an excited bunch of physicists at the European Organisation for Nuclear Research (CERN) near Geneva will fire subatomic particles into a 27-km loop, making them travel the bend 11,245 times a second, and then smash them head on.

For those conducting the mega-experiment 300 feet under the French-Swiss border, answers to the birth of the universe may be answered. But for people like Prof Otto Rössler of the University of Tübingen, it will be apocalypse. Last week, Rössler and other naysayers of the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) experiment had hoped that the European Court of Human Rights would block it. They believe that the chances of a black hole — an intense gravitational field sucking in everything including light — being created by the experiment is very high. Rössler says that the worst case scenario will have the Earth sucked inside out “within four years of a mini-black hole forming”. The Court, however, dismissed the petition.

So what is the experiment about? Arrays of delicate sensors in the LHC will track the wreckage of the smash-up: a spray sub-atomic particles like quarks, muons, and pions. Overground computers will then sieve this data before sending it to institutions around the world that specialise in high-energy physics. The truth is, no one really knows what will emerge from these collisions.

Considering that the ‘mini black holes’ created at CERN will be so weak that they will exert minuscule gravitational tugs, we shouldn’t worry. But just in case, on Wedneday, keep your windows shut.

I shudder at the thought and the images that are conjured up by the headline but I can’t think of any other reason as to why he’s picked Sarah Palin as his running ‘mate’. She’s hot. Here are the facts (and some pictures).

Is he screwing her?!

She was elected Governor of the State of Alaska in December 2006 which gives her less than 2 years experience in elected office by the time the 2008 elections come around. This after McCain has in the past been severely critical of the relative inexperience of his competitor Obama (Wonder how he will respond to questions on that!). One of McCain’s aides was quoted saying that McCain is going to “make the choice from his heart.” Hmmm.

McCain hasn’t worked with her in any capacity in the past and she has never featured in any of his campaigns. A VP is someone who is qualified to be President in the eyes of the President. And in McCain’s eyes, he found the most qualified person to be Palin (some suggest that his decision reminds us of the symbol of his rival party – the donkey!).

Doesn't she look like some supermodel posing in some fantasy office outfit!?

Doesn't she look like some supermodel posing in some fantasy office outfit!?

This is a desperate move by the Republicans to woo the disgruntled Hillary supporters (read: women) to vote for them. This election would be a great test of the average American intelligence. Would they be influenced by their feministic tendencies and vote for the man/woman pair (aged 72/44) or would they be driven by common sense and a little consideration for the country and vote for the man/man pair.

This election has been no short of entertainment. First with the democratic candidature race between a black man and a woman. Next this. I cannot wait to see what fireworks the actual elections will bring about. I wish elections in India would be as entertaining. Not where we vote for candidates we hardly know about. All said and done all the media attention on the american elections have been educating. No one will counter the fact that this event is being followed by many more people than the population of america.

I am neither democratic nor republican. I do not support Obama (primarily for his outlook towards outsourcing). Neither do i support McCain (I don’t know why). But I am thoroughly enjoying this blockbuster reality show that is the American Elections of 2008!

UPDATE: Here’s a video I found of McCain and Palin’s campaign. Funny!

Disclaimer: I mean no offence to any of the people/parties mentioned in the post above. It is merely a figment of my imagination and I figured that it would be for the better good of mankind that I penned it here. Thanks for not sniping me down!

This is for the information of bloggers around the world reading this blog (Yeah right.. I wish!).

“Blog Action Day is an annual nonprofit event that aims to unite the world’s bloggers, podcasters and videocasters, to post about the same issue on the same day. Our aim is to raise awareness and trigger a global discussion.”

The topic for this year is Poverty.

“First and last, the purpose of Blog Action Day is to create a discussion. We ask bloggers to take a single day out of their schedule and focus it on an important issue.

By doing so on the same day, the blogging community effectively changes the conversation on the web and focuses audiences around the globe on that issue.

Out of this discussion naturally flow actions, advice, ideas, plans, and empowerment. In 2007 on the theme of the Environment, we saw bloggers running environmental experiments, detailing innovative ideas on creating sustainable practices and focusing audience’s attentions on organizations and companies promoting green agendas. In 2008 we aim to again focus the blogging community’s energies and passions, this time on the mammoth issue of global poverty.”

We will be participating in this event. I urge you my fellow bloggers to mark your calendars on the 15th of October and join this movement as well.

Teach India – What a powerful campaign! It hits you hard, it opens your eyes, it pushes you to speak out. That this nation desperately needs a massive skill-set buildup. That your free time is much more productive when aligned with this grand mission of education. That even you, the insignificant pawn in this whole game, can make a difference.

True, no doubt about it. But where does The Times of India come into all this? I don’t think TOI is an NGO struggling with funds and a heavenly mission. They’re a big huge corporate firm, with money overflowing from every possible corner. News is big business. News is dirty business. News is sensitive business.

TOI is probably more bothered about its brand value than that poor little kid sitting on the side of the road, whose life would change with the 2 hours that you spend every week (Teaching India, that is). They need this publicity. It’s their initiative for CSR – Corporate Social Responsibility. They have a business plan for it, they have a well-worked out budget for it. For them, this is just an investment.

And that, for me, is a problem. Flurrying little companies with huge purses and "CSR" blinking in their eyes, do you really think they have a grand mission? The moment the public forgets about that poor little kid sitting on the side of the road, TOI will pull the plug. They’re not going to spend a paisa more if nobody’s going to see it.

Theres something wrong with this current system. Businesses, corporate houses, the "biggies", are very smart about their investments. Their goal, after all, is to multiply money. Even if it means starting a war in Iran, grooming terrorists, misreporting facts to sway public opinion, bribing "the bad guys in the government" to get their license, or (simply) speculating on the share markets. And in between all this hotch-potch we have the NGOs, the activists, the faceless heroes, the "smallies", trying to make a better world. Unfortunately, for the biggies to multiply their money beyond 1x, they have to do things that are at odds against the smallies. The real war on this earth, is actually between the biggies vs. the smallies. And thats whats wrong.

Now I’m not here for some radical change. What I do feel, though, is that the smallies need a much larger voice in this scheme of things. They need a larger platform to bargain on fair terms. What they need is for their work to be truly valued at a correct price. So that the trade between the biggies’ money, and the smallies’ work, is equal.

So that NGOs dont have to wait decades for TOI’s ‘godsend’ intervention.

Finally, 3 months after the much hyped Bangalore International Airport (Yes, I refuse to call it Bengaluru till it becomes official) opened, I got a chance to visit it. I had been keenly following the newspapers with regard to the facilities, the criticisms, and the very public debate as to whether the old airport at HAL should be kept open. Let’s put ourselves in the shoes of the administrators who realised that air traffic would increase drastically and they needed to do something about it. HAL being in the middle of the city, space is unavailable. What are the other options? Get more area around HAL and develop it or move outside the city. The first option would be terribly unpopular since a lot of area would have to be acquired. Hence the plan to move the airport outside the city, where space is not a problem. Devanahalli was chosen as the location for the new airport. Being just within the border of Bangalore, this area was perfect, or so it was said.

Cut to May 2008. The launch of the new airport was being delayed because of technical difficulties with the ATC. The debate about whether the old airport should remain open had reached its peak with both sides having very powerful arguments. Concern was that short distance flights would become uneconomical because of the time taken to reach the new airport. BIAL argued that it was agreed in writing that it would be the only airport in Bangalore and they would not be able to break even if both airports operated. More arguments centered about the connectivity to BIA. It was said that roads are not complete and it would take a minimum of 2 hours to reach the airport because of bad roads and increasing vehicular traffic.

Back to the present. BIA has been in operation for the last 3 months. All debates as to the old airport have died down. I shall tell you about my personal experience. Koramangala to BIA – Meru Cabs – 07:32 – 08:10. That was just about 40 minutes. Yeah yeah it was early on a Sunday morning and is not an accurate measurement. But talking about roads, except for a small stretch on Bellary Road that is bad because of flyover constructions, the whole drive was a pleasure. I can understand that within the city traffic during rush hour is bad. But that cannot be blamed on the new airport, that is just bad traffic management by the Police and the Government. During rush hour it would take almost an hour from Koramangala to the old airport that is just a little over 7 kms. Getting back from the airport, I decided to use the Vayu Vajra or the Bangalore International Airport Shuttle. Much much cheaper than the cab, very comfortable as well, although it would take a little longer. BIA to Ramurtynagar – BIAS-8 – 09:10 – 09:55.

Dear Bangalorean,

The best of the world’s airports are outside their respective cities (in some cases very far out). I have lived in Calcutta (definitely not one of the best in the world, but far nonetheless), where the airport has been way outside the city for a long time now. It takes longer to reach the airport than it does here but nobody complains because they are simply used to it. Change is necessary and there will always be resistance. But we must be patient.

Hopefully in a few years, with the metro rail coming up, Bangalore can feature among the best of the world’s cities. Till then all we can do is wait.

Have a look at pictures of the new airport here.

Are the Olympics good for China? Seems like a very obvious answer right? “Of course it is, it’s the Olympics!! It will result in better tourism and will contribute to the economy! Imagine all the attention the country will be getting from the rest of the world”. That’s precisely what is not good for China, the attention. It’s so much attention that the world is giving them, that the Chinese Government sees this as an opportunity to establish China’s emergence as an economic and athletic powerhouse. Let me explain.

China is forgetting it’s own people. It’s all good that they’re getting a lot of new infrastructure including the very ambitious Bird’s Nest Stadium, the National “Water Cube” Aquatics Center, National “Duck Egg” Theater, a couple of new airport terminals, and not to forget the numerous kilometers of roads and subways that will connect these places and ensure that everything flows smoothly. At what cost? A family restaurant in a “unsightly” neighbourhood is closed down and a huge wall erected around that neighbourhood to block the ugliness (NYTimes). Factories in neighbouring cities have been ordered to shut down in order to help clean up the polluted Beijing air (NYTimes), leaving thousands of people without jobs. Rumours also have it that priority is being given to foreigners when it comes to ticket sales.

It’s not all rosy for tourists from other countries either. How about a set of rules for tourists on what they may or may not do while in Beijing, including “No shouting of slogans or sentiments that are deemed by the authorities to be harmful to the host country’s morals, economy, or culture. No wearing of such slogans on T-shirts, either.” (MarketingProfs). Stringent visa restrictions, spying, strict policing and general suspicion have made the experience difficult for now. A bronze medalist in the last games was denied her visa to the games this year. She had planned to cover the games as a reporter. The government have recruited spies to report on suspicious people or protesters. Restaurant and Cafe owners in Beijing have been asked to report or keep out certain minorities. One Olympics historian says “China’s security measures “go way beyond protecting people from terrorist attacks. This is about the Communist Party showing their own people that the world accepts them as legitimate rulers of China.”

The outlook of the authorities towards the games is very well summed up by a statement by Zhou Yongkang, security chief for the Communist Party, “We must give full play to the superiority of the socialist system, and organize and mobilize the great masses to wage a people’s war for the protection of Olympic Games security”.

‘Tujhe apna rashtra baasha nahin aatha ?! Tch Tch…’ A remark I often encountered in my four years at Manipal. A Malayali, born in Madras, brought up in Bangalore, English was always my first language. Hindi had no special significance to me. In fact, I regarded it with absolute contempt. I would have preferred being boiled in hot oil for 40 years than being made to sit for those Hindi lessons in school, counting down the 40 minutes by the second. Yes, it got so boring infact that I was actually ‘bored to death’ atleast once a month. They say a cat has nine lives. I’ve had many more. My eyes would glaze up, my brain go into auto-pilot as I stared like a moronic zombie at the blackboard. Things only livened up, when the teacher took potshots at the slightly more active of us with the duster. That I managed to get 86% in my boards just proves that we outsource the correction of our board papers to the Chinese, whos’ Hindi is only slightly better than mine. It was only about half a decade later, when I discovered the ethereal joy of cussing in Hindi that I actually learnt it. But, I digress.

What I wanted this post to be about is my indignation to the fact that I am expected to know Hindi just because I am Indian. So, with sincere apologies let me get into the technicalities of it. Hindi, like many other North Indian languages is part of the Indo-Aryan languages, a sub-branch of the Indo-European family of languages. The South Indian ones belong to the Dravidian family. For us to speak Hindi is every bit normal as it is for a Bihari to speak Malayalam. So why then do you expect us to force Hindi down our throats and spit it out at your will and wish ?

Even the founding fathers of our nation planned to do away with English as an official language after 15 years of independence. Luckily, they had the insight to give Parliament the power to extend that period as deemed necessary. In 1964, the then Shastri headed government planned to make the official language solely Hindi. It was met by widespread opposition even from within the Congress and yet they decided to go ahead with it. Only after riots and resignations of the many South Indian ministers did the government finally back down.

Not speaking Hindi does not make us any less patriotic , any less proud to be Indian. We all talk about the diverse culture India enjoys. Hows is the culture south of the Vindhyas any less important or valid than that to the north of it? Why are we lesser equals? We may be only 22% of the population, but we are still a part of the population.

So don’t tell me I should know Hindi. It just so happens that I do.

No.

Posted on: August 6, 2008

So, the strangest thing happened. I was sitting one day on my desk, and someone prodded me with the idea of collaborative blogging, and it seemed all cool. You see, i started my own blog too. But whenever i went back to it, i got bored. It stunk. You see, the great thing with blogging is creating your own flavour of english – i say “stunk” is a word too. Now back to the concept of collaborative blogging. What the !^&$@ is that anyway?

Is it democratic? Do people write a blog, vote on it being posted, and then go ahead and post it. Do they then go ahead and vote on comments, and vote on the design, and vote on the button placement. And vote on the button colour. And, most importantly, vote on which flavour of bloginglish they follow? Do the voters start aggregating and consider their unanimous vote as the “majority”? Does the “minority” then ask for reservation, and quota, so that, inversely, they become the majority? Does the majority then throw a fit, burn some buses, ruin some railway tracks? Does the minority then reverse-attack the majority, starting a whole new fight that no longer solves the original vote problem?

Or is it authoritarian? Does the creator consider himself above all else? Is his choice of colour, buttons, button placement, comments, posts, and more importantly, bloginglish, the final verdict? Are the slaves just content providers that are paid just about peanuts. What if they never got their peanuts? What if they were bonded bloggers? What if they planned a coup? What if they were successful in their attack? And, because they were born and brought up in an environment that only taught them the skill of content providers, they were unable to understand what the creator did? What if they made it even worse, and bonded some more bloggers just to feel good?

Or is it communist? Did Lenin decide the theme to be “Sickle Red”? Is the blog a community that does not believe in individual ambition, but the collective responsibility of the community as a whole? Does the “government” penalize those who dont follow the “code”? Wont i get sick of being stuck to this stupid box that limits my height and width in the whole blog frontpage? Can’t i bribe the “government” to promote my post? Or what about just BOLDing my tags in the tag cloud? Money does good you know.

The problem is, none of the above options will allow me to write whatever i want. I want to write about tech. Computer tech. Anti-Apple tech. But “they” wont allow me. Or even if i did, they’d leave comments like “Please, dont do this. we want to keep this collaborative blog as collaborative as a collaborative blog can be.”

And i say No.

EDIT: As it turns out, “stunk” is actually a proper english word that is the term for the past tense of stink. So the whole basis of my theory above, basically, fails.


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