Monday, March 16, 2009
India goes to vote again, another money flaunting, muscle flexing, hoodwinking,backstabbing,booth capturing circus is about to unfold. A new set of men and women shall be chosen to govern the country.Early nineties saw a then considered to be the baap of all political showmanship, BJP's rathyatra.The obvious agenda behind such a yatra or journey was to whip up the Hindu sentiments in the name of Ram.A vernacular leftist daily had a gem of a poem in this context which i translate here- Ram has re-incarnated in the form of Advani, this can be safely assumed, if the vote bank goes to BJP, the country's reigns will be in the hands of Hanuman! Both the avatar and the ape god reference here, are to demean the essence of the juggernaut which was unleashed in the country. The said party did finally win, but a lot later. And not Hanuman but A B Vajpayee was at the helm, incidentally the five years of his party's rule were puntuated with hiccups like Godhra, Kargil and Lahore summit( Advani almost looked ready to confer the Padmashri on Musharraf). And then, a whirlwind rally by Sonia saw the tides turn in favour of the congress again.The rule of the UPA was a bumpy, rocky ride capped with the recent recession.Two ideologicaly polarized parties, two different regimes, same unsatisfactory results. Not to talk about some forgotten piece of fiction called election manifestos.In India we choose not able leaders with vision, but personalities with narrow agenda.The messy,often bloodstained regional politicos, steeped in black money are promoted to the echoleons of power at the centre, or else given enough lollies in their state itself. Parties are willing to partner with anybody who has a seat to his/her name.The coalition resulting of such deals are multiheaded monsters allowed to run the country shamelessly, the voters clearly having shunned each one of them.In the run up to the general elections,a more disgusting result of such coalitions is surfacing, the blunt, selfish, egoistical leaders of regional parties are openly flaunting their drooling tongue and wagging tail, prime ministerial aspirations exposed. Just about anybody can pin their hopes in a lok sabha election for the top job. The top job is that easy. It is akin to a plump piece of meat hanging on a thread. Any bully can snatch it and be promptly named our next PM. It happens only in India.There is absence of logic in the mandates, reason is conspicous by its absence in the coalitions(adultry is the norm of the day), a single stable leadership is missing from the thick of things, India is about to vote for its next puppet PM. For the politicians, of the politicians,by the politicians. Thumb rules.
Friday, March 6, 2009
The powerhouse of world enconomy is taking one disastrous tumble after another in the face of a yet to be fully ascertained recession. Sub prime is prime time news, plus every coffee, chai or ciggie break topic.Stimulus or no stimulus, some known company or the other is announcing cut in flab like it is a routine policy matter. Now news has come in from the lands of plenty about families wiping themselves out, often initiated by the head of the family;reason, unable to cope with the crunch.So much already, more bad news invariably around the corner; all this what for? because of the countless mistakes of a wealthy, powerful, all pervasive, domineering state which has the largest share of every listed man made threat to the planet? This
nation consumes every thing from burgers,chips,colas,trees,gas,steel,paper,rubber, oil,whiskey,beer, anything that is there to consume like there is no tommorow.The average American is worth at least 20 Indians in terms of consumption of resources. The amount of pollution US of A creates would blacken the face of earth in a mere few years if all other nations were to follow suit.Now this hungrier_ by_ the_ minute giant is showing yet another disgusting face of itself, callous misappropriation of mortgage funds to the tune of so many billions that some nations may possibly run their economy for a hundred years with that kind of money.That kind of money is gone;kaput. Result is, truly deserving nations like India, which ought to come out of shadows of a miserable past, and share the power equation of the world, is being unnecessarily made to drag back its feet into messy waters. More pollution from the American stable, the dollar dirtying the fragile economic balance of the world. What can we do about it? For starters, our nation has shown tremendous foresight in refraining from falling into American hands to support its key infrastructure. Oil, a near monopoly of the US, cannot be totally produced in our homeland and hence needs to be outsourced. Sectors like IT services,call centers ect did depend on the well paying American cos, but then they are relatively new money spinners, and hence do not directly affect the vast majority. But we do need a serious relook into the shortfalls of a dissaparate revenue generating capacity across all sectors. Agriculture, small scale industry and consumer electronics should be strengthened to such an extent that the lower and middle income group, the bottom of the heap, begins to add value to the national income. The health of the nation lies in the weakest sections of the society, in our case, the agricultural sector must pull its feet up towards better output and quality. The per hectare yield is a shameful figure by world standards. This can and must change immidiately. Like in milk production, food grain surplus is the need of the hour. The green revolution that never was, must become a reality.Secondly the millions of manufacturing units must get all possible help as regards financial, technical or marketing related support. Improved quality in home grown products will automaticlly open new markets, just like in the case of the high quality saree fabric or mangoes that India exports by the tonnes.All in all, a better equipped, burden free, government backed lower income group, which so far has only faced apathy and injustice, must be allowed to break free of the shackles of the last four hundred or so years. This step alone can cure a plethora of economic maladies which the country faces from time to time.Let the hetherto unknown Indian in the darkest corner of the country stand up to tell the world what he can and does do, chances are, another wave of change will happen. This time it just might take the wind out of some mortgage swindling American.Take that.
nation consumes every thing from burgers,chips,colas,trees,gas,steel,paper,rubber, oil,whiskey,beer, anything that is there to consume like there is no tommorow.The average American is worth at least 20 Indians in terms of consumption of resources. The amount of pollution US of A creates would blacken the face of earth in a mere few years if all other nations were to follow suit.Now this hungrier_ by_ the_ minute giant is showing yet another disgusting face of itself, callous misappropriation of mortgage funds to the tune of so many billions that some nations may possibly run their economy for a hundred years with that kind of money.That kind of money is gone;kaput. Result is, truly deserving nations like India, which ought to come out of shadows of a miserable past, and share the power equation of the world, is being unnecessarily made to drag back its feet into messy waters. More pollution from the American stable, the dollar dirtying the fragile economic balance of the world. What can we do about it? For starters, our nation has shown tremendous foresight in refraining from falling into American hands to support its key infrastructure. Oil, a near monopoly of the US, cannot be totally produced in our homeland and hence needs to be outsourced. Sectors like IT services,call centers ect did depend on the well paying American cos, but then they are relatively new money spinners, and hence do not directly affect the vast majority. But we do need a serious relook into the shortfalls of a dissaparate revenue generating capacity across all sectors. Agriculture, small scale industry and consumer electronics should be strengthened to such an extent that the lower and middle income group, the bottom of the heap, begins to add value to the national income. The health of the nation lies in the weakest sections of the society, in our case, the agricultural sector must pull its feet up towards better output and quality. The per hectare yield is a shameful figure by world standards. This can and must change immidiately. Like in milk production, food grain surplus is the need of the hour. The green revolution that never was, must become a reality.Secondly the millions of manufacturing units must get all possible help as regards financial, technical or marketing related support. Improved quality in home grown products will automaticlly open new markets, just like in the case of the high quality saree fabric or mangoes that India exports by the tonnes.All in all, a better equipped, burden free, government backed lower income group, which so far has only faced apathy and injustice, must be allowed to break free of the shackles of the last four hundred or so years. This step alone can cure a plethora of economic maladies which the country faces from time to time.Let the hetherto unknown Indian in the darkest corner of the country stand up to tell the world what he can and does do, chances are, another wave of change will happen. This time it just might take the wind out of some mortgage swindling American.Take that.
Tuesday, March 3, 2009
This year's filmfare awards reinstated the old fact about this most popular of cine awards in bollywood.It is populist and often contrived.The awards in itself are not a patch on the global one's;themselves gullible to entrappings as displyed recently, it at least has the guts to say that look, we know what the public likes, so we shower only the viewers choices with the statuettes. A notable ommission though would be Ghajini.This blockbuster of the year was given a cold treatment, pray why, filmfare?because it's a southern remake?oh! so you don't like regional makers to enter your esteemed territory and run havoc. Ghajini went on to shatter record after record, the style statement of sorts it created was a sidey bonus, and both went unnoticed, unrelenquished, Amir's brilliant portrayal notwithstanding.Had this been a 'homegrown' production, bollywood would have given it the maximum trophies. Anyways, a perfect compliment to last year's best female lead in Priyanka Chopra has been delivered; an excellent selection. Roshan Jr was a bad choice altogether for best actor. If not Amir for his short term memory loss afflicted role, then Shahrukh deserved it for his double role in RNBDJ.
In the music category, the choice of A R Rehman for Jane tu...was poor, it should have gone to him, but for Jodha Akbar.Best film was a dissapointing and agonisingly callous choice in 'Jodha Akbar', 'Fashion' deserved it hands down.The second female lead in 'Fashion', played by Kangana, and rightly awarded for best supporting actress providing a little consolation. This acid tongued (pun intended) comment on the model-designer scenario with the whole lot of cliches, was by far the finest example of direction and production. It richly deserved to win the maximum trophies, including best film. Vocal merit awards again could have gone any which way, no singer making much of an impact, 'haule haule' by Sukhwinder, which won for best male playback, in particular was an odd choice, he doesn't even sound close to Shahrukh. The rest of the categories are technical and hardly scrutinised by the masses, 'oye lucky....oye' bagging the best dialogue award, is seconded by yours truly.A number of award ceremonies are on the way in the coming months, each with its own set of prejudices and fallacies, a few more bloomers would be witnessed, in the end no one is likely to complain. They just want to watch the great Indian tamasha unfold on the stage near them, clap for the winner, encourage the losers to hold their breath on to the next round of trophies. Something always comes by in a decent filmy year. There is one for every one, even for the perpetual absentees (read Amir Khan).Or if all else fails, 'have money will buy' is the sure shot winner(read......nothing).The legend of playback, Kishore Kumar, waited 26 years for his first filmfare trophy.An old issue of the magazine by the same name carries the year by year account of the legacy of Filmfare awards, search for it, buy it, it's worth a dekko. One finds exellence, passion and integrity on those pages.Now that is exactly what the awards these days do not honour.Ask Amir Khan.
In the music category, the choice of A R Rehman for Jane tu...was poor, it should have gone to him, but for Jodha Akbar.Best film was a dissapointing and agonisingly callous choice in 'Jodha Akbar', 'Fashion' deserved it hands down.The second female lead in 'Fashion', played by Kangana, and rightly awarded for best supporting actress providing a little consolation. This acid tongued (pun intended) comment on the model-designer scenario with the whole lot of cliches, was by far the finest example of direction and production. It richly deserved to win the maximum trophies, including best film. Vocal merit awards again could have gone any which way, no singer making much of an impact, 'haule haule' by Sukhwinder, which won for best male playback, in particular was an odd choice, he doesn't even sound close to Shahrukh. The rest of the categories are technical and hardly scrutinised by the masses, 'oye lucky....oye' bagging the best dialogue award, is seconded by yours truly.A number of award ceremonies are on the way in the coming months, each with its own set of prejudices and fallacies, a few more bloomers would be witnessed, in the end no one is likely to complain. They just want to watch the great Indian tamasha unfold on the stage near them, clap for the winner, encourage the losers to hold their breath on to the next round of trophies. Something always comes by in a decent filmy year. There is one for every one, even for the perpetual absentees (read Amir Khan).Or if all else fails, 'have money will buy' is the sure shot winner(read......nothing).The legend of playback, Kishore Kumar, waited 26 years for his first filmfare trophy.An old issue of the magazine by the same name carries the year by year account of the legacy of Filmfare awards, search for it, buy it, it's worth a dekko. One finds exellence, passion and integrity on those pages.Now that is exactly what the awards these days do not honour.Ask Amir Khan.
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