Pics and Picks

January 21, 2009

Obama’s speeches

Filed under: Politics — Zizu @ 4:28 am

I found it cool to see a site that listed only all of Obama’s speeches. I have picked up some real works of art from – http://obamaspeeches.com

My fellow citizens:

I stand here today humbled by the task before us, grateful for the trust you have bestowed, mindful of the sacrifices borne by our ancestors. I thank President Bush for his service to our nation, as well as the generosity and cooperation he has shown throughout this transition.

Forty-four Americans have now taken the presidential oath. The words have been spoken during rising tides of prosperity and the still waters of peace. Yet, every so often the oath is taken amidst gathering clouds and raging storms. At these moments, America has carried on not simply because of the skill or vision of those in high office, but because We the People have remained faithful to the ideals of our forbearers, and true to our founding documents.

So it has been. So it must be with this generation of Americans.

That we are in the midst of crisis is now well understood. Our nation is at war, against a far-reaching network of violence and hatred. Our economy is badly weakened, a consequence of greed and irresponsibility on the part of some, but also our collective failure to make hard choices and prepare the nation for a new age. Homes have been lost; jobs shed; businesses shuttered. Our health care is too costly; our schools fail too many; and each day brings further evidence that the ways we use energy strengthen our adversaries and threaten our planet.

These are the indicators of crisis, subject to data and statistics. Less measurable but no less profound is a sapping of confidence across our land – a nagging fear that America’s decline is inevitable, and that the next generation must lower its sights.

Today I say to you that the challenges we face are real. They are serious and they are many. They will not be met easily or in a short span of time. But know this, America – they will be met.

On this day, (more…)

January 9, 2009

The plight of Indian democracy

Filed under: India,Politics — Zizu @ 3:08 am

This is an article I found on rediff today, and I couldn’t agree with the writer more. If we go up in arms against our leaders, no one else is to blame, but ourselves, snce we have misused democracy. Democracy is a very funny tool. It is extremely powerful and empowering, while at the same time, the misuse can be disastrous. Like Peter Parker’s uncle says, “With extreme power comes extreme responsibility.” Ask the Afghan woman who finally got a chance to vote for who should lead her, and then we can realize the meaning of democracy. Till then, we are responsible for all Rabris, Golmas, Gawlis and what not.

If Ashok Gehlot ever gives up politics he can make his mark as a juggler.

Gehlot is the chief minister of Rajasthan. And the finance minister. And the home minister. And the state excise minister. And the public works minister. And the urban development and housing minister. And the forest and environment minister. And the youth affairs and sports minister. And the mines minister. And the social justice and empowerment minister. And the waqf minister. And the information technology and communications minister. And the food and civil supplies minister. And, well, you get the picture!

Ashok Gehlot alone knows how he shall find the energy to juggle these responsibilities. Speaking of energy, did I mention that Gehlot is also the energy minister?

It is clear that the utter paucity of talent in the Congress ranks is so great that Gehlot and the few good MLAs at his disposal must take more than their fair share. Thus primary education and secondary education fall to the lot of Labour Minister Master Bhanwar Lal, higher education is the responsibility of Industries Minister Shanti Dhariwal, technical and engineering education is overseen by Tribal Area Development Minister Mahendrajeet Singh Malviya, and technical education (agriculture) is under, as you might have guessed, Ashok Gehlot.

May one hope that between them at least one of the four harassed education ministers finds the time to educate their colleague Golma Devi? When I say ‘educate’ I do not mean that they should introduce her to the intricacies of public administration, simply teaching her to read and write would be enough.

Literacy is apparently not one of the gifts possessed by the newly-elected MLA from Mahuwa (Dausa). This has not, however, prevented Ashok Gehlot from naming her as minister of state for khadi and gramodyog.

It has been reported that much hilarity ensued when the new ministers were taking their oaths of office, normally a fairly solemn ceremony. The poor lady could not read the oaths of office and confidentiality when given the paper with the prescribed words, and the governor then generously decided that the oath could be taken as read.

Let us put aside all the politically correct blathering and recognise the appointment of Golma Devi for exactly what it is — a symbol of the depths that Indian democracy is plumbing today. Does anyone believe, seriously, for even a single minute, that an illiterate person is qualified to make head or tail of the innumerable files that every minister must read?

But Ashok Gehlot knew what he was doing when he named Golma Devi as one of his ministers, he was obeying the compulsions of caste politics. The Congress played the caste card to the hilt during the Vasundhara Raje era, pitting the Jats against the Gujjars and the Gujjars against the Meenas. When that was still not enough to propel the Congress to a simple majority in the Vidhan Sabha, Gehlot was forced to turn to independent MLAs.

The Meena leader Kirodi Lal, the MLA from Todabhim (Karauli), was once one of Vasundhara Raje’s ministers, but then became one of the BJP rebels. He now leads a group of five independent MLAs that hold the balance of power. Kirodi Lal apparently refused the offer of a ministry for himself, but demanded a seat at the table for his wife, Golma Devi.

The fact that Kirodi Lal refused office indicates that he is unwilling to be associated too closely with the Gehlot administration, especially with Lok Sabha elections around the corner. After the oath ceremony, the beaming husband told the media that with Golma Devi in office he himself would take over household duties; the dutiful wife duly attested that her husband could make excellent gajar mattar, daal-baati. Ashok Gehlot must be hoping that Kirodi Mal’s culinary talents do not extend to cooking up trouble!

There was a time when we in the south used to look up to politicians from the north in some awe. Those were the days when we had a Jawaharlal Nehru in Delhi [Images] and a Gobind Ballabh Pant in Lucknow, today when we think of Hindi belt politics we are more likely to think that they are personified in Golma Devi, smugly assuring ourselves of the superiority of our own leaders.

If so, I recommend a reality check for my sniggering brethren from the south. Anyone who thinks that literacy by itself leads to a better class of politics should take a long hard look at Tamil Nadu’s rural development and local administration minister.

There is no doubt whatsoever that M K Stalin, the ‘Thalapathi’ of the DMK, is not just literate but highly educated. He holds a bachelor’s degree. He has dabbled in theatre, founded the Tamil magazine Ilaya Suryar, and wrote regularly in the DMK newspaper Murasoli. He is no stranger to public life, having addressed his first public meeting precisely forty years ago, on January 3, 1969.

So how did M K Stalin celebrate the ruby anniversary of his entry into politics? Assuming the now famous tapes of the incident are correct, the minister was busy breaking the law, distributing currency notes before the by-election in the Thirumangalam assembly constituency. The Election Commission has taken the case seriously enough that it ordered its officer to register a case against Stalin. (A Union minister escaped because he was only seen handing money to M K Stalin, not to the public at large!)

I understand that M K Stalin is pleading that he was distributing money while celebrating someone’s son’s birth. I am perfectly willing to believe that some DMK functionary in and around Madurai [Images] had a child but it beggars belief that currency notes were being flung around just like that for a newborn. Or is the DMK now so flush with funds that this is standard practice?

Whatever the truth, M K Stalin, a four-time MLA and a former mayor of Chennai, can scarcely plead ignorance of the election laws. What exactly is the point of having a literate MLA whose literacy apparently does not extend to reading the Model Code of Conduct?

There was a hue and cry against politicians immediately after the tragic attacks in Mumbai [Images]. But let us face it squarely, it is we who elected both the literate M K Stalin and the illiterate Golma Devi, and it is we who must endure the consequences of being swayed by the politics of language or of caste.

It is a gloomy January day in Delhi as I write this but no murkier and no more dismal than India’s prospects if our politics continue to deteriorate like this. North or south, literate or illiterate, does it make a difference?
T V R Shenoy

December 29, 2008

The World this year – an article in the Economist

Filed under: Politics,World Economy — Zizu @ 11:44 pm

The world this year
Dec 18th 2008
From The Economist print edition

The credit crunch turned into a full-blown global financial crisis in September when Lehman Brothers, one of Wall Street’s big investment banks, declared bankruptcy and American officials seized control of American International Group to prevent the giant insurer’s collapse. As panic spread, governments engineered the rescue of distressed banks or took them over directly. By the end of the month the remaining big Wall Street houses had either been absorbed by others or become bank holding companies.

America and Europe reacted to the unfolding crisis by unveiling broad bail-out packages for the financial system. After a battle in Congress America extended $700 billion in funding. With credit markets frozen, central banks took emergency steps to boost liquidity. America’s Federal Reserve made unprecedented market interventions, such as buying large amounts of short-term debt issued to companies to enable day-to-day financing.

Most central banks slashed interest rates. The Fed reduced its rates to near zero, lower than they have ever been.

The global stockmarket gains of recent years were wiped out. Hopes that emerging markets would remain buoyant during a downturn in the West were dashed when markets plummeted in China, India, Russia and elsewhere.

With job losses mounting, governments pondered measures to stave off a deep economic slump. Japan and the euro area fell into recession (using the definition of two quarters of negative growth) and America was officially declared to have been in recession since December 2007. The IMF, World Bank and OECD snipped their projections for economic growth next year.

A change is gonna come
ReutersEvents in the markets helped propel Barack Obama to a big win in America’s presidential election. John McCain, Mr Obama’s Republican rival, was widely judged to have fumbled his response to the crisis.

Earlier, Mr Obama fought an epic battle with Hillary Clinton in the Democratic primaries. Mrs Clinton was given the job of secretary of state in the Obama administration, which starts work on January 20th. One of the new president’s top priorities will be to implement a stimulus package, the passage of which should be made easier by increased Democratic majorities in Congress.

Britain’s Gordon Brown won plaudits for his handling of the financial crisis. It had looked as though 2008 would be a dismal year for the prime minister. His Labour Party trailed David Cameron’s Conservatives by some 30 points in the polls, but rebounded when the Tories failed to explain how they would have handled the crisis differently.

 Yasuo Fukuda resigned as Japan’s prime minister in frustration at his inability to implement policy. The ruling Liberal Democratic Party put Taro Aso into the job, but his future is in doubt as the country’s economy contracts.

Kenya was ravaged by violence following a disputed presidential election, leading to the formation of a fragile government of national unity in April. Two judges oversaw separate reports on the trouble that criticised politicians, police and the electoral commission.

Pakistan’s general election was a humiliation for the embattled presidency of Pervez Musharraf. His allies won just 16% of the seats, well behind the Pakistan People’s Party led by Asif Zardari, the widower of Benazir Bhutto, a former prime minister assassinated last year. Mr Musharraf eventually resigned when parliament threatened to impeach him; Mr Zardari won an indirect ballot to replace him.

The comandante’s last move
Fidel Castro stepped down as Cuba’s president, handing over the job to his younger brother, Raúl, whose plans to reform the island’s communist economy were slowed by two devastating hurricanes.

APA resurgent Russia invaded Georgia in August after Georgian forces entered the breakaway region of South Ossetia. It was Russia’s first big military incursion beyond its borders since it invaded Afghanistan in 1979. Moscow pulled its troops back, eventually, but recognised the independence of South Ossetia and Abkhazia.

Dmitry Medvedev won Russia’s presidential election in March, though real power remained with Vladimir Putin, who became Mr Medvedev’s prime minister.

Radovan Karadzic, the Bosnian Serb wartime leader, was arrested in Belgrade, 13 years after being indicted for crimes against humanity. He was sent to the war-crimes tribunal in The Hague to stand trial.

EPAIndia endured another year of frequent terrorist incidents, including a spate of bombings in one day in Jaipur. But even the experts were taken by surprise at the audacity of a co-ordinated attack by gunmen on Mumbai. Security forces fought the assailants over several days and at least 190 people were killed.

The violence was less severe in Iraq than in previous years; American forces handed responsibility back to Iraqi troops for Anbar province, the bloodiest zone in the first years of the insurgency. Iraq’s parliament endorsed an agreement that requires American troops to withdraw from Iraq altogether by the end of 2011.

Conversely, it was the deadliest year for coalition forces in Afghanistan since the 2001 invasion. In a chilling development, a 13-year-old boy was deployed as a suicide-bomber by the Taliban, killing three British marines.

After being dogged by corruption allegations, Ehud Olmert decided to step down as Israel’s prime minister. He remains in office until February’s general election, which Binyamin Netanyahu is currently favoured to win.

When no means wait and see
The European Union was thrown into a tizzy when Irish voters rejected the Lisbon treaty, which Eurosceptics see as an effort to impose the old draft constitution by the back door. EU leaders pressed Ireland to hold another vote.

The ideological divide in Latin America widened. Venezuela nationalised the cement and steel industries, Argentina’s government took over its private pension system and Ecuador defaulted on its foreign debt. But most governments in the region maintained their trust in free markets and inflation targeting.

Rest ye merry gentlemen
Merger activity dwindled compared with 2007. Several large takeover bids failed, such as Microsoft’s offer for Yahoo! and BHP Billiton’s pursuit of Rio Tinto. Hewlett-Packard did buy EDS, and Anheuser-Busch, which makes Budweiser beer, was taken over by Belgium’s InBev. At $52 billion, it was one of the biggest ever foreign acquisitions of an American company.

ReutersChina’s big year as host of the summer Olympics didn’t go quite according to plan. The games were a spectacular success, but China’s suppression of the worst outbreak of violence in Tibet in decades led to protests in cities around the world that took part in a relay of the Olympic torch en route to Beijing.

Three months before the Olympics China suffered its worst natural disaster in 30 years when a massive earthquake rocked the province of Sichuan, killing some 70,000 people and leaving 5m homeless. China launched an all-out rescue effort that was widely praised.

In contrast, Myanmar’s ruling junta was roundly condemned for its response to a cyclone that left large swathes of the Irrawaddy delta submerged, causing at least 145,000 deaths. The furtive regime was eventually persuaded to allow a trickle of foreign aid into the deluged region.

Most carmakers had a rotten year, no more so than in America. Detroit’s Big Three went caps-in-hand to Congress for public assistance.

EPAThe price of oil breached $100 a barrel for the first time in January. Oil prices spiked at more than $147 in July, but fell by more than two-thirds as the world economy drooped.

The end of the commodity boom was especially welcomed in countries that had witnessed riots over high food prices earlier in the year.

Thaksin times
Thailand saw prime ministers come and go with alarming frequency amid a political crisis caused by a stand-off between allies of Thaksin Shinawatra, a former prime minister toppled in 2006, and pro-monarchy supporters. The latter staged a sit-in at Bangkok’s international airport for a week that left thousands of passengers stranded.

Canada’s Stephen Harper failed to win a parliamentary majority for his Conservative government; two months after the election the prime minister had to suspend Parliament to avoid being ousted by the opposition.

Robert Mugabe won a presidential run-off election in Zimbabwe after his opponent, Morgan Tsvangirai, who won the first round, pulled out because of intimidation. A power-sharing deal gave the prime minister’s job to Mr Tsvangirai. Conditions remained miserable for most Zimbabweans; inflation (officially) ran at hundreds of millions per cent and cholera swept the country.

Thabo Mbeki was ejected by the African National Congress from his post as South Africa’s president. Jacob Zuma, the ANC’s party leader, seems likely to win the job in 2009, provided that continuing court cases do not ensnare him. A breakaway party, the Congress of the People, may dent the ANC’s authority in a general election in mid-2009, though probably without ousting the ruling party.

Bernard Madoff, a Wall Street veteran, was arrested in possibly the biggest fraud in history; his Ponzi scheme may have lost investors $50 billion.

It was a bad year for Colombia’s FARC guerrillas. Two of their leaders were killed, one of them in a bombing raid by Colombia’s army on a camp just across the border in Ecuador, which prompted a break in diplomatic relations. The army also rescued Ingrid Betancourt, the FARC’s most famous hostage.

A “farewell kiss”
Pundits began writing George Bush’s political obituary as his approval ratings sank to new lows. At a press conference in Baghdad a disgruntled Iraqi journalist threw his shoes (size ten) at the American president, an Arab insult.

The first protons were circulated around the Large Hadron Collider. Designed to help physicists explain the existence of mass, some feared the experiment would create a gigantic black hole. Wall Street’s collapse just a few days after the LHC was switched on was deemed a coincidence.

December 28, 2008

The Amarnath Land Row

Filed under: India,Politics — Zizu @ 8:38 pm
Tags:

the Amarnath land row, whose chronology as depicted by the media is as follows…

State govt transfers 100 acres of land near Amarnath cave to Shri Amarnathji Shrine Board for setting up temporary shelters for pilgrims.

LATE MAY TO JUNE 25

Initial opposition to the transfer comes from environmentalists. Valley politicians, both mainstream and separatist, quickly join in saying state’s autonomy in danger. Six killed in police firing in Srinagar. Issue snowballs into major confrontation in Valley. Counter protests in Jammu as communal divide deepens.

JUNE 25

Tenure of Governor S K Sinha, at the centre of accusations over the transfer, ends. He is replaced by N N Vohra.

JUNE 28

PDP, a ruling coalition partner in state, pulls out opposing the land transfer, reducing the Ghulam Nabi Azad govt to a minority.

JULY 1

State cabinet revokes land transfer order. Section 144 imposed in Jammu.

JULY 11

Congress CM Azad, who resigned on July 7, leaves office. Governor’s rule in state.

JULY 1 TO AUGUST 5

Protests over revocation of land transfer gather force in Jammu region. By late July, the region is paralysed by protests and highway to the Valley cut off. Deaths due to violence and police firing reported every day as agitation spreads to interiors. Centre calls all-party meet.

AUGUST 6

PM Manmohan Singh holds an all-party meeting to bring an end to the current impasse.

AUGUST 8
The Amarnath Yatra Sangarsh Samiti calls for extending the general shutdown of the Jammu region till August 14.

AUGUST 9
The 18-member all-party delegation headed by Union Home Minister Shivraj Patil arrives in Jammu to review the situation following recent violent protests but Shri Amarnath Sangarsh Samiti (SASS), which is leading the agitation over land transfer issue, refuses to hold talks with the team members.

AUGUST 10
Home Minister Shivraj Patil chairs an all-party meeting on the Amarnath land issue in Srinagar.

AUGUST11
Leaders of the all party delegation who visited Jammu and Srinagar to find a solution to the Amarnath land row fail to arrive at a consensus to resolve the vexed issue and will meet again on August 12.

A prominent Hurriyat leader was killed in police firing, which claimed a total of four lives and curfew quickly imposed in Srinagar after a protest march by separatists and others in an attempt to cross the Line of Control against the “economic blockade” turned violent.

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