Friday, September 30, 2011

Thoughts of Legend Bhagat Singh

Below thoughts are taken from "Words of Freedom - Ideas of a Nation" chapter Manifesto of the Naujawan Bharat Sabha 1926.


The whole history of human progress is written with the blood of young men and young women. And because reforms are ever made by the vigour, courage, self-sacrifice and emotional conviction of the young men who do not know enough to be afraid and who feel much more than they think. It were they, the young only, who fought. And everywhere the young can fight without hope, without fear and without hesitation. 


While we Indians, what are we doing? A branch of peepal tree is cut and religious feelings of the Hindus are injured. A corner of a paper idol, tazia, of the idol-breaker Mohammedans is broken, and 'Allah' gets enraged, who cannot be satisfied with anything less than the blood of the infidel Hindus. Man ought to be attached more inportance than the animals and yet, here in India, they break each other's heads in the name of 'sacred animals'....


There are many... among us who hide their lethargy under the grab of internationalism. Asked to serve their country they reply: 'Oh Sirs, we are cosmopolitans and believe in universal brotherhood. Let us not quarrel with the British. They are our brothers.' A good idea, a beautiful phrase. But they miss its implication. The doctrine of universal brotherhood demands that the exploitation of man by man and nation by nation must be rendered impossible. Equal opportunity to all with any sort of distinction. But British rule in India is a direct negation of all these, and we shall have nothing to do with it.


One man, in his early 20s, had such thoughts. While reading this book, almost on every page I stop and think, has 20% of his ideas being used and implemented, what has changed since then? Even today one is exploiting the other, yes the change is who and whom. No more there is British rule on India, but the country is now ruled by narrow self made boundaries casts, social status, rich and poor. Forget
about universal brotherhood, do we have a country brotherhood?

This is a big question our generation today faces, where do we want us in the years to come? Has the scarifies made to give us a better living are only important in history books or they still hold some meaning for us?

Sunday, August 21, 2011

I Don't Need a Lokpal Bill

I don't need a lokpal bill. I am my own lokpal.

India is a democratic nation and everything from politics to poverty, all problems and solutions start from this country's individual. We have the right to choose our leader then why do we choose someone who in a year we say is involved in illegal things? Who started paying money to officers for doing favor to them in different matters? Who gives black money to builders to save tax?

Who should be hold responsible for this then? Neta or Janta. In my view it’s the later one. We try and hide our income to save tax, converting into black money, and then we take a fake gold bill and reconvert that money in white. But in whole of this transformation we eat the tax we should pay and then we say Mumbai roads have 1000 potholes.

I want to ask generation today a simple question: are we doing our own bit to improve our country? Can we be our own lokpal? If the answer is yes then we don't need a bill to improve our nation and political or any other force can stop us being at the top.

Saturday, August 6, 2011

UID

Dear Friends,

Would like you to please encourage unprivileged sections of society in your neighbourhood, to enrol for the UID, using attached enrolment form, downloadable from www.uidai.gov.in.

Process:

Pick the nearest enrolment agency address (usually post office) using toll free number.

Submit the dully filled form with photocopies of proof (carry originals for verification), at agency office location & get your fingerprints & iris scan in the Govt database on schedule date/time.

Benefits: Helps efficient delivery of Public Services like Healthcare, Ration Subsidies / PDS, Employment/ NREGA, Education etc.

Note: You can enroll from anywhere* for any location across India.

*Know the locations where infrastructure has been setup by the UIDAI, (phased rollout across India).

Contact Coordinates:

Email: help@uidai.gov.in ;

Portal: www.uidai.gov.in ;

Phone: 1800 180 1947 ;

Post: PO Box#1947, Bangalore-1

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Specially for Indian Women

Chetan Bhagats Article in TOI : Specially for Indian Women

Alright, this is not cool at all. A recent survey by Nielsen has revealed that Indian women are the most stressed out in the world: 87% of our women feel stressed out most of the time. This statistic alone has caused me to stress out. Even in workaholic America, only 53% women feel stressed.

What are we doing to our women? I'm biased, but Indian women are the most beautiful in the world. As mothers, sisters, daughters, colleagues, wives and girlfriends - we love them. Can you imagine life without the ladies?


For now, I want to give Indian women five suggestions to reduce their stress levels.


One, don't ever think you are without power. Give it back to that mother-in-law. Be who you are, not someone she wished you would be. She doesn't like you? That's her problem.

Two, if you are doing a good job at work and your boss doesn't value you - tell him that, or quit. Talented, hard-working people are much in demand.


Three, educate yourself, learn skills, network - figure out ways to be economically independent. So next time your husband tells you that you are not a good enough wife, mother or daughter-in-law, you can tell him to take a hike.

Four, do not ever feel stressed about having a dual responsibility of family and work. It is difficult, but not impossible. The trick is not to expect an A+ in every aspect of your life. You are not taking an exam, and you frankly can't score cent per cent (unless you are in SRCC, of course). It is okay if you don't make four dishes for lunch, one can fill their stomach with one. It is okay if you don't work until midnight and don't get a promotion. Nobody remembers their job designation on their dying day.

Five, most important, don't get competitive with other women. Someone will make a better scrapbook for her school project than you. Another will lose more weight with a better diet. Your neighbour may make six-dabba tiffin for her husband, you don't - big deal. Do your best, but don't keep looking out for the report card, and definitely don't expect to top the class. There is no ideal woman in this world, and if you strive to become one, there will be only one thing you will achieve for certain - stress.

So breathe, chill and relax. Tell yourself you are beautiful, do your best and deserve a peaceful life. Anybody trying to take that away from you is making a mistake, not you. Your purpose of coming to this earth is not to please everyone. Your purpose is to offer what you have to the world, and have a good life in return. The next time this survey comes, I don't want to see Indian women on top of the list. I want them to be the happiest women in the world. Now smile, before your mother-in-law shouts at you for wasting your time reading the newspaper.


Cherish Womanhood.

Wednesday, June 29, 2011

'India's per capita income may touch $10,000 by 2039'

India's per capita income could touch $10,000 by 2039, up from $1,000 at present, if sustained economic growth of over 8 per cent is maintained for the next 25 years, the country's Chief Economic Advisor Kaushik Basu said.

Addressing economists, investors and academicians in Washington, Basu said the fundamentals of the Indian economy are strong enough in the medium and long term to sustain a healthy growth rate of over 8 per cent.

"The per capita income of India will reach $10,000 by 2039. . . if India maintains its gross domestic product growth at 8 to 8.5 per cent for the next 25 years," Basu said at the US-India Economic and Financial Partnership on Monday.

The Indian economy, which expanded by 8.5 per cent in 2010-11, is likely to expand at the same rate in the current fiscal as well.

Indian Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee is leading a high-level delegation here to promote India as an attractive investment destination.

Basu further said a 1 per cent increase in the country's GDP would create an additional one million jobs and India was committed to maintaining the growth momentum.

While India's economic fundamentals are strong, continuous high inflation is seen as a big constraint to its growth.

At the conference, Reserve Bank of India Deputy Governor Subir Gokarn said that supply side pressures on inflation may moderate the growth momentum in the short run.

"Inflation is a significant near-term macro challenge and growth would be impacted in the short-term in managing inflation and inflationary expectations," he said.

Besides supply side constraints, high global commodity prices, including food and fuel, are adding up to the inflationary pressures.

Last week, the Indian government raised retail prices of politically sensitive diesel, LPG and kerosene, in the wake of high crude oil prices in global markets.

Inflation cost Indians Rs 58,00,00,00,00,000 extra!

Indian households incurred an additional expenditure of whopping Rs 5.8 lakh crore (Rs 5.8 trillion) in the last three years, due to spiralling inflation and dearer food items, says a research report.

"The rise in inflation to 8 per cent per year during 2008-09 to 2010-11, from 5 per cent in the preceding three years eroded the purchasing power of money and inflated the consumption expenditure bill of Indian households by Rs 5.8 lakh crore," research firm Crisil said in a study, Inflation Hurts.

It said that inflation was not uniform and food items saw a much sharper price increase as compared to non-food items during the three-year period.

"Food inflation was at 11.6 per cent during 2008-09 to 2010-11 as compared to non-food inflation of 5.7 per cent," Crisil said.

Headline inflation, which includes both food and non-food primary articles besides manufactured items, has been above the 8 per cent mark since January 2010. It stood at 9.06 per cent in May this year.

The Reserve Bank of India has hiked its key policy rates 10 times since March 2010 to curb demand and tame inflation.

In its annual monetary policy for 2011-12, the RBI said that inflationary pressure is likely to continue during the first half of the current fiscal on account of high global commodity prices, particularly crude.

The apex bank had exuded confidence that the pressure from high food prices would moderate in the days to come.

However, after a brief period of moderation, food inflation has again started surging and stood at 9.13 per cent for the week ended June 11.

This happens even as manufactured inflation, which has over 65 per cent share in the Wholesale Price Index basket, has breached the 7 per cent mark.

"The surge in inflation was initially driven by supply shocks such as a rise in food and fuel prices, which then spread to manufacturing goods as well," Crisil said.

Headline inflation for the whole of 2010-11 averaged 9.6 per cent as compared to a mere 3.8 per cent during the previous fiscal.

Experts have said that with the recent hike in prices of diesel, kerosene and cooking gas, overall inflation is likely to touch double-digit in July.

The study said that growth of private consumption expenditure in nominal terms increased to nearly 17 per cent per year during 2008-09 to 2010-11, as against 14 per cent in the preceding 3 years mainly due to rise in food inflation.

Crisil said the price trends of commodities in the WPI favour the middle and higher income classes, rather than poor and vulnerable Indian households who spend large part of their income on food.

"The middle and high income groups benefit more from falling prices of non-food manufactured items particularly durable goods, as they have higher disposable income to spend on other goods and services, including consumer durables and for savings," Crisil chief economist D K Joshi said.

"The poor, with limited discretionary income to spend on consumer durables, do not benefit much from their lower prices. In contrast, rising prices of food items strain their discretionary spending," he added.


Crisil said that food inflation is likely to remain high in the near future due to structural and supply side issues.

"Higher food prices should be an incentive to enhance production of food items, but this has not happened so far. In addition to price signals, productivity improvement in food/agriculture categories would require better technology and improved investments in irrigation. In the absence of these measures, high food inflation is here to stay," it said.

The study said that inflation in certain food items, especially egg, meat, fish and milk, has surged to double- digit over the last two years after having moderately in the preceding period.

"Rise in prices of these items has a greater impact on consumers, as they are purchased frequently and also account for a large share of a household's daily expenditure.

Purchases of manufactured goods, especially durables, are not as frequent. Therefore, a decline in prices of these goods often goes unnoticed," it said.

In 2010-11, prices of 146 out of 676 items in the WPI basket fell.

Of these, 117 items belonged to manufactured categories, including consumer goods as well as intermediate goods used as inputs for production of other goods.

However, the decline in these items was neutralised by additional spending on food products, Crisil said.