Tuesday, February 22, 2011

See the hypocrisy here!

 

Congress spokesman speaking after the verdict of the Godhra incident!

Congress spokesperson Jayanthi Natarajan said she was not aware of the judgement, but the communal violence that followed the train carnage was “a blot on democracy”. “In a political sense, whatever the judgement with regard to Godhra incident, the communal violence that erupted in Gujarat (after the train carnage) remained a blot on democracy... It is a blot on the record of Narendra Modi, for which he will always have to answer the people of the nation,” she said.

Well.. well what a surprise...

Do you remmeber 1984 sikh riots, do you remember the Union Carbide disaster. Those are not blots on democracy? Oh yes, when things happen uder the congress then its not a blot on democracy, its just something that happens in a democracy isn't it!

 

 

 

Will the UPa listen to this

advice from Niranjan Rajadakshya

Economic reforms have fallen off the map. They need to be brought back into the spotlight for the sake of the average Indian, whose opportunities for a better life will move up in sync with higher economic growth.

I really hope so!

Thursday, February 10, 2011

Guess who is this about

"He's a bastard" was the reply. After a small pause, he added: "But what a magnificent bastard."

See here for the answer

You will feel the

punch of the following sentence if you follow sport as a religion!

The judgments concludes with a reference to the great Chicago Black Sox baseball fixing scandal, echoing the famous words of a distraught young fan to "Shoeless Joe" Jackson, one of the players involved: 'Say it ain't so, Joe.'

Wednesday, February 02, 2011

Will the government heed

to these concerns:
There is no need to hit the panic button. This is not 1991. But the new Union budget is being framed against the backdrop of a stuttering world economy, and signs of domestic pressures. There are ample indicators of the key risks in the year ahead. The fiscal deficit is being funded by domestic savings and there are signs that it is crowding out private investment; the current account deficit is funded with foreign capital, but the worrisome drop in foreign direct investment in recent quarters means that India is increasingly dependent on volatile portfolio and short-term debt flows; and high inflation is a clear sign that the lack of meaningful reforms since 2004 has made the economy structurally constrained to increase aggregate supply, with the output gap shrinking too early in the business cycle.


Lets wait and see!