I agree with the piece in that .. Everybody should be treated the same.
Monday, March 25, 2013
The hypocrisy of it all summed up in one sentence
"When I was in the military, they gave me a medal for killing two men and a discharge for loving one."
Full article here
Thursday, March 21, 2013
Every Indian should read this
Winning the intellectual battle for economic liberalization http://www.livemint.com/Opinion/hjUdBaLNgjwdQiqpdUp7bO/Winning-the-intellectual-battle-for-economic-liberalization.html
Why we need to bring true liberalisation in India. Truly well written.
Wednesday, March 20, 2013
Guha gets it so right here
on Sehwag
Wonderful prose. I wish I could write my papers like that!
An excerpt
As the taxi entered the driveway of my hotel, I decided I must (as fathers tend to) have the last word. "The two people I feel most sorry for today," I said to my son, "are TG Vaidyanathan and yourself." Why, he asked, allowing me to express, in my own voice, the words he knew were coming. I did. "TGV did not watch Virender Sehwag bat. And you did not watch BS Chandrasekhar bowl."
Well I missed Chandrasekhar's bowling too, but at least I saw Sehwag bat to my hearts content!
Monday, March 18, 2013
A must read piece on Modi
The Idea of Modi http://realitycheck.wordpress.com/2013/03/17/the-idea-of-modi/
Saturday, March 16, 2013
Wednesday, March 13, 2013
Tuesday, March 12, 2013
Well, we have to endure such appalling mistakes
What bothers me is we are undertaking these blunders under a PhD economist
Perfect piece!
on how creating more legislation to enhance government efficiency will fail here
When economics deems public services to be inefficient, legislative measures to redress such inefficiencies become redundant. Yet, what does not seem to decrease is public support for such wasteful legislative actions. The futile chase for an “effective” Lokpal to curb corruption is another example. In that case, too, the votaries of a “strong” Bill ignored these realities. The reason could be both the economic irrelevance and economic ignorance of voters in the political market.
In the democratic political market, the value of an individual’s vote amongst a million others is essentially infinitesimal. What this entails is voters possessing very little incentive to get educated on public policy to shape government action in a positive manner. But some argue that political competition would steer economies towards sounder public policy.
Sunday, March 10, 2013
Thursday, March 07, 2013
Harsha gets it right
in his piece here
Age tends to dull ambition. A weary body rebels against being driven again. "The Eye of the Tiger" sounds good in the movies. But if he can summon the desire, there might still be some magic left. I'd love it to be so.
Could not have said it any better. One can hope!
Tuesday, March 05, 2013
The hypocrisy of the article is quite funny
David Brooks on "Brutality Escapades"
The article is on how the mighty in your surroundings get to set the norm which are what most people abhor but still follow. Now all this is fine, My problem with his piece is this.
Americans and Europeans tend to think it is self-defeating to engage in cyberattacks on private companies in a foreign country. You may learn something, but you destroy the trust that lubricates free exchange. Pretty soon your trade dries up because nobody wants to do business with a pirate. Investors go off in search of more transparent partners.
But China’s cybermercantilists regard deceit as a natural tool of warfare. Cyberattacks make perfect sense. Your competitors have worked hard to acquire intellectual property. Your system is more closed so innovation is not your competitive advantage. It is quicker and cheaper to steal. They will hate you for it, but who cares? They were going to hate you anyway. C’est la guerre.
Monday, March 04, 2013
A rebuttal on aakar patel's piece
How Mr. Patel became a journalist is beyond me. To claim Indians are as safe as Americans in terms of terrorist violence is just laughable.
Anyway...