Saturday, December 13, 2008

26/11 - കുറവില്ലാത്തതു് വിശകലനങ്ങൾക്കു മാത്രം...

26/11 നെ പറ്റി അരുന്ധതി റോയിയുടെ വിശകലനം എപ്പോഴാണുണ്ടാവുന്നതു് എന്നു നോക്കിയിരിക്കുകയായിരുന്നു.. അപ്പോഴാണു് രാജീവ് ശ്രീനിവാസന്റെ ‘നിഴൽ പോരാളി’ യിൽ നിന്നു് വിവരം കിട്ടിയതു്. പ്രതീക്ഷിച്ച രീതിയിൽ തന്നെ വിശകലനം - എവിടെ കളിച്ചാലും പകിട പന്ത്രണ്ടിൽ തന്നെയേ വീഴൂ...

പിന്നെ ഈ നൂറ്റാണ്ടിലെ ഈ. എം. എസ് ആയ സീതാരാം യെച്ചൂരി യുടെ വക അടുത്ത വിശകലനം (വേറൊരു റിപ്പോർട്ട് ഇവിടെ). Indo-US nuclear deal ആണത്രെ മുംബൈ ആക്രമണങ്ങളുടെ യഥാർത്ഥ കാരണം.. ഇതു പോലെ ഒരു ആണവ സഹകരണ കരാർ ചൈനയുമായി ഉണ്ടാക്കിയിരുന്നല്ലോ അമേരിക്ക ഒന്നോ രണ്ടോ വർഷങ്ങൾക്കു മുൻപു് - അവിടെ ഭീകരർ ആക്രമിക്കാഞ്ഞതു് ചൈനയുടെ ഭാഗ്യം എന്നു മാത്രം ആണോ സഖാവു യച്ചൂരിയുടെ അഭിജ്ഞമതം ഇനി...?

Friday, December 12, 2008

Rule 49 O - myths and the fact..

One story that is going rounds through the cyber-space, be they discussion forums, blogs, groups, or email networks, at an increasing frequency lately - particularly after the recent Bomaby terrorist attacks, is the one about Rule 49 O of the "Constitution of India" (which in some emails read 1969 Act of the constitution!!!). The story runs generally thus. It looks a bit bizzare that people genuinely took to this rather mal-intentioned story without batting an eye lid. The least that could have been done was to check if there is indeed an Article numbered 49 O in our constitution, and if yes what does it deal with.

Let's see what the actual facts are:

First of all, this Rule 49 O forms part of "Conduct of Election Rules" 1961. The clause is reproduced below.
49-O. Elector deciding not to vote.-If an elector, after his electoral roll number has been duly entered in the register of voters in Form-17A and has put his signature or thumb impression thereon as required under sub-rule (1) of rule 49L, decided not to record his vote, a remark to this effect shall be made against the said entry in Form 17A by the presiding officer and the signature or thumbimpression of the elector shall be obtained against such remark.
Full compendium of these rules can be obtained from this link. A write-up about this provision that appeared in The Hindu a few years ago can be seen here.

The wrong impression that was meant to be perpetrated by this hoax email can be illustrated by the following example. Let's assume that in an election, candidate A gets 200,000 votes and candidate B gets 200,123 votes, and the total number of 'no votes' asper Rule 49O comes to 124. Then as per this story, the entire election exercise would be cancelled, repolling ordered and the candidates would be disqualified for 6 years. This notion is wrong - it has no basis absolutely.

At least the perpetrators should have given a more plausible interpretation that if the rejections i.e. 49 O 'no votes' exceed the total number of votes polled, then a re-election needs to be ordered, and the candidates do not have the right to contest again. This is on the premise that more voters have rejected the candidates than the number of voters who have supported them. For example, candidate A gets 200,000 votes, candidate B gets 200,123 votes, but 'no votes' per rule 49O come to 450,000. Then it would have made a better, more credible stroy - without any basis though.

The Election Commission of India, on being made aware of such stories doing the rounds, has come up with a proper clarification on the subject, which you can read here. Please also see the narrative on Wikipedia. "Technology Law India" clarifies thus. An excerpt from their clarification is as follows:
Rule 49-O falls under the Chapter II of Part IV of the Rules which was introduced in 1992 and deals only with voting by electronic voting machines or EVMs. The remark referred to here is an offline entry by the presiding offer (accompanied by the voter’s signature) to record the fact that a vote was not electronically recorded even though the voter had registered in the register of voters. This would allow reconciliation of mismatches arising from a situation where you have lesser votes polled in the machines than the names entered and signed in the register of voters. There is no provision for polling to be cancelled based on the number of 49-O votes.
From another perspective, it can be seen that there is a fundamental flaw as well in this rule. If a voter has opted for Rule 49 (O), then that fact will be known to everyone in the polling station. That is, the 'secret' ballot will no longer be 'secret' ballot. Even the courts are prevented from knowing a voter's choice of candidate under section 94 of the Representation of Peoples Act, 1954. It could therefore be that this provision may not stand the test of law, if challenged in a court of law and subjected to legal scrutiny. In fact a petition by the People's Union for Civil Liberties seeking such provision for negative votes is still pending before the Hon'ble Supreme Court of India.

It may also be interesting to note that the Election Commission of India through a letter written in 2004 by the then Chief Election Commissioner of India, Mr. T S Krishnamurthy to the Government of India recommended adding a button called 'No Voting' in the Electronic Voting Machines or adding a column in the ballot paper for 'No Voting', so that firstly voters will have that chice, and secondly any such 'No-Vote' decision by the voter remains a secret. The Government of India, as expected, has not taken a decision on it yet (and will not likely to, in the future, as well).

See excerpt from the ECI letter to the Central government:

[Quote]
7. NEGATIVE / NEUTRAL VOTING

The Commission has received proposals from a very large number of individuals and organizations that there should be a provision enabling a voter to reject all the candidates in the constituency if he does not find them suitable. In the voting using the conventional ballot paper and ballot boxes, an elector can drop the ballot paper without marking his vote against any of the candidates, if he chooses so. However, in the voting using the Electronic Voting Machines, such a facility is not available to the voter. Although, Rule 49 O of the Conduct of Election Rules, 1961 provides that an elector may refuse to vote after he has been identified and necessary entries made in the Register of Electors and the marked copy of the electoral roll, the secrecy of voting is not protected here inasmuch as the polling officials and the polling agents in the polling station get to know about the decision of such a voter.

The Commission recommends that the law should be amended to specifically provide for negative / neutral voting. For this purpose, Rules 22 and 49B of the Conduct of Election Rules, 1961 may be suitably amended adding a proviso that in the ballot paper and the particulars on the ballot unit, in the column relating to names of candidates, after the entry relating to the last candidate, there shall be a column None of the above, to enable a voter to reject all the candidates, if he chooses so. Such a proposal was earlier made by the Commission in 2001 (vide letter dated 10.12.2001).
[Unquote]

Saturday, November 22, 2008

‘സാനന്ദ’സ്വാഗതവും സിംഗൂരും.. ഒരു ‘റ്റാ‍റ്റാ‘ കഥ..ഭാഗം ഒന്നു്

നവംബർ 21 ന് എഴുതിത്തുടങ്ങിയതാണിതു്. അന്നു് എഴുതിത്തീർക്കാൻ പറ്റിയില്ല. സാധാരണ ചെയ്യാറുള്ളതു പോലെ അതിനടുത്ത വാരാന്ത്യത്തിലേക്കു മാറ്റപ്പെട്ടു. പക്ഷെ അതിനിടയ്ക്കു നവംബർ 26 വന്നു - അന്നത്തെ പ്രത്യേക സാഹചര്യത്തിൽ പിന്നീടെപ്പോഴെങ്കിലും എഴുതാം എന്നു കരുതി മാറ്റി വെച്ചു. ഇന്നലെ ശ്രീ ബി. ആർ. പി. ഭാസ്കറുടെ ഈ കുറിപ്പു (ലിങ്ക് ഇവിടെ) കണ്ടപ്പോൾ എഴുത്തു തുടരാം എന്നു കരുതി. ഇതിനു് തുടർക്കുറിപ്പുകൾ ആവശ്യമായി വരും. കാരണം കുറേയധികം സംഭവങ്ങളെക്കുറിച്ചു പറയേണ്ടി വരും, കുറേയധികം ലേഖനങ്ങളെ ബന്ധപ്പെടുത്തേണ്ടി വരും - അതിനു കൂടുതൽ സമയം വേണം. പക്ഷെ ധം‌ര തുറമുഖ പദ്ധതിയെക്കുറിച്ചു് ഉടനെ എഴുതിയേ പറ്റൂ...
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ചിലർ വളരെ ഭാഗ്യവാന്മാരാണു് - അവർക്കു് പൂർവ്വാർജ്ജിതമായ സമ്പത്തിലോ പ്രശസ്തിയിലോ സൌഭാഗ്യങ്ങളിലോ അഭിരമിക്കാം, അതിന്റെ ചിറകിന്മേൽ സർവതന്ത്രസ്വതന്ത്രരാകാം, കൂടാതെ സർവസ്വീകൃതരും ആവാം. ഭൂതകാലം അല്ലെങ്കിൽ പൈതൃകം നൽകിയ യശോധാവള്യത്തിന്റെ പൊലിമയിൽ നിന്നു മാത്രം കൈവരുന്നതാണു് അവർക്കു് ആ സ്വീകാര്യത, പലപ്പോഴും. സ്വയംകൃതാനർത്ഥങ്ങൾ അവർക്കു് പ്രശ്നമാവാറില്ല, ഒട്ടുമിക്ക സമയങ്ങളിലും. മറ്റാരെങ്കിലും ആണെങ്കിൽ കളങ്കിതരായോ തിരസ്കൃതരായോ മാറേണ്ടി വരുന്ന പ്രശ്നങ്ങളിൽ പോലും സമൂഹം അവർക്കു് ഒരു മുൻ‌കൂർ ജാമ്യം നൽകിയിരിക്കും.

അവർ വ്യക്തികളാവാം, പ്രസ്ഥാനങ്ങളാവാം, വ്യവസായസ്ഥാപനങ്ങളാവാം. പാരമ്പര്യത്തിന്റെ വെള്ളിവെളിച്ചത്തിൽ നിന്നു മാത്രം അവർ അവകാശപ്പെടുന്ന, അല്ലെങ്കിൽ അവർക്കു നൽകപ്പെടുന്ന ഈ വിശ്വാസ്യത, സർവസ്വീകാര്യത എപ്പോഴെങ്കിലുമൊക്കെ ചോദ്യം ചെയ്യപ്പെടേണ്ടതല്ലേ? കുറ്റം ആണു് ചെയ്യപ്പെട്ടതെങ്കിൽ അവരും മറ്റുള്ളവരെപ്പോലെ തന്നെ വിചാരണ ചെയ്യപ്പെടണ്ടതല്ലേ? കക്ഷിഭേദമെന്യേ, വ്യക്തിഭേദമെന്യേ ഒരു വിചാരണ പോലുമില്ലാതെ അവർക്കു കുറ്റവിമുക്തി നൽകിയാൽ അതു തെറ്റല്ലേ?

ഒരു പക്ഷെ റ്റാറ്റാ ഗ്രൂപ്പിനു് ഈ ഭാഗ്യം വലിയ അളവിൽ ഉണ്ടു്. പണ്ടെങ്ങോ അവരുടെ ഹോട്ടലിൽ Britishers and dogs are not allowed എന്നെഴുതിയതിന്റെ ഉപകാരസ്മരണ ഇന്നും അവർക്കു നൽകുന്നു നമ്മുടെ സമൂഹം. 20,000 ത്തിലേറെ മനുഷ്യജീവികളുടെ ജീവനപഹരിച്ച ഭോപ്പൽ ദുരന്തത്തിനുത്തരവാദികളായ യൂണിയൻ കാർബൈഡു് എന്ന കമ്പനിയെ പരോക്ഷമായെങ്കിലും ആദ്യമായി പിന്തുണച്ചതു് നാമൊക്കെ വാഴ്ത്തുന്ന Tata ഗ്രൂപ്പ്‌ ആയിരുന്നു - Warren Andersen എന്ന യൂണിയൻ കാർബൈഡു് ചെയർമാന്റെ അറസ്റ്റിനെ വിമർശിക്കുക വഴി (ലിങ്കുകൾ ഇവിടെ, ഇവിടെ) പിന്നീടു്, ആ കമ്പനിയെ Dow Chemicals ഏറ്റെടുത്തതിനു ശേഷം ഭോപ്പൽ ദുരന്തത്തിന്റെ ഉത്തരവാദിത്വത്തിൽ നിന്നു്, പ്രത്യേകിച്ചു് criminal liability യിൽ നിന്നു്, അവരെ ഒഴിവാക്കുവാൻ രത്തൻ റ്റാ‍റ്റ വളരെയധികം ശ്രമിച്ചിരുന്നു - ഇപ്പോഴും ശ്രമിച്ചു കൊണ്ടിരിക്കുന്നു. 2007 ജനുവരിയിൽ പ്ലാനിംഗ് കമ്മീഷൻ ഉപാദ്ധ്യക്ഷൻ മോണ്ടെക് സിങ് അലുവാലിയയ്ക്കും പിന്നീടു ചിദംബരത്തിനും അദ്ദേഹം കത്തുകൾ അയച്ചു. പ്രത്യക്ഷത്തിൽ മനുഷ്യക്ഷേമപ്രവർത്തനം എന്നു തോന്നത്തക്ക രീതിയിൽ, എന്നാൽ Dow Chemicals നെ criminal liability യിൽ നിന്നു ഒഴിവാക്കുക എന്ന അജണ്ട പരോക്ഷമായി ഉന്നം വെച്ചു കൊണ്ടും, ചെയ്ത ഈ പ്രവൃത്തി ആരും വലിയ പ്രശ്നമാക്കി കണ്ടില്ല. അതു കൊണ്ടാണല്ലോ ഇടതു വലതു ഫാസിസ്റ്റ് നാസിസ്റ്റ് ഗവണ്മെന്റുകൾ രത്തൻ റ്റാറ്റയ്ക്കു ചുവപ്പു പരവതാനി വിരിച്ചു കൊണ്ടേയിരിക്കുന്നതു്...

അപലപനീയം എന്നു തന്നെ പറയാവുന്ന ഇത്തരം ധാരാളം സംഭവങ്ങൾ, പിന്നാമ്പുറക്കഥകൾ വേറെയും ഉണ്ടു്. മുകളിൽ സൂചിപ്പിച്ചതു പോലെ തുടർക്കുറിപ്പുകൾ പുറകെ. പക്ഷെ ധം‌ര തുറമുഖപ്രവർത്തനങ്ങളുമായി ബന്ധപ്പെട്ടു് റ്റാറ്റ നൽകിയ വാഗ്ദാനങ്ങൾ, പരിസ്ഥിതിസംബന്ധമായവയുൾപ്പെടെ, പാലിക്കപ്പെട്ടേ പറ്റൂ. പ്രത്യേകിച്ചു്, ഒരു സ്വതന്ത്രപഠനം നടത്തി അതിന്റെ നിഗമനങ്ങൾ അംഗീകരിക്കപ്പെടുന്നതു വരെ തുറമുഖ പ്രവർത്തനങ്ങൾ നിർത്തിവെക്കും എന്ന വാഗ്ദാനം പാലിക്കപെട്ടേ പറ്റൂ..

Saturday, November 8, 2008

Aggression in the field - a few stray thoughts..

October 2008 had been a special month on many counts - the most notable among them, apart from the successful launch of Chandrayan, being the following:

1) Vishwanathan Anand regaining (retaining) his crown;
2) Sachin Tendulkar becoming the leading run getter in the Test & ODI versions of cricket;
3) Saurav Ganguly choosing to retire at the end of the current Indo-Australian series;
4) Anil Kumble retiring from international cricket

The coincidence of all these happening at about the same time is not the topic that I've chosen to dwell on. Instead, as a number of writers have already commented recently, it will be interesting to have a look at the on/off-field behaviour of these dignified champions, and possibly check if there is any correlation of their conduct on and off the filed with their actual performances. The moot question is - does one need to be overtly aggressive or arrogant in the field, in order to be a champion material? Can a gentleman choose to remain a gentleman and maintain his dignity but at the same time continue to be a champion or continue to tread all the way up to his or her stardom?

In the world of tennis, it was in the early eighties that Martina Navratilova came into the spot light, eclipsing the charming aura of Chris Evert. In the late eighties Steffi started on her ascendancy. When I used to watch the live telecast of Steffi versus Martina matches in those days, I used to wonder why Martina gets so charged up after beating Steffi - who was just a kid less than half her age at those times - who always used to exude a charm of vulnerability all around her even in her peak. As a strong contrast to Martina, Steffi's victory celebrations always used to be rather muted, with a relieved smile all around her face - a very dignified stance most of the times..

I used to enamoured of what Steffi does, as compared to Martina's gesticulations. Show one's relative superiority in one's performance, not in all other kinds of showing off, during the match or post-match. Does one need to be overtly aggressive and nauseatingly arrogant always declaring "I'm the best", to be a winner? Can't one be quiet, gentle, dignified and organised in sports?

As some of the articles that I have provided links for in my previous post, chess, of all games, was meant to be a game where contestants ought be boisterous and showing explicit animosity and contempt to the fellow contestant. They should always throw bad language and foul exclamations at the other - such was the practice. With a few exceptions though. In my child hood days, I used to follow the Spasky Fischer matches (1972) which was held in Iceland's capital Reykjavik. In those days, we had to rely on newspaper reports obviously, and I used to remember reports which indicated that Fischer, the freak genius that he was, used to be a bit crazy, sometimes. Bursting out that Spasky was hypnotizing him etc., was an example of his worst tantrums. But I understand that Boris Spasky was a gentleman, so much so that in the previous tournaments that they used to play one another, he used to go to Fischer's room, which used to be as disorganised a room can be, take him out to the swimming pool, and tried to make Fischer relax a bit. I used to read that after such positive interventions by Spaksy, Fischer's record of winning over Spasky used to go up!! A rarity that can only be dreamt about in these days,I say!!!

All the four gentlemen whose names I have written in the first paragraph have proved that one can be dignified and gentle while remaining champions in their own areas. One may have a view or two in divergence in his feel about Saurav's conduct, but I disagree. He was all energy, demonstrative sometimes, totally different, and might have been forceful, but his conduct was never undignified, or non-gentlemanly or even arrogant. I'd say that vis-a-vis Australia he was only showing to keep our heads high, and never to be servile. Being servile used to be the norm, rather than the exception, with our team, most of the times in the earlier days and it was at such times Saurav showed his own way to counter that.

Dignity will be remembered for ever, while histrionics will tend to be laughed at more often than not, except possibly for rare cases of freak geniuses such as John McEnroe. Such geniuses are rare in his history - so very rare that those others who wish to blindly emulate such behaviour should have the common sense and intellect to understand that unless they have such elements of genius within them they will soon fall by the way side and obviously into the oblivion..

Saturday, November 1, 2008

ചില ഒക്ടോബർ 31 ചിന്തകൾ..

ഈ പോസ്റ്റ് വരുന്നതു് ഒരു പക്ഷെ നവംബർ ഒന്നിനാവും.. ഇന്നലെ പോസ്റ്റ് ചെയ്യാൻ പറ്റിയില്ല എന്നേയുള്ളൂ - ചിന്തകൾ ഇന്നലത്തെയാണു്.

പാരതന്ത്ര്യം എന്നാൽ ‘അന്യന്റെ വരുതിയ്ക്കു നിൽക്കുക’ എന്നു വിവക്ഷ. അപ്പോൾ സ്വാതന്ത്ര്യം എന്നാൽ ‘സ്വന്തം വരുതിക്കു നിൽക്കൽ’ എന്നാവും അല്ലേ. ഒരു വരുതിയ്ക്കു നിൽക്കൽ ഈ രണ്ടു് അവസ്ഥകളിലും ഉണ്ടു് - അന്യന്റെയോ സ്വന്തമോ ആവും വരുതി എന്ന വ്യത്യാസം മാത്രം. Freedom of thought, freedom of expression എന്നൊക്കെ പറയുമ്പോഴും അതിൽ അന്തർലീനമായി ഒരു നിയന്ത്രിക്കൽ - സ്വകീയമോ പരകീയമോ - ഉൾഭവിച്ചിട്ടുണ്ടു്. ഒരൊറ്റ വാഹനം പോലും ചുറ്റുവട്ടത്തില്ലെങ്കിലും വേഗത കൂടിയാൽ മറ്റാർക്കും അപകടം ഉണ്ടാവുകയില്ല എന്നുറപ്പാണെങ്കിൽ പോലും 120 കിലോമീറ്റർ എന്നൊരു വേഗതാനിയന്ത്രണനിർദേശം ഉണ്ടെങ്കിൽ അതു പാലിക്കപ്പെടണം എന്നു നിയമം അനുശാസിക്കുന്നതു പോലെ. ഡോ. മന്മോഹൻ സിംഹ്‌ ഈയിടെ ചൈനയിൽ വെച്ചു് ഊന്നിപ്പറഞ്ഞതു പോലെ ശക്തമായ റെഗുലേഷൻ ഇല്ലെങ്കിൽ ആനകളാവും ആദ്യം അടി തെറ്റി വീഴുക. വീഴ്ച്ചകൾ ഇല്ലാത്ത ഒരു ലോകം പക്ഷെ അയഥാർത്ഥമാണെന്നറിഞ്ഞു കൊണ്ടു തന്നെ 24 വർഷം മുമ്പുള്ള ആ ഒക്റ്റോബർ 31 ന്റെ ഓർമ്മകളിലേക്കു് - തികച്ചും സ്വകീയമായ ഓർമ്മകളിലേക്കു്..

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അന്നു് ഒരു സുഹൃത്തിന്റെ അനിയത്തിയുടെ വിവാഹം ഗുരുവായൂരിൽ വെച്ചു്. തിരുവനന്തപുരത്തു നിന്നു കൃഷ്ണകുമാർ തലേന്നു തന്നെ കൊച്ചിയിൽ എത്തി. ‘ആത്മാരാമൻ’ എന്നാണു് കൃഷ്ണകുമാർ സാഹിത്യലോകത്തു് അറിയപ്പെടാറു്. അന്നൊക്കെ ഇത്തരം യാത്രകൾ ഒക്കെ ഞങ്ങൾ ഒരുമിച്ചാണു്. 30നു വൈകുന്നേരം ഗുരുവായൂരിൽ. തീരഭൂമിയിൽ നിന്നു് ധാരാളം പുസ്തകങ്ങൾ വാങ്ങുന്നു - ബാലാമണിയമ്മയുടെ കുറെ കൃതികൾ വാങ്ങിയതു് പ്രത്യേകം ഓർമ്മിക്കുന്നു. പലേയിടങ്ങളിലും അന്വേഷിച്ചു കിട്ടാത്തവ ആയിരുന്നു അവയിൽ പലതും.

പിറ്റേന്നു വിവാഹചടങ്ങുകൾക്കു ശേഷം ഊണു കഴിച്ചു കൊണ്ടിരിക്കുന്നു (‘നന്ദിനി’ ടൂറിസ്റ്റ് ഹോമിൽ എന്നാണോർമ്മ). പതിനൊന്നു് ആവുന്നതെയുള്ളൂ. പെട്ടെന്നു വധുവിന്റെ അമ്മാവൻ ഓടി വന്നു പരിഭ്രമത്തോടെ പറയുന്നു - മിസ്സിസ് ഗാന്ധിയെ വെടിവെച്ചു എന്നൊരു വാർത്തയുണ്ടു്, ഏതായാലും വേഗമാ‍ക്കാം ഊണും പുറപ്പെടലും. ഒരു നടുക്കം ഉണ്ടായി എല്ലാവർക്കും..ആകെ ഒരു സംഭ്രമം. വഴിക്കു് അക്രമങ്ങൾ ഉണ്ടാവാൻ സാധ്യത ഉണ്ടു് എന്നു് പൊതു അഭിപ്രായം. വ്യക്തികൾ crowd ആയി മാറുമ്പോൾ, ആ അവസ്ഥയിൽ എത്തുമ്പോൾ പ്രതികരിക്കുന്നതു് വളരെ വ്യത്യസ്തരീതിയിൽ ആവും എന്നതു് സുവ്യക്തം. ഗുരുവായൂർ ബസ് സ്റ്റാന്റിൽ ബസുകൾ ഒഴിഞ്ഞു കൊണ്ടിരിക്കുന്നു. ആദ്യം പുറപ്പെട്ട ബസ്സിൽ തന്നെ ചാടിക്കയറി. തൃശ്ശൂരിൽ എത്തുമോ എന്നു് ഒരുറപ്പും ഇല്ല. വഴിക്കൊക്കെ ആക്രോശിക്കുന്ന സംഘങ്ങൾ കുറേശ്ശെ രൂപപ്പെട്ടു വരുന്നു.. Elias Canetti യുടെ 'Crowd and Power' നെ പറ്റി ഞങ്ങൾ സംസാരിച്ചു... തീരെ അശക്തൻ ആയ ഒരു വ്യക്തി പോലും ഒരു ജനക്കൂട്ടത്തിന്റെ ഭാഗം ആവുമ്പോൾ ശക്തനാവുന്നു - അല്ലെങ്കിൽ ശക്തിയുടെ പിൻബലം നൽകുന്ന ഒരു തരം ധൈര്യം അവനു കൈ വരുന്നു. ചിലപ്പോൾ വളരെ മായികമായ (illusory എന്ന അർത്ഥത്തിൽ) ഒരു ശക്തി അല്ലെങ്കിൽ ധൈര്യം ആവും അതു്, എങ്കിൽ പോലും. ഒരു ചെറിയ പ്രത്യാക്രമണത്തിനു* പോലും ഒരു പക്ഷെ ഈ മായികബലത്തെ തകർക്കാൻ പറ്റും എങ്കിൽ പോലും. *പോലിസിന്റെ crowd management ന്റെ പ്രധാന ഘടകം ഇതു തന്നെ ആണല്ലോ.

കേച്ചേരി കഴിഞ്ഞു് ഒരു അഞ്ചു മിനിറ്റ് ആയിക്കാണും - ഒരു കല്ലു ചീറിപ്പാഞ്ഞു ബസ്സിന്റെ വശത്തു തട്ടി തെറിച്ച വലിയ ശബ്ദം കേട്ടു ആകെ ഒരു ഞെട്ടൽ ബസ്സിനുള്ളിൽ. പിന്നെ ഒരു പാച്ചിൽ ആയിരുന്നു. തൃശ്ശൂർ എത്തി - മറ്റപായങ്ങൾ ഉണ്ടാകുന്നതിനു മുമ്പു്. ട്രെയിനുകൾ ഒന്നും ഇല്ല. റെയിൽ‌വേ സ്റ്റേഷൻ വിജനം ആയിക്കഴിഞ്ഞു. KSRTC സ്റ്റാന്റിൽ ആളുകൾ ഉണ്ടു് - പക്ഷെ ബസ്സുകൾ ഒന്നും പുറപ്പെടുന്നില്ല. തൃശ്ശൂരിൽ താമസിക്കാൻ പറ്റാഞ്ഞിട്ടോ ഒന്നുമല്ല, പക്ഷെ തിരിച്ചു എറണാകുളത്തു് എങ്ങനെ എങ്കിലും എത്തിപ്പെട്ടാൽ മതി എന്നാണു് മനസ്സിൽ. ‘വീടു്’ എന്ന സ്ഥാപനം നൽകുന്ന ഒരു സംരക്ഷണം ഒരു പക്ഷെ ഇത്തരം സന്ദർഭങ്ങളിൽ മനസ്സു് ആഗ്രഹിക്കുന്നുണ്ടാവാം.. സന്ദർഭം അനുസരിച്ചു് ഈ ‘വീടു്’ എന്ന സ്ഥാപനത്തിന്റെ പരിധി മാറുന്നു.. വിദേശത്തു വെച്ചാണിത്തരം കാര്യങ്ങൾ ഉണ്ടാവുന്നതെങ്കിൽ ഇന്ത്യയുടെ ഏതെങ്കിലും ഭാഗത്തു എത്തിയാൽ സംരക്ഷിതം എന്ന തോന്നൽ. വടക്കേ ഇന്ത്യയിൽ വെച്ചാണെങ്കിൽ കേരളത്തിൽ അല്ലെങ്കിൽ തമിഴ്നാട്ടിൽ എത്തിയാൽ പോലും മതിയാവും. കേരളത്തിൽ വെച്ചാണെങ്കിൽ വീട്ടിൽ തന്നെ എത്തണം..

പ്രത്യേകിച്ചു് ഒരു പദ്ധതിയും ഇല്ലാതെ ഞങ്ങൾ ആ ബസ് സ്റ്റാന്റിൽ ഇരുന്നു. ഇടക്കു റെയിൽ വേ സ്റ്റേഷനിൽ പൊയി നോക്കും...വൈകുന്നേരം ആയി. വിശപ്പും ദാഹവും അല്ല പ്രശ്നം - എറണാകുളം വഴി പോവുന്ന ഒരു ബസ്. പക്ഷെ അതില്ലാത്ത അവസ്ഥയിൽ വിശപ്പും ദാഹവും തല പൊക്കി. ബസ് സ്റ്റാന്റിലെ ഒരു മിൽമാ ബൂത്തിന്റെ പിൻ‌വാതിലിലൂടെ ചില ബേക്കറി വിഭവങ്ങളും കാപ്പിയും ബൂത്തുടമസ്ഥൻ ഒരുക്കിത്തന്നു. രാത്രി എട്ടര മണിക്കു വെറുതെ ബസ് സ്റ്റാന്റിന്റെ പിൻഭാഗം വഴി ഒന്നു കറങ്ങിയതാണു് - ഒരു ബസ് സ്റ്റാർട് ചെയ്യപ്പെടുന്ന പോലെ ഒരു തോന്നൽ. “എറണാകുളം വഴി കോട്ടയത്തിനാണു് - പോരുന്നോ’ എന്നു കണ്ടക്റ്ററുടെ ചോദ്യം. ആദ്യം തമാശയാണെന്നാണു കരുതിയതു്. “പോരുന്നെങ്കിൽ കയറിക്കോ” കണ്ടക്റ്റർ ഒന്നുകൂടി ആവർത്തിച്ചു. വേറെ ഒന്നും ആലോചിച്ചില്ല - ഞങ്ങൾ ഉള്ളിൽ. വേറെ നാലോ അഞ്ചോ പേരും കൂടെ. ബസ് സ്റ്റാന്റിനുള്ളിൽ കയറാതെ പിൻ‌വശത്തു നിന്നു തന്നെ ബസ് എറണാകുളം റോഡിലേക്കു തിരിഞ്ഞു. ഡ്രൈവറുടെ മകളുടെ കല്യാ‍ണം ആണു രണ്ടു ദിവസം കഴിഞ്ഞു കോട്ടയത്തു വെച്ചു - അതു കൊണ്ടു അയാൾക്കു പോയേ പറ്റൂ. അധികാരികളുടെ അനുവാദം ഇല്ലാതെ പോന്നതു പോലും ആവാം അയാൾ, ഒരു പക്ഷെ.

വഴിക്കു മുഴുവൻ ഇടയ്ക്കിടക്കു് വഴി തടയൽ ധാരാളം. പക്ഷെ ജനക്കൂട്ടങ്ങൾ ഒന്നു അടങ്ങിയിരുന്നു.. തകർത്തു പെയ്ത മഴയ്ക്കു ശേഷം അതു ശമിച്ച പോലെ.. ക്രോധം ദുഖം ആയി മാറുകയായിരുന്നു.. പലതവണ ടെലിവിഷനിലും റേഡിയോ യിലുമായി കണ്ടും കേട്ടും ആളുകൾ ആ സത്യം internalise ചെയ്തു. ഒന്നാറിത്തണുത്തു.

ചാലക്കുടി കഴിഞ്ഞു യാത്രക്കാരായി ഞങ്ങൾ മാത്രം. 11 മണി ആയപ്പോൾ, ഞങ്ങൾക്കു ഇറങ്ങേണ്ടിയിരുന്ന, മനോരമ ജങ്ക്ഷനിൽ തന്നെ ഞങ്ങളെ ഇറക്കി ആ ഡ്രൈവർ. അദ്ദേഹത്തിന്റെ മകളുടെ കല്യാണം തടസ്സമില്ലാതെ നടക്കട്ടെ എന്നാശംസിച്ചു് ഞങ്ങൾ എന്റെ വാസസ്ഥലത്തേക്കു നടന്നു..പിന്നെ മൂന്നു നാലു ദിവസത്തേക്കു ഒരു തരം ഹർത്താൽ രീതിയായിരുന്നു എല്ല്ലായിടത്തും...

BBC യുടെ ഓർമ ഇതാ ഇവിടെ. അന്നു BBC റിപ്പോർട്ടർ സതീശ് ജേക്കബ് ആണു്. അദ്ദേഹത്തിന്റെ റിപ്പോർട്ടുകളിൽ നിന്നാണു് കൂടുതൽ വിവരങ്ങൾ കിട്ടിയിരുന്നതു്.

1948 ജനുവരി 30 നു ശേഷം ഭാരതം നേരിട്ട ഒരു പ്രത്യേക അവസ്ഥാവിശേഷമായിരുന്നു അന്നു്. അന്നത്തെ തലമുറയുടെ അത്തരത്തിലെ ആദ്യ അനുഭവവും. ഭീകരവാദം അതിന്റെ തീക്ഷ്ണമായ അവസ്ഥയിൽ വന്നെത്തിയിരിക്കുന്നു എല്ലായിടത്തും എന്ന തിരിച്ചറിവു് ഭാരതത്തിനുണ്ടായതു് ഒരു പക്ഷെ അതിനു ശേഷമായിരിക്കും. തന്റെ രക്ഷ നോക്കാൻ ബാദ്ധ്യതപ്പെട്ട രക്ഷാ ഉദ്യോഗസ്തന്മാർ തന്നെ തന്റെ ജീവൻ കവർന്ന ഒരു ഭീകരമായ ദയനീയമായ വശം കൂടെ ഈ സംഭവത്തിനുണ്ടു്. ഇന്നത്തെ മാതിരി ഇന്റലിജൻസ് സംവിധാനങ്ങൾ അന്നുണ്ടായിരുന്നെങ്കിൽ ഒരു പക്ഷെ ആ സംഭവം ഉണ്ടാവുമായിരുന്നില്ല..അതോ ഉണ്ടായിട്ടും അതിന്റെ പിഴവായിരുന്നോ ഈ ദാരുണതയിൽ എത്തി നിന്നതു് - ആർക്കറിയാം?

ഇന്ദിരാഗാന്ധിയുടെ സംസ്കാര വേളയിൽ എത്തിയ യാസ്സർ അറാഫത്തിന്റെ ഒരു ഇന്റർവ്യൂ മാത്രം ഇപ്പോഴും മനസ്സിൽ... ആ തിളങ്ങുന്ന കണ്ണുകളിൽ ആകെ നനവായിരുന്നു.. ‘എന്നെ യാസ്സെർ എന്നു മാത്രം വിളിച്ചിരുന്ന എനിക്കു പിറക്കാതെ പോയ എന്റെ സഹോദരി’ എന്നു തുടങ്ങി ദൂരദർശനുമായി അദ്ദേഹം നടത്തിയ ആ സംഭാഷണം എന്തോ ഇപ്പോഴും മനസ്സിൽ...

രാഷ്ട്രീയമായി എത്രയോ പാളിച്ചകൾ തെറ്റുകൾ ആരോപിക്കാമെങ്കിലും അന്താരാഷ്ട്ര വേദികളിൽ ഇന്ത്യയുടെ ശിരസ്സുയർത്തി തന്നെ നിർത്തിയ ഒരു മഹദ്വ്യക്തിത്വം തന്നെ ആയിരുന്നു അവരുടേതു്. അന്നു് അമേരിക്കയിൽ മഞ്ഞു വീണാൽ ഇന്ത്യ തുമ്മിയിരുന്നില്ല ഒരു കാരണവശാലും..

ശരിയാണു് - ഒരു വഴിയോരക്കാഴ്ചയായിട്ടെങ്കിലും ഓർമ്മകൾ ഉണ്ടായിരിക്കണം...

Friday, October 31, 2008

Lord of the universe..

Now the turn has come to salute yet another genius - Vishwanathan Anand, the champion who is all smiles at all times. The person who has proved to the world that one can be a superstar and world champion in chess, without having to be rough, ill-mannered, overtly aggressive, and indulging in 'hate-speak' at all times. Whenever he is seen on TV or in the press, a smiling cheerful face is probably what strikes us the most..The ruffians that champion chess players ought to be is a belief, certainly a wrong one at that, that is unfortunately rooted deep in the psyche of many a chess-player - not fortunately in the part of the world where we hail from, but in many other parts of the world. Please see the related report in Times of India, and the blog post of Prem Panicker (from 'Smoke Signals'), from where I got this TOI link.

Let me salute the champion, one more time.. May there be many more laurels coming your way, Anand - we're proud of you..

Monday, October 27, 2008

About the girl child - cry thy beloved country..

This morning, or more correctly some time in between late last night and this morning, at some point when brain slips to a kind of delirium, when images that we have seen past but can't be irretrievably relegated to the inner folds of memory start circling around you, I was thinking of the girl child.. ..Just the other day, while coming back from a business travel, my co-passenger was a girl surely past her teens and possibly into her mid twenties..a very intelligent girl - not the type who is absolutely oblivious of things happening outside of her county, leave alone her country..very sweet and smart, who one would wish had been his or her daughter ..Her first destination was Kathmandu, possibly a Himalayan trek, and then the next few weeks in our homeland..she told me she'd love to travel all over India.

That return flight was a journey of close to 7 hours, and she slept for half the time...and was taking notes from a book when not asleep..probably making preparations for her trip I thought..

One question she did not ask me was about how safe would a girl just past her teens be in India, alone.. probably it is her own surroundings, the nature of her environs or what she'd have seen all around her while growing up, that made her not ask that question.. or she may have been in the know..but if she were to ask that question, what answer should I have given..?

And this morning I happened to read this..coincidental or not, I can't say either way..

Your words, Babita, somehow pierce into my heart..and surely it bleeds..when you write 'bodies lusted and whisked away in the name of love', I shudder to think it could be anyone's dear daughter, lovely sister who a father and a mother would have grown by giving love beyond what they could... but looking at her being disrobed and raped, the collective conscious of the society feigns to be attentive while talking about the stock exchange or TV serials with nauseating detachment.. yes - it is a collective betrayal on what I'd tend to believe, or what my upbringing has taught me to believe, as world's most wonderful creation..

Looking at the whole thing with a kind of impassioned detachment, I'd tend to believe that ours is a society which is hypocrisy personified in the truest sense of the term.. God's own country - it is made out to be. True, it made a good copy for the ad world , but does it mean anything to us? Society which imbibes relief when "my husband/my wife/my children" (sorry - parents not included) are safe, even when our neighbour has lost his entire family.. when our next door neighbour gets physically attacked in broad day light, we tend to close our front door and look at our wrist watch to see if it is time for the 5.30 serial..we have political parties, why political parties we have a reigning Chief Minister at the moment, who outsmarted anyone else in conveniently using the plight of the girl child to ride a popular wave and snatch a political victory, then only to forget the agonies of the girl child and relegate several of those police cases into the convenient oblivion of our collective conscious..

As a society, we have not seen a war being fought..except dawn to dusk strikes and harthals.... We have never seen even a fraction of the agonies of our freedom struggle, or taken part in any kind, yet ashamedly courageous enough declare before the masses in a self congratulatory mode the fruits of our incessant struggle..what has been our collective contribution to any cause, except certain isolated works by individuals - I wonder..

Cry thy beloved country..what else.. at least let your sins get washed off by your tears (unless they are not induced by glycerine)..

Thanks Babita for the strikingly forceful and violently forthright writing..

Saturday, October 18, 2008

എഴുത്തും സ്വാതന്ത്ര്യവും...

ഈ എഴുതുന്നതിൽ ആർക്കെന്തു തോന്നുന്നു എന്നതു് എന്റെ വിഷയം അല്ല.. അതിനോടുള്ള പ്രതികരണങ്ങൾ എന്റെ ബൌദ്ധികസ്വത്തല്ല താനും.. ഞാൻ എന്തെഴുതുന്നു എന്നതു മാത്രം ആണു് എനിക്കു സംബന്ധം.. അതെന്റെ സ്വാതന്ത്ര്യം ആണു താനും. അതിൽ ‘എന്തു കൊണ്ടു്’ ‘എന്തിനു്’ എന്നുള്ള ചോദ്യങ്ങൾ അപ്രസക്തമാണു് എന്നെ സംബന്ധിച്ചിടത്തോളം. ആ കവിത താങ്കൾ വായിച്ചതെന്തിനു്, അതിനെക്കുറിച്ചു് അങ്ങനെ എഴുതിയതെന്തിനു് എന്നു ആരെങ്കിലും നേരേ വന്നു ചോദിച്ചാൽ അതെന്റെ സ്വാതന്ത്ര്യപരിധിയിൽ വരുന്നതു കൊണ്ടു് എന്ന ഒരുത്തരമേ എനിക്കുള്ളു. ഒരർത്ഥത്തിൽ അതു മാത്രമല്ലേ ഉത്തരം ഉള്ളൂ എന്നും തോന്നാം..

ആക്ഷേപഹാസ്യങ്ങൾക്കു് മൌനം ആണു് ചിലപ്പോൾ നല്ല മറുപടി. "Silence speaks more than words can" എന്നല്ലേ പരിണതപ്രജ്ഞർ പറയാറു്...

ആനുഷങ്ഗികമായി ഇത്തിരി ഉച്ചത്തിൽ ഓർത്തു പോയി എന്നേയുള്ളൂ....

Friday, October 17, 2008

Sachin crosses Brian Lara's record!!!

As I write this, the fire-crackers at Mohali haven't yet gone mute.. and let me salute that great cricketer Sachin Ramesh Tandulkar for the feat that he's achieved in the first over after tea against Australia on day 0ne (October 17, 2008)..He has gone past Brian Lara in becoming the highest run getter in Test cricket. Now he holds all the big four records in cricket - highest run getter in Test cricket, highest run getter in One-Day International cricket, maximum number of centuries in Test cricket and maximum number of centuries in One-Day International cricket...

A big feat that...something which could get broken at some time in the future, but not an easy one to get over at that..!!!

Let me join the cricketing world, the cricketing fraternity and my fellow Indians in lauding his feat...

Saturday, October 11, 2008

Why pamper industries at the cost of agriculture? A Tata example..

It was more than a decade and a half ago, in 1992 to be precise, that I happened to hear an economist speak on 'sustainable integrated balanced development'. Just to reminisce, that was the beginning of the globalisation phase of India, probably just before India Inc. started receiving the limelight, or shall I say more positively skewed share of focus, from the powers that be. The internet boom had not yet started its ascendancy. We had just survived the fall outs from the liberation of Kuwait and the (first) Iraq war by Mr. Bush, the Senior. It was only a few months prior to that, that we'd been through the the Indian Express expose on the pawning of gold by our government under the stewardship of the then Finance Minister Yashwant Sinha, who was at that time with the Janata Dal (his pre-BJP days). Dr. Manmohan Singh (MMS) had unveiled his first budget. P. Chidambaram was commerce minister at that time. IMF doctrines had just began its influence on governmental policies.

This sets out the back drop. 

It may be just coincidental that the 'economist-speak' (which I have referred to in the opening paragraph) was in Calcutta, in Narendrapur to be more precise. It took place during a refresher course which I was attending in my then employer's training complex at Narendrapur. Among several interesting things which he shared with us, he recounted his student days at the famed Delhi School of Economics, particularly the discussions that took place with MMS himself. He was tangentially indicating that there was a gradual shift since then in the economic postulates of Dr. MMS, compared to where he was in his DSE days, and he tried to make out a case that that was possibly due to the 'learning unlearning' process he subjected himself to in his is days at Washington. He (our speaker) felt that MMS got catapaulted to a totally different kind of doctrinated pedestal after his stint with the IMF.

Let us come back to our theme. His (our speaker's) one question was - why should we give primacy to industries and particularly so, at the cost of agriculture? His argument was that stimulated economic growth derived from enhanced industrial growth in a manner out-pacing agriculture may be less meaningful to a country like India. Politicians after politicians speak about the fortunes of industrialisation, but do not spare even an iota of thought on agriculture. Unless we have a sustainable environment-friendly integrated and balanced development where the primary, secondary and tertiary sectors are given balanced focus, it can only help widen the rift between the rich and the poor. As the saying goes, how does the rich becoming richer help the poor who is left with only one option - to become only poorer. Increase in the number of millionaires is by no means a good measure of what real development is. This was the crux of his rather thought provoking speech.

However, it is nothing but a bare fact that the story is no different irrespective of whether the state is ruled by the left or the right or those who take a middle path. Let us take the Tata project which was supposed to have gone to fruition in Singur. Have we spared a thought on how much financial assistance was promised to the Tatas by the Left-controlled WB government?Here's a snap shot of some of the "highlights" of the deal.
  • Tata's investment supposedly ~ Rs. 1500 Crore.
  • Heavily subsidised lease of ~1000 acres of land to the Tata on an express way, supposedly worth upwards of Rs. 600 Crore. Here's what a 'Rediff' report says

Incidentally, land for the factory had also been provided at a subsidised rate with 645 acres being provided to Tata Motors at Rs 1 crore a year against market rate of Rs 19.3 crore a year in that area, and with 290 acres being provided for the vendor and related facilities units at Rs 23 lakh a year against a market rate of Rs 8.7 crore a year. This excluded the cost of acquisition of the land pegged at around Rs 120 crore.

  • Concessional power @ more than half of the rates charged to any high tension industrial unit, and promise of offset should the tariff increase by more than 25 paisa per KwH.
  • Soft loan to Tatas of Rs. 200 crore loaned within two months of inking the MoU in May, 2006 at an interest rate of 1% per annum repayable 21 years thence, in five equal installments. By way of aside, please do a small calculation how much this amount would grow to, if invested as an FD in a bank. On interest subsidy alone, this would mean something like Rs. 25 crores a year.
  • Reimbursement by WB government of Central Excise Duties that Tata pays for 10 years.
  • Reimbursement by WB government of all corporate income taxes in full for first five years and 30% for next five years payable by Tata.
  • All sales taxes i.e.VAT and CST collected by the Tata Motors from the customers to be kept with the Tatas for 31 years at an interest rate of 0.1% per annum!!!
  • Reimbursement by WB government of the loan interest payable by the Tatas to build the project. A 'Yahoo' group report reads thus:

This can be described in very simple words that who ever buys any car and pays
taxes on that, the money is retained by Tatas for thirty years and instead of
depositing in the exchequer within 45 or 90 days, will deposit after 31 years.
If the amount of money that the Tatas will retain during the thirty years, it
will amount to huge sums of money to which 1500 crore will look pigmy.

In addition to the above, the government would have had to open new sections within the government secretariat, only to run separate accounts for this project keeping in view the accounting complications involved in the deferment of loans, reimbursements etc. explained in the foregoing..

My initial thought on reading the related reports is - who cannot be starting and running a project given the sops and incentives? Is the public aware of all these? It is nothing but an absolute shame that nobody speaks about any of these, but will outrun the other in fixing the blame squarely on Ms. Mamta Banerjee, who for whatever reasons chose to speak for the farmers. She may have had her own political agenda behind it, but can that reason mask the facts behind the deal? And to get what benefit - tangible or intangible - in return? 

More details about these here and here. Those who are inclined can read on...

PS: It will be interesting to do some research on the specifcs behind the likes of this - say the 'Smart City' project in Kerala, and see if similar things come up there as well.....

പാവം കവിത...

മാതൃഭൂമി (86:31) ഒക്റ്റോബർ 5-11 ലക്കത്തിൽ ഒരു അനുഗ്രഹീത കവിയുടെ ‘പാവം’ എന്ന ഉദാത്ത രചന. ചില വരികൾ ഉദ്ധരിക്കാം.

“..തിടുക്കത്തിൽ ടോയ്‌ലെറ്റിൽ കയറുമ്പോഴാ‍വും
ചുവരിൽ അവ നിശ്ചലമായി ഇരിക്കുന്നതു കാണുക....
.............
‘മുട്ടലെല്ലാം‘ അതോടെ പോവും
ടോയ്‌ലെറ്റിൽ നിന്നു പുറത്തു വരും...” ഇങ്ങനെ പോവുന്നു വരികൾ..

“ഈ സിനിമ കണ്ടില്ലെങ്കിൽ നിങ്ങൾ നല്ല സിനിമ കണ്ടിട്ടില്ല“ എന്നു് പണ്ടു് സിനിമ പരസ്യ വാചകങ്ങളിൽ ധാരാളം കണ്ടിരുന്നു.. അതു പോലെ “ഈ കവിത വായിച്ചില്ലെങ്കിൽ നിങ്ങൾ ഉദാത്തമായ കവിത വായിച്ചിട്ടില്ല“ എന്നു് നിസ്സംശയം പറയാം - അല്ലേ!!

ഏതായാലും മാതൃഭൂമിയോടു നമുക്കു നന്ദി പറയണം - ഇതു വായിക്കാൻ അവസരം ഒരുക്കിയതിനു്.. ഇതിന്റെ അടുത്ത ഭാഗങ്ങൾ ഇനിയും എഴുതപ്പെടുമെന്നും അവ മാതൃഭൂമിയിൽ പ്രസിദ്ധീകൃതമാകുമെന്നും നമുക്കു പ്രത്യാശിക്കാം...

Friday, October 10, 2008

Impudence - but can that go to this extent?

Amidst the turmoils that we are witnessing day by day in the financial world, who would have expected that the American International Group (AIG) would dare throw a party at a Californian resort to celebrate US Government's bailout of their group with tax payer's money?

Please see what AIG officials have done (here) and some reactions to it (here)
WASHINGTON — Less than a week after the federal government had to bail out American International Group Inc., the company sent executives on a $440,000 retreat to a posh California resort, lawmakers investigating the company's meltdown said Tuesday.

The tab included $23,380 worth of spa treatments for AIG employees at the coastal St. Regis resort south of Los Angeles even as the company tapped into an $85 billion loan from the government it needed to stave off bankruptcy.

The retreat didn't include anyone from the financial products division that nearly drove AIG under, but lawmakers were still enraged over thousands of dollars spent on catered banquets, golf outings and visits to the resort's spa and salon for executives of AIG's main U.S. life insurance subsidiary.

"Average Americans are suffering economically. They're losing their jobs, their homes and their health insurance," House Oversight Committee Chairman Henry Waxman, D-Calif., scolded. "Yet less than one week after the taxpayers rescued AIG, company executives could be found wining and dining at one of the most exclusive resorts in the nation."
Some gory details of the spend...
Here is your hard earned tax dollars at work....

$139,375.30 for rooms. $147, 301.71 for "banquets." $1,488 for the Vogue Salon, which features manicures, pedicures and hairstyling. $6,939.09 on golf. $2,949 for tips. $5,016.32 at the Stonehill Tavern. $3,064.71 for in-room dining and the lobby lounge. That's part of the $440,000 bill from a recent weekend bash that an American International Group Inc. subsidiary threw for its top performers ........

നന്ദിയുടെ മൃഗരൂപം

ഇതു മനുഷ്യൻ പലപ്പോഴും നന്ദി പറയേണ്ട ഒരു മൃഗത്തെപ്പറ്റിയാണു് - നായ അല്ലെങ്കിൽ സാധാരണ ഭാഷയിൽ പറഞ്ഞാൽ പട്ടി.... സ്വർഗ്ഗാരോഹണ സമയത്തു് ധർമ്മപുത്രർക്കൊപ്പം ഒരു പട്ടി ഉണ്ടായിരുന്നു എന്നു് മഹാഭാരതത്തിൽ. അവസാനം വരെ നമ്മോടൊപ്പം അവനുണ്ടാവും എന്നതിന്റെ ഒരു പ്രതീകം ആവാം ആ കഥ. പട്ടിയെപ്പറ്റി കൂടുതൽ ഇവിടെ.

Thursday, October 2, 2008

Research versus Cruelty versus Ethics

Quite difficult a topic this. However, in a moral crisis, we can't but be taking sides for "..the hottest place in the hell is reserved for those who remain neutral in a moral crisis" (some say this is a quote by Dante Alighieri, and some say this quote never appeared in his works, but is an interpretation given by JFK who had a great liking for this quote)..

Is it not to cruel to do this to those closest to human beings? Please read on..

In the animal kingdom, you can't get closer to humans than chimpanzees since we share around 99 percent of the same DNA. For proponents of animal testing, that genetic proximity makes chimps prime "human models" to help find cures for the viruses and diseases that plague us. On the other hand, because they exhibit remarkably human traits, opponents believe testing and captive research represent forms of cruelty....

Gandhiji In The Context Of Globalisation – A Glance At The Ethics Of Globalisation

Last two three weeks had been quite hectic at work, so much so that getting organised mentally to go astray on blogging thoughts was quite difficult. There was one more reason, in fact, for that. My intent was to write on the Indo-US nuclear deal, but then the amount of opinionated, and many a times conflicting, information that was coming in from various sources made it rather difficult to get a firm pedestal on which to start writing from. The conflict continues still, with the left parties deciding to observe the day on which the agreement gets inked as a 'black day'. As the saying in our vernacular goes, ours is a society where sides are taken even on an issue of one beating his mother, and no wonder the polity is so wide apart on its affiliations to this deal that the hapless millions who are caught in between the two sides (those using the grey cells, perhaps?) really find it a struggle to distinguish black form the white...Anyway, few more things to read on before I ink my thoughts on that.

But then today is October 2, the day on which the greatest of Indians was born 139 years ago. Perhaps now is the time when the ordinary Indians will be missing this great man, more dearly than ever. Just thought it timely to reproduce an article that I wrote a few years ago for a souvenir that was being published by the Embassy of India here commemorating the Indian Republic day. To be honest, the write up is more of a compilation, and several publications have been relied upon, in compiling that write up.

Here goes.....

Quite oft-quoted in social and economic circles the world over, and almost clichéd as a result, is the submission that today’s is an era of globalisation, and that globalisation is here to stay, and that nations and peoples will necessarily have to go through a “learning- unlearning” process or bring about a paradigm-shift to stand up to this social, economic and irreversible inevitability. Much as strong as this argument presented by protagonists of globalization remains, there stands an “equal and opposite” reaction to it, validating yet again the famed postulates of Newtonian physics. Most of the thinking world, more so many of the NGOs, have voiced and tabled their stiff opposition to having sweeping changes under this guise. Nevertheless, there is no denying the fact that globalization, whether right or wrong, has become a defining moment in contemporary human history. Globalisation impacts every human being in every aspect of their being - ranging from the conceptual to the materialistic, from a philosophical definition of ourselves to more mundane, physical, material and down-to-earth aspects of our lives. Something loosely akin to the Industrial revolution and colonization; probably following a similar chronological sequence too.

This write up examines how Gandhiji’s views on globalisation have become crucially relevant today, as they indeed were decades ago during the colonial days. 20th century history tells us that India's Independence scripted one of the most significant defining moments in history – one that ignited a world-wide process of decolonization, probably ending with the handover of Hong Kong to China, five decades later. But almost coinciding with this period of political de-colonisation, one could see the emergence of another kind of economic transition commencing with the establishment of the “Bretton Woods” institutions, the end of the Cold war etc. – symbolically represented by the fall of the Berlin Wall or the collapse of the USSR.

A larger sweep of history could, however, indicate that the above statement may not entirely be correct. The notion that universal identities must always take precedence over particular identities can be seen to be an old one. Karl Marx identified the highest solidarity as that of man’s with his species-being. And, one could also argue that globalisation is a process that has been going on for a long time. Amitav Ghosh, in his novel “In an Antique Land”, narrates how global links had been established long ago between traders from the Middle East and Indian merchants, long before Vasco da Gama landed on the coast of Kozhikode in Kerala.

But globalisation then had a more humane face than what it has today. Since the advent of Vasco da Gama, the trade scenario changed – the links have started assuming inhumane proportions, leading to slavery, oppression, colonialism, imperialism, and above all inequality. In one view, it may look as though globalisation has expanded choices and created more goods and services for consumption, and resulted in economic expansion of various countries. However, one should not forget that while globalisation may well have expanded the economy, it has fundamentally, and often negatively, affected the conditions of production and employment. Whether this has resulted in any upliftment of the common man - the man in the streets, the man who struggles to win his bread, clothing and shelter, is very much open to question. In one sense, 'production by the masses' which provided dignity to the worker, and is more appropriate to a society with a huge population, had to make way to 'mass production', the brutally aggressive, ecologically damaging, and self-destructive product of the market forces. As Schumacher put it, it dehumanizes the labour. The market instead of being one’s servant, has become his master.

In such a scenario, where does Gandhiji’s relevance spring up? Gurudev Rabindranath Tagore, inspired by the vision and values of Gandhiji, once wrote thus in an article titled “Crisis of Civilisation”:

"We have for over a century been dragged by the prosperous West behind its chariot, choked by the dust, deafened by the noise, humbled by our own helplessness and overwhelmed by the speed. We agreed to acknowledge that this chariot-drive was progress, and the progress was civilisation. If we ever ventured to ask, `progress towards what, and progress for whom', it was considered to be peculiarly and ridiculously oriental to entertain such ideas about the absoluteness of progress. Of late, a voice (Gandhi) has come to us to take count not only of the scientific perfection of the chariot but of the depth of the ditches lying in its path."

Nothing reflects Gandhiji’s relevance in this context, better than Gurudev’s quote. To be objective, there is nothing on record to prove that he was against globalisation per se, even though anti-globalisation movements often portray him as someone who shared their ideological leanings. Nor was he against India going global. Probably, it could not have been otherwise, as he himself was a product of globalisation – having been educated in London and influenced by the lives and teachings of the likes of Jesus, Tolstoy, Thoreau and Ruskin, and having started his political activities in South Africa before he even joined the political arena in India. He is in fact seen to have stated that globalisation is no bigger a threat to India than what she faced from the Greeks, or the Huns or the British.

Moral and ethical development should go alongside economical development. This was Gandhiji’s maxim. He believed, and rightly so, that wealth amassed unethically can only make a human being poorer – probably poorer than the poorest of a man who never neglected morals despite struggling hard to make both the ends meet. He advocated that every nation should adopt and execute a development model or strategy which is suited to improving the quality of its people's life. At the same time, he would also say that economic well-being of an individual or of a society by itself need not necessarily mean high quality of life if he, or that society, stands low on the cultural-moral scale. In other words, globalisation should be rooted in ethics. The idea which is the most foundational to his developmental model is that neither in planning nor in its execution, should there be anything unethical, or which prompts, or provides an opportunity, to any participant in it to do anything unethical. It may look outlandish to be so much concerned with ethics or morality at this time because many of the so-called world leaders of today’s tend to be believing, and firmly so, that certain amount of immorality or non-ethical behaviour is unavoidable or not worth bothering about in the larger interests of development. Gandhiji however believed that true economics never militates against ethical standards. He did not distinguish much between the two in fact. To him, good ethics must make good economics, as true economics stands for social justice, and promotes the good of all equally, including the weakest.

In the globalisation models that we see galore lately, development starts from the top with the affluent – a development measure that enriches the already-rich and the affluent, with an assumption that the resultant benefits may percolate to the poor and the under-privileged. But in reality, instead of percolating, the benefits simply evaporate or get dried up before they reach the bottom rung of the ladder. In the Gandhian model, on the other hand, the development process starts with those who are at the bottom of the affluence scale, and therefore it is sure to benefit the poor, which eventually promotes social harmony which in turn will benefit the society at large.

His economic ideals were not about the destruction of machinery, but about regulation of excesses. He did object to the 'craze for machinery’- the labour-saving machinery because such machinery can help only a few to ride on the back of the millions. He did not consider profit to be necessarily unethical; instead he postulated that a businessman has the right to make profit, but he has to do so within the bounds of morality. If profit is the sole motive of an enterprise, then such a motive is sure to throw humanity out of its equilibrium. The emphasis has to be shifted back to the person rather than the product. Costs have to be measured in human terms by taking cognizance of its benefit to human beings.

Gandhiji once said “Whenever you are in doubt or when the self becomes too much for you, apply the following test. Recall the face of the poorest and weakest man whom you have seen, and ask yourself if the step you contemplate is going to be of any use to him. Will he gain anything by it? Will it restore him to a control over his own life and destiny? Will it lead to Swaraj for the hungry and the spiritually starving millions? Then you will find your doubt and your self melting away”.

No doubt - there is no better test than this that could be applied in today’s world, in today’s economic order.

Friday, September 5, 2008

Historical Blunder - Revisited ....

Last week, couldn't get pen to paper (or in this case, fingers to the key board) to write on the Left (not by any means to right the left, which is not my business). And thanks to the 'changing-by-the-minute' political dynamics in our country, the scenario which I was trying to comment on last week underwent further changes - whether such changes were significant or not is debatable though. The position which the Left in India has taken lately in relation to the Indo-US nuclear deal, was among the few points that I wanted to ponder in my blog, but then the usual 'shifting-of-the-goal-post-to-suit-their-game' done by the US (leaking of a secret letter to the press), as can be expected from them on any issue on any day, has altered the political and technical dimensions of that issue, though not in a fashion that can change the complexion of the issue altogether, but change enough still to alter its moorings somewhat, nonetheless. Might it be that one can say that the issue has gone murkier.

More on the nuclear issue, obliquely later on in this blog or possibly more explicitly in a separate one. The object of this blog is mainly to air my views on what I believe to be a gross political mistake yet again by the left. The first one took place in the mid nineties (see here) when Mr. Jyoti Basu was offered the Prime Ministership of this country, and the Communist Party (Marxists) declined the offer. This was what was termed as a 'Historical blunder', or gross political mistake by Jyoti Basu himself. The second one took place during the last two months, and that smacked of nothing but political expediency, the proclamations by the Karats of the CPI (M) and the Bardhans of the CPI, and the Chandrachoodans of the RSP about the issue-based dimensions of such a political decison notwithstanding. It was a grave error of judgement, to my mind - political or otherwise.

The arguments substantiating the view that I hold belong to different layers, but I am at the same time not discounting the fact that there could be different layers of arguments counter to those as well. But firstly, the point to be underscored is that the underlying political agenda which prompted the left to extend support to the UPA hasn't changed a bit. In fact, the stark reality remains that what they have done now amounts effectively to undermining the very political compulsion that made them extend support to the UPA. That is to say - in a scenario where the nation was divided on its 2004 verdict, the left decided to support the UPA to keep the BJP and its allies at fray. I should say - that was the main, if not the only, driver behind such a political move. None is so naive as to falsely thinking that the left is in sync with the Indian National Congress as regards political agenda. All are indeed aware that both have their own distinct and different scripts on hand and both have fiercely fought one another in the electoral battle - sometimes on a one-to-one battle (like in Kerala or WB). Hence the common ground, a common platform on which to reach a broad consensus called CMP or 'Common Minimum Programme' (see here or here) It was supposedly a consensus document on programmes and issues, meant to act as a back drop for the Left - UPA alliance to consummate. Everything seemed alright up to this stage. The problem lay in the left's interpretation of the CMP. It wasn't meant to be a back seat from which the car is driven, and if the left had any such mistaken notions, it was simply a continuation of their ongoing saga of political misjudgements. They should not have attempted to convert the CMP into a sword of the Democles - a gun pointed at INC's head. No government can work in that manner. Governments should have some breathing space of their own from which to function. I can't say my views are a reflection of the reality, but I can say such a perception did exist, and does exist still, - that the left tried to put a stranglehold on the government under the banner of 'supporting from outside'. It was nothing but an attempt to do a back seat driving. "Wrongs can adduced on the INC and the rights can be claimed by ours" - that was the essence of their "support from outside".

I have heard several staunch leftists, or the so called leftists in this part of the world where I am based at the moment (many of who in reality are Petite bourgeoisie in the Marxian parlance), shamelessly take credit for any positive contributions of the UPA government a la the famed Basheerian character “എട്ടുകാലി മമ്മൂഞ്ഞു്”. In my personal life, I have come to be in close touch with a few of of the leftist leaders, and be able to view a few others, at close quarters. I have no disregard for any of them at a personal level, but from a political or ideological perspective, I just can't stand the nauseating self righteousness of their leadership. Let me go to the extent of saying that if they really meant business and wanted to show their political superiority or honesty, they should have had the moral courage or candour to join the UPA government. But the fact is that they did not, despite being invited more than once by the UPA. Quite possibly the left in general, and CPM in particular, in their collective wisdom would have though that having to join the UPA would have meant 'political harakiri'. I'd say that their 'historical blunder - act 2' started right at that point.

My view is that by being a part of the government, they could have been better-placed to influence the policies or actions of the government. They could have become a strong balancing force, a potent correction factor, within the government, if that was indeed their intent i.e. if they really wanted to ensure that only the good gets delivered to the people. But then one can say that their intent was only to gain the position of a big brother, to be able to breath down the neck of the government i.e. to preach rather than to do. Such a postulation can't be faulted - I should say that there is much merit in such an argument. (Interestingly, does that explain why the left makes a better opposition than their perform at the Treasury benches - a food for thought, indeed!!).

The 'historical blunder' continued. They withdrew support to the UPA on the nuke deal - an issue that is not yet close to the common man who the left supposedly represents, and not on economic issues, or social issues which the common man identifies with, more closely. On the nuke deal, true - there are several facets to be reviewed closely and carefully. What is needed on such issues is the ability to have an dispassionate and objective analysis, devoid of all self-righteous megalomania and philosophical or political baggage. But the fault lay with the left to have brought forth the nuke deal as a single point agenda on which to withdraw support to the UPA, and in that process clear the hurdles before the BJP and its allies so that their march forward becomes clearer. There were several other issues like the inflation, like the sale of PSU assets, like the food security issues, like the micro-economic issues on which their fight with the ruling regime - be it ideologcal or otherwise, would have been more meaningful to the common man. It would have become a fight for the people. If, in Kerala or West Bengal where they are in power, they could have coined phrases like "agitate together with governance (ഭരണത്തോടൊപ്പം സമരം)", what prevented them from agitating in the streets while being a supporter of the UPA? Instead they withdrew the support, resulting in a 'lose-lose' situation for all.

Just think about where they are at the moment? Ignominiously keeping the seat of PM-ship warm enough for someone like Mayawati, who till a few months ago was working for the BJP and their allies in the company of people like Chandra Babu Naidu who was, and still is, a BJP ally, to occupy come 2009. God save them - Amen!!!!!

Sir - blunder is something which gets committed once and is pardonable; twice committed, it becomes being foolish that warrants a warning. But more than that, what should we call it? Being imbecile, blind.....

Sir, will history ever pardon the Left for this.....?

Saturday, August 30, 2008

'Wiki'fication or 'Wiki'tisation...

Yet another weekend holiday midway-through now, as I write this. Last week, couldn't write anything, as I got into the midst of some serious "Wiki GrandhaSaala" (വീക്കീ ഗ്രന്ഥശാല or 'Wiki Source', as it is officially known) business - proof reading Kumaran Asan's Seethaakavyam which was typed in by another gentlemen. As you can guess, "Wiki GrandhaSaala" is a grand initiative, a la Wikipedia, supported by voluntary collaborative contributions by likeminded individuals who are willing to lend their time and efforts into adding collections into this, what could undoubtedly be called a, “universal library”. Please see the link (here) to WikigrandhaSaala and the brief intro shown below.

കഴിഞ്ഞകാലത്തിലെ അമൂല്യഗ്രന്ഥങ്ങളുടെ ശേഖരമാണിത്. പകര്‍പ്പവകാശ പരിധിയില്‍ വരാത്ത പ്രാചീന കൃതികള്‍ (ഉദാ: ബൈബിള്‍, വേദങ്ങള്‍..), പകര്‍പ്പവകാശ കാലാവധി കഴിഞ്ഞ കൃതികള്‍ (ഉദാ: കേരളപാണിനീയം), പകര്‍പ്പവകാശത്തിന്റെ അവകാശി പബ്ലിക്ക് ഡൊമൈനില്‍ ആക്കിയ കൃതികള്‍ എന്നിങ്ങനെ മൂന്നു തരം കൃതികള്‍ ആണു വിക്കി ഗ്രന്ഥശാലയില്‍ ചേര്‍ക്കാവുന്നത്

I have decided to lend my time, whenever and in whichever manner I can, into this initiative. And let me also solicit, through this blog, contributions from the like-minded.

Even though I did not write anything in the blog last week, there was a topic that I had been carrying with me for sometime now. That is about the left parties in India – the cross roads they are in at the moment. As it lingers in many a minds in these days, has the left collectively, or certain political parties within the left movement particularly, shifted what they used to call pristine ideological moorings into shaky temporary landings of political expediency..?

I will reflect my thoughts, possibly later today...In the meantime, please look at the link here..


Saturday, August 16, 2008

Dark Knight - through a viewer's lens!!

It may not entirely be an over-statement, if one were to say that of late, particularly during the last decade or so, watching a movie, or rather sitting through the reels of celluloid that unwind before us, has become more of an agony than excitement, pleasure, or even a positive jolt, which it used to be previously. On many an occasion, the scenario gets to such decadent a level that one would be forced to leave his or her brain back home and go through this anguish with a kind of clinical blankness. In a majority of cases, by the time he or she gets up from the seat for the drive back home, most of the scenes would have gone amiss from his or her mind anyway..

It was after a fair bit of time gap (possibly more than 5-6 months since the last movie at a movie hall) that I went to see a movie - the much acclaimed Dark Knight - at a multiplex ten or so days ago. The trigger was a text message that my son sent me after he'd been to see that movie. The message read something like this. "Dad, forgot to tell you yesterday - Dark Knight is running in the movie halls in Doha; why don't you and mom go see it - surely you will like it". In his Orkut page, I also saw some comments of his about Chris Nolan's (director of the movie) genius and a quote from the Joker - the villain, or rather the actor in a negative role, in the movie.

These things might have raised my expectancy level several notches up from the normal 'blankness', when I decided to be a part of the Dark Knight audience. Alas, I should say that expectations belied on me, one more time (and to my son I should say that I record my disagreement with his opinion on the movie).

While sitting through the reels, my memories went back to my childhood days - about the first few movies that I saw when I was, say, 5 or 6 years old. The movie hall nearest to my house was Kodungore Nirmala 'talkies'. It was a 'C' class theatre, or what we used to call 'ola (ഓല)theatre', or a movie hall which has thatched roof and bamboo-matted walls. During matinee shows, the sun-god used to make his presence felt inside the hall - several lighted circles used to come in from outside and adore the silvery screen, I remember. There were a few RCC theatres in the immediate vicintiy such as Ponkunnam Srikrishna and Kanjirapply Baby, and of course in Kottayam there used to be Raj Mahal and Star. Anand came later, followed by Abhilash & Asha (twin theatres) and Anupama. Trips to those theatres were far and few in between, though. Nirmala used to be the main destination, most of the times..

Coming back to 'Dark Knight', yes, on my exit from the multiplex screen, my mind quietly made a compare of what I'd just seen with what I saw in my childhood days. I still remember a film called 'Nadodi', a Prem Nazir starrer. The villain (could have been Jose Prakash - can't remember ) is all powerful, negatively omni-potent, omni-present, capable of wreaking havoc wherever whenever at the beck of a finger, and remains one-up on the 'detective' until the very last minute. Thieves plant bombs at will, including inside the Police Station with not even God being aware. The 'sada' policeman as usual is one who slips in the mud at every two minutes, and the police team (at those time wearing shorts, and not trousers) joins in after the detective catches the culprits through a thrilling archery session or 'vaal-plate', as it used to be called by the public. And finally the detective acknowledges the support given by the lady detective (who in most cases used to be Sheelamma), and the side-kick (who used to be Adoor Bhasichettan). In those days, there used to be 'Jana Gana Mana' too, at the end, and thereafter it was "Shubham" :-)

My good god - how many times have we seen this formula being enacted and re-enacted ad nauseum, the same wine with only the bottles changed? Isn't high time that the tinsel world put some sort of an end to this? Aren't those who pay from their pockets fed up of these yet? Or just because the production standards are superb, where unbelievable things are made to happen in a credible, technologically sophisticated manner, is it that the movie will still be accepted by the public the world over? Does increasing sophistication in the use of technology including the use of IMAX cameras (the bank robbery shots in DK were shot by IMAX cameras) make a film 'more equal'? I'm told Dark Knight has broken one too many a box-office record, and I'm amazed, to say the least.

What does this film offer you? What do you take home with, after sitting through the reels for 152 minutes - other than possibly having witnessed a different kind of villainy being exhibited by Heath Ledger ? Incidentally he had put up a commendable performance - the only one worthy of a special mention in this movie - to my mind. Have you seen anything which you haven't seen before - I wonder? In James Bond movies, at least the story line changes, the setting changes, the scenario changes - but what about this? Supposedly, the car and later the mobike used by Bruce Waynes are technological marvel, it seems - so what? Do such things make a god movie? Have you ever seen a villain who can rob a bank but in the process kill a score of his accomplices, yet manage to have thousands of his gang-members still ready to lend life for him, one who can plant hundreds of bombs in a city where there are expected to be thousands of surveillance cameras fixed, does not get tired even after getting "questioned" by several top-notch investigation officers who use third degree torture methods, and after all these several rounds of third degree torture, even "seduce" a trained senior police officer into questioning him with absolutely no protection around, so much so that the police officer then gets into the hands of the villain and....finally the villain escapes from the high security prison, and then plants hundreds of bombs in a hospital....

Sir, I thought the world of the celluloid was a world of "make-believe"..but wasn't this a bit too far?

Time out, time out sir,... and that takes us to cardinal issue - what should movie do to the viewer as a minimum. To my mind, a movie should in some way relate to a viewer, as a base line. Just as a reader of a book relates to the text that he reads (lest he or she will stop reading it). Just as we look at a smiling baby. Just as we look at a blooming flower, or a speck of sunlight that comes out of a dew drop....The moment an artistic creation becomes devoid of such a connect, then it no longer belongs there - it ceases to be itself. Such a disconnect divorces the movie from the viewer, and what is called a "loss-of-specie" happens, which is what happens in many cases. However, here we're only talking about the basic requirement. The level of greatness, the level of quality, the level of largeness of a creation increases with the intensity of such a relationship. It can reach out to your inner self, it can touch your heart, it can connect to your intellect, it can overwhelm you, it can overtake you, it can identify with you, it can make you think, laugh or cry... else it can make you wish you were the creator of that work...

I think this also answers the question of when does a viewer start relating to a movie? There should be something in it that reaches out to you, to the inner chords of your heart. Emotionally, intellectually, aesthetically, artistically, there should be a vibration within you...When the bow of a violin touches its strings, music comes out. When air is blown through the empty space of a flute, melody flows out. The work of art should, in a similar manner, resonate within you... and that happens, as the laws of physics stipulate, when the other body's frequency of vibration reaches your natural frequency. When that happens, you identify with that work, and it remains with you, sometimes for ever. To name a few, just a few - think of the he famous staircase scene in the greatest of movies 'Batteleship Potemkin', the scenes from 'Bicycle thieves', scenes from 'Padher Panchaali', the scenes from 'Swayamavaram', scenes from 'Elippathayam', scenes from 'Esthappan', scenes from 'Kireedom'..they will not leave your mind, as long as you are able to think, remember...

It is not that this movie was ever expected in that level of class at all. No, far from it. But sir, while coming back from the temple festival, shouldn't there be at least a broken piece of bangle that I should be able to take back...?

*********************************

The credit titles read as under:

Directed by: Christopher Nolan; screenplay by Christopher Nolan and Jonathan Nolan; photographed by Wally Pfister; production design by Nathan Crowley; edited by Lee Smith; music by James Newton Howard and Hans Zimmer; produced by Charles Roven, Emma Thomas and Christopher Nolan. A Warner Bros. Pictures release.

Actors: Christian Bale (Bruce Wayne/Batman); Heath Ledger* (The Joker); Aaron Eckhart (Harvey Dent); Maggie Gyllenhaal (Rachel Dawes); Gary Oldman (Lt. Jim Gordon); Michael Caine (Alfred); Morgan Freeman (Lucius Fox).

*Note: While checking some reviews, I learned, with deep sorrow, of this 28-year-old Australian actor's death earlier this year (January 2008) due to an accidental overdose of prescription medicines for insomnia and anxiety.


PS: You can see a couple of other reviews which I stumbled upon here or here,

Saturday, August 9, 2008

Technology in cricket - further thoughts

Reflecting further on the new review system, particularly after hearing Sanjay Manjrekar, Gregg Chappel et al at the post match review session, I end up with a feel that this signifies a major departure from the past in the game of cricket - inasmuch as it effectively extinguishes an unwritten rule, or rather a convention, hitherto followed, particularly on lbw decisions. "Benefit of doubt" being granted to the batsman was that convention. This practice did allow for the fact that human eyes would not be able to see all what happened to the minutest of its detail. More so on close-call situations which neither the bowler nor the wicket keeper nor even the batsman would be able to say with absolute surety if it was 'bat-pad' or 'pad-bat'. In such instances, the 'benefit of doubt' stands granted to the batsman. That decision will be made by the umpire, which could have been right or wrong. Consistency being maintained by the umpires was the key, though.

This allowance of human errors, and the agonies and ecstasies that revolved around such, gave a more humane touch to the game. The advent of techology has made it robotic, thus robbing the game of the sweat and tears that surrounded it. Now, the expectation is that there is no 'doubt' by the machine and by extension therefore, no 'benefit' as well. As someone put it, might it be that the likes of Kapil Dev, Imran Khan, Wasim Akram, Waquar Younis, Shane warne, Muralidharan (and many others) would certainly have had much higher tally of wickets, had technology decided the fate of the batsmen who faced them. And the likes of Bradman, Border, Gavaskar, Lara, Sachin would not have this many number of centuries as well.

The more I think about it, my belief grows in strength that this great game ought not have made such a tame surrender to the cameras....

Friday, August 8, 2008

Technology in cricket - is it "analysis paralysis"?

Yet another Friday for me, the weekend holiday - the equivalent of a Saturday or a Sunday to this part of the world where I am at present. As I write this, the first day's play of the third test match between Sri Lanka and India is underway. Already (at the time of my writing this) seven Indian wickets are down, out of which four (Rahul, Sachin, Gautam and one more, and probably one more which I can't confirm as I did not follow the telecast in full) were confirmed by "technology" - the third umpire who "sits upstairs", the favoured phrase for Gregg Chappel who is commentating. Out of those four or five decisions, three were reversals of decisions made at the middle, on the ground. In other words, India would only have been 198-3 as against 198-7 where they are now.

I was thinking - does this take certain desirable things away from this game which used to be called at one time, the "game of glorious uncertainties..."? Does this take the life and sheen out of a game which used to rely on human judgements - never infallible but exciting neverthless? Hasn't it made the game a bit boring, by going in for clinical "exactitude" at the expense of "errors and omissions" likely by human intervention?

I am aware tennis matches have started relying on technology of late, on line calls and the like, but what needs to be borne in mind here is that unlike in tennis, the chance of a batsman in an cricket innings gets extinguished with that decision. In tennis, the same player can continue to play but in cricket that is not the case. Secondly, if technology is going to be used in the manner it is used now, then why call the ground umpires by that name? Their positions have, one could argue, been relegated to someone acting in between the players and the "appelate tribunal" sitting upstairs.

Anyway, mine was just a random thought, and on further reflection, I myself could think of several arguments to the opposite. And I know there are lines of reasoning to the contrary - such as "when technology available, why not use it to the betterment of the game". etc. May be correct, isn't it? But then the question always remains - is the third umpire seeing an exact picture of what happened on the ground? So long as it is "garbage in garbage out", who can say for sure that garbage does not go in?

again just a thought this...

Friday, August 1, 2008

മഹാകവേ നിത്യം നമസ്തേ.....

'Beyond the smoke screens' എന്ന മറ്റേ ബ്ലോഗിൽ എഴുതിത്തുടങ്ങിയതും ഈ ഭാഷാന്തരത്തിൽ നിന്നാണു് - മഹാകവി ജീ യുടെ സാഗരസംഗീതത്തിന്റെ ഇംഗ്ലീഷ് പരിഭാഷ. കഴിഞ്ഞ വർഷം ഒരു ടെലിവിഷൻ ചാനലിന്റെ ബ്ലോഗ് ഫോറത്തിൽ ആരോ ചോദിച്ചപ്പോൾ എഴുതിയതാണു്. പക്ഷെ ആരും അവിടെ അതു് വായിച്ചു പോലുമില്ല - തന്നെയുമല്ല ലഭിച്ച ചില പ്രതികരണങ്ങൾ വായിച്ചപ്പോൾ അതവിടെ എഴുതിപ്പോയല്ലൊ എന്നു തോന്നിപ്പോയി. കാരണം ഇത്തരം പോസ്റ്റുകൾ ആയിരുന്നില്ല അവിടെ ആവശ്യം.. മിമിക്രി പ്രതീക്ഷിച്ചു നിൽക്കുന്ന സദസ്സിന്റെ മുൻപിൽ ചൊൽക്കാഴ്ച നടത്തിയാൽ എന്താവും ഫലം - അതു മാതിരി... ആ കഥ പോട്ടെ - പിന്നീടെപ്പൊഴെങ്കിലും എഴുതാം...

ഈ ബ്ലോഗും അതിൽ നിന്നു തന്നെ തുടങ്ങാം...

ശ്രാ‍ന്തമംബരം നിദാഘോഷ്മള സ്വപ്നാക്രാന്തം
താന്തമാരബ്ധക്ലേശ രോമന്ഥം മമസ്വാന്തം
ദ്രുപ്ത സാഗരാ ഭവദ്രൂപ ദര്‍ശനാല്‍
അര്‍ധസുപ്തമെന്നാത്മാവന്തര്‍ ലോചനം തുറക്കുന്നു
നീയപാരതയുടെ നീല ഗംഭീരോദാരച്ഛായ
നിന്നാശ്ലേഷത്താല്‍ എന്‍ മനം ജൃംഭിക്കുന്നു
ക്ഷുദ്രമാം എന്‍ കര്‍ണ്ണത്താല്‍ കേള്‍ക്കുവാ‍നാകാത്തോരു
ഭദ്ര നിത്യത യുടെ മോഹന ഗാനാലാപാല്‍
ഉദ്രസം ഫണോല്ലോല കല്ലോല ജാലം പൊക്കി
രൌദ്ര ഭംഗിയില്‍ ആടി നിന്നിടും ഭുജംഗമേ
വാനം തന്‍ വിശാലമാം ശ്യാമ വക്ഷസ്സില്‍ക്കൊത്തേ-
റ്റാനന്ദ മൂര്‍ച്ഛാധീനമങ്ങനെ നില കൊള്‍വൂ

തത്തുകെന്നാത്മാവിങ്കല്‍ കൊത്തുമെന്‍ ഹൃദന്തത്തിൽ
ഉത്തുംഗ ഫണാഗ്രത്തില്‍ എന്നെയും വഹിച്ചാ‍ലും

Tired and tranquillised - the sky remains, anguished by the scorching clime of the boiling summer dreams..

My mind remains weary and tiresome, impinged by the ruminations of the agonies commenced..

Oh the mighty ocean agitating in arrogance.. the mere sight of thine opens up the half asleep inner eye of my being..

You are the mighty vastness of the infinite, majestically reflected in the blue ..

My mind swells up and permeates into the vastness, on your embrace...

Oh the mighty serpent - your hood, the roaring waves that are,
spread and raised in wild abandon.. and dancing in wildly aggressive splendour ...
rendering sweet melodies of the holy permanence - inaudible to my non-discernible diminutive ears..

And the sky remains thus - overwhelmed in ecstasy, bitten on the dark vastness of its chest...

Oh serpent – dance on my soul...
Bite on my heart...
Carry me aloft, atop your raised hood…

മഹാകവേ നിത്യം നമസ്തേ....

ഒരു തുടക്കക്കാരന്റെ പരിഭ്രമത്തോടെ....

I had, since opening this blog account a few months ago, been pondering over how to start, when to start and where to start - the thought, or in a way a doubt, that lingers in the inner minds of anyone who starts with a fresh page..

Almost every time I have made up my mind to have a start, however imperfect it may be, the one face that comes to my mind is of Mahakavi G's. Do not know why so - but I'd go by my innate feel. It was in 1972 that I saw and heard Mahakavi first. That was at the Girls' High school auditorium in Ernakulam, where I had been as a participant of a "leadership training" camp organised by Malayala Manorama. Unforgettable experience the 4 day camp had been, in every sense of the term. Apart from having had a chance to see Mahakavi, I could see hear persons of eminence such as M P Manmadhan, P A Said Mohammed, M K Sanu et al.. From the world of politics, there were personalities such as A C George, A C Jose, Moideenkutty Haji (who was the then speaker of Kerala assembly) et al...Among the organisers were M/s T P M Ibrahim Khan (who is now a leading advocate in the High Court of Kerala), James Kurian (who is now a leading advocate in Kottayam), Sasidharam Kandathil (I think he is with Veekshanam newspaper) and the like..

More about that later...but coming back to Mahakavi, I will never ever forget the speech that he made keeping the audience literally spell bound. It was like a water fall - elegantly graceful, silken-smooth, uninterrupted, captivating, getting straight into our heart..I can never forget the grace on his face, the elegance in his rendition...and even the milken-white hair of his !!!

Let me start my blog with an attempted translation of a few lines from Mahakavi's Sagarageetham.

ശ്രാ‍ന്തമംബരം നിദാഘോഷ്മള സ്വപ്നാക്രാന്തം
താന്തമാരബ്ധക്ലേശ രോമന്ധം മമസ്വാന്തം
ദ്രുപ്ത സാഗരാ ഭവദ്രൂപ ദര്‍ശനാല്‍
അര്‍ധസുപ്തമെന്നാത്മാവന്തര്‍ ലോചനം തുറക്കുന്നു
നീയപാരതയുടെ നീല ഗംഭീരോദാരച്ഛായ
നിന്നാശ്ലേഷത്താല്‍ എന്‍ മനം ജൃംഭിക്കുന്നു
ക്ഷുദ്രമാം എന്‍ കര്‍ണ്ണത്താല്‍ കേള്‍ക്കുവാ‍നാകാത്തോരു
ഭദ്ര നിത്യത യുടെ മോഹന ഗാനാലാപാല്‍
ഉദ്രസം ഫണോല്ലോല കല്ലോല ജാലം പൊക്കി
രൌദ്ര ഭംഗിയില്‍ ആടി നിന്നിടും ഭുജംഗമേ
വാനം തന്‍ വിശാലമാം ശ്യാമ വക്ഷസ്സില്‍ക്കൊത്തേ-
റ്റാനന്ദ മൂര്‍ച്ഛാധീനമങ്ങനെ നില കൊള്‍വൂ

തത്തുകെന്നാത്മാവിങ്കല്‍ കൊത്തുമെന്‍ ഹൃദന്തത്തിൽ
ഉത്തുംഗ ഫണാഗ്രത്തില്‍ എന്നെയും വഹിച്ചാ‍ലും

Tired and tranquillised - the sky remains, anguished by the scorching clime of the boiling summer dreams..

My mind remains weary and tiresome, impinged by the ruminations of the agonies commenced..

Oh the mighty ocean agitating in arrogance.. the mere sight of thine opens up the half asleep inner eye of my being..

You are the mighty vastness of the infinite, majestically reflected in the blue ..

My mind swells up and permeates into the vastness, on your embrace...

Oh the mighty serpent - your hood, the roaring waves that are,
spread and raised in wild abandon.. and dancing in wildly aggressive splendour ...
rendering sweet melodies of the holy permanence - inaudible to my non-discernible diminutive ears..

And the sky remains thus - overwhelmed in ecstasy, bitten on the dark vastness of its chest...

Oh serpent – dance on my soul...
Bite on my heart...
Carry me aloft, atop your raised hood…

മഹാകവേ നിത്യം നമസ്തേ....