Powered By Blogger

Friday, April 27, 2012

Economics Is Directly Proportional to Politics




While I am spending time in hospital these days, equating life with death and cancer with Emphysema, Its midnight when I utilize this spare time for a update, the tittle may look quite familiar for being an old topic, but I am having tea for the first time on this table :)

Economics assumes rational behavior and rational choices made by freely contracting parties meeting to transact business in free and open markets.  Abba Lerner, a renowned economist noted, “Economics has gained the title of the Queen of the Social Sciences by choosing solved political problems as its domain.”  In other words, economists cleverly assume away all the political problems that come in the way of rational people making rational choices.  Free and open markets don’t happen by themselves.  It takes a lot of political effort to organize them and keep them open and free.  Nor are all the participants in the market rational players.  One among them, the State, is the biggest player of all, and its actions may be rational only in the context of its own agenda that has little to do with what economists imagine.  It may for instance prefer just to preserve the power of its existing masters rather than maximize utility for themselves or others.  How does society arrive at a point where rational people are able to meet freely in free and open markets to transact business?  That is in the realm of politics and it is to politics we must turn for answers.  Put simply, before you can talk economics you need to get the politics right to set up the institutional framework that free and open markets require to work their magic.  How do societies arrive at such a point? That is the key question that economics doesn’t address but we must.


Whether a society arrives at the juncture, where it finds the creation and maintenance of free and open markets imperative, is a complex function of its particular history and the way power is configured among the various players in that society.  [I will use State and society interchangeably relying on the context to clear any misunderstanding.] This point is worth examining in detail because it posits two different things.  Firstly, all the payers in the society must find it in their interest to let markets intermediate business among them.  That presupposes power is more or less evenly dispersed among players and they can agree on a certain set of universal rules, which will then be applied to all in the realm uniformly.  Secondly, the path by which a society arrives at such a happy confluence itself shapes the configuration of markets and the rules that govern them. In other words, the particular history of players in their past dealings with each other colors the outcome. Clearly, getting markets right is neither easy nor automatic as we assume.  A lot of hard work and trial and error goes into the process before even the most rudimentary of markets becomes functional.


What then are the essential characteristics of a society that lead it to establish free and open markets?  In a significant book, “Why Nations Fail” Daran Acemoglu and James A. Robinson argue that Societies which can create institutions to guarantee – [a] reasonably dispersed power among players such that none can dominate all others, [b] a centralized and uniform application of agreed rules of business through out the realm that guarantee equality and fairness and [c] incentives that motivate the masses to contribute openly and freely to the well being of the society or state – are able to arrive at the promised nirvana over time.  These three conditions are necessary and usually sufficient.  They are not path independent though.  The specifics of how society arrives there and what it needs to do depend on their particular history over time.  Point to note here is that a functioning democracy more or less corresponds to power being widely dispersed in a society.  A constitutional form of governance in turn guarantees both an adequate centralization of rule making and application to governance uniformly.  But a democracy by itself doesn’t achieve the third pre-condition that is a fair and equitable system of incentives is in place to motivate people to give off their best.


India commenced its journey in recorded history with a terribly mixed slate.  It is therefore not surprising that we are still not at point where we can rely on markets to organize our economy smoothly with its invisible hand producing optimum prosperity for all.  We have come a long way but the ultimate goal eludes us.  How might we get closer?


Begin by noting that our caste system makes us one of the most unequal, blatantly oppressive, almost predatory societies.  The caste system is so ubiquitous and pervasive that those of us brought up in its milieu are almost blind to its inequity.  That’s true of even the oppressed.  To the oppressed, as Mayawati was prone to remind us, it matters little if the oppressor is a devout caste Hindu or a Muslim invader from distant lands out on a pillaging expedition.  To the oppressed they are all the same.  Caste has divided us with catastrophic results for our civilization and polity.  We have come a long way after independence.  But the backlash against affirmative action is worrisome.  If we regress on the equality front, all will be lost.  On the other hand, our democracy guarantees we will get there eventually through trial and error whether we like it or not.  Hence it would be best if we got on with the job anyway. The legacy of caste and tribal exclusion has left us with a large number of people who cannot be easily absorbed into a market-based economy.


With the caste system goes our system of hereditary succession in professions, businesses and politics that militates against a merit based society.  The two together present formidable barriers to entry for meritorious people.  For every hereditary succession, a hundred otherwise meritorious people are demotivated.


The British gave us two unintended but invaluable gifts. Firstly, they brought about the essential centralization of rule making in a parliament and arranged for an administrative and court system that applied those rules across the realm.  Could we ever have done this on our own given our constantly squabbling regional satrapies and 26 different languages?  In their knitting together of India we thus have the first of the conditions necessary- a centralized polity with uniform rules.  They may not be ideal but they make a great beginning compared to what went before them. The second gift came to us from our constitutional fathers by way of the Constitution itself.


We tend to underestimate the huge step forward that the constitution means.  Societies spend hundreds of years trying to shake off rules devised by reference to divinity and substitute them with rules made by mutual consent of the members of the society.  The transition from “divine rule” to “constitutional rule” is neither easy nor bloodless. Yet in what must be a remarkable feat in recorded history, we made that transition in 1947-50 and haven’t looked back since.  This is not to say our transition is either complete or will be problem free.  The debate about secularism is just one of the pointers to such problems. Nevertheless, compared to other contemporary societies, we have accomplished a near miracle whose importance to our eventual success cannot be underestimated.


It is on the design and implementation of incentives that motivate our people to give of their best that we appear to have floundered the most.  We have simply not been able to clearly articulate a vision here that is both true to human nature and is able to harnesses individual capabilities to produce prosperity for all.  What are we doing wrong?


First off we need to recognize that people work hard and develop ideas for themselves in order to benefit and profit from them.  Yes there are saints amongst us but a society has no business demanding humans turn into saints in order to be its members.  Humans will be humans and a society must learn to work with what is, not what it considers its ideal. An individual’s responsibility to others ends when her tax dues are paid.  To except anything more is to be foolish.

Secondly, if a person works hard, innovates, etc., how does she store the value she creates for herself when she needs it.  It is here that a fair, transparent, uniform and inviolable system of property rights becomes critical.  If a person earns, but cannot store value safely, free from expropriation or surreptitious stealing by the state, why should she work hard?  Yet, India’s record on property rights is simply horrendous.  We have expropriated property from businesses, we have denied property rights to tribals, we don’t enforce property rights properly, and worse of all, Government cheats us of our property stored as money by merrily inflating away its value or subjecting it to stealthy taxes.  Either way, while we are relatively free in allowing people to earn, we don’t allow them to safely store the value of their labor.  Not surprisingly, people hide their wealth, send it abroad or bury it in useless gold.  The failure to respect a person’s store of value is our major failure in the schema of incentivizing people to give of their best.

Our politicians have taken the easy way out to reap votes through populism rather the hard way to incentivize people.  We have our outliers, who despite all hurdles in the way, have pursued novel ideas, and have created enormous wealth and value for society.  But by and large, politicians have chosen to correct our legacy problems of inequality by pulling down outliers rather than giving incentives to underperformers to pull themselves up.  The problem is acute because politicians don’t raid your current income as much as your stored wealth – usually surreptitiously.


People work for themselves and their near and dear ones. A state’s role is to enable them to do so without infringing similar rights of others in a free and fair manner.  The right to enjoy the fruits of what one creates is at the heart of an individual’s motivation to excel.  When we defeat nature’s way of motivating people, we defeat ourselves as a society.  India must realize that an unfair and shabby system of property rights and lack of respect therefor is holding back her people.

Sunday, February 26, 2012

why I pray?

THERE is nobody to hear your prayers. Your prayer is simply a monologue; you are praying to the empty sky. Nobody is going to reward you for your prayers – remember it. If you really know what prayer is, prayer itself is its own reward. There is nobody else to reward you; the reward is not there in the future, not in the afterlife. But praying itself is such a beautiful phenomenon that who cares about the future and who bothers about the reward? That is greed, the idea of reward. Prayer in itself is such a celebration, it brings such great joy and ecstasy, that one prays for the prayer’s sake. One does not pray out of fear and one does not pray out of greed. One prays because one enjoys it. One does not even bother whether there is a God or not. If you enjoy dance you don’t ask whether there is a God or not. If you enjoy dance, you simply dance; whether anybody is seeing the dance from the sky or not is not your concern. Whether stars and the sun and the moon are going to reward you for your dance, you don’t care. The dance is enough of a reward unto itself. If you love singing you sing; whether anybody listens or not is not the point. So is prayer. It is a dance, it is a song; it is music, it is love. You enjoy it and there it is finished. Prayer is the means and prayer is the end. The end and the means are not separate – then only you know what prayer is. When I say prayer, I mean an openness towards God. Not that you have to say something, not that you have to ask something, but just an openness, so that if He wants to give something, you are available. A deep expectation, but with no desire – that’s what you need. Urgent expectancy – as if something is going to happen any moment. You are thrilled by the possibility of the unknown but you don’t have any desire. You don’t say that this should happen or that should not happen. Once you ask, prayer is corrupted. When you don’t ask, when you simply remain in silence but open, ready to go anywhere, ready even to die, when you are simply in a receptivity, a passive, welcoming spirit, then prayer happens. Prayer is not something that one can do – it has nothing to do with doing. It is not an action or an activity – it is a state of mind. If you want to talk, talk, but remember, your talk is not going to affect the existence. It will affect you, and that may be good, but prayer is not going to change God's mind. It may change you, but if it is not changing you then it is a trick. You can go on praying for years, but if it doesn’t change you, drop it, throw it, it is rubbish; don’t carry it any more. Prayer is not going to change God. You always think that if you pray, God’s mind will change, He will be more favourable, He will be tipped a little towards your side. There is nobody who is listening to you. This vast sky cannot listen. This vast sky can be with you if you are with it – there is no other way to pray. I also suggest to pray, but praying should be just an energy phenomenon; not a devotee-and-God phenomenon, but an energy phenomenon. OSHO

Saturday, February 11, 2012

WHEN WE FEE FINT..


I don't understand why Cupid was chosen to represent Valentine's Day.  When I think about romance, the last thing on my mind is a short, chubby toddler coming at me with a weapon…just read these lines somewhere,  and thought  for a moment, when we the world is coming out of the shadow  valentine’s day..Feb roses are over, spring set to step in its one of those March days when the sun shines hot and the wind blows cold:  when it is summer in the light, and winter in the shade.. With the cricket world cup dominating the front pages, still I say its not ‘the only’ best time to talk cricket..but try sparing a thought to walk along me in back to the dark woods of February, the rain of the 14 Feb, the couples around bunking their schools, like AAmir khan bunking the awards ceremonies :p
The Valentine’s Day “was” a reminder of the importance of love in human life. Everybody is hungry for love but very few know the art of love. Unless love becomes our way of life we will not feel fulfilled. Love in itself is an experiencing, a moment-to-moment flow with no past being carried; the river remains fresh. And the moment you say, “I love,” it has become an experience, it is already dead. Loving is something else; it is a process. You have to dissolve your ego in love. Anything alive is greater than you!
But Lots of people call Valentine’s Day a hallmark holiday, since it seems to have become an issue or a “day” due to the wiz marketers of greeting cards. And It’s true. After the lull of post Christmas, stores gear themselves up for the next big rush just before Valentine’s Day. Restaurants are over booked, Jewelry manufactures start working on hearts like mad to have them in stores at the beginning of February and designers work like mad on the latest and greatest clever/romantic greeting cards.Any product that can be romanticized even vaguely is. You can get romantic helicopter flights, ski get-a-ways and anything else you can fit into a heart or slam a heart around. The marketing is geared more to men’s pocket and women’s hearts. which is a little sexist, if you ask me. I don’t have an answer, why such a cruel differentiation between two forms of human? You can never predict when Rakhi sawant and kamal Rashid khan can have an complementary sex change operation!
WARNING: When a girl says she doesn’t want a gift for Valentine’s Day, for the most part, she is lying. Girls tend to want to sound cool, calm, and collected when it comes to the Day of Stress, and will try to alleviate the pressure. Girls overanalyze everything, though, so feel out the situation and make sure that a gift is actually not necessary J J..However, if you say that you don’t want a gift for Valentine’s Day, your significant other won’t know if you mean you actually don’t want a gift or if you’re just being nice. If you say no gifts, mean it. If you don’t mean it, don’t say it. J  
Meanwhile I got a chance to visit my old friend Afzal a day after the valentines, he runs a coaching classes for MBA entrance exams , there I saw a board that read, “Who do you love?” On it students had listed the people they love most. The first time I saw it, I walked on by. But then I turned around, grabbed a red marker and wrote “me.”! is it really necessary that you need a partner for love? Never confuse LOVE with SEX !! Why the hell world always cry for a partner around the 14 Feb?I know most of people going through this, love themselves; they rise in love never fall in love. Try to rise, and rising in love is a totally different matter.
I even felt this  Feb was a Big Bang theory for most of blokes as it displayed how John Abraham was getting colder with Bipasha basu ?consider the day next to 14feb: Will all those lovers continue whispering sweet nothings in each other's ears, will they keep surprising one another with candlelit dinners and trips down memory lane? It is to be hoped so. Reality however, suggests otherwise and we all, single or unattached, can fall into a habit of not acknowledging the people who matter in our life.
I'm sure there is no right answer, but I can only say that taking a long road trip together is a very romantic adventure. When it is only the two of you day after day, you have only each other to lean on and you certainly learn new things about the other one as you live your journey day by day. Whether you are the reluctant one or the one ready to hit the road tomorrow, I can only say be sure to lovingly figure out what you each need  and go make your trip happen. You will never regret your decision.
Look up what the actual meaning of Valentines Day is. I think you'll find that it is totally different meaning to what the shops and Commerce would like us to believe. Valentines day was also a time to remember the legendary poet Faiz,.whose birth centenary was on 13th Feb,  for he said “aur bhi gham hai duniya me mohhabbat ke siwa”..
For so long  my dear friends , huh..leaving you all back to the platform of world Cup, from where I picked u for a small evening walk, my dream still remains of an India-Pak final in Mumbai with Sachin Tendulkar scoring a hundred to take India to victory. Can't think of a better way to celebrate a rising India.. :)

Saturday, January 21, 2012

We are born alone, we live alone, and we die alone..



For me the subject is not so new, the lobliness often haunts me..  most of know me as a witty kind animal. But I compare myself with much of Salman Rushidie a confused a coward and blasphemous fellow. Well reason could be the old factor, alonneness. I comprise of both loneliness  and aloneness. Recently got to read the master Osho over the subject! Here is how we differentiate Loneliness and Aloneness :
  1. The aloneness is total and complete. Not loneliness but aloneness. Loneliness is always concerned with others; aloneness is concerned with oneself.
     
  2. Aloneness is the joy of being just yourself. It is being joyous with yourself, it is enjoying your own company. There are very few people who enjoy their own company. And it is a very strange world: nobody enjoys his company and everybody wants others to enjoy his company! If they don't enjoy he feels insulted -- and alone he feels disgusted with himself. In fact, if YOU cannot enjoy your own company, who else is going to enjoy it?
     
  3. Aloneness, solitude is positive. It is overflowing joy for no reason. It is our very nature to be joyous; hence there is no need to depend on anybody else. There is no other motive in it, it is simply there. Just as the water flows downwards, your being rises upwards. Just give it a chance -- give it solitude. And remember again, solitude is not solitariness, just as aloneness is not loneliness.
     
  4. Only a no-thought is pure, because then you are utterly yourself, alone, nothing interfering. Jean-Paul Sartre says: The other is hell. And he is right in a way, because whenever you are thinking of the other you are in hell. And all thoughts are addressed to others. When you are in a state of no-thought you are alone, and aloneness is purity. And in that aloneness happens all that is worth happening.
     
  5. Your aloneness is your essential being.
     
  6. Meditation is total freedom, aloneness, the flight of the alone to the alone. There is no other, so there is no question of drowning yourself, but one hundred percent mindfulness will be needed -- less than that won't do.
     
  7. Meditation means being ecstatic in your aloneness. But when you become ecstatic in your aloneness, soon the ecstasy is so much that you cannot contain it. It starts overflowing you. And when it starts overflowing you it becomes love. Meditation allows love to happen. And the people who have not known meditation will never know love. They may pretend that they love but they cannot. They will only pretend -- because they don't have anything to give, they are not overflowing.
     
  8. You can be alone, but that aloneness may not be true aloneness. It may be only loneliness, and you may be thinking and fantasizing about all kinds of things. Aloneness comes out of awareness; it has nothing to do with where you are in the outside world but where you are in the INSIDE world.
     
  9. Through aloneness, the ego is shattered. It has nothing to relate to, so it cannot exist. So if you are ready to be alone, unwaveringly alone, neither escaping nor falling back, just accepting the fact of aloneness as it is -- it becomes a great opportunity. Then you are just like a seed that has much potential in it. But remember, the seed must destroy itself for the plant to grow. Ego is a seed, a potentiality. If it is shattered, the divine is born. The divine is neither "I" nor "thou," it is one. Through aloneness, you come to this oneness.
     
  10. Consciousness has come to the point now where you know that you are alone. And only in aloneness can you attain enlightenment. I am not saying loneliness. The feeling of loneliness is the feeling that comes when one is escaping from aloneness, when one is not ready to accept it. If you do not accept the fact of aloneness, then you will feel lonely. Then you will find some crowd or some means of intoxication in which to forget yourself.
     
  11. The first thing we must do is to accept aloneness as a basic fact and learn to live with it. We must not create any fictions. If you create fictions you will never be able to know the truth. Fictions are projected, created, cultivated truths that prevent you from knowing what is. Live with the fact of your aloneness. If you can live with this fact, if there is no fiction between you and this fact, then the truth will be revealed to you. Every fact, if looked into deeply, reveals the truth.
     
  12. If you become aware of your aloneness, then you become aware of the aloneness of others also. Then you know that to try to possess another is trespassing.
     
  13. You must make a distinction between two words: lonely and alone. In the dictionary they carry the same meaning, but those who have been meditating, they know the distinction. They are not the same, they are as different as possible. Loneliness is an ugly thing; loneliness is a depressive thing -- it is a sadness; it is an absence of the other. Loneliness is the absence of the other -- you would like the other to be there, but the other is not, and you feel that and you miss them. YOU are not there in loneliness, the absence of the other is there. Alone? -- it is totally different. YOU are there, it is your presence; it is a positive phenomenon. You don't miss the other, you meet yourself.

    Then you are alone, alone like a peak, tremendously beautiful! Sometimes you even feel a terror -- but it has a beauty. But the presence is the basic thing: you are present to yourself. You are not lonely, you are with yourself. Alone, you are not lonely, you are with yourself. Lonely, you are simply lonely -- there is no one. You are not with yourself and you are missing the other. Loneliness is negative, an absence; aloneness is positive, a presence.

    If you are alone, you grow, because there is space to grow -- nobody else to hamper, nobody else to obstruct, nobody else to create more complex problems. Alone you grow, and as much as you want to grow you can grow because there is no limit, and you are happy being with yourself, and a bliss arises. There is no comparison: because the other is not there you are neither beautiful nor ugly, neither rich nor poor, neither this nor that, neither white nor black, neither man nor woman. Alone, how can you be a woman or a man? Lonely, you are a woman or a man, because the other is missing. Alone, you are no one, empty, empty of the other completely.

    And remember, when the other is not, the ego cannot exist: it exists with the other. Either present or absent, the other is needed for ego. To feel 'I' the other is needed, a boundary of the other. Fenced from the neighbors I feel 'I'. When there is no neighbor, no fencing, how can you feel 'I'? You will be there, but without any ego. The ego is a relationship, it exists only in relationship.
     
  14. First move from things to thoughts, then from thoughts to the thinker. Things are the world of science, thought is the world of art and the thinker is the world of religion. Just go on moving inwards. The first circumference around you is of things, the second of thoughts, and the third, the centre, your very being, is nothing but consciousness. It is nothing but a witnessing. Drop things and go into thoughts; then one day thoughts also have to be dropped and then you are left alone in your purity, then you are left absolutely alone. In that aloneness is God, in that aloneness is liberation, moksha, in that aloneness is nirvana, in that aloneness for the first time you are in the real.
     
  15. Ordinarily a man is alone, a woman is alone. Loneliness is there. Even if you are attached to a man or woman or a friend, and it is only the attachment of lust, you will remain lonely. Have you not watched it? Attached to a woman, attached to a man, but still you remain lonely. Somewhere deep down there is no communication with the other; you are cut off, like islands. Even dialogue seems to be impossible. Lovers ordinarily never talk to each other, because each talk creates argument, and each talk brings conflict. By and by, they learn to be silent; by and by, they learn somehow to avoid the other, or at the most, tolerate. But they remain lonely. Even if the other is there, there is space; the inner space remains unfulfilled.
     
  16. On the path of meditation, aloneness is sought, desired, hoped for, prayed for. Be alone. So much so that not even in your consciousness does any shadow of the other move. On the path of love, get so dissolved that only the other becomes real and you become a shadow and by and by you completely disappear. On the path of love, God remains, you disappear; on the path of meditation, God disappears, you appear. But the total and the ultimate result is the same. A great synthesis happens.
     
  17. In fact, mountain/valley are one thing, so are love and meditation, so are relationship and aloneness. The mountain of aloneness rises only in the valleys of relationship. In fact, you can enjoy aloneness only if you can enjoy relationship. It is relationship that creates the need for aloneness, it is a rhythm.
     
  18. Aloneness makes you overfull. Love receives your gifts. Love empties you so that you can become full again. Whenever you are emptied by love, aloneness is there to nourish you, to integrate you. And this is a rhythm.
     
  19. I have always been alone on my path. Even today I am absolutely alone. Your being here does not make any difference -- my aloneness remains untouched -- because aloneness is so intrinsic. Nobody can enter into your aloneness. You can be in the crowd and absolutely alone, but you may be alone and not alone at all. You can sit in a cave in the Himalayas and still think of the crowd, of the girlfriend and the boyfriend and the marketplace and what is going on there....
     
  20. Aloneness is also one of the fundamental experiences as you enter silence. In silence there is nobody else, you are simply alone. The deeper your silence will be, thoughts will be gone, emotions will be gone, sentiments will be gone -- just pure being, a flame of light, burning alone. One can get scared because we are so much accustomed to living with people -- in the crowd, in the marketplace, in all kinds of relationships. You may not be aware that in all these relationships -- with friends, with your husbands, with your wives, with your children, with your parents -- you are basically trying to avoid the experience of aloneness. These are strategies so that you are always with somebody.

    It is a well-known fact, psychologically established, that if a person is left alone in isolation, after seven days he starts talking... a little like whispering. For seven days he keeps talking inside, keeps himself engaged in the mind, but then it becomes too much -- things start coming out of his mind through his mouth and he starts whispering. After fourteen days you can hear him clearly, what he is saying. After twenty-one days he does not bother about anybody, he has gone insane; now he is talking to walls, to pillars, "Hello friend, how are you?" -- to a pillar, hugging a pillar! And this is true not about somebody special, it is true about everybody. He is trying to find some relationship. If he cannot find it in reality, he will create a hallucination.

    You will see: just stand by the side of the road and watch people going from the office to the house, and you will be surprised. They are alone -- although there is a crowd all around -- but they are talking to themselves. They are making gestures, they are telling somebody something... because the crowd around them is not related to them. They are alone in the crowd, so they are trying to create their own illusion. Maybe they are talking to their wife, to their boss -- there are many things which cannot be said but right now they can say them. In front of the wife they cannot say it, but in this crowd, where everybody is engaged in his own thing, everybody is doing his own thing, they can say things to the wife. Nobody is listening, and at least one thing is certain -- the wife is not there! But they need the wife, they need someone to talk to. And after thirty days of isolation, a dramatic change happens: it is not only one- sided; it is not only that they are talking to the pillar, the pillar also starts talking to them! They do both things: first, "Hello, how are you?" and then, "I am good. I am fine, doing well." They answer from the side of the pillar too -- in a different voice. Now they have created a world of their own, they are no longer alone. No madman is alone. Either you are mad or not. If you don't know aloneness, there is something of madness in you.

    Only pure aloneness gives you a clean sanity. You don't need the other; the dependence on the other is no more there, you are enough unto yourself. Language is meaningless because language is a medium to relate with the other. The moment you are no longer dependent on the other, language is meaningless, words are meaningless. In your silence -- when there are no words, no language, nobody else is present -- you are getting in tune with existence. This serenity, this silence, this aloneness will bring you immense rewards. It will allow you to grow to your full potential. For the first time you will be an individual, for the first time you will have the touch and the taste of freedom, and for the first time the immensity, the unboundedness of existence will be yours with all its blissfulness.

    So whatever happens in silence -- either sadness or aloneness -- remember, in silence nothing wrong can ever happen. Whatever happens is going to enhance the beauty of it, deepen the charm of it; anything that happens will bring more and more flowers, more and more fragrance to it.
     
  21. Loneliness is a negative state of mind. Aloneness is positive, notwithstanding what the dictionaries say. In dictionaries, loneliness and aloneness are synonymous -- they are synonyms; in life they are not. Loneliness is a state of mind when you are constantly missing the other, aloneness is the state of mind when you are constantly delighted in yourself. Loneliness is miserable, aloneness is blissful. Loneliness is always worried, missing something, hankering for something, desiring for something; aloneness is a deep fulfillment, not going out, tremendously content, happy, celebrating. In loneliness you are off center, in aloneness you are centered and rooted. Aloneness is beautiful. It has an elegance around it, a grace, a climate of tremendous satisfaction. Loneliness is; beggarly; all around it there is begging and nothing else. It has no grace around it. In fact it is ugly. Loneliness is a dependence, aloneness is SHEER independence. One feels as if one is one's whole world, one's whole existence.

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Social Networking at the bottom of the pyramid..

                
Are you the sort of person who feels an instant sense of fatigue while reading the newspapers? Are you disturbed by the rising number of scams even as you read about them day after day? No, the number of scams haven’t gone up drastically. What’s happening, dear reader, is that you are getting faster and greater information flow. And promoting the “flow” are the multiple media platforms; so, from reading the news in print, you have access to the same news on the Net and also on television news channels. 

Just how can media promote innovation in government sectors that demand immediate attention? This was a question raised at the session, ‘How media can promote design and governance Innovation’, part of Design!Public, a day-long conclave to study ways of promoting governance innovation. 

For starters, the government needs to design and create websites in the digital media space that enables citizens to react and respond. Think about it. The often staid and rarely updated government websites can undergo a drastic change if only they are created as interactive platforms encouraging people to come aboard, interact directly and put forth their point of view.  Design, after all, is not about structure alone. It’s about information. 

Simply put, what we can start through media is digital activism. A case in point: Tata Tea’s Jaago Re campaign, an example of not just a commercially sustainable advertising campaign but also one with a public message to curb corruption. The brand was promoted through an interactive website even as the television commercials made us sit up and take note of the brand and what it did through innovation.  
An example of technology “convergence” discussed at the session was an NGO in Maharashtra dealing with nutrition and education issues for the underprivileged. From creating dedicated telephone lines for “anganwadi” workers to emphasizing the NGO work through television programmes to even starting a dedicated website to allow a process of interaction, the NGO was doing its bit in not just promoting its work but also getting feedback for what it was doing..

Now If cybercafés brought to those who did not have home PCs the power of the Net, a new class of handphones, called "smart feature phones" are marrying low-end hardware and software in a way under which the cheaper feature phones - which do not allow third-party applications -can be enabled for selected features of the Net, such as news, content or applications such as social media sites Facebook and Twitter. And that is what is powering what I call the "Networking at the bottom of the pyramid" (This is also aided by SMS-based communities linked to the Web).
 
 Facebook is making this happen through the integration of technology from Snaptu, a company it acquired. Media giant Yahoo is working with telecom service operators on the one hand and chip designers on the other, to make this work.

Yahoo plans to offer its services, such as its Yahoo Messenger, news, finance, weather, mail and Flickr embedded in MediaTek chips.
This is not really a browser interface that helps you take on the big big world of the Net, but what I call "Internet in a sachet" - to borrow an expression consumer goods companies used to proliferate the shampoo. "We are able to provide optimised Yahoo experience on very low-end devices," said Maheshwari. "It is going to give us reach."
The bottomline: we are heading for a future in which a Rs 1,000 handphone can access and interact with limited Internet features.
Last week, MediaTek announced an investment of $20 million in Spice Digital, a mobile value added service (VAS) company of the Modi group. MediaTek powers the chipsets for many feature phones in the market - companies like MicroMax, Lemon, Karbonn, Olive, Videocon, Intex etc.
By marrying content services with low-end handsets, design firms like MediaTek are doing to the Internet what microfinance is doing to banking
There is a lot to written on this.. and a gallons more to be shared..
I would love reading your views - guruism@aol.in

Tuesday, August 2, 2011

The Treasure cries.. :(


 You know about the $22 billion treasure in Trivandrum. So I am not going to recap the story about how the erstwhile—Indian royal families are always ‘erstwhile’ no?—royal family of Travancore and the Shri Padmanabhaswamy temple accumulated pots of gold over centuries in the form of taxes, gifts and bribes.
While the sheer volume of riches unearthed continue boggle minds and pop eyes, there is now a debate swirling up about what should be done with this astonishing wealth. Should the temple keep and treat it as personal wealth? Or should the government take it over and use it in some manner beneficial to the public? Trivandrum MP Shashi Tharoor wants to retain the treasure within the temple premises.
The pro-temple—or is it anti-state?—faction seem to be rallying around the idea that no one has the right to spend someone else’s money. That this is private property and should stay that way.
My views are irrelevant here.
(But since you ask: I am deeply saddened when religious institutions in one of the flagship “poor” countries of the world hoard so much wealth. $22 billion is an astonishing, game-changing amount of money that can be used to build sustainable institutions from scratch. Sure, the government is no white knight of fiscal transparency and prudence. But religious institutions are no safe havens either.
Maybe institutions should commit to spending a certain percentage of their wealth each year on social projects.
Wait. I know what some of you are thinking. Let me save you the speculation. I am a Hindu born , studied at a Roman Catholic school since by birth and graduated at sikh college,  But my only god is Mark Knopfler. Yes, churches/mosques/temples hoard wealth too. Yes, I think they should give it away too. No, I can’t make them do it first before your temples or mosques have to. Relax. I am not the enemy.!
There is the history of the hoard. Which will take much telling. I vividly remember watching Gharwali films of the 1980's- 1990's that dealt with such hordes of treasure being found under temples, inside wells and in cemeteries. I loved those movies, even if some of them did often end up being slapstick, dash-for-the-cash comedies. Let us all sincerely hope this latest find does not.
Also this comes at a time when a number of period Gharwali movies seem to have revived interest in local history.
But what is depressing is how the debate from the very beginning is skewed heavily in favourite of status quo. And status quo, as we all know, is India’s favourite solution to problems. Now I don’t mean to say that doing nothing is always the sub-optimal solution. Sometimes, for instance if Ghulam Nabi Azad says something, it is best to act as if nothing happened and carry on.
Yet somehow I get the feeling that all sides of a debate prepare for it by practising the word ‘No’ many times in front of a mirror. The sum total of what I have read on blogs, tweet and in columns so far:
1. Should the government take over the treasure? No. The government is full of thieves. There was something about spectrum…
2. Should the treasure be used for the public? No. Why do you want to spend other people’s money? This is private property.
3. Should be allow the temple to do something with it? No. What if they steal it? Maybe they already are?
4. Surely we can put it in a museum? No. Remember Gandhi’s glasses? Definitely thieving will happen.
5. Maybe the government and temple can somehow use it to help the poor? No need. First you tell all the churches and mosques to give up their wealth.
So what do you do? Count it, videotape it, photograph it and put it back in a hole in the ground. And put policemen all around it all the time. But by no means do anything with it.
All of those arguments have merits of course. Our government steals with aplomb, it probably is private property, temples are not above the occasional pilferage, our museums suck, and yes everybody else has treasure in their chambers as well. Perhaps all this negativity is symbolic of the general moral malaise that the nation has been plunged into ever since, what, the Commonwealth Games. People have written about the paucity of genuine good news from India.
I fear that all this bad news has plunged us into a permanent “worst-case scenario” frame of my mind. We go into a debate or a problem assuming that everyone will behave in the worst possible way. I already assume that all horrible news about female feticide is true, all government data is false, everything BCCI does is bad for cricket, and any positive news coming from India has a heinous evil side which will reveal itself soon enough and embarrass us all. Like a negative dope test.
Maybe I am just over-thinking this, reading the wrong columns and swiping through the most cynical tweets. But now I find myself in a bitter, cynical place. And I dislike it very much.
Do you think there is room in that secure, quiet vault under the Shri Padmanabhaswamy temple for a perturbed blogger? It seems happier down there than up on the ground above.

Monday, July 18, 2011

Poetry from Zindagi Naa Milegi Dobaara



Some things never fail to inspire. Good poetry & good movies are some of them. Awesome poetry by Javed Akhtar from the Movie ‘Zindagi Naa Milegi Dobara’
Jab jab dard ka baadal chaya
Jab ghum ka saya lehraya
Jab aansoo palkon tak aya
Jab yeh tanha dil ghabraya
Humne dil ko yeh samjhaya
Dil aakhir tu kyun rota hai
Duniya mein yunhi hota hai
Yeh jo gehre sannate hain
Waqt ne sabko hi baante hain
Thoda ghum hai sabka qissa
Thodi dhoop hai sabka hissa
Aankh teri bekaar hi nam hai
Har pal ek naya mausam hai
Kyun tu aise pal khota hai
Dil aakhir tu kyun rota hai…



Ik baat honton tak hai jo aayi nahin
Bas ankhon say hai jhaankti
Tumse kabhi, mujhse kabhi
Kuch lafz hain woh maangti
Jinko pehanke honton tak aa jaaye woh
Aawaaz ki baahon mein baahein daalke ithlaye woh
Lekin jo yeh ik baat hai
Ahsas hi ahsas hai
Khushboo si hai jaise hawa mein tairti
Khushboo jo be-aawaaz hai
Jiska pata tumko bhi hai
Jiski khabar mujhko bhi hai
Duniya se bhi chupta nahin
Yeh jaane kaisa raaz hai…



Pighle neelam sa behta ye sama,
Neeli neeli si khamoshiyan,
Na kahin hai zameen
Na kahin aasmaan,
Sarsaraati hui tehniyaan pattiyaan,
Keh raheen hai bas ek tum ho yahan,
Bas main hoon,
Meri saansein hain aur meri dhadkanein,
Aisi gehraiyaan, aisi tanhaiyaan,
Aur main…Sirf main.
Apne hone par mujhko yakeen aa gaya.



Dilon mein tum apni
Betaabiyan leke chal rahe ho
Toh zinda ho tum
Nazar mein khwabon ki
Bijliyan leke chal rahe ho
Toh zinda ho tum
Hawa ke jhokon ke jaise
Aazad rehno sikho
Tum ek dariya ke jaise
Lehron mein behna sikho
Har ek lamhe se tum milo
Khole apni bhaayein
Har ek pal ek naya samha
Dekhen yeh nigahaein
Jo apni aankhon mein
Hairaniyan leke chal rahe ho
Toh zinda ho tum
Dilon mein tum apni
Betaabiyan leke chal rahe ho
Toh zinda ho tum

What can I say… Just awesome !