Archive

Archive for the ‘Article by users’ Category

Bypolls should be banned by Election Commission

April 9th, 2009 No comments

Bypolls in India should be banned. A By-poll (occasionally also spelled ‘bye-election’, and known in the United States as a special election) is an election held to fill a political office that has become vacant between regularly scheduled elections.

Our politicians give up with elected seat with absolutely no respect to the voters who voted them in. In Dec 2008 Karnataka held bypolls as many sitting MLAs from Congress switched over to BJP (Operation Lotus). Rumours said the bypoll costed each candidate about Rs 25 crore. The Election Commission (EC) allows you to spend Rs 25 lakh officially. It is high time EC increases the official budget to Rs 25 crore directly.

India will hold its General Election in Apr/May 2009. Reports say candidates in popular constituencies will need to spend a whopping Rs 50 crore.

EC should ban bypoll. If a candidate surrenders his/her seat then the runner up should be declared the winner provided the winner doesn’t join the party to which the runner up belongs to. To explain it in clear terms, if Congress had won the seat and BJP candidate was the runner up, then the BJP candidate can be declared the winner provided the victorious candidate (Congress) is not joining BJP.

EC should not allow candidates standing from multiple constituencies. If they win from both constituencies then a bypoll needs to held in one at govt’s expense. If the EC cannot enforce this rule, the runner up of the seat they are surrendering should be declared the winner. This way candidates will think twice before standing from multiple constituencies.

We see few sitting MLAs contesting for a MP seat (or vice versa). If they win, then they will surrender the MLA seat. Preferably the EC shouldn’t allow a sitting MLA to contest for a MP seat. If they cannot enforce this rule, the runner up of the seat they are surrendering should be declared the winner.

In India, you need to be an elected member (MP – from Lok Sabha or Rajya Sabha) to be a cabinet minister. In the US it is contrary, a sitting Senate Member is not in the cabinet.

After Hillary Clinton was sworn in as the Secretary of State in Obama’s cabinet her Senate seat (New York) fell vacant. The New York Governor, David Paterson, had the power to select the replacement of Hillary Clinton. So, if we had this rule in India, the Governor of the state in which the seat fell vacant, would have had the power to choose the replacement of the MP.

First published in Oneindia.in

Categories: Article by users

JAI HO ! REPUBLIC OF INDIA !!!

April 9th, 2009 No comments

JAI HO ! RE-PRODUCT-ING PUBLIC OF INDIA ! JAI HO ! SLUM ( DOG ) MILLIONAIRES OF INDIA !!

Come to think of it, are WE ALL, not the slum millionaires of India ? The middle class & upper class Indians – becoming Lakhpatis & Crorepatis , because of the work & loyalty of slum (dogs)- the very human beings who work for us at our hospitals & homes & offices ; the people who serve us right from street side stalls to five star hotels ! The politician becomes a “slum millionaire” thro’ slum vote banks ! We all doctors have or had a foot in the slums ( let us not forget our KEM / JJ / Sion / Nair training atleast ). Even some Business empires & Bollywood biggies could be labelled as risen from slums. SLUM – SCUM – SCAM seems to be the permanent ingredients of India success story – “SATYAM” !!! The only problem is slum & scum have remained & on the contrary increased inspite of making millionaires out of an ordinary politician, doctor, businessman & a builder. And a Britisher Boyle comes along to become one more among the slum (dog ) millionaires……..

I have desisted from openly using the word ‘Dog’ in (slum dog millionaires) , because I find the word ‘Dog’ quite offending, that is to the dog community in general , inspite of being the most loyal animal friend to humans. From his (dog’s) perspective, I suppose, the man , the master is an elongated, cunning animal walking on his hind feet, who, one, can’t be trusted; two, can’t be loyal to his own brethren / species & three, can be self destructive ! And we call it ‘the dog eat dog attitude of man’ or ‘bitching about’!! And all this is because man is the only animal who lives in the ghettos of mind with me , mine , myself motto. And the moment one is willing to raise oneself out of this ghetto, we have a Buddha who continues to inspire for generations (spiritually ); A Barack Obama aspiring to lead politically the whole nation & hopefully the world or a Mohammed Yunus showing the way out of poverty thro’ microcredit finance in Bangladesh & thus bagging Noble peace prize thro’ poverty alleviation.

That brings me home to Medicine, the practice of which is not politics (for few black sheep it may be ) but an art of giving hope for life and living & science to practice ( the same ). And like any other art & science, while it requires the affection & respect of the society, it cannot survive on the concept of Free Lunch or Chronic subsidy ( for long ) in the name of Charity. And charity, particularly in medical treatment seem to be like an illegitimate child delivered at our door step with the sole responsibility of doctor – hospital ( medical establishment ) of nursing / rearing the child with the oft heard exhortation of nobility. To the point Nobility has been starved & decimated to near extinction & deceit raising its head. On a larger scale similarly, the so called Free Medical camps serve a purpose to only an extent, besides being a good PR exercise & a Photo Op. for the NGO’s organizing it; Do the patients benefit – in terms of sustained quality health care? Do the docs benefit in terms of job satisfaction, necessarily need not be in terms of money but definitely in terms of ROTI – Return On Time Invested ! I need not think aloud, since we all know the answer in our heart of hearts & was amply voiced by more than many in the IMA camp who attended it or did not! How do we come out of this no win situation, while maintaining the nobility of the profession, retaining the art & science & yet thriving (not merely surviving)? How can WE, the knowledge workers, skilled workers that we are, bring about an effective change in the slum (dog) scenario. I think the mantra is Management Input – a well thought out, a well coordinated strategy in place to reach out to the target population. When individuals like Mother Teresa, Amte’s, Dang’s could do it why not the organized might of IMA? When Mohammed Yunus can try & eradicate poverty (in Bangladesh) thro’ microcredit finance, why can’t WE, the IMA eradicate Health Care poverty mainly in urban slums & rural India. Can we do it ? Yes, instead of offering token free medical camps, set up a social, health security network & fund to provide health care for BPL families. Health care costs have been found to be a major factor in pushing the families into poverty all over the world. What it needs is the will & strategy to do it. Raise funds thro’ sponsorship – the pharmaceutical companies, the corporate houses for sustained quality health care ; create a social safety net for the economically backward & bring them in the ambit of affordable, private quality health care. Yes I think, the IMA can take lead & that would be one step in making our contribution towards social transformation thro’ health care, right to health being one of the most fundamental basic rights of a civilized society.

Instead of self righteous indignation, self pity or self congratulation, what is required is self respect for WE the self proclaimed, knowledgeable lakhpatis & crorepatis of India to accept the REALTY SHOW that India is & go about not just making noises but intelligent choice/s of change.

And let us remember inspite of all our lip service & sympathy shown to slum walas, there is a certain feel good glow on their faces despite all the discomfort, disease & debt surrounding them – apparently very accepting of the present, forgetful of the past & no expectations of the future. Life goes on blissfully, ignorant of basic human rights to health and responsibilities to hygiene with a willful neglect by the state. The NGO”s like IMA can & must try & make a change.

JAI HO THE BILLIONAIRE BHARAT – THE BILLION PLUS GAN RAJYA OF INDIA !

Dr. Hemant Agrawal

M.S.Orth(Mum), F.R.C.S., M.Ch. Orth. (England)

CONSULTANT ORTHOPAEDIC SURGEON.

EDITOR, Mulund,Mumbai IMA ( Indian Medical Association ) Magazine, “IMAGE”

Categories: Article by users

ELECTIONS 2009 – DEMOCRACY DHARMA ? DEMOCRACY DRAMA ?

April 9th, 2009 1 comment

WE Professionals, the so called Intellectuals, will choose to BE A SILENT SPECTATOR of this DRAMA OR Consider as our DHARMA & participate in a proactive manner ?

Will WE just Wail, when under attack ( like the rest of the soft state that India is being considered, looking up to Army ( commandoes ), America & Allah in that order ) OR Will We safe guard our interests, first & foremost as Indian Citizens & Indian society?

Even the THIRD GENDER (the eunuchs etc.) has threatened to actively participate in elections if their interests are not addressed, as per some news reports !

Once again a THIRD FRONT has raised its head with many PM aspirants planning & plotting for power – personal or for people, that is a big question? Let us not forget our past experience/s !

Can WE network with NGO’s like AGNI etc, to promote a good political culture, encourage a two party system with transparent political manifestos including the future PM with Audacity of HOPE for the entire nation.

Can WE reach out to the masses, particularly the lower educational-socio-economic strata, who come in contact with us to spread the message of political awareness – an exercise which is a must to achieve any desirable results because the BHARAT lives amongst the masses (residing in urban chawls / slums & rural India). Gandhiji was probably the only Indian leader who could establish a mass contact leading the entire nation to political freedom.

JAAGO RE JAAGO ! DOCTORS – PROFESSIONALS JAAGO !!

Dr. Hemant Agrawal

M.S.Orth(Mum), F.R.C.S., M.Ch. Orth. (England)

CONSULTANT ORTHOPAEDIC SURGEON.

EDITOR, Mulund,Mumbai IMA ( Indian Medical Association ) Magazine, “IMAGE”

Cell No. 9821131883

Tel.No. 022 25931515

Categories: Article by users

Blame Games

April 8th, 2009 No comments

Saw the BJP campaign ad on tv where they blame the government for unemployment and recession…the ad goes on to state that all this could be fixed if the BJP is voted into power…Hogwash! What do they take us for?

I think even in these torrid times, our condition is better off…true, the market’s down, but you still get a decent job if you search for it…Most IT companies in India have also stopped placements and employee intake, but they have not let go of their old employees and the layoffs are less compared to what people in other countries are witnessing…

Blame Games! Political parties are it again, and it irritates the hell outta me…it would’ve been better if they offered solutions for those problems but it’s probably too much work for those guys…why bother when people always fall for the same lies? they would rather sit and think of how they would spend those 5 years na? sitting in the air-conditioned office, those very kewl cars with the red light on top…all the money they would earn from selling government contracts to the highest bidder…

3 cheers for Indian bureaucracy…Hip Hip, Hoooray!!

Categories: Article by users

We will vote for you if you promise that you will not waste money

April 7th, 2009 No comments

My dear responsible brothers and sisters,

We have rights for everything, but do we have rights to ask our politicians , the following question, whom we elect and select thinking that they will care care of us and our beloved country’s growth.

We will vote for you if you promise that you will not waste money, will you?


Dear politicians, leaders of all political parties,

Millions and millions of money is being wasted; natural resources like fuel and power are being spent in huge quantities during election campaigns. Un imaginable amount of money is also being wasted in printing posters, flyers and the like.


Let us be responsible citizens of our mother nation, stop wasting such huge amounts of money.

Think differently,…

Why don’t you use that money for industrial developments in your localities. Benefits are…your money will earn more money, you will have industries on your own and you will help our country to grow, last but not least you will offer employment opportunities, if not for all, at least to people in your area or your own party men/women.

Somehow or other our nation will grow.


It is really a big SIN to WASTE money in this difficult time. Think about this IDEA ..

Let us collectively make a Change and Let us be the Change.

If you Promise not to waste Money, We will Promise that we will vote for you.

If all of us  ( including our politician brothers and sisters) take this OATH now, the whole world will salute our mother nation(country) one day that is not far away.


Jai Hind


Valoothoor Vama A.Mohamed Ali

A Responsible and Patriotic Citizen

Chennai

Categories: Article by users

“Reservation free” India now possible

March 27th, 2009 No comments

This is the right time to show your anger. Be the part of democracy and rule out all those corrupt leaders and political party who r promising and favoring any kind of reservation in jobs and higher education.
Some of the party dares to promise reservations on various grounds like caste, community and gender in there Manifesto-2009.
Lets come together and vote against all those people who ever is favoring any kind of reservation.

Remember this is your turn…. kick them out..(This is the only time when your opinion matters)

JAI HIND

If you feel so Join our Hand in this fight and spread the message as large as possible, so that each party come to now that if they talk about reservation then… there time is over now.

 

http://www.orkut.co.in/Main#Community.aspx?cmm=60440626

Categories: Article by users

IPL – International Premier League

March 24th, 2009 1 comment

The IPL just moved it’s venue outside India. Undecided as of now, but it’s between England and South Africa.

It was supposedly due to the police not being able to provide adequate security to the players because of the election period. But the statements from police ranks, even a written statement from the Mumbai Police Commissioner Hassan Gaffoor speak otherwise. It’s being hinted that it had to do with the Congress – NCP fallout over a seat sharing issue. The revised schedule of the IPL was approved by the Home ministry only to be reversed later. Some say it’s a pressure tactic against the Sharad Pawar led NCP to give in to the Congress demands.

It’s definitely a big loss for India as everyone’s going to take the hit, from the team owners themselves who get some of their revenue from the local stadium ticket sales, to the common shop owners, to the fans. It just won’t be IPL anymore as the energy will be missed this time around. The league owners remain unaffected though, as the major chunk of revenue (around 95% or more) comes from television and other broadcasting rights.

Categories: Article by users

Written in 2002, has been relevant before and still very much is…isn’t that sad?

February 6th, 2009 1 comment

TORCH

For a penny less
My heart I have sold
I burn my friend
and call myself bold
I say I have faith
but still I do not believe
Bcoz all around I find
God has become blind
Yet I walked with a torch
as my eyes begged,
a bit of happiness to see.
My torch was extinguished
peace wasn’t meant to be
And all this time I wondered,
In the light…
How much i craved to be,

Now,

For an hour in the dark,

I wish, would be forever for me.

Religion is a way of LIFE, not of DEATH.

We are literate, its time we learnt.

Shridhar – Indian by religion.
15th April 2002

Categories: Article by users

WEDNESDAY FOREVER!

February 6th, 2009 No comments

“See you in an hour”
She said smiling.
Anticipation her
new love gifted.
“Will you marry me?”
He said. Sipping
wine she was
from her glass
“Let’s not let
this moment pass”

And it did not.
The hour never ended.
It was a Wednesday.

Shridhar – 28-11-2008

Categories: Article by users

An Analysis of Misfortune and Hardship

January 27th, 2009 No comments

The question of God’s justice involves certain problems, such as the existence of disasters, loss and evil in the natural order, and inequalities in the social order. This question arouses, in fact, a whole storm of questions and objections in the minds of many people. The problems they face are so fundamental that what start out as doubts and hesitations, ultimately become an indissoluble complex.
Such people ask how it is possible that in a world created on the basis of intelligence and wisdom, so much suffering, pain and evil should prevail; that the world should be subjected constantly to the successive blows of hardship and misfortune, with loss and deficiency always in the ascendant.

Why is it that in various parts of the world, terrible, overwhelming events assault mankind, resulting in untold loss and destruction? Why is one person ugly and another beautiful, one healthy and another sick?

Why are all men not created equal, and does not their inequality point to an absence of justice in the universe?
Justice in the order of things depends on its being free of oppression, discrimination and disaster, or the absence from it of all defect, sickness, and poverty; this, they say, alone would result in perfection and justice.
We must begin by admitting that our evaluation of the affairs of the universe does not permit us to penetrate the ultimate depths of phenomena; it is inadequate for the analysis of the ends and purposes of things.
Our initial understanding of unpleasant events and disasters is bound to be superficial; we are not prepared to recognize any truth lying beyond our initial impression. We cannot, at the outset, delineate the ultimate aims of those events, and we, therefore, regard them as signs of injustice. Our feelings become aroused and lead us into the most illogical analyses.
But if we reflect more profoundly, we will see that this onesided evaluation of events we label injustice comes from making our interests or those of people to whom we are directly or indirectly related, our criteHon and yardstick. Whatever secures our interests is good, and what ever harms us is bad. In other words, our judgment of good and bad is based on a short-eyed perception narrow horizons of thought, and a lack of precise knowledge concernlng the norms of creation.
Is our existence the only issue involved in every occurrence? Can we make our own profit and loss into the criterion of good and evil? Our material world is constantly engaged in producing change. Events that did not exist today will occur tomorrow, some things will disappear and others will take their place.
It is obvious that what is useful and beneficial for some people today will cease to exist tomorrow. But for us who are human beings and attached to our own existence and the things of the world, the acquisition of things is good and their loss is bad. But despite man and his attachments, the changing nature of the world produces constantly changing phenomena.  If the world did not comprehend the possibility of change, phenomena them selves would not exist, and, therefore, there could also be no question of good and evil.
In such a hypothetical, unchanging world there would be neither loss and deficiency nor growth and development, no contrast or differentiation, no variety or multiplicity, no compounding or motion. In a world without deficiency or loss, there would also be no human, moral or social criteria, limits, or laws. Development and change are the result of the motion and rotation of the planets, if they ceased to exist, there would be no earth, no moon and no sun, no day, no month and no year.
A somewhat comprehensive view of the world will permit us to understand that what is harmful for us today, or may be so in the future, is benefi cial for others. The world as a whole moves in the direction dictated by the overall purpose of being and benefit of being; individuals may suffer harm in this process, and it may even be that mankind at large does not stand to benefit.
Were we able to plunge deeply enough into the ocean of knowledge and turn the pages of its book replete with mysteries with the finger of our under standing, the ultimate purpose and outcome of all events and phenomena would be revealed to us.
However, our powerof judgment is not sufficiently comprehensive to deal with the complex web that confronts us: we know neither the chain of prece ding causes that have produced the phenomena of today, nor the chain of future effects those phenomena, in turn, will produce.
If it were possible for us to look down from above on the broad plain of the world, in such a way that we could see all the positive and negative aspects of everything, all the mysteries of everything occurring in the world; if it were possible for us to evaluate the effects and results of every event in history, past, presentand future and everything occurring between pre-eternity and post-eternity, and, if this were possible for us, then we might be able to say that the harm of a given event out weighed its benefit and brand it as evil.
But does man have such comprehensive awareness of the horizontal and vertical chains of causality?Can he situate himself on the moving axis of the world?
Since we do not dispose of such an ability, since we will never be able to traverse so infinite a distance, however longbeourstride; since we will never be able to lift the veil from all these complexi ties and take their due measure, it is best that we refrain from one-sided and hasty judgments that are based on our own short-sightedness.
We should recognize that we must not make our own benefit the sole criterion for judging this vast universe. The relative observations we make within the framework of the limited data at our disposal and the specific conditions to which we are subject can never furnish criteria for a definibve judgment.
Nature may often be working toward the fulfillment of a particular goal that is unimaginable to man, given his conventional circumstances. Why cannot it not be supposed that unpleasant occurrences are the result of efforts aimed at preparing the ground for a new phenomenon that will be the instrument of God’s will upon earth? It may be that the conditions and circumstances of the age necessitate such processes.
If all the changes and upheavals that terrify us did not take place within a given plan and design and for the sake of a specific aim, if they were to be extended throughout time without producing any positive or construc tive result, there would be no trace on earth of any living creature, including man.
Why should we accuse the world of injustice, of being chaotic and unstable, simply because of a few exceptional occurrences and phenomena in nature?  Should we start objecting because of a handful of unpleasantnessess, major and minor, forgetting all the manifestations of precision and wisdom, all the wonders we see in the world and its creatures, that testify to the will and intelligence of an exalted being?
Since man sees so much evidence of careful planning through out the universe, he must admit that the world is a purposive whole, a process moving toward perfection. Every phenomenon in it is subject to its own specific criterion, and if a phenomenon appears inexplicable or unjustif iable, this is becauseof man’s short sightedness. Man must understand that in his finiteness, he lacks the capacity to understand the aims of all phenomena and their content; it is not that creation has any defect.
Our attitude to the bitter and unpleasant occurrences of this world resemble the judgment made by a desert dweller when he comes to the city and sees powerful bulldozers destroying old buildings. He regards this demolition as a foolish act of destruction, but is it logical on his part to think that the demolition is unplanned and purposeless? Of course not, because he sees only the process of demolition, not the calculations and plans of the architects and others involved.
As a certain scientist said: Our state is like that of children who watch a circus packing up and preparing to move on. This is necessary for the circus to go else where and continue with its life of excitement, but those short-sighted children see in the folding of the tents and the comings and goings of men and animals nothing but the dissolution and termination of the circus.”
If we look a little more deeply and imaginatively at the misfortunes and disasters that plague man and interpret them correctly, we will appreciate that in reality, they are blessings, not disasters.
A blessing being a blessing, and a disastel being a disaster is dependent upon man’s reaction to it; a single event may be experienced quite differently by two different people.
Misfortune and pain are like an alarm warning man to remedy his deficiencies and errors; they are like a natural immune system or regulatory mechanism inherent in man.
If wealth leads to self-indulgence and pleasure-seeking, it is a misfortune and a disaster, and if poverty and deprivation lead to the refinement and development of the human soul, they are a blessing.
Thus, wealth cannot be counted as absolute good fortune nor poverty as absolute misfortune. A similar rule covers whatever natural gifts man may possess.
Nations who are confronted by various hostile forces and compelled to struggle for their survival are strengthened thereby. Once we regard effort and struggle to be a positive and constructive endeavor, we cannot overlook the role played by hardships in developing man’s inner resources and impelling him to progress.
People who are not obliged to struggle and who live in an environment free of all contradiction will easily be immersed by material prosperity in their pleasures and lusts.
How often it happens that someone willingly endures hardship and pain for the sake of a great goal! Were it not for that hardship and pain, the goal might not appear so desirable to him!
A smooth path along which one advances blindly and mechanically is not conducive to development and growth, ant a human effort from which the element of conscious will has been removed cannot produce a fundamental change in man.
Struggle and contradiction are like a scourge impelling man forward. Solid objects are shattered by the pressure of repeated blows, but men are formed and tempered by the hardships they endure. They throw themselves into the ocean to learn how to swim, and it is in the furnace of crisis that genius emerges.

Untrammeled self-indulgence, love of the word, unrestricted pleasure seeking, heedlessness of higher goals all these are intications of misguid ance and lack of awareness. In fact, the most wretchet of men
are those who have grown up in the midst of luxury and comfort, who have never experienced the hardships of life or tasted its bitter days along with the sweet the sun of their lives rises and sets within, unnoticed by anyone else.

Following one’s inclinations and adhering to one’s desires is incompatible with firmness and elevation of spirit, with purposeful effort and striving.  Pleasure-seeking and corruption, on the one hand, and strength of will and purposiveness, on the other, represent two contrary inclinations in man.  Since neither can be negated or affirmed to the exclusion of the other, one must strive constantly to reduce the desire for pleasure and strengthen the opposing force within one.

Those who have been raised in luxury, who have never tasted the bitter and sweet days of the world, who have always enjoyed prosperity and never endur ed hunger they can never appreciate the taste of delicious food nor the joy of life as a whole and they are incapable of truly appreciating beauty. The pleasures of life can be truly enjoyed only by those who have experienced hardship and failure in their lives, who have the capacity to absorb diffi culty and to endure those hardships that lie in wait along every step of man’s path.

Material and spiritual ease become precious to man only after experiencing the ups and downs of life and the pressure of its unpleasant incidents.

Once man is preoccupied with his material life, all dimensions of his existence are enchained, and he loses aspiration and motion.

Inevitably, he will also neglect his etemal life and inward purification. As long as desire casts its shadow on his being and his soul is ensnared by darkness, he will be like a speck tossed around on the waves of matter. He will seek refuge in anything but God. He therefore needs something to awaken him and induce maturity in his thoughts, to rernind him of the transitoriness of this ephemeral world and help him attain the ultirnate aim of all heavenly teachings, the freedom fo the soul from all the obstacles and carriers that prevent man from attaining lofty perfection.

The training and refinement of the self is not to be had cheaply; it requires the renunciation of various pleasures and enjoyrnents, and the process of cutting loose from them is bitter and difficult.

It is true that such exertions will be for the sake of purifying man’s inner being and allowing his latent capacities to appear.

Nonetheless, patient abstention from sin and pleasure-seeking is always bitter to man’s taste and it is only through obstinate resistance to lower impulses that he can fulfill his mission of breaking down the barriers that confront him and thus ascend to the realm of higher values.

Categories: Article by users