K R Aadisthan is showing a lot of promise.
Classic
“sadly, it all came down to a typo”
Selective Amnesia is back in action. Vesana claims that the problem was all because of a “typo”. Of course, given CCG’s record, I am going to assume that it was his typo. Come on CCG! Give us the details! And acknowledge the debt of gratitude that you owe to us spelling Nazis, a k a cartel members. Who knows which other disasters you have been saved from because someone corrected your spelling…
Ideas for stealth reforms
85 consumer items to go off reserved list
The government has decided to remove several consumer items from the list of products reserved for the small-scale industry. The list includes sweetened cashew nut products, shoe polish, wheel chairs, sandalwood oil, hair pins, mechanical razors, gas lighters, adhesive insulating tapes and coffee percolators.
There was a McKinsey study which claimed that removing product market restrictions (i.e. removing the reservation of the 800 odd items for the small scale sector) was the most important next step the government could take, because it would give a 2 point boost to the GDP growth. So I suppose I am happy about this.
Incidentally, this gives me an idea about how to go about reforms free from the left’s interference. The government should propose “decoy reforms”, things which they are never going to do, but which will make the left come charging at you. For example, they should propose that you are going to privatise the DRDO or allow foreign political parties to contest elections in India, or something similarly outlandish. The left will do their usual stuff – organise strikes, carry out dharnas, etc. While they are thus distracted, the government can go on with the really important reforms.
Unintended consequences
Effective now, cialis has been removed from the blacklist. So all you people who want to talk about socialism can resume use of my comments section. Thanks to SS who pointed out the problem, observing accurately that “I always thought socialism couldn’t get it up on its own”
Now Gaurav is wrong.
(and by extension, I too)
Not for the first time, I have to turn around and criticise someone I praised a day before. Gaurav is now claiming that people who have lots of children do so for economic reasons, i.e. so that they can send them to work and supplement the family income.
Come on! Now this is confusing effect with cause. He is actually saying that though they have access to contraception, people choose not to use it because they want the extra income from their future children.
Continue reading
Trades Unions
Sathish has been claiming in Anarcaplib that the unions in Kerala are learning from their earlier mistakes and are willing to correct them. I am sceptical if they will ever do it, and to tell you why, I will have to tell you people a story about Trade Unionism. It is a long story with many morals at the end of it. But before that, here is a little-known titbit. The earlier British version of the term was Trades Union (in singular). Can anyone tell me why? It has to do with the history of how the unions were formed. And oh. The correct answer will get you a gmail invite!
If you want one, that is.
The various forms of slavery
Hint to the leftists and the rightists.
You think that
It is slavery to sell your services to foreigners
It is slavery to buy foreign stuff. It indicates a lack of confidence in our own manufacturers.
It is slavery to work for foreigners
It is slavery to employ foreigners, such as for example McKinsey consultants to advise us on economic policy.
Has it occurred to you that if you think “slavery” every time you see a white face, the fault lies not in our trade with them, but within yourself?
Population is not the problem
That’s what Gaurav says, and I agree.
When I was a child, it occurred to me that population was the wrong measure; we should be looking at population density. So I read up a bit about population density and in some book was written words to the effect that “though there are more prosperous countries which have a higher population density than India, India’s population is still considered high when compared against her available resources”
I don’t remember the exact words, but they were more highfalutin than that, so naturally I didn’t understand what it was saying. A couple of years later, when I reread the book (an atlas actually) I realised that they were saying that India was considered to be overpopulated because she was poor. So the reasoning was circular. India was poor because we were overpopulated. The population density was not actually high, but when compared with what resources we had, we were overpopulated.
That formative experience made me distrustful of experts and their big words.
Some notes
I had some trouble with my blacklist. I was not able to add new URLs to the blacklist. Some error with max_data_packet thrown by MySql. Strangely, I seem to be the only one who has ever got it in the history of MT Blacklist. Has any of your blacklists never gone above 3700 entries?
I wasn’t able to fix it. So I worked around it by deleting a whole bunch of blacklist entries and putting catchall strings in their place. So for example if you have legitimate URLs with the string “porn” somewhere in it, you won’t be able to put it in my comments anywhere. I hope those false positives will be so rare as to be non-existent. If are a nice Bengali girl with the unfortunate name of Aporna, tell me
Then there is Swami who has fired another shot in the long battle between us on the subject of Gandhiji. I will respond some time. And by the way, I too don’t know how to manually trackback to a site. Is it even possible? I think it uses HTTP POST to do it and you need to write some kind of script to do it.
A look at the positive side of mudslinging
Our politicians have been attacking each other viciously over the past few months. Most people think that this isn’t a very good thing, and perhaps they are right. Calling someone like Manmohan Singh a “Shikhandi” even disgusts someone like me and I am a person who a) does not get easily disgusted and b) actually enjoyed it when it was Sonia Gandhi under attack.
I was about to write a post wondering what on earth had gotten into the BJP to do such self-defeating things, when it occurred to me that there was a positive side to all this muslinging and all this arresting each other on corruption charges.
You see, most of our politicians deserve to be in jail for one reason or the other, be it for corruption, rioting, rape or murder. Our leaders accuse each other of all these crimes during election time, but after they get elected, they usually say things like “We will not be vindictive”. That’s because they know quite well that if they seriously pursue cases against each other, they will also be targetted by their opponents when they come to power.
So the positive side of all this vicious attacks on one another will hopefully be that the gentleman’s rogue’s agreement among our politicians may finally break down. If they put one another in jail with the same enthusiasm they have displayed in snarling at one another, it will be a blow for the rule of law.
The most amazing thing about something
There is something strange about articles that start like this:
There was a time when India looked at the poor as the yardstick for policy making. Today she looks at the middle class and the rich, the poor having disappeared from the map of progress and development.
(The two faces of India)
Go on and read the article if you want. It is 9 months old (and I got it from a 9 month old post on Charukesi’s blog. Don’t ask how I got there. It was a mix-up), but the lamentation is standard and could have been written any time in the past 13 years. It is about how the neo-liberal economic policies and the forces have globalisation are unfortunately leaving the poor behind, unlike before, when India used to “look at the poor as the yardstick for policy making”
I find those arguments really, really, weird coming from hardcore leftists. Because during the supposed Golden Age of Nehruvian Socialism, they used to say the same things about Nehru’s policies.
Continue reading
On forgeries and stuff
Apparently some idiot in the US forged a document claiming to be a 30 year-old memo using MS Word. That story is all over the American blogosphere and it isn’t a very interesting one for someone in India.
But then, I have some gmail invites to give away and… I haven’t asked my readers a question to show off my knowledge for quite some time, so I might as well ask a question and set a prize… a Gmail Invite! (is there anyone who still wants it?)
There was a forgery scandal in India that was, in a sense, a mirror image of the one that is happening in the US. Someone had used a manual typewriter to forge a document said to have originated in a foreign country, and someone immediately pointed out that the manual typewriter was a museum piece in the rest of the civilized world.
Which scandal am I talking of?
(Hint: Try to narrow down the period during which it might have occurred.)