15TH AUGUST IS OUR INDEPENDENCE DAY

15TH AUGUST IS OUR INDEPENDENCE DAY

Today we must all be in a jubilant mood . But most of us are unhappy.

The President, in his speech last evening , expressed his displeasure over te way the proceedings of the Parliament was blocked by the unrelenting attitude of the two dominant parties , the BJP and the Congress.

Ex-service men have been conducting a squatting demonstration at the Jantar Mandir , near the Parliament , demanding ‘one rank one pension’ Yesterday they were manhandled and driven out by the police. Is this the way , we should treat our men who fought for our country? Why could the Government not agree to their demand ? Extra money should not be an excuse.

General public are angry at the rising cost of living.

Even yesterday the Pakistani forces attacked our army at the border and Prime Minister chooses to ignore this ? Why?

Individually , my family is worried about my wife’s illness. She is much better now. She can manage her affairs ; only my daughter or myself help her when she takes bath. She will do the cleaning with the soap , we pour water over her body.

I want that we should go back , but my daughters like to serve her , at least for six months.

Jai Hind!

RELEVANCE OF MERCY PETITION

RELEVANCE OF MERCY PETITION
Law is blind ; it does not bother to find out the human being who perpetrated the crime.
The person involved may be the only son of the parents or he may be the bread winner , on whom the family depends for survival. I remember a case in which an eminent Doctor was convicted for murder of his wife. He was given the benefit of life imprisonment by the Governor , because of his utility for the public.
In almost all cases , the mercy petition is considered by the Governor or the President on ‘political ‘ considerations. This is the purpose of this power granted to them.
If a Hindu was involved , will the President refuse mercy?
When the first Communist Government assumed power in Keralam , in 1957 , all those Party workers undergoing life imprisonment , were let off.
So mercy petitions should not be rejected

HUMANISM VS HANGING

HUMANISM VS HANGING
Forty members of Parliament have written to the President of India , urging him to reconsider the decision, to hang the terrorist this month . Hanging is a crude form of killing. ‘An eye for an eye’, is barbaric. When you cannot take your own life (suicide is punishable under the law) , how can one take the life of another human being? Even otherwise , life time inside the prison cell , is harder than hanging , which cuts short the agony .
For voicing this sentiment , Salman Khan is being harassed by Shiva Sena and the BJP. Think coolly and raise your voice against the system of hanging.

INERVIEW WITH KEJRIWAL

INERVIEW WITH KEJRIWAL

An interview with AAP leader Kejriwal was broadcast by an English Channel.

It is shocking that even his Ministers are no allowed to talk with the Lt. Governor freely. At the same time, any functionary of the BJP is free to contact him.. In fact , Kejriwal says that the Governor’s office has become an office of BJP. He will go running if called by BJP President.

For the smooth functioning of the Government, it is important that the Governor must have the confidence of the Chief Minister.

HUNG PARLIAMENT- ‘text/javascript’ src=’

Democracy presupposes bipartisan model, with a small number of independents or small parties which have only a vocal role, with no teeth to bite with.
Recent elections in England and Australia have demolished this system. Next month, elections are due in Bihar. Only a miracle can produce clear majority.
In India, the President can invite any one (even a non-member of the legislature) to form a government and he gets six months to prove his majority. This provision in our Constitution has been misused by the ruling party, to hoist its nominee as Chief Minister or Prime Minister of India.
I suggest that these posts be chosen by election by secret ballot.

MEDICAL COUNCIL OF INDIA HAS BEEN DISSOLVED

It is very shameful. The Medical Council of India, a regulatory body responsible for maintaining standards of education in the country, has been dissolved. The reason is corruption.

Ketan Desai, the President of the MCI, was arrested by the CBI, in connection with charges of corruption.

Study of medicine in India has become a farce. Competitive entrance examinations are held for admission to government medical colleges. But private medical institutions are free to admit candidates, without sufficient marks. They extract huge sums of money as capitation fee. Most private colleges are ill equipped and some of them do not have the requisite staff.

Here anything can be managed by bribing. All know it but keep quiet.

Maximum ragging is in these colleges, where the children of wealthy men come to enjoy life, not for studies

Half the seats are reserved for incompetent students, based on their caste.

How can such people diagnose diseases? Medicines are purchased after receiving hefty commission from traveling medical representatives.

No one wants to work in villages. In government hospitals, there are no medicines.

Re-organizing the MCI is not enough. The whole system has to be changed.

Considering the population in rural areas, it may be desirable to raise a large army of “bare foot doctors”, as China did in earlier times. The number of degree colleges for science may be reduced and the facility utilized for churning out medical personnel for rural India

IS CAPITALISM PERMANENT?

To talk of permanency, on the basis of the experience of a few centuries is immature. But how capitalism is going to end, is a matter of conjecture.

I read a book in which the author, who is well versed in Marxism, opined that people have a habit of living with crises. Do people of earthquake prone areas migrate to safer places? In the same way, people live with economic crises too, according to this author.

If the developed world manage to survive this global crisis, well, we may accept his theory. Greece is already burning with street class war.

ENLIGHTENED CAPITALISM

All of us agree that a worker and an engineer may not get the same salary. An entrepreneur is not satisfied with salary. He wants to make profit. The contradiction pointed out by Marx, between the greed for unlimited profit, keeping down wages to the minimum survival level, and the need to enhance purchasing capacity, which can be done only by increasing wages, has been solved in the developed world by timely negotiations between capitalists and workers. The loss of profit was recouped by exploitation of the workers in undeveloped world. If capitalists agree to be content with reasonable profit, the share of profits given to workers in the name of bonus can be increased, allowing workers to buy more.

But that is a big IF. The greed for more money became so high that they forgot all good manners and went on pick pocketing, not sparing even fellow capitalists. Here is the rub; can a leopard change its spots?

REVOLUTIONS

Marx wrote that every revolution is preceded by a change in the tools of production. He called man a tool making animal. The new economic forces mature in the womb of the old society, he added.

All these things happened during industrial revolution and the violent bloody changes in France, and 13 American colonies and the bloodless Cromvellian revolution in England conformed to these analyses, but the Paris Commune of 1871 did not. There was no change in the tools of production. The new society, established by the communards, did not develop within the womb of the old society. It was rather an abortion caused by the new ideology. The collapse of the first communist state saddened both Marx and Angels.

Lenin tried artificial insemination and succeeded to a great extent, in bringing out a new communist state. But he practically abandoned communism and replaced individual capitalism with state capitalism. Marx was a genius; a scientist in the chaos which came to be known as economics. After almost seven decades, full fledged capitalism came in Russia.

Mao only brought industrial revolution in feudal China.

EGALITARIAN SOCIETY

The ideal social set up, where production and distribution will be regulated by super computers, may not come by wishful thinking. The revolution in communications has brought about the requisite change in tools of production. The only stumbling block is the military. In the United States, the President is a tool in the hands of oil cartels and industrialists. The military supports the president. If they do not like a President, he is killed.

In Pakistan, Burma, Turkey etc. the military calls the tune. In some South American countries, Leftist Governments are coming up, changing the equation between die hard capitalists and progressive forces.

It is too early to write off Marx’s predictions about communist revolution coming about in the most advanced countries first. The whole of Africa, most of Asia and South America are still under feudalism. First capitalism may develop before any futuristic predictions can be made about communist revolution.

OTTAPALAM, THE ORIGIN OF THE NAME

I used to wonder how this name came about.

In Malayalam, it means single bridge. Otta is single and Palam is bridge. The only bridge here is yet to be completed! People have been agitating for it during the last seventeen years.

A casual talk with a friend, over the telephone, cleared my mind. He is at Edapal, near Kuttipuram and and is well versed in local history.

He explained that Samoothiri, the ruler of Malabar, attacked Cochin State, a buffer between the former and the powerful Travancore and stationed his troops at several points like Edapal, Rapal, Thottipal etc. near our village. Palayam or cantonment, became pal in course of time. There is Metturpalayam near Coimbatore.

Now, our Ottapalam is actually Ottapalayam, where Tippu Sultan stationed some of his troops, during the period he occupied Palakad, where he built a strong fort, the outer walls of which are intact even now, and continues to be a local attraction.

Former President , late K.R. Narayanan hails from Ottapalam.

PACHAURI AND HIS BUSINESS EMPIRE, EXTRACTS FROM THE WEB

Questions over business deals of UN climate change guru Dr Rajendra Pachauri
The head of the UN’s climate change panel – Dr Rajendra Pachauri – is accused of making a fortune from his links with ‘carbon trading’ companies, Christopher Booker and Richard North write.
 
Published: 8:30AM GMT 20 Dec 2009
 
The head of the UN’s climate change panel – Dr Rajendra Pachauri – is accused of making a fortune from his links with ‘carbon trading’ companies. Photo: EPA No one in the world exercised more influence on the events leading up to the Copenhagen conference on global warming than Dr Rajendra Pachauri, chairman of the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and mastermind of its latest report in 2007.
Although Dr Pachauri is often presented as a scientist (he was even once described by the BBC as “the world’s top climate scientist”), as a former railway engineer with a PhD in economics he has no qualifications in climate science at all.
 
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What has also almost entirely escaped attention, however, is how Dr Pachauri has established an astonishing worldwide portfolio of business interests with bodies which have been investing billions of dollars in organisations dependent on the IPCC’s policy recommendations.
These outfits include banks, oil and energy companies and investment funds heavily involved in ‘carbon trading’ and ‘sustainable technologies’, which together make up the fastest-growing commodity market in the world, estimated soon to be worth trillions of dollars a year.
Today, in addition to his role as chairman of the IPCC, Dr Pachauri occupies more than a score of such posts, acting as director or adviser to many of the bodies which play a leading role in what has become known as the international ‘climate industry’.
It is remarkable how only very recently has the staggering scale of Dr Pachauri’s links to so many of these concerns come to light, inevitably raising questions as to how the world’s leading ‘climate official’ can also be personally involved in so many organisations which stand to benefit from the IPCC’s recommendations.
The issue of Dr Pachauri’s potential conflict of interest was first publicly raised last Tuesday when, after giving a lecture at Copenhagen University, he was handed a letter by two eminent ‘climate sceptics’. One was the Stephen Fielding, the Australian Senator who sparked the revolt which recently led to the defeat of his government’s ‘cap and trade scheme’. The other, from Britain, was Lord Monckton, a longtime critic of the IPCC’s science, who has recently played a key part in stiffening opposition to a cap and trade bill in the US Senate.
Their open letter first challenged the scientific honesty of a graph prominently used in the IPCC’s 2007 report, and shown again by Pachauri in his lecture, demanding that he should withdraw it. But they went on to question why the report had not declared Pachauri’s personal interest in so many organisations which seemingly stood to profit from its findings.
The letter, which included information first disclosed in last week’s Sunday Telegraph, was circulated to all the 192 national conference delegations, calling on them to dismiss Dr Pachauri as IPCC chairman because of recent revelations of his conflicting interests.
The original power base from which Dr Pachauri has built up his worldwide network of influence over the past decade is the Delhi-based Tata Energy Research Institute, of which he became director in 1981 and director-general in 2001. Now renamed The Energy Research Institute, TERI was set up in 1974 by India’s largest privately-owned business empire, the Tata Group, with interests ranging from steel, cars and energy to chemicals, telecommunications and insurance (and now best-known in the UK as the owner of Jaguar, Land Rover, Tetley Tea and Corus, Britain’s largest steel company).
Although TERI has extended its sponsorship since the name change, the two concerns are still closely linked.
In India, Tata exercises enormous political power, shown not least in the way that when it expressed its interests in developing land in the eastern states of Orissa and Jarkhand, it led to the Indian government displacing hundreds of thousands of poor tribal villagers to make way for large-scale iron mining and steelmaking projects.
Initially, when Dr Pachauri took over the running of TERI in the 1980s, his interests centred on the oil and coal industries, which may now seem odd for a man who has since become best known for his opposition to fossil fuels. He was, for instance, a director until 2003 of India Oil, the country’s largest commercial enterprise, and until this year remained as a director of the National Thermal Power Generating Corporation, its largest electricity producer.
In 2005, he set up GloriOil, a Texas firm specialising in technology which allows the last remaining reserves to be extracted from oilfields otherwise at the end of their useful life.
However, since Pachauri became a vice-chairman of the IPCC in 1997, TERI has vastly expanded its interest in every kind of renewable or sustainable technology, in many of which the various divisions of the Tata Group have also become heavily involved, such as its project to invest $1.5 billion (£930 million) in vast wind farms.
Dr Pachauri’s TERI empire has also extended worldwide, with branches in the US, the EU and several countries in Asia. TERI Europe, based in London, of which he is a trustee (along with Sir John Houghton, one of the key players in the early days of the IPCC and formerly head of the UK Met Office) is currently running a project on bio-energy, financed by the EU.
Another project, co-financed by our own Department of Environment, Food and Rural Affairs and the German insurance firm Munich Re, is studying how India’s insurance industry, including Tata, can benefit from exploiting the supposed risks of exposure to climate change. Quite why Defra and UK taxpayers should fund a project to increase the profits of Indian insurance firms is not explained.
Even odder is the role of TERI’s Washington-based North American offshoot, a non-profit organisation, of which Dr Pachauri is president. Conveniently sited on Pennsylvania Avenue, midway between the White House and the Capitol, this body unashamedly sets out its stall as a lobbying organisation, to “sensitise decision-makers in North America to developing countries’ concerns about energy and the environment”.
TERI-NA is funded by a galaxy of official and corporate sponsors, including four branches of the UN bureaucracy; four US government agencies; oil giants such as Amoco; two of the leading US defence contractors; Monsanto, the world’s largest GM producer; the WWF (the environmentalist campaigning group which derives much of its own funding from the EU) and two world leaders in the international ‘carbon market’, between them managing more than $1 trillion (£620 billion) worth of assets.
All of this is doubtless useful to the interests of Tata back in India, which is heavily involved not just in bio-energy, renewables and insurance but also in ‘carbon trading’, the worldwide market in buying and selling the right to emit CO2. Much of this is administered at a profit by the UN under the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) set up under the Kyoto Protocol, which the Copenhagen treaty was designed to replace with an even more lucrative successor.
Under the CDM, firms and consumers in the developed world pay for the right to exceed their ‘carbon limits’ by buying certificates from those firms in countries such as India and China which rack up ‘carbon credits’ for every renewable energy source they develop – or by showing that they have in some way reduced their own ‘carbon emissions’.
It is one of these deals, reported in last week’s Sunday Telegraph, which is enabling Tata to “mothball” nearly three million tonnes of steel production at its Corus plant in Redcar, while opening a new plant in Orissa with a similar scale of production, gaining in the process a potential £1.2 billion in ‘carbon credits’ (while putting 1,700 people on Teesside out of work).
More than three-quarters of the world ‘carbon’ market benefits India and China in this way. India alone has 1,455 CDM projects in operation, worth $33 billion (£20 billion), many of them facilitated by Tata – and it is perhaps unsurprising that Dr Pachauri also serves on the advisory board of the Chicago Climate Exchange, the largest and most lucrative carbon-trading exchange in the world, which was also assisted by TERI in setting up India’s own carbon exchange.
But this is peanuts compared to the numerous other posts to which Dr Pachauri has been appointed in the years since the UN chose him to become the world’s top ‘climate-change official’.
In 2007, for instance, he was appointed to the advisory board of Siderian, a San Francisco-based venture capital firm specialising in ‘sustainable technologies’, where he was expected to provide the Fund with ‘access, standing and industrial exposure at the highest level’,
In 2008 he was made an adviser on renewable and sustainable energy to the Credit Suisse bank and the Rockefeller Foundation. He joined the board of the Nordic Glitnir Bank, as it launched its Sustainable Future Fund, looking to raise funding of £4 billion. He became chairman of the Indochina Sustainable Infrastructure Fund, whose CEO was confident it could soon raise £100 billion.
In the same year he became a director of the International Risk Governance Council in Geneva, set up by EDF and E.On, two of Europe’s largest electricity firms, to promote ‘bio-energy’. This year Dr Pachauri joined the New York investment fund Pegasus as a ‘strategic adviser’, and was made chairman of the advisory board to the Asian Development Bank, strongly supportive of CDM trading, whose CEO warned that failure to agree a treaty at Copenhagen would lead to a collapse of the carbon market.
The list of posts now held by Dr Pachauri as a result of his new-found world status goes on and on. He has become head of Yale University’s Climate and Energy Institute, which enjoys millions of dollars of US state and corporate funding. He is on the climate change advisory board of Deutsche Bank. He is Director of the Japanese Institute for Global Environmental Strategies and was until recently an adviser to Toyota Motors. Recalling his origins as a railway engineer, he is even a policy adviser to SNCF, France’s state-owned railway company.
Meanwhile, back home in India, he serves on an array of influential government bodies, including the Economic Advisory Committee to the prime minister, holds various academic posts and has somehow found time in his busy life to publish 22 books.
Dr Pachauri never shrinks from giving the world frank advice on all matters relating to the menace of global warming. The latest edition of TERI News quotes him as telling the US Environmental Protection Agency that it must go ahead with regulating US carbon emissions without waiting for Congress to pass its cap and trade bill.
It reports how, in the days before Copenhagen, he called on the developing nations which had been historically responsible for the global warming crisis to make ‘concrete commitments’ to aiding developing countries such as India with funding and technology – while insisting that India could not agree to binding emissions targets. India, he said, must bargain for large-scale subsidies from the West for developing solar power, and Western funds must be made available for geo-engineering projects to suck CO2 out of the atmosphere.
As a vegetarian Hindu, Dr Pachauri repeated his call for the world to eat less meat to cut down on methane emissions (as usual he made no mention of what was to be done about India’s 400 million sacred cows). He further called for a ban on serving ice in restaurants and for meters to be fitted to all hotel rooms, so that guests could be charged a carbon tax on their use of heating and air-conditioning.
One subject the talkative Dr Pachauri remains silent on, however, is how much money he is paid for all these important posts, which must run into millions of dollars. Not one of the bodies for which he works publishes his salary or fees, and this notably includes the UN, which refuses to reveal how much we all pay him as one of its most senior officials.
As for TERI itself, Dr Pachauri’s main job for nearly 30 years, it is so coy about money that it does not even publish its accounts – the financial statement amounts to two income and expenditure pie charts which contain no detailed figures.
Dr Pachauri is equally coy about TERI’s links with Tata, the company which set it up in the 1970s and whose name it continued to bear until 2002, when it was changed to just The Energy Research Institute. A spokesman at the time said ‘we have not severed our past relationship with the Tatas, the change is only for convenience’.
But the real question mark over TERI’s director-general remains over the relationship between his highly lucrative commercial jobs and his role as chairman of the IPCC.
TERI have, for example, become a preferred bidder for Kuwaiti contracts to clean up the mess left by Saddam Hussein in their oilfields in 1991. The $3 billion (£1.9 billion) cost of the contracts has been provided by the UN. If successful, this would be tenth time TERI have benefited from a contract financed by the UN.
Certainly no one values the services of TERI more than the EU, which has included Dr Pachauri’s institute as a partner in no fewer than 12 projects designed to assist in devising the EU’s policies on mitigating the effects of the global warming predicted by the IPCC.
But whether those 1,700 Corus workers on Teesside that will be losing their jobs next month will be quite as excited about the international ‘carbon market’ as Dr Pachauri, is quite another matter.

MY LIFE – CS PURAM-3

THUPPAN
His name is Subrahmanian. In namboodiri families we never say this name. It is either Thuppan, Unni, Kunjukuttan,Aniyan or Kuttan.
He is our neighbour just opposite our house. His wife is Radha, a school teacher. When she goes to the school, either he comes to our huse, or I go to him. He is a very interesting charactor and I am never bored in his company.
He first went to study Rig Veda at the Brahmaswam math at Trichur. He is well versed in it and all the rituals of our caste. Then he took diploma in Mechanical Engineering. While workig in some office, he had a heated argument with his supervisor, who said something which infuriated our Thuppan, who struck him with an iron rod, so suddenly and so violently that he fell down dead.

Actually, he was not dead, but fearing reprisals,our hero ran away and found some work in Bombay. There too he did not do well.
As the chela (disciple) of some Sanyasi, he went to London. There he fell foul of the Guru, who he says, was a fraud, and ultimately came home to Keralam. Fell in love with the fair Radha and settled in CS puram village. At that time, he was the sole namboodiri, in this village of aiyers. Afterwards Poduvaya Vasudevan, who married my cousin sister Parvathy, and myself joined the group.
The village has three temples with considerable responsibilities and enough money in the bank. So the president and the secretary and the committee members are elected. Thuppan sided with the younger, rebel group who never had enough strength to challenge the establishment, so there were always some one or other in his house, who belonged to the rebel group. His relatives at Palakad also came occasionally and I got acquaited with many of them.
Another intersting charactor was Gas Murthy. No one in the village would go to the town. Tell GM, who has custody of all documents of us, his customers, and maintains liaison with the offices concerned, and he will give you a cylinder the same day. He has always twenty or so cylinders ready in his stock. He is short and looks as if he never takes bath or changes his cloths.

For all my purchases, including oils, which we bought five k.kg. each of coconut oil and thil oil at a time, I went to the big bazaar at Palakad, where things are available at wholesale rates. I just enjoyd the outing, even though during rainy season it becomes cumbersome, what with your bag and umbrella, and money in various pockets, holding the steel rod of the bus for support, as invariably I have to travel standing, and giving money to the conductor, when he demands, keeping a watch all the time, lest you may miss the point where you must get down.
We had more than enough coconuts and once I took it to the mill, where oil is extracted. It was on the other bank of the river and I had to ask many people before I was able to locate it. It was a small mill, but I liked the smell of fresh coconut oil and it was the first time I saw such procedure. I am always eager to see something new.
In those days I used to visit Kadampuzha Devi temple. It has a romantic appeal. The pond inside the temple is fed by underground water, flowing through the rock hill above, over which a small temple township has developed and is still in the process of growing.

During the rainy season, the pond over flows with clear water and one can always enjoy the bath annd swimming. There are separate portions for men and women, demarcated by a partition wall.
 After the evening pooja at about 7.30, the rice-jaggery pudding offered to the deity, standing at a level below that of the devotees, is distrbuted free to those present there; and the temple is locked and the whole area deserted. If I had a car, I would have stayed on till about ten, enjoying the moon light, filtered through the big tree leaves !
An European has establishhed a good dairy farm in the forest beyond the town.Visitors are not allowed inside.
Whenever I go to Kadampuzha, I would go to my sister Savithry’s house, only an hour’s journey from there, before returning home.
There are some KSRTC buses running direct to Kadampuzha which is famous in the Malabar region. Normally we go via Pattambi and Vallancherry.