Wednesday, September 16, 2020

How the Economic Machine works

I saw this wonderful half an hour presentation of how the economy works. Ray Dalio has done a wonderful job in keeping the concepts suitable for a layman. I have decided to prepare a similar module of how the economy and the world work, in smaller bit sized presentations, in order to understand and explain better. Before that, I need to prepare a flowchart of my current understanding of the economy, in a way that I'm able to explain it to a layman.



Outrage over Unilever Tresemme ad

Unilever withdrew the entire range of Tresseme products from South Africa, after outrage over an ad that depicted African hair as frizzy. Finally, some backlash against one of the many prejudices that continue to be practiced and promoted. Maybe this shall be the beginning of the end of such campaigns, considering that Fair & Lovely has been Unilever's leading product in the fairness cream market. We hope that such outrage translates into redesigning our outlook towards such bias.



Anti-defection law

I was watching The House of Cards, season one, the second time. Frank is looking to get his policy drafted into legislation, and works to get enough legislators on his side. In this effort he requests Claire, his wife, to speak to a couple of legislators, and convince them to vote in favour. Claire tells the two gentlemen to vote their conscience, as she has motive to see the bill defeated.

I was thinking of similar situations in India, where the party whip issues a whip to ensure that all party members vote the line of the party, failing which they may face expulsion from the party. The kind of conscience voting is simply not feasible here. And any member cannot genuinely have a different point of view on a particular issue, while agreeing or falling in line with party philosophy in general.

This also makes debates on such issues irrelevant, as members are forced to restrict their expression to the party line, and we may be losing out on valuable inputs from members, if there are any. And for the same reason, parties fear the anti-defection law. The anti-defection law was probably passed with good intention, to prevent corruption and cross-voting without adequate grounds. But it has gone against the principle of people representation.

Thursday, August 13, 2020

Gunjan Saxena, The Kargil Girl on Netflix

This is how a biopic must be made! Inspirational and interesting, never a dull moment, yet not going over the top. A call to break stereotypes, a must watch for all women! And men!

Monday, August 10, 2020

The greatest intellectual adventure!

Brian Cox in a wonderful tweet tells us how coming to terms with our existence is the greatest intellectual adventure! This is such an eyeopener.  

 

Saturday, August 8, 2020

Jaane Woh Kaise (Pyaasa) Cover by Kartik Kumar

Jaane Woh Kaise (Pyaasa) 

SD Burman, Sahir Ludhianvi, Guru Dutt 

Cover by Kartik Kumar 

The beauty of some songs is in their simplicity! And when you sing, you realize its not easy to be simple! 

#GuruDutt #SDBurman #SahirLudhianvi and #HemantKumar take you into a sombre mood, leaving you #Pyaasa!

No copyright infringement intended; only for entertainment and private use; no commercial benefit intended.



Wednesday, July 22, 2020

Look at yourself in the mirror

The Habit Coach on YouTube by Ashdin Doctor offers bite sized self help tips and is recommended by Amit Varma, of India Uncut and The Seen And The Unseen fame. 

In one of the first episodes I heard,  Ashdin asks 'When you look into a mirror, do you see your flaws,  your best self, or do you not look long enough to know?' When you see a friend,  do you see their parts, or their complete being? So, why do you see your individual flaws? So stop being too critical of yourself.  

Every few days, so and look at yourself in the mirror.  You may not like what you see.  You may not recognize who you see.  But, have a conversation with that person. Talk about how you feel, how far you've come, how you've done in life. Find a true connect with yourself. See yourself as a complete individual.