Showing posts with label GuestPost. Show all posts
Showing posts with label GuestPost. Show all posts

Thursday, August 18, 2011

Corruption in India: The Premise We Cannot Pretend to Ignore

Overview of the Corruption Perceptions Index (...Image via WikipediaThis is a guest post by SCT discussing the substantive issues and contextual approach towards drafting multiple versions of the Lokpal Bill which guides on the question of including the PMO, Judiciary, Members of Parliament and junior officers in the ambit of the Lokpal or not.

There are three drafts on Lokpal bill coming in public domain. I do not to wish to go into details as the drafting details can be taken care later on if we are clear about the substantive issues to be tackled.

The popular perception is that corruption at high places of executive, legislature and judiciary has reached unacceptable levels and people at the top level of all the three wings of State are unwilling or unable to do anything. Recent examples of the PM office coming in disrepute over several large scams, Ministers or equivalent directly found prima facie accused of mammoth corruption, eight former Chief Justices accused of corruption in a petition before the Supreme Court, Parliament accepting shameful act open bribing on issue of "No Confidence", have made informed persons desperate.

Corruption has entered every institution and every walk of life and people feel that it flows from top. In such a situation, we have to have a mechanism for dealing with corruption by PM or his office, as also the corruption in higher judiciary particularly in the various High Courts.

If this is accepted, the drafts can be examined and seen as to which is most appropriate or that another draft with parallel bills for Judicial Accountability and Codification of Parliamentary Privileges be taken up. The problem is neither in drafting nor in any constitutional infirmity, it is in some of these "highest vested interests" agreeing to be treated on par with others and subject themselves to independent scrutiny.

The guest author is Shri S.C. Tripathi I.A.S. (Retd 1968) L.L.B. M.Sc. He takes an interest in education, economy, energy, legal, political and constitutional issues. This is his third blog.

Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Parliament and the People: Is the Janlokpal protest unconstitutional?

The Indian Constitution preambleImage via WikipediaThis is a guest post by SCT in which he shares a legal opinion on the sovereignty of parliamentary procedure for law-making in a free and functioning democracy.

There seems some confusion on two related issues, namely that the protest of Anna and team is unconstitutional and that Parliament is sovereign so when the bill is before Parliament all public action should cease.

Both the arguments are flawed. These arguments have validity only when an overwhelming number have full faith in these institutions. But these are not normal circumstances.

Firstly, the Parliament is neither Sovereign nor Supreme. The People are Sovereign as the opening lines of Preamble of the Constitution state clearly.

In modern times, large countries can not have Government by the People and that is why the Parliaments and Elected bodies legislate on behalf of the People and elect the Executive in a Democracy. But if they become dysfunctional, People have every right to protest peacefully so that the Parliamentarians can gauge the will of the People and one does not have to wait for the end of the tenure of the House.

It also implies that once elected, the Parliament or the legislators can not ignore the will of the People and become totally self-serving as is the common perception at this point on the issue of tackling corruption. We have seen how debates in Parliament on the issue of "No Confidence" can be won or lost by offer of bribe that was left shamefully unsolved by the Parliament forcing the Supreme Court to intervene.

On so many issues in the past, various groups have taken out processions and protest marches even while the bills are pending in Parliament. The most glaring example is the Women's Reservation Bill that has been with the Parliament for nearly a decade but whenever a discussion is planned, some interest groups threaten agitation and everyone in Government and the Parliament develops cold feet.

So, neither the Parliament is Sovereign nor a protest over any bill that is pending, unconstitutional. Even technically and constitutionally, the Sovereignty under Indian Constitution is not located in any single Institution at all time.

Now, on the second issue as to whether an agitation or fast is unconstitutional, I would only say that the question is absurd in a Democracy. Yes, conditions about the place can be imposed but not on numbers and days. If at any stage, there is commission of crime or violence or apprehension thereof (such as on later days of a fast unto death), the enforcement agencies deal with situations everyday and are expected to take legal action with which all are familiar.

The present situation is not a normal happening, it has to be taken as an abnormal situation because corruption has affected almost every person and he has felt helpless till he saw Anna's movement. A quick solution based on consensus and not on "smart" handling, is necessary.

The guest author, SCT, is Shri S.C. Tripathi I.A.S Retd. (1968) L.L.B. This is his second blog.

This Moment in the Movement: Beyond Lokpal Bill 2011

Detail from Corrupt Legislation. Mural by Elih...Image via WikipediaThis is a guest blog by 'SCT' in which he shares his thoughts on the India Against Corruption movement and offers a way forward on national anti-corruption policy issues.


The public support to Anna Hazare is not necessarily a vote for Janlokpal bill. It is an expression of wide scale resentment about the corruption that pervades all institutions and walks of life and has corroded the essentials of these institutions.

It is also an expression of disgust people feel over the inability and incapacity of the Government to take any effective measures. In fact the popular perception is that those who have to act are the ones benefiting from this sorry state of affairs.

The least Government could do was to read the mood of the people and present a bill giving more teeth to the Lokpal e.g. bringing PM and higher Judiciary under its ambit.

Also, the time has come to bring Electoral Reforms, at least those provisions that many Election Commissions and Law Commissions have recommended in the past.

Government must now introduce a bill for these reforms as the electoral process is the fountainhead of corruption.

The guest author, SCT, is Shri S.C. Tripathi I.A.S. Retd (1968). He takes an interest in education, economy, energy, legal, political and constitutional matters. This is his first blog, guest or otherwise.

Friday, May 6, 2011

If Twitter can break the news, can Empire Avenue make the people behind the news?

Every time a major event takes place in the world surpassing the normal news cycle, social media is the story behind the story and Twitter has the lead role on stage.  Every time the world turns to Twitter to watch a revolution in the Middle East or react to the news of Osama Bin Laden's capture and death at the hands of US Seals (also first leaked on Twitter), we improve our understanding of the power of Twitter. How exactly do people use Twitter and what does that mean?

One day, we will hold Empire Avenue in equal regard.  Not for breaking the news, but for making the people behind the news.

Empire Avenue will dilute the power of the mainstream media to create, cultivate, and foist celebrities on us.  (I'm looking at you, TMZ.) Hence forth, that power shifts to the people.  Talk is cheap.  Eaves are valuable.  Best of all, there's no need to cut down trees.

On Empire Avenue, everybody is an "influencer" but on the internet, people are not that easily influenced.

The only way to get ahead and stay ahead is to play the game with a positive attitude and outside the game, just keep doing what you do best.  People will come to you for the meat and potatoes but fall in love with you for the pudding.

How do you use Empire Avenue: to socialize, spam, get rich or get famous?

In the short amount of time I've spent at Empire Avenue, as one of the recent influx of new arrivals in March/April 2011, I have seen lots of spamming, lots of trading, some serious investing and a little bit of socializing.  What good is a social media exchange where people don't socialize?  Yesterday, I discussed a few of my observations and experiences from my first fortnight at Empire Avenue regarding how people interact with each other on the site in my second guest post at Wise Marketing, a U.K. social media blog.

I playfully called my first article on Empire Avenue an Idiot's Guide to Empire Avenue for Day 1 Newbies here on my own irreverent blog.  But the footfall at Wise Marketing proved they are wiser than I because they chose the title of the article from the opening sentence, What is Empire Avenue?

I don't expect the spamming and trading to ever stop or even slow down.  The serious investors are addicted to the game and are promoting the site through personal channels.  No man is an island unto himself.  All you need for a good social gathering is a good host/hostess and there's no dearth of those in the world.

Next, I'd really love to see people use Empire Avenue to legitimately discover and promote people who provide good content.  I know several cult-like internet celebrities are already making waves at Empire Avenue.  (I'm looking at you Guy Kawasaki and Chris Pirillo.) I'm waiting for the day a rank unknown is discovered, appreciated, feted and crowned.  Full disclosure: I have my eye on that crown.

--Update--May 28, 2011--
It appears the link to my second guest post at Wise Marketing is no longer functional.  So I reproduce here the full text of the article for your reading pleasure:
--Full text of my original article--


What good is a social media exchange where people don't socialize?

So we've established Empire Avenue as the place you want to be.  Now the question is what kind of place is it? 

As hundreds of people join every day, new members struggle to make their presence known and attract investors.  Many take the easy path of least effort and quickest returns.  Link dropping and self-whoring is the order of the day on every single chat room and every single community unless one of the strict "seniors" is around to monitor, admonish and blacklist the culprit.  Outside of the sacred shelters known as Team Zen and The [X] Bar, Empire Avenue feels less like a social networking site and more like the messy raging sprawling house party that grew accidentally and unintentionally out of inviting a couple of gals over one night.   

But even within the hallowed grounds, the talk is all shop talk. "What is your take on dividends/share vs share price vs growth?" "How do you use the Twitter Index in relation to the rest of the site?" "(e) XYZ just signed up. He has 92 thousand twitter followers." "(e) EBAY is in the house. 'Nuff said, am I right?" "Lakers is a fake account.  You will be refunded." "I am developing a share management tool to help your portfolio."

Wager a guess which corner of the internet was not buzzing about Osama this week?  Not even the New York City or Government and Politics community!  I was dumbfounded, especially since the majority of active users are Americans.

Didn't anybody join Empire Avenue to seek meaningful connections with other people outside of 200x200 share exchanges?

Thankfully, somebody from Chile did.  It was a joy to meet and converse with Diego Araya a.k.a (e) VLADISLAV this week.  V (I already have a nickname for him!) was the first person to enter my INDIA chat room where I hoped to promote the INDIA personal community.  Instead, V and I embarked on the most delightfully serendipitous conversation, discovering we both spoke a phrase or more of Spanish, French, Japanese and Arabic.  V's interest in Indian religions provided the solid footing for a larger enriching discussion between a Baha'i st and an agnostic nihilist about god, man and religion, never mentioning but feeling in our bones the unforgettable context of you-know-who who got you-know-what in you-know-where.

Soon, we ran out of broad tolerant respectful things to say and threw the discussion open to the 9 people eavesdropping (not that our talk managed to inspire any of these eavesdroppers to actually drop some eaves on either of us).  A Sindhi man from California introduced himself, old friends showed up, eaves were exchanged, nobody joined INDIA and the conversation drifted towards helping out newbies and sharing the how-to articles published at Wise Marketing. 

Saturday, April 30, 2011

Idiot's Guide to Empire Avenue for Day 1 Newbies

I did more than just give myself a pep talk, mourn Casey Abrams's exit from American Idol and celebrate happy wedding day yesterday (two kisses! woo hoo!).  I also wrote up an idiot's guide to Empire Avenue sharing my list of top ten to-do tips for Day 1 newbies.  Many people get frustrated when they can't figure out the site and drop out quickly.  They don't want to look stupid asking basic questions and they don't know whom to ask.  These people should read my guest post, What is Empire Avenue? at Wise Marketing, a U.K. based social media blog.

Update: Looks like the article is a big hit.  The Spring, a U.S. based social media blog reprinted it as well, with extra information and links I sent them.  Macmanltd, another U.S. blog, reprinted the article as well, without prior permission but with the full text and links intact.  They also bought some of my shares on Empire Avenue a couple of weeks later.

Update on May 28, 2011:  In light of developments at Wise Marketing today, I reproduce below the full text of my original article for your reading pleasure.

What is Empire Avenue?
Watch out Facebook.  Empire Avenue is the latest hottest highly addictive social networking site.  While Empire Avenue capitalizes on the very same human personality trait of narcissism, it takes the idea to its logical conclusion. Instead of declaring a "liking" (of dubious veracity)
for other people, Empire Avenue insists you put your money where your mouse is.  On Empire Avenue, you and I are more than just people. We are in fact, people-stocks. Strangers around the world trade shares in us on a virtual stock exchange for virtual profit.

Why should I join Empire Avenue?
People sign up to find out the market worth of their personal brand and social network. You can list yourself on a public stock index closest to your chief interest, for example, news and media or sports or weapons.  People build portfolios buying people-stocks based on market valuation of social media activity, common interests or personal connections.

How do I earn money and build my net worth on Empire Avenue?In chronological order, here is a to-do list:

1) Fill out your profile and upload a portrait photograph
2) Connect all social media platforms in which you are active - Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, Youtube, Flickr
3) If you have one, connect your blog RSS feed to get it peer endorsed
4) Go about your normal social media activities - tweet, "like"/comment, connect, upload videos and photos
, post on your blog
5) Join city, interest/brand and personal communities
6) Find people via the Search Function or the Twitter Index and buy people-stock
7) Market yourself to potential buyers
8) Reciprocate share purchases as much as you can within your budget
9) Chat with people as much as possible on anything and everything
10) Participate in Special Achievement parties, such as the Royal Wedding

Empire Avenue considers every single one of these actions and transactions as "achievements" and awards you points, known as the virtual currency Eaves. The more you have, the more you can earn.

This is how I met some truly cool people, learned new vocabulary (all newbies get "scalped") and raised my share price 120% by the morning of my sixth day at Empire Avenue, despite two days of inactivity. Try it for yourself. It's fun. But if you are a blogger like me, make sure you read the Terms of Service. You may not want to give Empire Avenue a "non-exclusive, transferable, sub-licensable, royalty-free, worldwide license to use any IP content that you post on or in connection with the website".

(e)Pundit writes on politics, policy, current affairs and human interest news from or related to India at Pundit Comment: http://punditcommentator.blogspot.com

Friday, April 22, 2011

"I'm not hungry!"

This is a guest post authored by EastEnder in celebration of salt, iron, iron fortified iodized salt and food, "yummy" food.

I like to eat strawberries and all kinds of fruit except banana.  I like to eat pizza straight from Italy.  I like English khana.  I like lots and lots of sweet things apart from too much candy.  I like sprouts.

I like bhindi.   I like cheese dosa.  I like plain rice and chicken.  I do like dal but not mixed with rice.  I like the chicken satay that you get in Thai restaurants.

I don't like ham and sausages.  I don't like burgers.  I don't like sunny side up.  I don't like the yellow egg yolk.  I do like scrambled egg and a little bit of omelet.  I love cracking eggs.  I like to make pancakes.

I know that food is called food.  I know that food is yummy.  I know that food is precious.  I know that food is as precious as a pearl or diamond or crystal. 

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