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Sorted by :  August  2018
by Phil Butler on 31 Aug 2018 4 Comments

Russian President Vladimir Putin dances at a lady’s wedding in Austria, and European media goes nuts. America’s President Donald Trump meets with Russia’s leader, and all of Washington cries out for a coup d’état and a public hanging. Meanwhile, the people of the world wait for solutions to their real problems. Here’s a look at why those solutions will proba...

by Israel Shamir on 30 Aug 2018 1 Comment

As a new military confrontation over Syria is impending, thought out by Israel, prepared by the British and executed by the US, the West’s future depends greatly upon two mavericks, the US President Donald Trump and the UK Opposition Leader Jeremy Corbyn. These two men are as different as you can make. One is for capitalism, another one is a socialist, but b...

by P M Ravindran on 29 Aug 2018 11 Comments

In a residential compound near a stream, three siblings had constructed independent houses and were living with the best of both worlds, the support system of the undivided Hindu family and the freedom of a nuclear family. Two of the houses, of which one was unoccupied temporarily, were single-storied, the third was double- storied. Early in the morning, the...

by R Hariharan on 28 Aug 2018 0 Comment

Though we see words such as vote bank, desi, paratha, thali and child lifter in our newspapers, we never notice them because we have become accustomed to them; familiarity breeding content… During the 1971 war on the eastern front, I shepherded a bunch of foreign media persons who wanted to see some of the captured areas. After trudging through a couple of ...

by N S Rajaram on 27 Aug 2018 3 Comments

Judged strictly on merit, the various Aryan theories rank among the shoddiest examples of scholarship - riddled with scientific contradictions and weighed down by political and racial prejudices. But in influence and longevity, especially in politics, they bid fair to compare with the theories of Einstein and Darwin. The ‘Aryan nation’ became the mantra of...

by Bhaskar Menon on 26 Aug 2018 12 Comments

The story goes that Shiva and Parvati were watching from Kailas one day as a poor old man trudged along a desert road hungry, thirsty and miserable. “Why don’t you help him?” Parvati asked. “I can’t”, said Shiva. “It is his karma.” “You are all-mighty God,” said Parvati. “You can change his karma.” “I can’t”, said Shiva. “The Law of Karma is unbreakable and ...

by James M Dorsey on 25 Aug 2018 2 Comments

Financial injections by Qatar and possibly China may resolve Turkey’s immediate economic crisis, aggravated by a politics-driven trade war with the United States, but are unlikely to resolve the country’s structural problems, fuelled by President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s counterintuitive interest rate theories. The latest crisis in Turkey’s boom-bust economy r...

by B S Harishankar on 24 Aug 2018 8 Comments

Following protests and pressure from Catholic church and mining/quarrying lobbies, another 10-member high-level working group (HLWG), headed by Krishnaswamy Kasturirangan was appointed to study the Gadgil report, review and suggest measures for implementation. The Kasturirangan Committee submitted its report to the Ministry on April 15, 2013. It...

by B S Harishankar on 23 Aug 2018 6 Comments

Torrential rains, overflowing rivers and a series of landslides have currently resulted in the deaths of over 360 people in Kerala. Rivers such as Bharathappuzha, Chalakkudi, Periyar, Pamba, Achankovil and Meenachil, rising from the Western Ghats, are flooding villages and townships. Roads and bridges have been devastated and washed away. Landslides and floo...

by James M Dorsey on 22 Aug 2018 4 Comments

Saudi conduct of its ill-fated war in Yemen coupled with Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s alignment with the Trump administration and Israel, and his often coercive approach to diplomatic relations, has opened the door to challenges of the kingdom’s moral leadership of the Sunni Muslim world, a legitimizing pillar of the ruling Al Saud family’s grip on pow...

by Sandhya Jain on 21 Aug 2018 14 Comments

When Atal Bihari Vajpayee was finally elected for a full tenure in 1999, his detractors began to acknowledge his virtues (liberal, poet, orator, consensus builder) and denigrate his party and parent organisation, the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh. Yet the slogan, ‘right man in the wrong party’, was inaccurate as Vajpayee founded the Bharatiya Janata Party with...

by Vijaya Rajiva on 20 Aug 2018 13 Comments

A program aired on a famous television channel, (Is Carnatic Music being Communalised?, Aug.13, 2018) raised the question whether those who argued that Carnatic music should not have icons such as Jesus and Allah are being needlessly communal. Music is universal, argue those who wish to include Jesus and Allah in their repertoire of songs. A very vocal advoc...

by R Hariharan on 19 Aug 2018 2 Comments

The passing away of Muthuvel Karunanidhi, 94, last of the leaders groomed in the Dravidian stable of rationalist godfather “Periyar” EV Ramasamy Naicker, leaves a huge void in Tamil Nadu politics. The leader, endearingly called Kalaignar (pronounced kalainyar, meaning gifted scholar) by his party cadres, was a man for all seasons. The rise of “Mu Ka” (his in...

by James M Dorsey on 18 Aug 2018 1 Comment

Iran has raised the spectre of a US-Saudi effort to destabilize the country by exploiting economic grievances against the backdrop of circumstantial evidence that Washington and Riyadh are playing with scenarios for stirring unrest among the Islamic republic’s ethnic minorities. Iran witnessed this weekend [Aug. 11-12] minority Azeri and Iranian Arab protest...

by James M Dorsey on 17 Aug 2018 3 Comments

The failure of Western allies to rally around Canada in its dispute with Saudi Arabia risks luring the kingdom into a false belief that economic sanctions will shield it from, if not reverse mounting criticism of its human rights record and conduct of the war in Yemen. It also risks convincing Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman that acting with impunity ...

by K P Prabhakaran Nair on 16 Aug 2018 16 Comments

Many Indians, if not all, have woken up to the virtue of organic foods, as compared to those derived from the highly soil extractive, chemically driven intensive agriculture, euphemistically known as the “green revolution”. There are even States within India which “officially” are “organic”, like Kerala, Odisha. The wealthy can afford “organic” foodstuff, be...

by N S Rajaram on 15 Aug 2018 1 Comment

Indian thinkers have not been blind to the idea of building strength through proper education. Swami Vivekananda had profound insight into the needs of national education. Probably the greatest insight that he brought to the problem was the recognition that education must focus on strength, which alone builds self-confidence. This is the exact opposite of Ma...

by Thierry Meyssan on 14 Aug 2018 1 Comment

It is with prudence and determination that the Russian Federation and President Trump put a definitive end to the domination of the world by transnational interests. Convinced that the balance of powers does not depend on their economics but rather on their military capacities, President Putin has certainly reinvigorated the quality of life for his compatrio...

by Grete Mautner on 13 Aug 2018 7 Comments

The other day, an acid attack in the city of Worcester resulted in a three-year-old suffering serious face and hand injuries. Somehow, the May government that seems to be unable to jump off the Russophobic bandwagon didn’t make an attempt to blame this attack on Moscow. Probably, we can attribute this abnormal pattern of behavior of the sitting British autho...

by Salman Rafi Sheikh on 12 Aug 2018 1 Comment

While the future of the Iran-nuke deal continues to depend upon the will of Europe, China and Russia in the face of US unilateral withdrawal and the latter’s campaign to convince at least Europe to do the same, for Iran the important question is not just the deal now. For it, the more important question is of how to defeat, thwart and circumvent the US sanct...

by B S Harishankar on 11 Aug 2018 10 Comments

In an article, ‘How genetics is settling the Aryan migration debate’, Tony Joseph, former editor of Business World, argued that the population of the Caspian, Central Asian and Indian regions share a common DNA (The Hindu, June 16, 2017). Endorsing the Aryan Migration Theory, Joseph contended that Indo-European language speakers, who called themselves Aryans...

by Rachel Douglas on 10 Aug 2018 4 Comments

After the June and July leadership meetings of the G7 (1) and NATO, marked by acrimony among their members and hostility towards much of the rest of the world, the 10th anniversary summit meeting of BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa) was a breath of fresh air. Held in Johannesburg, South Africa, the event’s official theme was “BRICS in Africa...

by N S Rajaram on 09 Aug 2018 11 Comments

Like many Hindus I often find myself at a loss when called upon to explain to others what Hinduism is. I find this problem of Hindu identity to be particularly acute among Indians living in the West, and other ‘Westernized’ Hindus. What is Hinduism? Is it the observance of festivals like Diwali and rituals like the daily sandhya-vandana? Is it reverence for ...

by James M Dorsey on 08 Aug 2018 2 Comments

Recent Iranian trade figures suggest that the United Arab Emirates, a strong backer of US efforts to squeeze Iran economically, could emerge alongside China as the Islamic republic’s foremost lifeline in seeking to blunt the impact of harsh sanctions. Russia and Oman rather than Europe are emerging as runners-up in possibly enabling Iran to circumvent sancti...

by Sandhya Jain on 07 Aug 2018 12 Comments

A Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) probe into the murder and alleged rape of a nomad child in Jammu’s Rassana village has acquired urgency with the arrest of Talib Hussain, the man who publicly dictated who was guilty and should be arrested for the crime, and instigated the communal polarisation in the region. His arrest on August 1, 2018 for the...

by Tony Ryan on 06 Aug 2018 1 Comment

Crushing people who are genuine healers and medical saviours is a long-established medical tradition in Australia. The doctor who first blew the whistle on Thalidomide, Dr William McBride, was banned from practicing medicine until 1998… almost half a century. He was not recognised for his courageous role until 2018, when an ABC TV journalist unwittingly rele...

by Tony Ryan on 05 Aug 2018 0 Comment

It might well be noted that Australia’s Aborigines in the northern states (NT and Kimberly) receive more such antibiotics and vaccinations than any comparable group in the world, and that because of deficient diet, largely reliant on processed foods and takeaways, plus vast consumption of sugars and carbohydrates, this has had undoubted implications for Abor...

by Tony Ryan on 04 Aug 2018 2 Comments

The history of Autism goes back only 84 years. In 1933, autism was unheard-of. In 1934, the first case of autism was encountered. This occurred months after public vaccination regimes commenced. Fifty years ago, with vaccination regimes much-expanded, the occurrence of autism was declared one in 10,000. Now in Australia autism is reported as one in sixty-sev...

by B S Harishankar on 03 Aug 2018 7 Comments

‘God is dead’ is a phrase that first appeared in Friedrich Nietzsche’s 1882 collection, The Gay Science, and later in his philosophical novel, Thus Spake Zarathustra. To many Europeans, this phrase by Nietzsche summarizes the state of religion and culture in modern European society. One of Christendom’s most prominent atheist advocates is the Italian...

by Petr Lvov on 02 Aug 2018 0 Comment

Mahdi al-Mashat, President of the Houthi Supreme Political Council (the political wing of the Ansar Allah movement) has requested Russia for help in resolving the military conflict in Yemen. In a letter sent to President Vladimir Putin, Mahdi al-Mashat emphasised the “aggression against Yemen” and “the military escalation perpetrated by the Saudi-led coaliti...

by James M Dorsey on 01 Aug 2018 3 Comments

Pakistani prime minister-in waiting Imran Khan’s ability to chart his own course as well as his relationship with the country’s powerful military is likely to be tested the moment he walks into his new office. Pakistan’s most fundamental problems loom large and are likely to demand his immediate attention. He probably will have to turn to the International M...

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