Thursday, January 31, 2008

Thank God for Florida

Rudi Giuliani is finally out of the race, after failing to win the Florida primary (and any of the other primaries so far). As much as candidates like Mike Gravel, Dennis Kucinich, and Ron Paul have struggled to get their message to the public because of the mainstream media's brazen neglect of them (Kucinich had to file a complaint to have a TV network include him in a debate, the network won), Giuliani had it made - the media loved him, foisting his Manhattan-sized smile into voters' faces well before campaigns formally got underway.

The Kucinich episode illustrated the power of the media, Giuliani's failure shows its limitations.

Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Matchmaking 2008

When Hillary Clinton won the New Hampshire primary, her edge was widely attributed to her getting emotional on TV the day before the vote. I am not a big Obama fan but I certainly do like him between the two of them, so I was pretty upset at the outcome. "How stupid can people get, to vote on the basis of ephemeral sentiments?!", I fumed. However, after some chintan, it occured to me that my preference for Obama over Clinton had no objective basis either; I liked him simply he seemed a nicer fellow.

Well then, how does one filter out all personal feelings and vote objectively? Enter the online matchmakers for the presidential candidates. There seems to be a whole bunch of hand-holding available out there - websites that will help you decide the best candidate for you, based on your opinion on political issues. I decided to try out one called SelectSmart.com.

All I had to do was choose between support/oppose/neither on a range of issues from Social Security through Stem Cell Research. Also, I could adjust a moving bar to indicate how strongly I felt about a particular issue. I ended up choosing "neither" on quite a few issues that I was not fully conversant with, while heavily weighing issues like Iraq, gay rights, and deficit spending.

Here is what the matchmaker found for me:

Theoretical Ideal Candidate - 100%
[D = Democrat, L = Libertarian, R = Republican]

1. Ron Paul (R) - 75%
2. Wayne Allan Root (L) - 66%
3. Alan Keyes (R) - 60%
4. Barack Obama (D) - 59%
5. Mitt Romney (R) - 56%
6. John McCain (R) - 52%
7. Mike Gravel (D) - 38%
8. Hillary Clinton (D) - 32%
9. Mike Huckabee (R) - 24%

Proves me wrong about Obama - my love for him was objective, after all!

Saturday, January 26, 2008

A Gandhi falls to McCarthyism 2.0

Yesterday, Arun Gandhi, founder of the M.K. Gandhi Institute of Non-Violence housed in the University of Rochester in New York, resigned from the board of the institute after a post written by him criticizing Israel in a Washington Post online forum drew outrage and condemnation from various quarters.

Here is the complete story. Tucked away in some corner of the Washington Post website is a forum called "On Faith" where the Post invites guest panelists to write on religion and spirituality. Arun Gandhi is one of the regular panelists. On January 7, Gandhi posted a piece titled Jewish Identity Can't Depend on Violence, wherein he strongly criticized the way the Jewish identity has been structured around the Holocaust.
Jewish identity in the past has been locked into the holocaust experience -- a German burden that the Jews have not been able to shed. The world did feel sorry for the episode but when an individual or a nation refuses to forgive and move on the regret turns into anger.

Any nation that remains anchored to the past is unable to move ahead and, especially a nation that believes its survival can only be ensured by weapons and bombs. We have created a culture of violence (Israel and the Jews are the biggest players) and that Culture of Violence is eventually going to destroy humanity.
This is highly abridged. Read the complete post here.

The outrage over the post was phenomenal. There were 400+ responses to the post, most of them highly critical of Gandhi. Abraham H. Foxman, national director of the Anti-Defamation League, announced "I think it's shameful that a peace institute would be headed up by a bigot". The Rochester Democrat & Chronicle, a local newspaper, said of him, "..it's hard to imagine Gandhi being able to function with credibility again in this community".

On January 10, Gandhi offered an apology "for my poorly worded post". The Washington Post also issued an apology, calling the initial post regrettable. But nobody was in a mood to listen by then. The president of the University of Rochester expressed disappointment with Gandhi and said that the apology failed to explain his views. The Rochester Democrat & Chronicle squawked ceaselessly in the days following the episode about Gandhi's "deep moral flaw" and the need for the University to dissociate itself from Gandhi.

On January 17, in a nation that prides itself on the freedom of thought and expression, the hounded Arun Gandhi finally turned in his resignation from the Institute. The resignation was accepted yesterday.

I read Gandhi's post again and again and found it sorely in need of literary finesse, but could not find anything that would justify branding him as morally flawed and a bigot. What do you think?

Friday, January 25, 2008

Corruption and the rule of law

Last week, on a tour of Bundelkhand, Rahul Gandhi evoked his father's famous refrain about only 15 paise of a rupee spent by the Centre reaching the intended beneficiaries. To rub in his claim about Mayawati's incompetence and corruption in the state administration, Gandhi went a step further and degraded the number to 5 paise.

The fact that politicians, no matter how corrupt a stock they come from, always publicly denounce corruption is just another evidence of how widespread the notion of 'corruption=bad' is. But is it always so?

A paper by Douglas Houston in the Cato Journal argues that the belief, though widespread, might not be true for societies that have failed to establish a sound rule of law. Houston created a mathematical model to simulate the effect of corruption on the economy, and uses data from 119 nations to populate his study.

Here is what the study, titled Can Corruption Ever Improve An Economy? [pdf link], finds:
The primary results from this study are that corruption has significant restrictive as well as expansionary economic effects. The relative magnitude of the two forces depends on the degree to which laws protecting property are enforced in a nation. When protections are weak, corruption can play a significant expansionary role for a nation.

Most policy discussions proceed on the assumption that whenever public officials use their public authority for private gain the economy will be damaged. However, corrupt behavior can also affect an economy positively by substituting for bad governance
(emphasis mine).
And here is some advice for governments and international donors who make the curbing of corruption the linchpin of their campaigns:
Corruption should not be indiscriminately attacked in poorly governed countries. It often is symptomatic of the poverty of legal protections. Rather than attempt to increase the cost of corrupt behavior, the appropriate policy in these circumstances is to focus on reducing the cost of engaging in legal transactions.
On too many occasions, I have quarrelled with people who justified the expediency of bribery. I can see all of them now, giving me the "bola tha na!" look.

Wednesday, January 23, 2008

Pot calling the kettle black

A huge public rally addressed by Narendra Modi in Mumbai last week provoked an amusing reaction from Bal Thackeray. Obviously unsettled by the rally's success and the prospect of the BJP unseating the Sena in Maharashtra, Thackeray dressed Modi down, thus:
“Muslims are terrified (of him). This is his formula in politics...but when power goes to our head, you can't say how a person will behave.”
Then it goes over the edge:
''Only the Shiv Sena pattern will work in Maharashtra.''
Hmmm. So Balasaheb, how exactly is the Sena pattern different than the Modi pattern?

Saturday, January 19, 2008

Spot Quiz

Q. Which one of the US presidential hopefuls for 2008:

  • Voted NO for the Iraq war; says the war is illegal
  • Thinks that Iran has an absolute right under the NPT to develop nuclear power for peaceful purposes; opposes war with Iran
  • Wants to cut off aid to Israel and Arab countries alike
  • Said in a televised debate, about the 9/11 attacks: "They dont come to attack us because we are rich and we are free; they attack us because we are over there."

Hint: No, dont look among the Democrats.

Its Ron Paul.

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

Funniest thing I read today

Luos joke bitterly that America will have a Luo president before Kenya does.
[link]
Luo is the tribe in Kenya whose leader Raila Odinga was, some say, cheated out of a presidency by the incumbent belonging to the Kikuyu tribe. Barack Obama's father belonged to the Luo tribe!
:)

Sunday, January 13, 2008

The Way She Shouldn't Move

For the benefit of those with better things to do than read the news: A much-publicized incident took place in Mumbai in the early hours of January 1 when two women partying in Juhu were gang-molested by a large group of men. A couple of Hindustan Times lensmen who happened to be present there captured the incident on camera, thus giving it the national recognition that it subsequently got.

The incident itself and the events that followed offer a treasure trove of reference material for the students of society on a host of topics; to name a few - the power of India's new activist media, the workings of legal-political institutions, and many gender-related questions. Let me air my two paise about the last of these issues; more specifically, the role of gender in the delineation of individual freedom.

For my frame of reference, I use a paper foxily titled The Way She Moves [pdf link] by Shilpa Ranade that appeared in the Economic and Polital Weekly (EPW) last year. The paper, written in super-pedantic style worthy of EPW (just one of the many pieces of work that I fantasize of someday translating into a "for dummies" version, for the masses to enjoy), deals with the idea that the perception of public spaces is not secular but is dictated by the "bodies we inhabit" - who we are, and in the specific case, the gender we wear. Between layers of sociological jargon, the paper carries some great, simple ideas that I found particularly relevant in the Juhu context.

"Don’t make a mountain out of a molehill. Keep your wives at home if you want them safe."

This is D N Jadhav, the Mumbai Police Commissioner, speaking. Serious. Now hear what Ranade and her colleagues found from one of their participatory surveys:

..participants are asked to locate in (a) drawing a group of young boys and a group of young girls of the same age. The girls are (always) marked as playing in the smaller, more defined and enclosed corner of the open compound while the boys occupy the larger central section of the ground.
The paper observes how men have better access to public spaces at all times of the day, while a woman has to "manufacture an appearance of purpose" to be present legitimately in the same space/time. There are other interesting findings on, literally, how women navigate themselves (hence the name of the paper?) through public spaces that are almost always male-dominated.

After all, the "control of women's movement has been central to the maintenance of a gender regime informed by patriarchy...(and)...in many countries this restriction on women's movement is written into the law." Fortunately, there are no laws restricting women's movements in India or Mumbai, which is what Commissioner Jadhav seems to forget. When law enforcers themselves forget the laws, the job of interpreting them falls on citizens. If so, the men must have felt like vigilantes doing their social responsibilities when they reached for the women. And that is what it seems like if you listen to the suspects talking to the media after their release on bail:

"While the newspaper splashed ‘molestation’ pictures, they did not write a word about how the girls in question were drunk. The couples were in an inebriated state. They were smooching on the road. What were they expecting?”
LOL! What were they expecting?! I, male, have been noticeably inebriated in public in various cities, towns, and villages in various parts of the country at various times of the day. I, male, have been noticeably inebriated on trains, buses, cars, motorcycles, on foot, and even on a bicycle. What was I, male, expecting? Censure from law enforcement for violating written laws, yes. But censure and "disciplining" from my fellow citizens for violation of unwritten laws, NO! Why should those women have expected anything different?

Let me wrap up with the following, again from the EPW paper:

For women, the production of respectability is closely connected to manufacturing safety for themselves. Any transgression of boundaries spatially is deemed as a challenge to the status-quo and liable to be punished...smoking in public, going out to night-clubs, travelling alone at night, and so on are various degrees of contradiction of the dominant map of gender-space.
I suppose those girls in Juhu weren't aware of the trade that they, but not their brothers, are expected to make: respectability for safety.

Endnote: The Juhu episode has sufficient qualities to qualify for being a "Prince Media Event". Remember Prince, the 5-year old kid who was rescued from the bottom of a deep borewell in Punjab, while the country watching with bated breath on 24-hour news channels? The prime characteristic of a Prince Media Event is that the episode being gaga-ed over is a pretty everyplace, everytime happening. Kids fall down, fatally, in unprotected wells all the time, and incidents of sexual harassment much serious than the Juhu one happen all the time. But only what you see, not what you know, can hurt you, right?

Monday, January 07, 2008

Think global, act local

Prevailing dogmas in Indian polity leave certain issues unquestioned and unanswered. For example, why would anyone not want a new IIT in their city or state? Avinash, over at Swantah Sukhay, explains why.

Sunday, January 06, 2008

The making of a Nanny State

A couple of legislations enacted by the State of California caught my eye in a year-end legislative review:

Assembly Bill No. 649 - "horse jockey bill" - decrees that since "professional jockeys are vital to the horse racing industry and the work they perform is very dangerous", their riding fee that jockeys earn should be increased by at least the same rate by which the state minimum wage is increased.

Senate Bill No. 250 - "gift card bill" - stipulates that onwards of January 1, 2008, the issuers of gift cards will be forced to redeem the remaining cash value on gift cards, if it is less than $20.
I offer no quarrel if my jockey friends want a bit more to make ends meet, or about the convenience of encashing gift cards instead of carrying them around waiting for the right opportunity to use them. But there is also such a thing as a statutory overreach, no?

Friday, January 04, 2008

Huckabee wins Republican nomination in Iowa

With a platform that combines economic populism and social conservatism, Mike Huckabee embodies the worst of both the Democratic and Republican ideologies.

But hey, lets give credit where its due: he has a cute smile (always reminds me of Dev Anand).









free html hit counter