Awaiting our CHANGE

November 30, 2008

America has voted for a change. Not the red states and blue states but the United States of America has voted for a change. They have voted for one man, the same one man in Texas, NY, California and Wisconsin. The man they know knows about what’s good and bad about their country and trust him to change the bad to good. America is a Democracy.

India is another Democracy, where most people (not me) are very proud of their democracy which has lived for more than 60 years now. Here, people generally vote every 5 years, and the vote for someone who:

– belongs to the same caste as they are

– distributes money and liquor among people as a part of campaign

– will visit their constituency only when the next election is due

– will propagate wrongs of current government rather than proposing solutions

– arrange top security for him, while leaving the people naked to terrorists

– has criminal cases against him, but still is shameless enough to beg/demand for votes

– believes in changing parties and ideologies to remain in power

The mess in which our political system is is because for years most of India has been voting for above reasons. Today, our democracy has become a joke. It has become a playground for some shameless people, who over the years have mastered the art of winning elections in this country and are least bothered about needs of the nation (infrastructure, security, education, health, and energy).

Do I sound like a cynic?

Some of the ‘fans’ of our democratic system will come out advising, vote for a change, or better compete the election yourself. I am sure many young, enlightened individuals follow that advice; we are yet to see a change. These people are insignificant in front of the masters who have spent their lives practicing the art of Indian elections.

So the bottom-up approach to change won’t work, the change has to come at the top. The playing rules have to be changed in order to take the Sonia’s, Advani’s and Mayawati’s out of the system.

Here is an alternate game plan.

+ Anyone can apply to be the president, however the eligibility criteria has to be very tough (highly educated, experience of successfully managing people and resources, ideal candidate would be a someone at the helm of a big organization)

+ The election commission, consisting of elite leaders from all walks of society assesses all applications and selects the top 2 candidates

+ These 2 candidates are asked to create a team of people who would help them assess the current state of the country and draft a plan that would work for next 5 years

+ The election commission associates KRA’s to every section of the plan and these two candidates are allowed to campaign for two – three months so that they can explain their agenda to all sections of the society

+ The entire nation then votes for one of these two candidates and the one who wins, gets to implement his agenda

+ The President runs the country like the CEO of an organization, gets to select his management team and is answerable to Election commission, who assesses the performance of the government on set KRA’s every year

+ The election commission may ask the government to replace the non performers

+ The loosing candidate also gets to give a constructive feedback on the policies employed by the government, but there would be no confidence motion.

+ After 5 years, the presidential candidates remain same unless the current ones choose to retire or their teams decide upon a batter candidate.

In short, would like Ratan Tata, or Narayan Murthy or maybe someone ex- army, run our country like Tata or Infosys, than Advani or Sonia taking turns to exploit the age-old and poor constitution.

I would appreciate some wise reviews of the plan.

SUMIT


Happy New Year … n d wshs

January 1, 2008

Short, crisp, innovative, straight from the heart are the wishes we receive on special occasions such as the new year, via the short text messages in our mobile phones. Unfortunately due to storage limitation in phones, we usually have to delete these precious messages.

To address this problem and to better utilize my blogspace, I have decided to add a separate page to my blog – “The Wishes“. This way I’ll keep all those precious wishes with me forever, whenever I get them.

And anyone visiting this page is bound to get amazed by all the innovative ways people use to say the same old thing …. Happy New Year, Only the figure at the end is what changes … this time it is 2008.

The message I sent out this year, was simple:

Best wishes for the new year to you and your loved ones. Lets welcome 2008. Cheers and keep smiling.”.. Sumit


The last few weeks …

December 16, 2007

So I am on my blog again, it feels like after an era but it has only been a few weeks… huh!!

Every weekday has crawled like a week itself, choc-o-bloc with work work and more work, and the weekends have disappeared either sleeping, shopping or traveling. So here are some random things that were responsible for my busi-ness:

  • Work, ofcourse. Will not crib as i have loved the challenge, but it’s been tough.
  • Misbah ul haq. Whenever I managed to catch up with cricket, I found this batting. His patience failed mine, and I had to change the channel.
  • Table Tennis. This is what has replaced my tea breaks at office, like this game.
  • Shopping. Well my inflated credit card bill is what i am left with after a shopping spree.
  • Shataabdi Express. I went to close friends marriage on a weekend with a group of friends, the Delhi-Amritsar train was my first Shataabdi experience.
  • Golden Temple at 2 am. Yes, after the marriage ceremony and before the train back to Delhi, we decided to visit the Golden temple, and awesome experience (see the pic in my clicks section) and the time was 2 in the morning.
  • Dus Kahanian. Saw this movie last Sunday, and still cannot decide whether the movie was good or bad. A mix of extremely good and bad stories.

Though most part of the last few weeks has been fast, tight and tedious, this weekend seems to be different, it seems to be slow, peaceful, beautiful and long (it’s still Sunday Morning), and while I was wondering why this change I realized that it’s December already. Yes it’s December, my favorite month for multiple reasons and one of them is this beautiful whether. And as i foresee decreasing workload going forward, this december is going to be Happy December as usual.
Sumit


Childhood Memories

November 14, 2007

NG’s last post on Childhood memories, brought back some of my best and tasteful childhood memories. Since she has tagged me to that post, it gives me a better reason to preserve those memories in writing here, before they get stacked under these monotonous daily chores. So here I go … with 5 of those specialities which tickled my taste-buds as a child.

1. Milkfood Ice-cream: Well it was the first Ice-cream that started coming in the cup over the usual ‘Jet‘ ice-creams (those wrapped around sticks) which were a norm till then. The cup was out of the reach of my pocket money (rs 5) and I have been bad at saving, so buttering mom was my only chance at the cup.

2. Sweet Cigarettes: NG has said it, those white sticks with a red tip were a rage at one time, and Phantom was my brand (as i got it at the shop near my house).

 3. Tomato Ketchup: Well yes, not Pakoras but ketchup was my taste. I used to lick the bowl clean to make sure none of the ketchup was wasted. I don’t know whether it was exclusively a childhood thing, or the effect of all those stern looks and scoldings i received for this habit, but now ketchup is nearly a no no for me.

4. Coffee at parties: Coffee at marriage and B’day parties (the one they prepare with that fizzz machine) has been my favorite coffee ever since I was a child. As kids we used to hover around the coffee stall at parties to make sure we got maximum cups, with that tasty choco powder sprinkled over a hot cup of coffee. I bet, Cafe coffee day and Costa Coffee can never have it on their menu.

5. Rasna: I love you rasna, coz no one can beat that smell which that original red rasna carried along with the taste. Now, I am not sure if they manufacture the original red wala rasna, as the last time I checked (couple of years back) they had orange and lemon variants to offer. But I’ll still try to explore the market once again to see if I find my rasna taste and smell again.

Now that my turn is over, I would like to carry on this tasty tag to five others who are listed below:

Once you are through, please tag five people each to carry on the tag.