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Friday, 29 April 2011

If North Korea can Destabilise the World

The north has got what it takes. A recession, uranium deposits, technology to fire missiles. It has got what it takes, to make a successful nuclear state. If even a single uranium loaded weapon can be fired at the states it can do enough damage. Japan can be next and India the third target.

Once this is done joan iL wong or whatever he's called will have his hey day and would have proved George Bush wrong.

Enemy of the State!

If you ever find yourself in a position where you find yourself at loggerheads with the policies and features of your parent state, Remember to keep your mouth shut and to follow the forums, blogs and newsletters and voices of friends and to forget the language and grammar. Get the Point!

A persecuting state does not care about its english and grammar. It cares only about what it delivers and persecutes for its own benefit.

In the movie of the same name, gene Hackman helps the unsuspecting black victim will smith to escape the state's wacks.

Why America Requires a Stooge against China?

We are in the third phase of bad american foreign policy. President Obama supported the Indian nation, so that he can have a stronger force in Asia against the Chinese. Russia was the enemy yesterday, the Chinese are the enemies today and You would be the enemy tomorrow.

The Nuclear Weapons Trick

Most countries who claim to own the nuclear weapon actuallly don't, which is because they own the technology but cannot afford the weaponry. The Iraq inspection was a case in question. Nobody stores nuclear arsenals as they cost a lot. Instead, they test them and assemble them when required. Uranium enrichment!

During economic troubles, most won't be able to assemble, store materials or be able to buy the materials for the same. Here (You read it here, first), better than Wikileaks!

Please Don't Grant the UNSC Seat to India?

If UNSC or other such positions are granted to failed nations, soon we would have to follow suit with Namibia, Kenya or Pakistan. Even granting such status to them would be less harmful, but granting it to the Indian state is folly.

The future needs vision not a bullock cart on Rolls-Royce wheels. We need foresight, strategy to tackle the tomorrow, not death and dissipation and eventual destruction.

Those Who Corrupt the Land?

If you reason why so many crores happen to be with businessmen in India today than ever before, here is the secret. They bribe the politicians. Anyone with an income or net worth of more than a 100 crore has earned it by bribing a politician or a government official.
All this crores running around in cities and towns are ill gained. This are men who if investigated won't be able to explain their extraordinary wealth or income.
Is the United States listening? This is the rising nation you point to your children in schools. China, Yes, Indua No. Wake up, see the light, Neanderthals.

The Chinese Attack on India and Its Capture

In the future, if china attacks India, it too will have the same trouble Genghis Khan faced many years before. A combat of numbers and of confused attackers and chaos. He knew he would afce it and avoided for the same.

The future chinese attack will involve nuclear weapons, artillery and eventual flooding of the land by the infantry. Chinese soldiers from delhi to mumbai to bangalore to calcutta. Once the chinese occupy the place they would have to punish the people for their past wrongs and arrogance. The slaughter houses of Japan will be revived on this land and the Chinese will persecute the people of the country of lost origins. Again, history will be repeated as Genghis had slaughtered the Sultan's men at the confluence of the Indus. Cheers!

Why Genghis Khan never attacked the Indian Sub-Continent?

Genghis Khan is a symbol of Mongolia and his face appears on Mongolian banknotes and vodka labels.

Battle of Indus

The Battle of Indus was fought at the river Indus in today's Pakistan in the year 1221 between Jelal ad-Din Mingburnu, the sultan of the Khwarezmid Empire and his only remaining forces of five thousand, and the Mongolian horde of Genghis Khan.
Jelal ad-Din Mingburnu was fleeing to India with his men together with thousands of refugees from Persia, following the Mongol sacking of several cities, including Bukhara and Samarkand, the latter being the Khwarezmian capital. After having won the Battle of Parwan, near the city Ghazna (Ghazni) in eastern Persia, Mingburnu headed for India to seek refuge together with his army of some fifty thousand men and several thousand refugees. However, the horde of Genghis Khan caught up with him when he was about to cross the river Indus, the border of India. The sultan posted most of his men in the way of the Mongols to let him and the refugees pass the river in safety. When the army who awaited the enemy was busy fighting the Mongolian vanguard, Genghis Khan led the main force towards the sultan who was trapped between the Mongols and the river.
The sultan engaged the Mongols with his five thousand men against the Mongols' over ten thousand. This attempt failed however and the soldiers were soon separated from the refugees who were brutally slaughtered. When the sultan realised he was doomed, he and his closest followers crossed the river into India. Only a few of the refugees and probably none of the soldiers made it to the other side alive. Jelal ad-Din Mingburnu spent three years in exile in India before returning to Persia.

A History of Woks

Woks are iron cast utensils used in China. 200 B-C- 200 A.D. The first woks were made by the Han dynasty. The chopsuey, the noodle soup, the dumpling and the dim sum are all made in here. The keyword is stir fry.

Neanderthal: In Search of the Light-Part 3-The Toolmaker

Akaru-Ku sat under the night sky. He was still shaken by the sudden death of his dear friend Bauk-Shau. He sat on the flat rock surface outside his cave, which made for the courtyard. The trees standing beside the rocky platform glistened in the moonlight . He gazed at the stars in the night sky. He had never watched them so intently or persistently before. He was thinking. His normal daily activities never forced him to think. But the loss of a close friend was too deep an occurrence to be forgotten and move over, as happens in the animal kingdom. Death was seen as a happening. It was never mourned over. It happened to reindeers everyday, wild cats died every time there was a brawl, monkeys died of disease and birds died by being hunted by bigger birds. Death was natural, accurate and understandable, until it happened so close. Now, suddenly it did not make sense, seemed distorted and somehow unfair to somebody so young. He tried counting the stars, one at a time. He would start from the left, go over a formation to the right and then would start counting upwards and then downwards, but was still not sure how many made a formation. Then, he would start again and then give up.

As the Neanderthals were predominantly a hunting race, they were dependent on their tools. This tools were passed on every generation to be learnt, mastered and put to daily use. Tools of stone, which needed to be chipped off from the sides with another stone. It needed slow mastery, patience and a lot of dedicated effort to produce a rock worthy enough to cut through the leather of a bison, a boar or an elk. It was tedious work, but it was also part of the daily challenge to get food on the table. Akaru-Ku had watched his father and elders work on the tools, since he was a small boy, and wondered when he would get a chance to try his hand making one. He got to get started when he turned the age of 8. An age when most Neanderthal boys start their hunting and food gathering school to get lessons, before being able to take part in a real hunt. He was both amused and fascinated at how after many chips, the stone turned into a hard, sharp and lethal weapon enough to kill. He would try to count the number of times he chipped at the stone to make a hand stone knife. But every time he did so, he would be lost once again in the chipping and by the time it ended, he would have lost count. So he only had estimates of the number, but never the exact digit required for making a stone knife. He reasoned, the stone knife belonged to the ground from where it came, to the forest-where it belonged and to the animal whose body it would shear. Those were the ones, who would know the number, not the hunter, as it did not belong to him. He was merely a craftsman, wanting to put it to use. Hence, he did not have the knowledge of its number and the stone did not want to share it with him either.

Neanderthal: In Search of the Light-Part 2-The Burial Ground

The community is gathered near a piece of ground into the forest and some distance away from their caves to mourn the death of one of their members. His name was Bauk-Shau, an able hunter in his mid-forties, he had slipped and fell into the rocks near a 30 feet gorge in the ravines. His death was fast, painful and instant. An accident. Not even the men accompanying him could revive him as his skull was fractured, the brain haemorraged and the shoulder broken. It was a disastrous and unfortunate fall for a man known to hunt boars, wild leopards and bison with strength and strategy. An untimely loss of a valuable member and also profound grief at the frailty of life, of how it can steal without warning and kill without mercy.

The burial ground was about an acre in length and breadth. It was covered with mud collected from the river bottom as a mark of respect for the people. The hole was dug into the ground and the man was lowered into the pit and covered with mud. Some flowers were collected from neighbouring fields and glades to cover the mound. The women and children and some men gathered around the mound. Some are trying to still understand their interactions with the dead man. A hunt together, a food gathering jaunt, a wait till midnight to take turns to wake up and other thoughts. The sudden loss of this man is both a shock and a scare. The thought of having been in his place passes a shudder in every man, as they come to terms with this new eventuality of a violent end from an accident. Demau-Que is the head of the community and is in his 50s. He was instrumental in setting up the community together with Akaru-Ku's father, when they moved to the foothills. He has eight children from four wives and makes the decisions for the people. Bauk-Shau was the third son of his father who was one of the early members and had passed away. His brothers stood close by, their heads hung in sorrow and disbelief.
Demau-Que sat quietly near the burial mound and others gathered around him in a circle. He laid the flowers on the mound, sprinkled some water on it, and laid some fruits and nuts on it. One of his brothers brought his hunting knife, his spear and his deer skins to the elder. They placed them on the mound.

The next day was sabbath or fasting day for the community to mourn and hence nobody would eat anything for the entire day. There would be more mourning in Bauk-Shau's cave. Akaru-Ku was close to Bauk-Shau and they would hunt together for bisons near the river glade, where a watering hole was situated. Both, would sit for hours in the foliage waiting for bisons to show up, so they could hurl their spears at them. As Bauk-Shau was known to be impatient and dandy, Akaru-Ku would ask him to wait behind him before throwing the spear at the animal. A perfect timing is required to hit the animal to kill it or else it would be a missed chance and a missed lunch. He would then instruct him to lie low as the animal approached the watering hole. Once the distance between the animal and the men becomes a few metres, Akaru would hurl the spear into the bison's neck. The spear would jam into its shoulders as it would crumble to the ground. The men would run to attack and kill the animal with their hand-axes, if it tried to run away. The captured animal would be dragged by the men to the cave. The throat is first slit open with a Mousterian knife-a stone chipped from sides-to let the blood flow out on the rocks. This would take hours to accomplish as a bison is a full blooded animal. Then, the meat would be chopped into parts to be distributed to all the members. The meat would be enough to feed the people for a neat two weeks. The daily staple was fruits, nuts and gourds collected from the forest and meat provided much needed strength, energy and vigour. Bauk-Shau was known to be a waster and would play around with the animal's bones, while the meat was being scraped from the bones. He would whistle, while beating the bones against the rocks and hoot as they made the various sounds as they hit against the rocks. It amused him no end to see bones making such sounds by hitting a hard surface. As the meat would be cut into pieces, Blau-Pu (Akaru's younger brother) would also skin the animal for its leather. A tool used for this was different from the one used for cutting the meat. Blau-pu would slowly and quietly run the sharp piece of stone under the meaty surface to separate the skin from the flesh. He would eventually become lost in the activity and would have to be hooted at by Akaru to take up another task alongside, such as cleaning the outflowing blood from the meat. Bauk-Shau would hardly involve himself in the butchering. He saw it as a lame and vexing activity. He would rather hunt, maim or try capturing a running away escaping animal. Recapturing a running prey gave him the most joy and the bigger the animal the more the excitement. Adale-So was Akaru's elder brother and though he never took part in hunting the prey along with them, he was to be informed as soon as a prey had been captured and killed. He was the overseer for the hunting party and would direct them to the watering holes or other places, where prey might be present. Once they reached the spot and the prey was sighted, he would return to his own hunting practice of capturing prey. As he was older and stronger than the rest, he would kill a bison, a reindeer or an elk all by himself.
On the fateful day, Akaru and Blau-Pu were moving towards the ravines and the river was full as it had been raining aplenty after the summers. Bauk-Shau was left behind as he was watching and teasing a cluster of honey bees outside their honeycomb on a pine tree. A bee had bitten on his left eye as he had got closer to the comb. His eye had swollen, but he did not mind. Akaru and Blau-Pu kept yelling for him and gave up. Eventually, he relented and gave up on getting some honey from the comb. As he moved towards the ravines, he had to cross the gorge, which was a waterfall escaping into the ravines from the waters from the hills. He tried to keep his balance, but as he walked on top of the gorge, his eyes started blurring from the bee bite, his vision grew blurry and he slipped into the gorge.
Some people from the neighbouring limestone quarries had come to see the burial. It was rare to see somebody dead. A group of 15, who once lived with the community, but had broken off to live in the quarries. Game was easier and faster to obtain in the quarries. Brothers, relatives, elders who had moved on for better gains. They brought a reindeer for the family of the dead and handed it over. It was a token of bereavement and folly. It was a token of being related. It was a token of guilt for having left the community for an easier life. An elderly man moved over to Demau-Que and handed over the game to him. He accepted it and placed it beside him. Two men came over and stood by the elder. Demau-Que explained them what had happened. They listened intently with horror in their eyes and apparently shell shocked by the nature of the death. It was a lesson for them from mother nature for those who played pranks with its workings. An act of punishment for being laggardly, wasting and eventually perishing without trace.

Neanderthal: In Search of the Light-Part 1

In the beginning of time, when the first men awoke from their animal sleep they saw a world much different, new and unexpectedly challenging. This book describes the struggle, travails and eventual victory of early man to transition from animal to man. It is also an insight into the ways, the lifestyle and into the mind of the food gatherer, the hunter and the eventual farmer.

The predecessor of the Neanderthal was the Australopithecus. The Neanderthal eventually transitioned to become the modern man (through the Cro-Magnon) who built the early villages, towns, and cities. Carbon dating lists the Neanderthal to have lived between 600,000–350,000 years ago. A Neanderthal was well-built with strong bone structures. Most were carninvorous, whereas some were food gatherers.

Akaru-Ku, who is a young Neanderthal in his early 20's has been raised by his community which stays at the foothills of the North-Rhine Westphilia hills in the Neanderthal valley 12 km east of Dusseldorf in early Germany. His father had moved to Germany from the borders of France due to floods and famines in the region. The community is made of both food gatherers and hunters. He has four half brothers and two sisters.

The Neanderthal men and women cover themselves with animal skins to protect themselves from the cold and it is also their basic clothing. The men are occupied in fishing, hunting and food gathering. The community has about 25 to 30 people in all and they live in caves near the foothills of the mountains. The Neanderthal valley is covered by dense forests and animals such as Bears, Snow Leopards, the Sabre Tooth, Lions and Boars are in plenty. The forest is abundant with wild trees of all species and genus. Fresh fruits, berries, and gourds are some of the food gathered and collected by the Neanderthal. Men hunt the boar with their home made spears sharpened with jasper and stone heads. Axes with stones tied on top of them are also used to hurl at animals from a distance to kill, maim or dumbstruck them. The aim of the Neanderthal is remarkable and every weapon is executed with force and alacrity to meet its purpose. A hunting team usually has three to four men to kill and capture a boar, a wild bison, or a reindeer. Wild animals which stray near the homes or crossing their paths are scared off by howling, beating weapons together or on the ground and also by throwing stones at the predator. Spears are used to attack a wild beast in an encounter to kill it. The Neanderthal confronts everything from a wild bear or a wild cat with instant vigour, forced vitality and an inner desire for victory over the animal. Every animal brought down during a showdown is seen with pride and gratification by the community and the victor who brings such trophies most often gets to think, act and decide for the community. Wild animals are not eaten, but their bones, teeth and claws become trophies and ornaments and their leather is used for clothing. The Neanderthal spoke in a language of howls and grunts much like animals and the phonetics was unclear unlike modern humans who developed a clear and concise language. They had strong arms, legs and ribs making them the strongest among Homo Sapiens.

In all, the Neanderthal lives for the day, he has no concern for the tomorrow and he waits for every day to bring him new trophies and surprises. A typical Neanderthal goes to sleep at 10 in the night while his mates keep watch outside the caves till 2 and wakes by 4 to go hunting in the early morning. A early morning hunt yields boars and wild deers at the watering holes and in the foliages. Birds such as pigeons, fowl and woodpeckers are also hunting material for the Neanderthal. The winter is cold and long stretching from late October to late March. The summers are short and rain is frequent during all seasons. The Spring brings new fruits and autumn sheds the foliage from trees. The rivers and lakes are abundant with fresh water and springs are available close to the caves from this water sources. Fish is also a staple and is hunted with bare hands and spears by walking through the lakes and rivers.

Saturday, 23 April 2011

Civil Liberties: Or the State as a Terrorist

Random and massive violations of civil liberties in the Indian state has resulted in its prosperity enabling it to cash on the technology boom. Now, if you know persecuting people or forcing them to perform actions against their wishes always helps states to move ahead than others. Bad governance and corruption are key to this behaviour. A corrupt government machinery flows into mainstream society, just as a drain overflows during flood and mixes with well or lakes or other sources.

Persecution of weaker sections of society for one's own gain is also rampant. A black president unaware of politics, geographies and its dynamics, and failing morales of people in power. Its a sad state of affairs we live in and accept as natural. This is for all the silent sufferers down there who are tormented by these unknowledgeable people. The american foreign policy is also to blame as it is rhetorical and responsible for creation dichotomies or differences and is unaware of real people and their lives. Helping one nation to fight another is not or never a solution. Medicare or anything else is not cheap or affordable anywhere. It is only your escape route as you are not aware why you are in politics or why you wanted to be president. There is only one power in Asia and as of now it isn't belligerant. Please do not start anything new.

Thursday, 21 April 2011

The Nation as Cheat Trial

Government spending and funding to other nations. Many hardly have any idea most funds dissappear into hands not even remotely connected to their affairs. A magi in the ranks.

That magi my friend are the law makers and guardians of your nation, who secretly pass on funds into imaginary political goals and strategies.

End of Time

The Prophecies and soothsayers of yesteryears predicted a doomsday for the 20th century. Floods, droughts, famine, and eventual destruction of human kind. If that is ever going to be true, then it might be. Does time have an end? Does history have an end? Perhaps yes and perhaps no.

Thats, because by popular theory as time approaches its end, the universe is thrown from a single black warp like phenomena or entropy into a white warp. Thus, one after the other the constant churning of matter.

History behaves as people objects and events do and they too are transferred to this other place from the event horizon. If you find anything amiss or missing you better know that something moved on to the other side. Time is unstable as a quantity and if something has to happen it might happen because its its character to be.

Monday, 18 April 2011

Arabica Coffee-The Originator of the Coffee Bean

Most do not know this fact. Coffee originated in the Arabian peninsula and its present name is derived from the place Kaffa in Ethiopia. This coffee is most produced in Brazil as the climate, soil and altitude are ideal for its cultivation. Of the forty or so species of coffee, Arabica is said to be the most premium.

Sedition in a Democracy:Paradoxes of the Indian State

In recent times, there has been a conatnt push for persecution of people making statements against the state in the Indian state. The world view has been only cautious with respect to such charges. A democracy allows freedom of speech.

By classifying statements as sedition only makes lives of the political leaders easier to persecute the weak and the honest. The States, European leaders and others have been very cautious dealing with such factors.

Again, the American factor shows up, wanting to project the state as a rising nation, whic it is not. The American connection in Iraq was to change goverments. It is much worser today as it plays with the lives of the right, well-meaning and the righteous. From, yesterday's bad to today's evil. If iraq was bad, then the India story is evil which the American political establishment must accept as ther wrong doing. The sooner the better.

And, recognizing the Indian state as a failed or failing state, due to its ever increasing cases of bad governance, corruption and sedition charges, and accepting it as a "banana republic' is both important and necessary.

Why the Indians are Not in?

So much emphasis on a country still mired in bad governance, corruption, poverty and ever growing bad infrastructure. Inspite of knowing this truths, United States and other nations have pushed for the UNSC seat for this country.
Not knowing, this will jeopardise the well being of well meaning people in this country and other asian countries. The country's population is overlimit. Its resources not enough to sustain its people. Its politacl leaders are corrupt and incapable.
By promoting this people, the States, the French and the Russians have only made case for a much weaker world.

The French Connection

If the American story is poor, then it is complicated by the French. The Sarkozy is perhaps not even aware of the poor representation he makes for his country men when he compromises political reality for economic perks from the Indians or the Chinese.

A new Contract-Defense or Science is enough to appease this man for more politically wrong statements.

American Rhetoric: Or Why Our Leaders Fail Us

Since the financial breakdown of 2008 there has been a constant upheaval on the political front. The calmpdown on the economy is only complicated by factors such as short sighted leaders. The American failing foreign policy is more visible today by its continuous push of the India Story. If we really rake the inside of this, you will find it is more of a political ploy to gain support against the chinese.

If only our leaders grew up to realities and saw the light, they would realize they are responsible for the misery of their people by working on agendas that are not in the books.