Thursday, January 19, 2006

SR633m Goes Up in Smoke Yearly /

----- Original Message -----
From: Harikrishnan.K.P
To: naamhs@gmail.com
Sent: Thursday, January 19, 2006 12:02 PM
Subject: SR633m Goes Up in Smoke Yearly

SR633m Goes Up in Smoke Yearly
P.K. Abdul Ghafour, Arab News

Saudi Arabia consumes more than 15 billion cigarettes annually. (File photo)

JEDDAH, 19 January 2006 - The hazardous habit of smoking, the main cause of
lung cancer that kills more than 1.5 million worldwide annually, is growing
in Saudi Arabia, especially among its younger population.
According to a report issued by the executive office of Gulf Cooperation
Council health ministers, Saudi Arabia consumes more than 15 billion
cigarettes worth SR633 million a year. The Kingdom is one of the world's
largest importers of cigarettes, it said.
"Lung cancer is spreading among Saudi men and women at the rate of 3.9
percent," it pointed out.
Smoking is rampant even among doctors, the report said, adding that about
six percent of female doctors in the Kingdom have joined the bandwagon of
smokers.
The Kingdom's Western Region, whose main cities are Jeddah, Makkah, Madinah
and Taif, accounts for the highest number (26.8 percent) of smokers while
the Northern Region represents the lowest number with 14.9 percent.
Saudi women compete with their male population to smoke off their health and
pollute the country's clean environment. Women in the Eastern Province have
got the credit of being the country's largest tobacco consumers (45.5
percent).
Diseases caused by smoking kill more than 1.5 million people worldwide
annually, the report said, adding that the figure could hit 10 million by
2020.
The Saudi Health Ministry has taken a series of measures to reduce the
number of smokers in the country. It used this Haj season as a suitable
occasion to educate smokers to quit the unhealthy habit.
Entitled "Let's Make Makkah and Madinah Free from Tobacco," the ministry's
anti-smoking campaign was focused on keeping the pilgrims posted on the
serious health and economic consequences of smoking.
The event coincided with a landmark decision taken by the Madinah
Municipality on Jan. 1, banning the selling of tobacco and its ingredients
at shops around the Prophet's Mosque.
The government has banned smoking in many public places, such as schools,
universities, health and sports institutions, government buildings and
public transport. Violators of the rule would be fined SR200 on the spot.
The ministry has established specialized clinics to help people quit
smoking. But nicotine makes it hard for them to quit as it is as addictive
as heroin and cocaine.
Smoking causes not only lung cancer but also other kinds of cancer such as
cancer of the mouth, voice box (larynx), throat (pharynx), esophagus,
bladder, kidney, pancreas, liver, cervix, stomach, colon and rectum, and
leukemia.
Smokers are twice as likely to die from heart attacks as are nonsmokers.
Women who smoke are more likely to have a miscarriage or a lower
birth-weight baby, medical experts say.
Smoking is no more considered a fashion or a matter of prestige. Studies
show smoking employees cost businesses more as they are out sick more
frequently. Smokers put the health of those around them in danger. Studies
have shown that secondhand smoke causes thousands of deaths each year from
lung cancer and heart disease in healthy nonsmokers.

---

Don't vote against Iran again
When the International Atomic Energy Agency convenes an emergency meeting of
its Board of Governors in the next few weeks, India must not allow itself to
be dragooned into joining the Washington-led nuclear lynch mob against Iran.
http://www.hindu.com/2006/01/19/stories/2006011901171000.htm

---

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Saturday, January 14, 2006

K. Narayanan, The Hindu's first Readers' Editor / On Resource Mobilization

K. Narayanan, The Hindu's first Readers' Editor
Aim is to institutionalise the practice of self-regulation, accountability &
transparency

CHENNAI: The Hindu has perhaps become the first newspaper in India to
appoint a Readers' Editor, who will be "the independent, full-time internal
ombudsman."

Making the announcement at the conclusion of "two lectures" by the Editor
and the Readers' Editor of The Guardian, The Hindu 's Editor-in-Chief N. Ram
said: "The key objectives of this appointment are to institutionalise the
practice of self-regulation, accountability and transparency; to create a
new visible framework to improve the accuracy, verification, and standards
in the newspaper; and to strengthen bonds between the newspaper and its
millions of print platform and online readers."

Editor of The Guardian Alan Rusbridger spoke on the topic "Do newspapers
have a future?" while the newspaper's Readers' Editor Ian Mayes outlined his
role and the canvas of his interaction with the readers as "The news
ombudsman - a visible presence, an independent voice."

---

On Resource Mobilization

Resource mobilization, in any economy, entails taxing the rich.
Unfortunately, the experience of the past decade-an-a-half has shown that
successive Governments at the Centre have not only abdicated their
responsibility in this regard, but have handed out largesse to the affluent
sections year after year through tax-cuts of all varieties. Besides
contributing to rising inequalities, this has also resulted in a significant
fall in the tax-GDP ratio in India and constrained the ability of the
Government to undertake development expenditure. The UPA Government has to
muster the required political will in order to reverse such policies. Some
proposals for resource mobilization are suggested below.

1. Collect Tax Arrears: Income Tax arrears to the tune of nearly Rs.
99,000 crore and customs and excise arrears of another around Rs. 16,000
crore have piled up till 2005-06. Collection of central and excise arrears
had registered significant growth in 2004-05. Stepping up the momentum, the
Government should make a determined effort to recover the huge income tax
arrears. The recovery of even a fraction of the Rs. 1,15,000 tax arrears
would go a long way in generating resources for the Government. The
Government should set an overall target of recovering tax arrears worth Rs.
1,00,000 crore.

2. Tap Cash Reserves of CPSUs: An analysis of 57 Central Public Sector
Undertakings having positive net worth and net current assets, based upon
the Public Enterprises Survey, 2003-2004, indicated that only 17 PSUs had
invested more than 33 % of their Reserves and Surplus in the year 2003-04.
The remaining 40 PSUs have invested less than 33 %, and a considerable
number have practically not invested at all. In the aggregate, there are 50
CPSUs, which collectively have reserves and surpluses of Rs 2,21,157 crore,
amounting to nearly 7.5 % of GDP, but are actively investing only Rs 81,805
crore, i.e. 37 % of the available resources. A part of these reserves are of
course lent to the Government by holding securities. However, this
disturbing trend towards underinvestment needs to be reversed at once and
the CPSUs reinvigorated to undertake massive capital expenditure,
diversifying their activities if necessary. The Government should also seek
special dividends from those CPSUs, which are holding very high levels of
liquid reserves, in order to finance expenditure in social sectors or
infrastructure. Moreover, they should also be asked to raise the rate of
nominal dividends. The Government should set a target of Rs. 25,000 crore to
be mobilized through dividends from the CPSUs.

3. Restore Capital Gains Tax: The abolition of the long-term capital
gains tax on traded shares and units of Mutual Funds and the reduction of
the short-term capital gains tax to 10 % in Budget 2004 were unnecessary
moves, which has led to revenue losses to the tune of thousands of crores
and encouraged speculative activities in the stock market. Prof. Amaresh
Bagchi of the NIPFP has written, "Since much of economic power accrues to
asset owners in the form of rise in asset values, a tax system that fails to
tax capital gains remains gravely deficient and creates a strong bias in
favour of the rich. Not taxing capital gains also offends efficiency in that
it discriminates in favour of activities like speculation, which beget large
gains quickly, as against risk taking in ordinary business.exempting
long-term gains from only listed equities, as is now proposed, offends not
only fairness but also efficiency by discriminating against the unorganised
corporate sector and unincorporated enterprises - the small and medium
sector - where the bulk of our economic activities take place. In sum, there
is no good reason to exempt long-term capital gains from taxation, and that
too selectively for gains from listed equities, or for taxing short-term
gains at a rate lower than applicable to other incomes, as has been proposed
now. It will grievously damage the income tax base and offend both equity
and efficiency. Can the transaction tax be a substitute for a tax on capital
gains? The answer plainly is "no".[it] can in no way replace the income tax
any more than a sales tax can." (Business Standard, 21.07.04) In order to
correct this pro-speculation, pro-rich slant in the tax system, the
Government should tax capital gains at a flat rate of at least 15%. (It is
noteworthy that most investors in the US pay capital gains tax @ 15% with
some categories of assets inviting capital gains tax @ 25% to 28%)

4. Strengthen Securities Transaction Tax: The primary purpose of the
Securities Transaction Tax (STT) is to check speculative activities and
prevent volatility in the capital market. What the Government seeks to
achieve through differential rates for short-term and long-term capital
gains (i.e. to discourage short-term speculative activities) can be attained
through the STT, provided it is executed properly. The proposed rate of the
STT in Budget 2004 was 0.15 %, to be paid by the buyers in all segments of
the market (equities, bonds, government securities, and derivatives). Due to
protests from market players and intermediaries, the rates were reduced. It
was decided that 0.075 % STT would be charged both on the buyer and the
seller for equities in the case of delivery-based transactions, a paltry
0.015 % for day traders, 0.01 % for the derivatives segment, and nil for
bonds and government securities. The Government lost hundreds of crores
because of this dilution of the STT brought about under pressure from the
speculators and brokers. The STT for day traders was increased from 0.015 %
to 0.02 % cent in Budget 2005. Experience has shown that the doomsday
scenario painted by the critics of the STT were wrong, with the stock
indices surpassing all future highs even after the STT has been introduced.
However, if the objective of the STT is to reduce market volatility and
encourage long-term investments in the stock market, there is no good reason
why the rates of the STT should not be the same for all kinds of stock
transactions, be it delivery-based or non-delivery based, especially since
more than half of the total trading volume in the Indian stock market is
non-delivery based (day-trading). A flat rate of the STT should be fixed at
least at 0.10 % for both delivery-based as well as non-delivery based
transactions. There is no good reason to exempt bonds, derivatives and
government securities transactions from the STT and the same rate should
apply to them as well. The proposed rate of STT, along with the proposed 15%
capital gains tax, can together contribute an additional Rs. 5000 crore to
the exchequer.

5. A Nominal Tax on Foreign Exchange Outflow: The Government should
consider imposing a nominal tax on all foreign exchange outflows. This can
be done easily by levying a nominal 0.5% tax on all purchases of foreign
exchange in India with an exemption limit of $5000. Overseas aid and debt
repayments made by the Government should of course be exempted. The
Government can also exempt items of essential imports from its purview. This
small tax would not only generate substantial revenue but also help to
stabilize 'hot' money flows into our economy and provide some protection
against capital flight. This would also discourage capital flight through
overinvoicing of imports. A sum of Rs 5000 crore can be mobilized through
this tax.

6. Rationalize Corporate Tax Exemptions: Despite having a scheduled
corporate tax rate, which is comparable with developed countries, the
effective tax rate for the private corporate sector in India continues to be
low due to the myriad exemptions. Although some steps were taken in Budget
2005 to do away with some of the corporate tax exemptions, the corporate tax
rate itself was slashed at the same time. This was avoidable. The various
tax exemptions that exist today need to be rationalised. The Government
should urgently review the tax incentives under Section 80IA and 80IB of the
Income Tax Act. Currently, 100% profits are exempted from taxation for a
period of 10 years for infrastructure projects like Highways and Ports,
provision of Telecommunication services, development, operation and
maintenance of Industrial parks and Special Economic Zones and generation,
transmission and distribution of Power. The rate of deduction as well as the
period of the tax concession can be reduced for these infrastructure
projects as well as for industrial undertakings set up in the industrially
backward states. Moreover, exemptions that have been allowed for sectors
like Housing, Shipping, Hotel, Oil Refining etc. should be phased out.

7. Review Export Incentives: The existing set of export incentives also
needs to be reviewed. An estimate made by the Revenue Department suggested
that total duty foregone on account of export incentives was Rs. 39,704
crore, which was 13.6% of total export revenue in 2003-04 (Business
Standard, 08.08.04). Multiplicity of export incentive schemes has also led
to their misuse. The Government should immediately phase out schemes like
the DEPB and EPCG besides curtailing revenue losses on account of Drawbacks
and Advance Licence. Moreover, the tax incentives provided to the SEZ units
under the SEZ Act 2005 also needs to be revisited. Since SEZ units enjoy
customs and excise duty exemptions any way, the case for providing 100%
exemption from tax on profits for the first 5 years and 50% for the next 5
years does not seem to be justifiable. The Exim Policy of Government also
allows duty concessions to the SEZ units for conditional sales to the
Domestic Tariff Area (DTA), which clearly discriminates against exporters
outside the SEZs. Such concessions should be phased out. Overall, the
Government should be able to mobilize Rs. 10,000 crore through the
rationalization of the corporate tax exemptions and export incentives.

8. Broaden Service Tax Base: Although the Service sector accounts for 52
% of India's GDP, tax mobilization from this sector is a small proportion of
total tax revenue. The increase in the rate of the Service Tax to 10% in the
Budget 2004-05 and the broadening of the Service Tax net in 2005-06 were
steps in the right direction. However, the Service Tax target for 2005-06
remained at Rs. 17,500 crore only. M. Govinda Rao of the NIPFP had quoted
estimates by a Government appointed Expert Group to show that the size of
the tax base in respect of some key services like transportation and
storage, post and telecommunications, banking and financial institutions was
likely to be almost Rs 70,000 crore in 1999-00 (EPW, October 20, 2001). He
had suggested broadening the Service Tax base to cover all services except a
well-defined negative and exemption list. The Government should move fast in
this direction. While drawing the exemption list, the Government should be
cautious in avoiding further concessions for sectors, which already enjoy
the benefits of tax incentives, like the Information Technology Enabled
Services. The Government should set an immediate target of mobilizing an
additional Rs. 10,000 crore by broadening the Service Tax base.

9. Mobilize more Wealth Tax: The rate of the Wealth Tax should be
increased from the current 1 % to 3%. The base of the Wealth Tax should also
be broadened. It is evident from the collection of only Rs 265 crore on
account of Wealth Tax in 2004-05 that a lot of scope remains to improve upon
the collection efficiency as well. In rural areas, the base for Wealth Tax
is very low since agricultural land is exempted from being a taxable asset.
The Government should consider the imposition of a land ceiling beyond which
Wealth Tax exemption should not be granted. Moreover, a tax on conversion of
agricultural land for non-agricultural purposes may also be considered.

10. Introduce Inheritance Tax: India does not have any inheritance tax,
while almost all developed countries do. The Government should consider
imposing a progressive Inheritance Tax with a base level of 1% and an
exemption limit of Rs. 15 lakhs. An additional Rs 5000 crore can be
mobilized through the Wealth and Inheritance Tax.

11. Increase Excise Duty on Luxury Vehicles Run on Diesel: Diesel
prices in India are kept low through subsidies in order to facilitate
affordable public transport, low-cost carriage of goods across the country
and benefit the farmers who use diesel in running pump-sets and tractors.
The price differential between petrol and diesel, however, is exploited by
the auto industry to produce diesel run models of their popular cars, which
have less running costs. These private vehicles running on diesel get undue
advantage from the subsidy. Besides, this segment should be taxed with a
higher rate in order to discourage private cars and encourage public
transport, keeping in mind the immense damage that vehicular pollution is
doing to the environment in our cities. The Central Excise Duty levied on
luxury cars and SUVs run on diesel should be increased from the current rate
of 24%. The customs duty on imported cars as well as imported components for
luxury cars should be increased as well.

12. Increase VAT/Sales Tax Rate on Items of Luxury Consumption: Luxury
consumption has to be taxed at a higher rate. A Schedule of luxury items,
which are consumed only by those who are very rich, like diamond jewellery,
luxury cars etc. should be drawn up by the Government. Consumption in places
like Five-Star Hotels should also be included. This Schedule of luxury
consumption items should invite a higher rate of sales tax/VAT. Over 400
shopping malls are currently operating in India and many more are likely to
come up in the near future. These large organized retailers earn huge profit
margins because of economies of scale. Small unorganized retailers find it
difficult to compete with them. A surcharge on the sales tax/VAT payable at
shopping malls should be levied, which besides generating revenue, would
also help in creating a level playing field for small retailers.

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Thursday, January 05, 2006

Friday, December 30, 2005

Indian shares King Faisal international award / `Exhumed bo/dies' case: CBI probe ordered / free ebooks /

Indian shares King Faisal international award

The award consists of 24 carat, 200-gram gold medal and a cash award of
$200,000

DUBAI: An Indian mathematician has been named the co-winner of the King
Faisal International Prize for 2006, in recognition of his path-breaking
research, which has strengthened links between mathematics and physics.

M. S. Narasimhan, an honorary fellow at the Tata Institute of Fundamental
Research in Mumbai, shares the prize with United Kingdom's Simon Kirwan
Donaldson, president of the Institute of Mathematical Sciences and Professor
of Mathematics at Imperial College, London, for their seminal contributions
to mathematics, which also helped provide a foundation for physical
theories.

Prince Khaled Al-Faisal, Director-General of the King Faisal Foundation,
said the prizes would be distributed to the winners on February 18.

The two mathematicians' work has helped to establish strong ties with the
formulation of quantum chromo dynamics for which the King Faisal Prize in
physics was given last year, the Foundation said. Each of the five prize
categories consists of a certificate, hand-written in Arabic calligraphy,
summarising the laureate's work; a commemorative 24 carat, 200-gram gold
medal, uniquely cast for each prize; and cash award of $200,000. - PTI..

---

`Exhumed bodies' case: CBI probe ordered

Ahmedabad : The Gujarat High Court on Thursday directed the Central Bureau
of Investigation (CBI) to investigate the case of "exhumed bodies,"
suspected to be those of post-Godhra riot victims, near Lunawada in
Panchmahals district.

Justice C. K. Buch issued the direction in response to a writ petition
jointly filed by social activist Teesta Setalvad and riot-affected victim
Ameena Habib Hasool, demanding that the case be transferred to the CBI. The
CBI has also been ordered to file its report before January 30.

---

----- Original Message -----
From: nowshad yusuf
To: Rifa Group Mail
Sent: Thursday, December 29, 2005 9:46 AM
Subject: Free e-books

Dear Friends,

Are u interested in reading ? Visit the following site and enjoy reading of
thousands of e-books FREE!!!!!

www.gutenberg.org/

rgds
NOWSHAD PALAKKAD

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Saturday, December 10, 2005

Fw: Kaun Banega Crore Pati claims its first victim!


----- Original Message -----
From: saraswathy menon
To: malininam@hotmail.com
Sent: Saturday, December 10, 2005 1:42 PM
Subject: FW: Kaun Banega Crore Pati claims its first victim!

Kaun Banega Crore Pati claims its first victim!

New Delhi- The tremendously popular TV game show,"Kaun Banega Crore Pati"
claimed its victim in the capital. Mrs Neelam Arora, utterly disgusted with
her husband's inability to answer the simplest of questions, divorced him
immediately after the end of the show. The
entire event has shaken the capital to the core and has left the local
populace in a state of daze. Mrs Neelam Arora, when contacted, was all fire
and fury. "How can you stay married to a dumb brick who cannot answer even
the first 1000 Rupees question? Even a 6 year old
can answer such questions, but my husband, I mean, my ex-husband
*%$#@&*(unprintable) couldn't do it.

That's why; I called a lawyer immediately and filed divorce papers."
She also added that all her friends and relatives supported her move. She
also dismissed the suggestion that her husband, for motives best known to
him, could have deliberately flunked the question. Mr. Pankaj Arora, a
property dealer in one of the colonies of East Delhi, was happy when he got
the news from the Star TV network that he had got selected, one among
millions, for participating in the popular show and he considered himself
lucky to be so chosen. He was also told to bring his wife along to the
studios at Mumbai where the game shows were to be hosted by Mr Amitabh
Bachhan. Winning a crore was hardly in the mind of Mr Arora and all Mr
Pankaj Arora wanted to do there was to gape at his idol and may be he
thought he could try to sell him a few of the plots of his clients to
Amitabh at a small tidy margin. But Mrs Arora was made of sterner stuff.

Mrs Neelam Arora, ever the ambitious wife, now took charge of her indolent
husband. She hired the best tutor from Sachdev Tutorials, made him learn all
the countries and capitals in the world, currencies of different countries,
names of different states, rivers, towns in the country etc. After 3 weeks
of gruelling schedule of cramming, Mr Arora and Mrs Arora confidently
embarked on their journey to Mumbai, little knowing that the game show was
to
change their lives forever. Mr Arora was one among the 10 hopefuls selected
for the 'fastest finger first' event.

Amitabh appeared in flesh and blood and Mr Pankaj Arora, whose lifetime
ambition, was to see his childhood hero in person, felt a sense of
fulfillment and pressed some buttons in a hurry. Mr Arora couldn't believe
it! Mrs Neelam Arora felt like a mother whose favourite kid had won the best
baby show. Not only had he given correct answers, but he had done so even
before others could begin!

There was a hubbub around the auditorium as Mr Pankaj Arora gingerly took
the seat from Amitabh for everyone was convinced that history was going to
be made that day. There was suspense in the air and the audience could sense
money floating all around them. Amitabh Bachhan started the show by smiling
benignly at the nervous Mr Arora, the kind of smile he would give to a ABCL
investor, clapped his hands and read out the question. "Mr Pankaj Arora,
yehi hai aap ka pehla sawaal. Who wrote 'Valmiki Ramayan'? The choices are
A. Tulsidas B. Ramanand Sagar C. B R Chopra D. Valmiki?" Mr Pankaj Arora
very
promptly said, "Ramanand Sagar!". He had not forgotten the days when he used
to get up early on Sundays solely to watch the epic. Amitabh again smiled
the benign smile, cajoled him to use his lifeline, audience poll etc., but
Mr Pankaj Arora, like a true blue property
dealer, didn't budge from his position. He later told everyone sobbingly
that he wanted to preserve the lifelines for using them after touching the
25 lac mark Amitabh commiserated with him and told a shocked Mr Arora that
his answer was wrong. The pin-drop silence that followed immediately was
only to be broken by loud angry shriek from a female, that vidently from a
female, who had been done in by her husband.

She shouted immediately, "Is there a lawyer in the house?".

Before the pandemonium that broke out could settle in, Mr Arora and Mrs
Arora had parted ways as husband and wife. This event has caused great
sensation among the community of TV viewers and the effect has been electric
among the chronic followers of this game show. Whether this
'wife-divorcing-husband -for-flunking-the-first- question' event, will drive
away all husbands from the show or pull them with magnetic attraction to the
greatest TV game show ever, only time alone can tell - Agency news.

KAUN BANEGA CHORPATI

Its regarding Kaun Banega Chorpati - 2 (KBC - 2)

You all know it's a good business. But have you ever pondered. How Good??
Any guesses?? Let's see..

Airtel is charging Rs. 6 per SMS sent for this contest.

Assuming only 100 entries from say 10 cities of some 20 districts and 20
states.
6(Rs/SMS)*100(entries)*10(cities)*20(districts)*20(states) =
6*100*10*20*20=Rs.24,00,000

24 lakhs in 20 minutes. (People trying for the 2 lakhs cash prize).
Imagine what if 1000 entries try out from 100 cities????
The figure simply grows by 2 more zeroes and yields a whooping 24 Crores!!!!
And it does not stops there... In practice it could be another multiple of
100 or worst case a multiple of 1000 on an average.

In that case it is 24*100 crores earnings in just 20 minutes on every
episode!!! And the prize money : mere 2 crore (and from whose pocket ? )

Smart Business By Siddharth Basu!

And the best part of this calculation is just the SMS earning!!
What about the Ad money ??? A rough annual profit calculation goes like
this.

2400*(5*4)(episode/month)*12 = 576000 crores.

Let even 50% get dissolved in taxes and other payments, still you will be
left with (which includes even the meager 480 crores of prize money. i.e.,
if every episode bags 2 crore prize!)2,88,000 crores profit (only from SMS).

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Tuesday, November 29, 2005

What if you could write an e-mail to yourself and be assured of receiving it 20 years in the future? / THE REAL INDIA


Most time capsules involve cramming stuff into a metal box and burying it in
a hole in the ground. It's a method that works--but it's so primitive. What
if you could write an e-mail to yourself and be assured of receiving it 20
years in the future?

That's what we've done with this e-mail time capsule. Simply fill out the
fields below, decide how long you want the capsule to be sealed for and hit
send. We'll do our best to make sure the message gets delivered.

http://forbes.codefix.net/capsule/

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Monday, November 28, 2005

On-line storage alternatives /


On-line storage alternatives

New on-line back-up tools allow sharing of files/documents

The feature-packed on-line storage service e-snips (http://esnips.com),
which provides you one GB space for free, will be quite handy in tackling
your storage problems.

Recently this author tried out the new on-line backup product, Mozy
(https://mozy.com/) which is still in its testing phase. This utility allows
you to encrypt/store files on its server for free. To back up data, you need
to download the Windows XP based Mozy client. This author is yet to make
extensive use of the service.

Another web based storage solution worth a trial is Streamload
(http://www.streamload. com). It lets you store up to 10 GB for free; but
the free account holders cannot download files of size above 10 MB.

On-line word-processors

The on-line word-processor market is currently agog with action and many
such products are emerging (even big players like MicroSoft are planning to
enter this segment -
http://www.microsoft.com/office/officelive/default.mspx).

The on-line document editor Zoho Writer (http://www.zohowriter.com/Home.do)
is another Office product worth a mention. An additional feature of this
service is that it provides an e-mail id to which you can send documents. A
document thus sent will be stored on Zoho's server under your account and
you can edit or share it with anyone.

WideWord (https://wideword.net/) is yet another web based document editor
trying to get some foothold in this segment. Here, you can create a document
by just providing an e-mail id. The service will store the document on its
server and send you mail with a link for accessing/editing the newly created
document.

Opencourseware Finder

Reputed educational institutions such as MIT (http://ocw.mit.edu/index.html)
publish course materials on a range of subjects that include engineering,
biology and economics for free download. The newly launched search engine,
Opencourseware Finder (http://opencontent.org/ocwfinder/), helps you locate
such materials with ease.

J. MURALI He can be contacted at: jmurali@gmail.com

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Sunday, November 27, 2005

Accident in Dubai today 27 Nov 2005

 
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Sunday, November 27, 2005 4:59 PM

Saturday, November 26, 2005

Wednesday, November 23, 2005

The overwhelming presence of foreign workers in the Arabian Gulf has become a national security issue

Region | Bahrain

Published: 24/11/2005, 09:51 (UAE)

Call for prudent labour import policy

By Habib Toumi, Bureau Chief

Manama: The overwhelming presence of foreign workers in the Arabian
Gulf has become a national security issue amid international calls to equal
rights in their host nations, a Gulf Cooperation Council official warned on
Tuesday.

GCC Secretary-General Abdul Rahman Al Attiya.

"The GCC countries need to look at the massive presence of expatriates
basically as a national security issue, and not merely as an economic
matter, particularly in light of global changes and international
conventions," GCC Secretary-General Abdul Rahman Al Attiya said.

"International accords are pressing for the settlement of expatriates
and imposing giving them salaries equal to nationals and greater rights in
the areas of education and health. This new situation calls for a more
rational and more prudent policy by the GCC states in importing labour," Al
Attiya said at the opening of the two-day GCC labour ministers meeting in
Manama.

Zero-tolerance policy

"The GCC countries should resort to expatriate labour only when there
is a deep need for them and there are no local or regional alternatives," Al
Attiya said.

"The countries should implement a zero-tolerance policy towards
violators because it is matter of national security," he said.

"The GCC states need to gradually replace the expatriate force and to
address the causes of their overwhelming presence and to draw up a relevant
strategy that includes developing local human resources and boost
competitiveness in the public and private sectors," Al Attiya said.

Observers say that very high levels of foreign labour can cause a
variety of problems in the GCC countries, with profound political, social
and cultural consequences.

Earlier this month, James Zogby, President of the Washington-based
Arab American Institute, warned that the "guest workers" were a "time bomb
waiting to explode and unleash riots like those that rocked France."

"In this region, as well, in many places, workers are trapped in
horrible conditions, denied justice and their basic humanity. It hurts not
only them, but the image and the moral fibre of the countries which host
them. You must see them, incorporate their rights into your vision and
defend them," Zogby said.

More than 10m foreign workers

a.. Foreign labour makes up 88 per cent of the workforce in the UAE,
83 per cent in Qatar, 81 per cent in Kuwait, 72 per cent in Saudi Arabia, 55
per cent in Bahrain, and 54 per cent in Oman, according to official figures
in the Gulf states.
b.. In all, the number of foreigner workers exceeds 10 million, or
up to 70 per cent of the GCC's labour force, a figure that a Bahraini
economist describes as "frightening" especially given the large population
growth and economic problem.
c.. Observers say that very high levels of foreign labour can cause
a variety of problems in the GCC countries, with profound political, social
and cultural consequences.
d.. Foreign workers hail mainly from Asia (especially the Indian
subcontinent) and from the Arab East. Asians tend to work as domestic help
or as manual workers, while Arabs are employed in administration and
government positions.
e.. Over the past few months, thousands of low-paid Asian workers
staged protests, some violent, in Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar and the UAE for not
receiving salaries on time.




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Sunday, November 20, 2005

The Internet: a case of `founders keepers? / Ravishing charm of the Ravi Varmas /


The Internet: a case of `founders keepers?
Anand Parthasarathy
The second World Summit on the Information Society that opens in Tunis on
November 16 will see a renewed effort by developing nations, with U.N.
backing, to transfer `control' of the Internet from the U.S. to an
independent body.

THE WORD "cyber space" was coined long before the Internet was born. In fact
it is the creation of American novelist William Gibson who used it in his
novel Neuromancer a good ten years before the World Wide Web gradually
became a reality.
At the turn of the century, Gibson, asked to comment on the shape taken by
his unintended brainchild said perceptively: "The Internet is extra national
and post geographical. It is happening largely outside the jurisdiction of
politicians. It is truly one of the strangest things we have done as a
species. and we have done it inadvertently. If we take care of it, it may be
a step towards a better world." His instinct was right in one important
aspect: the relative freedom from political control that Internet enjoyed.
Indeed its origins lay in a network called DARPANet, a creation of the U.S.
government's Defence Advanced Research Projects Agency, which was initially
handed over to a consortium of American academic institutions, then grew and
grew... to become today's Internet.
By late 1980s the number of Internet users - and hence addresses - became
unmanageable without some regulation. The U.S. Department of Commerce and
the Post and Telecommunications Department established the Internet Assigned
Numbers Authority (IANA), which in 1998 became the Internet Corporation of
Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN), a private corporation that includes a
number of stakeholders.
http://www.hindu.com/2005/11/14/stories/2005111407501100.htm

---

Ravishing charm of the Ravi Varmas
The song, `Pinakkamano..' showcases the grandeur of Ravi Varma paintings in
cinematic style. PREMA MANMADHAN speaks to the crew that created it

PHOTOS OF KAVYA: HARI THIRUMALA

HISTORY VERSUS THE PRESENT The three Ravi Varma paintings juxtaposed with
the poses that Kavya Madhavan strikes in the song, `Pinakkamano..' in the
movie, `Ananthabhadram'
Raja Ravi Varma was once dubbed the creator of `calendar art' and `kitsch'.
Detractors took a back seat before long and the royal artist's works are
today one of the most sought after in the international art world. That he
made art accessible to people through reprints in those days is what puts
him above most others. All the gods and goddesses who adorned pooja rooms in
Kerala in the best part of the last century were certainly Ravi Varma
reprints.
The song, `Pinakkamano... ', penned by Gireesh Puthencherry and composed by
M.G. Radhakrishnan in `Ananthabhadram', is a celebration of Ravi Varma
works, a tribute to the Raja, as Santosh Sivan, director and
cinematographer, puts it. The song, sung by M.G.Sreekumar and Manjari, with
orchestration by Kannan, appeals for a specific reason.
http://www.hindu.com/mp/2005/11/19/stories/2005111902870100.htm

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Artists' forum, the Left speak up for Kushboo / Found dead in U.S. / The great digital divide

Artists' forum, the Left speak up for Kushboo
DPI leader denies that his party and PMK are behind agitations

http://www.hindu.com/2005/11/20/stories/2005112013270100.htm

---

Found dead in U.S.
New Delhi: Nayyar Pervez, son of the former MP, Syed Shahabuddin, was found
dead in a hotel room in the United States. He was a professor in Columbia
University.
---

THE SHASHI THAROOR COLUMN
The great digital divide
Today, the dividing lines between the rich and the poor, between the North
and the South, are the fibre-optic and high speed digital lines.

"But access to the Internet is of little value if the information that it
contains is ... in a language you don't understand, or if it fails to deal
with the life and death questions ... ."

MILES TO GO: New technologies are shrinking the world, but a huge percentage
of the world population has been left out.
WHEN these words appear I shall just have attended the World Summit on the
Information Society in Tunis, a serious attempt to grapple with the
challenges of our information-technology-driven times - the digital divide,
the governance of the Internet, the hope that the new technologies can drive
development. But the information revolution, unlike the French Revolution,
is at present one with much liberté, some fraternité and no égalité. It is
yet to deliver the goods, or even the tools to obtain them, to many of those
most in need.
Today, the dividing lines between the rich and the poor, between the North
and the South, are the fibre-optic and high speed digital lines. If "digital
divide" is an over-used phrase, it represents a reality that cannot be
denied. Fifteen per cent of the world's population controls around 80 per
cent of the world's telephones and about 90 per cent of access points to the
Internet, and they are 13 times more likely to own personal computers than
the rest. And the rest are the 85 per cent of the world's population living
in low and lower-middle income countries.

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Saturday, November 19, 2005

http://www.shootmeanemail.com/

http://www.shootmeanemail.com/
Forgetful? ShootMeAnEmail.com is your solution. People are forgetful, but as
Internet users we all have one thing in common.

We check our email every day.

The premise of ShootMeAnEmail.com is simple.

1.. You give us an email address.
2.. You tell us an event for which you need a reminder.
3.. You tell us when to send you the reminder.
4.. We send you an email on that day and time to a specified mailbox.
It's that simple. You check your email and there is a self-written reminder,
delivered to your inbox from ShootMeAnEmail.com's servers. No misplaced
post-it notes. No complicated scheduling programs. Just a quick note of your
own design delivered into your Inbox when you think you'll need it.

---

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Thursday, November 10, 2005

New library movement on the anvil in Kerala / yahoo \YAH-hoo\ noun / U.S. used white phosphorous against Iraqi civilians, charges Italian TV /


New library movement on the anvil in Kerala
Special Correspondent
Every school in the State to have better library facilities soon

THIRUVANANTHAPURAM: T he Education Department in Kerala has charted out a
task programme called `Vayanayilude Valaruka' (Grow up by Reading) for
encouraging reading habit among schoolchildren.
At a press conference here on Wednesday, Education Minister E.T. Mohammed
Basheer said libraries in all government schools and government-aided
schools in the State would be modernised and strengthened under the
programme. And a `library period' will be added to school timetable shortly.
The formal inauguration of the programme is scheduled to be held at a
function at St. Teresa's School in Ernakulam on Thursday. Mr. Basheer said
2,393 high schools and 2,827 upper primary schools would get better library
facilities during the first phase of the programme by the first week of
January 2006. Lower primary schools will get the facility subsequently.
The idea is to implement the programme with the participation of local
bodies, non-governmental organisations, local clubs, financial institutions,
school parent-teacher associations, Grandhasala Sanghom, cooperative
societies, public sector institutions and media houses.
Help will definitely flow in from all corners for such a programme, Mr.
Basheer said.

---

yahoo \YAH-hoo\ noun
: a boorish, crass, or stupid person
Example sentence:
The local teenagers' reputation as a bunch of yahoos was belied by their
courteous treatment of the stranded motorists.
Did you know?
We know exactly how old "yahoo" is because its debut in print also marked
its entrance into the English language as a whole. "Yahoo" began life as a
made-up word invented by Jonathan Swift in his book Gulliver's Travels,
which was published in 1726. The Yahoos were a race of brutes, with the form
and vices of humans, encountered by Gulliver in his fourth and final voyage.
They represented Swift's view of mankind at its lowest. It is not
surprising, then, that "yahoo" came to be applied to any actual human who
was particularly unpleasant or unintelligent. Yahoos were controlled by the
intelligent and virtuous Houyhnhnms, a word which apparently did not catch
people's fancy as "yahoo" did.
---

U.S. used white phosphorous against Iraqi civilians, charges Italian TV
The shells of the weapon burn every living thing within 150 metres of impact

- PHOTO: AP

INDISCRIMINATE USE?: White phosphorous being allegedly used by U.S. forces
in Iraq in November 2004 seen in this image from video made available by the
website of RaiNews24, the all-news channel of Italian RAI state television.
ROME: Italian state television aired a documentary on Tuesday alleging that
the United States used white phosphorous shells ``in a massive and
indiscriminate way'' against civilians during the November 2004 offensive in
Fallujah.
The report said the shells were not used to illuminate enemy fighters at
night, as the U.S. Government has said, but against civilians, and that it
burned their flesh ``to the bone.''
The documentary by RaiNews24, the all-news channel of RAI state television,
quoted former marine Jeff Englehart as saying he saw the bodies of burned
children and women after the bombardments.
Host of allegations
``Burned bodies. Burned children and burned women. White phosphorous kills
indiscriminately. It's a cloud that, within ... 150 metres of impact, will
disperse and will burn every human being or animal.''
There have been several allegations that the U.S. used outlawed weapons,
such as napalm, in the Fallujah offensive.
On November 9, 2004, the Pentagon denied that any chemical weapons,
including napalm, were used in the offensive.
On its web site, the U.S. Government has said it used phosphorous shells
``very sparingly in Fallujah, for illumination purposes.'' It noted that
phosphorous shells were not outlawed.

---
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Tuesday, November 08, 2005

Lined Paper / Free Online Graph Paper / Indians, most sexually content and committed! / Let us have another '9/11'

..http://www.incompetech.com/beta/plainGraphPaper/

Free Online Graph Paper / Grid Paper PDFs
Downloadable and very printable, I find these PDFs extremely useful.

So, you can make a 24x30 inch sheet with a green one-inch 10 point grid.
Obviously I cannot anticipate all needs, but the grids below should cover
most common ones.

Notice to people with Spam Blocks
If you have a Spam blocker that requires authentication, such as those from
ChoiceMail or Earthlink - I will not take steps to add myself to your
whitelist. Add me to your whitelist before you send out your email, or you
won't ever receive my replies.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Lined Paper
Lined Paper PDF Generator - Just horizontal lines. I needed this a while
back, so I figured other people might also need it.

Graph Paper
Graph Generator Lite - Specify the number of squares you want - and the size
of them.

Plain Graph Paper PDF Generator - Set your border and grid spacing (i.e. 4
lines per cemtimemter) to get as much graph as possible on your paper.

---

Indians, most sexually content and committed!
Tuesday, 08 November , 2005, 17:47

New Delhi: When it comes to making love, Indians are not only the safest but
are also the most committed to their partners and do not find their sex life
monotonous, according to the Durex Global Sex Survey.

The survey conducted by the world's leading condom brand said Indians have
had least (21 per cent) unprotected sex without knowing their partner's
sexual history, as compared to the global average of 47 per cent (Norwegians
73 per cent and Greeks 70 per cent are most likely to have unsafe sex
without knowing their partners sexual history).

As far as the number of sexual partners are concerned, Indians had the
fewest with an average of three as compared to nine globally. Turks with an
average of 14.5 partners have had more sexual partners than any other
nationality in the world.

That Indians are committed to their partners is vindicated by the fact that
only 13 per cent of them have had one-night stands, which is the least
compared to 44 per cent worldwide, it said.

The survey, which interviewed over 3,17,000 people from 41 countries,
including India, said apart from being the safest love-makers very few
Indians find their sexual relationship with their partner monotonous.

Only three per cent of Indians experienced monotony in sex compared to seven
per cent globally. While 46 per cent of Indians said they were happy with
their sex lives compared to 44 per cent globally.

Indians were rated slow when it came to losing their virginity at an average
age of 19.8 years as compared to 17.3 years, the average age when people had
sex for the first time worldwide, the survey said.

People from Iceland have sex younger than any other country (15.6) followed
by the Germans (15.9) and Swedes (16.1), it said.

Believing in safe sex, however, did not deter Indians in seeking sexual
contentment. Pornography (37 per cent) and pleasure enhancing condoms (28
per cent) are the top two sexual enhancers preferred by Indians. Globally,
23 per cent voted in favour of pleasure enhancing condoms.

Indians, like many other nationalities around the world, believe that
HIV/AIDS was the most important area that needed greater public awareness.
While 87 per cent of Indians voted it as a top priority area, which needed
greater awareness in the society, 72 per cent of people globally felt so.

Therefore, a majority of Indians (47 per cent) felt that government should
be investing in sex education in schools while 34 per cent around the world
believed so, the survey said.

The Indian priority to sexual safety was re-emphasised when close to a half
(49 per cent) said that with regard to encouraging the young people priority
should be to abstain from sex before marriage. Globally, only 8 per cent of
the people felt so.

Almost three quarters of adults worldwide (74 per cent) believed that young
people should be encouraged to practice safe sex while 41 percent of the
Indian opined the same.

Indians are, however, late to receive sex education with the average age of
getting the first sex education being 15.6 years while globally 13.2 years
was the average age for the same.

---

Let us have another '9/11'

NILEEN PUTATUNDA

NOVEMBER 8: The terror strikes of September 11, 2001, so transformed the
world it even invaded our lexicon: "9/11" became a metaphor for cataclysmic
destruction. But let us pause and see if these dates can be turned around.

For instance, September 11, 1893, was the first day of the World's
Parliament of Religions in Chicago where representatives of all organised
religions participated with the declared objective of presenting the
important truths held in common by the different religions of the world and
to bring the nations of the earth into a more harmonious relationship.

Let us have another such World's Parliament of Religions, with the greatest
scholars/sages of all faiths along with all the world's leaders, in India,
the land of Swami Vivekananda's birth. In other words, let us have another
"9/11", the real "9/11".

Swami Vivekananda was the unmatched hero of the Parliament of Religions in
Chicago. The unknown, monk became known throughout America and the world. In
his speeches, Swamiji stressed the idea of the validity of all religions and
their harmony.

---

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Thursday, November 03, 2005

Noam Chomsky and the human revolution / Mark Fischer spoke to Chris Knight, a scientist specialising in human origins.

Noam Chomsky and the human revolution

Mark Fischer spoke to Chris Knight, a scientist specialising in human origins. His main current interest lies in working out how human language may have evolved. This has led him to clash with Noam Chomsky

You are on record as saying that Chomsky needs to be overthrown and replaced. Why?

Chomsky is a genius - there’s no question of that. He’s made linguistics into a science, discovering how syntax works and how closely the world’s natural languages are related. In his view, at a deep level there’s really just one language, which he calls ‘Universal Grammar’. Linguistics is the attempt to work out the specifics of this grammar.

The problem is that he goes out of his way to construct an impenetrable wall between linguistics and everything else. For him, only natural science can be genuinely scientific. So linguistics can qualify as a proper science only if it sets out from a special definition of language. The main requirement, according to Chomsky, is to avoid confusing two things. One is language. The other is how it’s used. For Chomsky, linguistics doesn’t study usage: it studies only nature. Language is a computational faculty located in the head, enabling us to think in a human way. By defining language as a part of human nature, Chomsky justifies turning his back on culture and the humanities. Meanwhile, in his social activism and commentary, he turns his back on science. Not just Marxism but all other approaches claiming to be ‘scientific’ are point-blank rejected. In a nutshell: socialism mustn’t be scientific and science mustn’t be social. I am an anthropologist. For me, as an anthropologist, the interesting question is not just that Chomsky says such things. The really interesting question is why.

It’s not difficult to show that Chomsky’s objective role has been to drive a wedge between science and activism, doing all possible to ensure that no connection is made. To the American corporate and managerial elite, two things are important. One is that the scientific community doesn’t get active. The other is that the activist community doesn’t get scientific. As if to show that this split-brain approach is perfectly possible, Chomsky goes out of his way to construct two versions of himself, neither of which seems to be on speaking terms with the other.

It is hard to think of a policy more deeply reactionary. We now have a situation in which the climate science community in the US is frantically sounding the alarm, warning the oil industry about the potentially catastrophic consequences of global warming. Because their findings make such awkward reading to oil-dependent politicians, the climate science community is currently being ‘investigated’ by the Bush regime - the implication being that some of the leading scientists may be communist sympathisers. To a Marxist, it’s obvious that all this is nonsense. On the other hand, it is true that when ordinary impartial science collides with the political requirements of the ruling establishment, it becomes an incipiently revolutionary force. The international scientific community is now becoming aware that it must defend its autonomy - the inviolable autonomy of science. Scientists, for the most part, know that they must feel free to say uncomfortable things to their own governments, taking political action where necessary in defence of science.

More than anybody else, Chomsky legitimises the professional judgement that this would be wrong. He acts as a role model for all those who insist that there must be no mingling of politics with science. His peculiar value to the authorities is his talent for championing this position not from the political right but from a standpoint on the far left. This makes him virtually unassailable. His argument sounds very reasonable. He points out that an activist who invoked the authority of science to justify some personally favoured policy would be deeply suspect. Does any activist have the right to dress up this or that political ideology as ‘science’? Conversely, does a scientist have the right to subordinate theory construction to a political cause? Wouldn’t that be betraying the true mission of science?

Such arguments are in a sense right. They are also highly convenient. It is no secret that initially, when Chomsky’s paradigm was getting off the ground in the 1950s, the US military were interested in ‘Universal Grammar’ As they offered substantial funding to Chomsky’s research programme, it is on record what they wanted to achieve. They needed an electronic command-and-control device for use in their weapons systems. They hoped for a system in which personnel on the ground could issue verbal instructions to an airborne missile, specifying trajectories and targets. If they could do this in everyday, natural language - without having to learn special codes - it would obviously be hugely advantageous to them. ‘Universal grammar’ seemed an excellent idea.

It may well be that few people were under the illusion that Chomsky himself could actually build a universal language machine. In fact, on a personal level, he showed little interest in any direct military application of his ideas. But it was widely believed that his theoretical approach might indirectly assist. Working in what was called the ‘Research Laboratory of Electronics’ at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Chomsky consistently described the human language faculty as if it were a computational device composed of wires and switches.


Noam Chomsky: believes that social factors have nothing to do with the evolution of language
As it happens, needless to say, the machine promised by Chomsky was unlikely to be built in real life. No one will ever be able to construct a machine with a sense of humour, for example. But, machine or no machine, Chomsky’s value to the establishment remained real enough. He succeeded in dislodging linguistics from its former place among the social sciences, redefining the discipline as natural science. Once this move had been made, it caused terrible conceptual problems, producing utter bafflement all around and leading to what became known as the ‘linguistic wars’ - which proved to be among the most bitter and acrimonious disputes in western intellectual history.

Many linguists felt that their intellectual discipline had been violated by the attempt to have it completely removed from the broader humanities and passed over to the natural sciences. In order to avoid social and political issues, Chomsky declared that contemporary word-meanings - for example, the lexical concept, ‘carburettor’ - had been fixed for all eternity when Homo sapiens first evolved. Not surprisingly, such laughable ideas produced gasps of utter disbelief among Chomsky’s colleagues. Nothing in linguistics seemed to make sense any more. To activists in particular, Chomsky’s ideas about genetic determinism seemed abstract and irrelevant. But his principled stance on issues such as Vietnam made him difficult to attack. The outcome has been this very deep intellectual schism and this widespread feeling that you mustn’t mix activism with science.

If you did unite science and activism, what would the implications be? How does this debate impinge on what people should be doing politically in the here and now? Isn’t it all interesting - but arcane?

Not arcane at all. Chomsky’s great achievement has been to prove that language is ‘off the scale’ as far as anything else in biological communication is concerned. It’s not like a development from chimpanzee vocal calls such as pant-hoots or waa-barks. Language is qualitatively different. And he’s correct: it’s hard to see how language could have gradually evolved. Darwinian evolutionary science has so far failed to explain this puzzle at all. Human children are born with a ‘language instinct’ - that is, they are equipped to acquire complex grammatical rules so spontaneously and creatively that it is as if they knew the basics already. But if this is an instinct then it seems to have come from nowhere. No ape has any such instinct. For obvious reasons, this puzzle has appeared to provide ammunition for the creationists.

So, the implication is that language emerged out of some kind of revolution?

Yes, it must have been a qualitative leap, perhaps like the emergence of life itself. It was a major transition, one of many such events during the course of life’s evolution on earth.

Does Chomsky agree?

His view is that language is special. Furthermore, something special must have happened to make it special. Chomsky makes very few categorical statements about the special event in question, which he has recently termed humanity’s ‘great leap forward’. He views the whole topic as speculative. But he does insist on one thing: whatever it was, it definitely wasn’t social.

For Chomsky, you can have a revolution, as long as it remains part of natural science. Therefore it might have been a cognitive revolution. Or perhaps a massive genetic mutation. Alternatively, as neurons accumulated in the human brain, critical mass might have been achieved, whereupon the language device suddenly self-installed. So you can attribute the emergence of language to a ‘revolution’. And you can mix that word with other words, such as ‘cognitive’, ‘genetic’ and so on. But one absolute taboo remains in force. You mustn’t combine the word ‘revolution’ with the word ‘social’. That would be mixing politics with science.

When someone insists on such a point with such ferocity, you have to ask - why? Then, when you remind yourself that they are working in a Pentagon-funded environment, it all begins to make sense. It makes sense that Chomsky is forced to say things that to most people seem insane.

For example, he categorically insists that language is not for communicating thoughts. The first person to get suddenly wired up for language didn’t need anyone to talk to. The individual concerned used language simply to talk to ‘itself’ (Chomsky in his scientific capacity treats humans as ‘natural objects’). If you object that language is brilliant for enabling us to share our thoughts and dreams, he retorts that in fact almost anything can be used in this way. For example, you might want to make a public statement with your new hairstyle. The fact that you can use hair in such a way doesn’t imply that human hair evolved so that people could share their thoughts. Once again, the possible uses of a thing and its intrinsic nature must be kept conceptually separate.

That’s Chomsky’s position. It is easy to show that it doesn’t work. Where evolution is concerned, you need a theory to show how and why humanity’s ‘great leap forward’ happened and what it was comprised of. But, as soon as you have a social theory of any kind, it becomes a hot potato. If you are operating in a Pentagon-funded environment, it takes courage to come up with the discovery that revolution works. Obviously, the theory itself is going to have political implications, even if you are not particularly political as a person.

Your approach seems to suggest that everything distinctively human about human nature springs from a revolution. Is that a fair summary?

That’s right. The chief value of the study of human origins is precisely that. It undermines what is probably the deepest of all prejudices against the whole revolutionary project - the idea that not even a revolution could ever change ‘human nature’ The ruling class want us to believe that greed, selfishness, private property, sexual inequality, violence, etc - all these features of the current global order are intrinsic to the human condition. The study of human origins shows the reverse. This exciting branch of science reveals that everything distinctively human about our nature - for example, self-consciousness, the ability to see ourselves as others see us, the ability to establish moral and political understandings accordingly - all these things which define our humanity emerged out of struggle. They are all products of the greatest revolution in history, the one that made us human.

Did this debate explicitly feature during the symposium with Chomsky you attended?

Chomsky’s lecture on the evolution of language was predictable. He went into ‘C-command’, something called ‘binding’ and various other features of syntax. He implied that something amazing must have happened to get these features implanted into the human brain, but didn’t explain what.

I started by asking a question trying to pinpoint exactly what that ‘great leap forward’ was. What happened? Did I miss something, I asked? Where exactly was his theory? He replied that the brain became suddenly wired for language, although we don’t know how. That was the amazing event.

I asked a follow-up question: “Professor Chomsky, you seem to be very vague about what it was. Yet you are absolutely definite on just one thing: whatever it was, we know for certain it wasn’t a social revolution. Do I understand you correctly?” His comeback was that anyone who thought that social causation impinged in any way was sadly misguided. Nothing in the social life of humanity can possibly find its way back into the genome. We are all Darwinians, he pointed out, not followers of Lamarck.

I couldn’t let this go, despite the etiquette that’s supposed to be observed at such events. I took the microphone again and reminded everyone that the whole point about modern Darwinism is its focus on cooperation versus competition. By ape or monkey standards, human social cooperation is off the scale. Was Chomsky really saying that such topics are simply irrelevant?

He reiterated that social interaction is indeed irrelevant, since we’re dealing with innate structures of the human mind.

I had another go, of course. Humans do indeed have innate cognitive features which apes don’t seem to possess. We can point at things, for example. Stand in front of a cat and point - and it just stares at your finger. It doesn’t get it, no matter how hard you try. Even chimps don’t point things out to one another. Each sees the world from its own perspective. No ape behaves as if enquiring of those around it: ‘Do you see what I see?’ Two-way mind-reading is something they just don’t get. So the human revolution did involve a cognitive leap - but this was emphatically social.

Chomsky was exasperated and simply reiterated his assertion: social factors have nothing to do with the emergence of language. At which point I had to sit down, of course. But it had been worthwhile getting him to unequivocally state his position in such a forum.

So what does the future hold?

Let me mention one particular scientist. His name is Luc Steels. Chomsky has spent his life in an imaginary electronics laboratory. He’s been engaged in concocting designs for a language machine he’d never have to build. He knew that nobody would ever ask him where the fuses should go or how the wiring would work. By contrast, Luc is one of the world’s best-known designers of intelligent robots. His machines are built with the equipment to work out what’s going on around them and correlate perspectives. They don’t have any special wiring for language. They have to work that out for themselves. Luc calls this the ‘recruitment’ theory of the origins of language. His machines just recruit whatever resources they can find in order to establish communication. They’re built to remember those communicative interactions that succeed while forgetting those that fail.

Luc insists that if you follow Chomsky’s advice, it won’t work. If you design the hard wiring for ‘Universal Grammar’ in advance and jam it into your machines, you’ll just get it wrong. The implications are far too subtle and complex for anybody to work out. You just have to make these machines - his own ones look like comical dogs, by the way - and let them interact. After some time, they cumulatively build up the wiring for language. Of course, the outcomes are relatively crude, but in terms of underlying principles, the parallels with language seem to be real. I’m hoping to bring Luc to London soon, so that you can see what I mean.

By a stroke of good fortune, Luc was appointed by the conference organisers to prepare a response to my own paper at the conference. The title I had chosen was ‘The human revolution’. My final slide was this two-word slogan: Revolution works. I was surprised and relieved because Luc defended not only the general theory but also many of the details of my argument. At the symposium, this carried weight, I think, because everyone could see that Luc Steels knew what he was talking about. Unlike Chomsky, he actually had to build his ‘language machines’ - and they worked!

It’s hardly an exaggeration to say Chomsky has spent his life fighting off the theory of the human revolution. His opponents are doing joined-up thinking and he doesn’t want to know. My own experience of conferences of this kind is that, wherever scientists from different disciplines start talking among themselves, they discover that there was indeed some kind of revolution. Then they begin wondering about the details. What exactly happened? Most agree the crucial events occurred in sub-Saharan Africa, somewhere between 100,000 and 200,000 years ago. A new species emerged - Homo sapiens. Linguistically, socially and in other ways, humans did things that were quite peculiar. Nothing like this species had ever hit the planet before. And, as we begin piecing our story together, there’s this take-home message: Revolution works.

Like Galileo with his theory about a moving earth, a discovery of this kind is bound to upset the authorities. As Chomsky’s approach is set aside, I think linguists will want to escape their irrelevance and isolation, linking up with colleagues in neighbouring disciplines. As scientists feel less atomised and isolated, I think we’ll feel a new determination to defend our intellectual autonomy against the obvious institutional pressures to hold back.

The scientific community is intrinsically international. To remain true to science, we’ve no choice but to resist all merely national governments and authorities in favour of a constituency whose internationalism matches ours. As a scientist in paid employment, I am part of the working class. In becoming scientifically enlightened and self-organised, our aim must be to embrace society as a whole, just as Marx envisaged.

We won the revolution once. We have good grounds for believing we can do it again.

Wednesday, November 02, 2005

Prof. ONV on Kerala Piravi Day


http://savefile.com/files/6299651

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bush is a failure / passive driving ???


----- Original Message -----
From: Kumar_Nair@makshaff.com
To: naamhs@gmail.com
Sent: Wednesday, November 02, 2005 11:41 AM
Subject: google

Go to www.google.com
Type "failure" (without double quotes) in the search text box.
Press "I'm Feeling Lucky" button just next to "Google Search" button.
See what happens.

---

When will we stand up to the carmakers?
George Monbiot- © Guardian Newspapers Limited 2004
THE BAN on smoking in bars will save some fraction of the bar staff who die
every year as a result of passive smoking. The moral case is clear: people
are being exposed to a risk for which they have not volunteered. While
smokers have an undisputed right to kill themselves, they have no right to
kill other people. This case being generally applicable, what does the U.K.
Government intend to do about passive driving?
Every year, according to a paper published by the British Medical Journal,
some 54 bar staff in the U.K. die as a result of their exposure to other
people's cigarette smoke. And every year, according to the EU, some 39,000
deaths in this country are caused or hastened by air pollution, most of
which comes from vehicles. This is a problem three orders of magnitude
greater than the one that has filled the newspapers for the past six months,
and no one is talking about it.
It is true to say that British air, like that of most parts of the rich
world, is much cleaner than it used to be. Since the great smog of 1952
forced the Government to legislate, since coal gave way to gas and factories
fitted filters to their chimneys, acute pollution crises of the kind which
once killed thousands in a couple of days have not recurred. Between 1992
and 2000, traffic fumes fell steeply. But in 2000 the decline in the most
dangerous pollutant - small particles of soot - came to a halt. Since then
the levels have held more or less steady (with a spike in the hot summer of
2003). The British Government is in breach of European rules, and the
European Commission is in breach of any serious effort to do something about
it. So 39,000 lives are shortened every year.

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Sunday, October 30, 2005

EMS ON KERALA PIRVAI - ARTICLE WRITTEN IN 1956



FULL TEXT AT
http://www.dropload.com/redeem.php?t=a4349016e45590d3cd35deb940366312

You have 7 days to pick up this file. After 7 days it will be deleted. You
can only download the file once, so be sure and save it to your computer
rather than playing or running it from the browser.


Saturday, October 29, 2005

Again Scam - now on Lottery Tax


Again Scam - now on Lottery Tax, originally uploaded by naamhs.

Wednesday, October 26, 2005

Civil rights icon Rosa Parks dies /

 
Civil rights icon Rosa Parks dies 
  
Agencies 

Detroit: Rosa Parks, the black woman whose single handed protest sparked the civil rights revolution in America has died.
 
The 92-year-old icon of the racial equality movement died in her sleep on Monday surrounded by a small group of friends and family members, according to her lawyer Shirley Kaigler.
 
Parks was a 42-year-old seamstress for a department store in Alabama when she caught a bus in the town of Montgomery on December 1, 1955.
 
Three stops after she got on, a white man boarded and had to stand. Parks was arrested after refusing to give up her seat for him and uttering the words: “I'm tired of being treated like a second-class citizen.”
 
Her arrest and subsequent court appearance sparked a boycott of the bus system, led by a Then unknown Reverend Martin Luther King Jr.
 
The boycott lasted 381 days, and led to a US Supreme Court decision forcing Montgomery to desegregate its bus system.
 
Parks received the highest U.S. civilian honor, the Presidential Medal of Freedom, in 1996 and Congressional Gold Medal of Honor in 1999.

Monday, October 24, 2005

Tsunami caused by a bomb??

Please take a look at the following link, the same order

http://static.flickr.com/31/55125900_e7056056d1_b.jpg
http://static.flickr.com/24/55125914_94e2347b9d_b.jpg
http://static.flickr.com/28/55125894_c1b56e33aa.jpg?v=0

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Sunday, October 23, 2005

RIFA is organizing a seminar on the above mentioned subject "New Agenda for Kerala Development" on 28 October 2005

----- Original Message -----
From: Raveendran Muraleedharan
To: naamhs@gmail.com
Sent: Sunday, October 23, 2005 11:00 AM
Subject: please post in your group
Dear friend,

As responsible people from kerala the gulf malayalees are very
much concerned about the total social and economic development of the
ordinary people of kerala. The governments that ruled kerala since
independence implemented various measures for the emancipation of the poor
and the downtrodden. How far they succeeded in achieving the target?

It is now certain that in April-May 2006 a new government will
take office. What ought to be their agenda for the comprehensive development
of the ordinary people in the coming years?

RIFA is organizing a seminar on the above mentioned subject "New
Agenda for Kerala Development" on 28 October 2005. The presenter of the
subject is Mr. Suresh Kumar Mundiyath.

The October issue rifa monthly magazine "aksharam" will also be
released on that day.

The presentation will start at 7.00 PM, soon after the ifthar
party being organized by rifa

Space constraint is forcing us to make the attendance by
invitation only. Anyone from this group seriously aspiring for participation
in the ifthar and discussion may write to us.

With best regards,

Ahmed Melattur

Secretary,RIFA

0503119147

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Tuesday, October 18, 2005

Poll selects Noam Chomsky as world's top intellectual

 


Poll selects Noam Chomsky as world's top intellectual

Duncan Campbell

Distinguished professor remains unimpressed by the honour


 
Noam Chomsky

LONDON: He is in his 70s and first became known for his theory of transformational grammar — and now he is top of the thinkers' hit parade. Noam Chomsky, the Professor of Linguistics who has become one of the most outspoken critics of American foreign policy, has won a poll that names him the world's top public intellectual.

Prof. Chomsky, who was underwhelmed by the honour, beat off challenges from Umberto Eco, Richard Dawkins, Vaclav Havel and Christopher Hitchens to win the Prospect/Foreign Policy poll.

More than 20,000 voters from around the world took part in selecting the winners from a list of 100.

Missing segments

The most striking aspect of the list is the shortage of the young, the female and the French. Only two of the top 10, Mr. Hitchens and Salman Rushdie, were born after the War, and Naomi Klein is the highest placed woman, at 11.

France provides one name in the top 40, fewer than Peru and Iran provide.

Since the poll was for the world's leading intellectuals, it should come as no surprise that websites manned by supporters of Prof. Chomsky, Mr. Hitchens and Abdolkarim Soroush were used to draw attention to it.

Prof. Chomsky's supporters are clearly the most energetic: he took 4,800 votes to Mr. Eco's 2,500. The voters came mainly from Britain and the U.S.

Sceptical winner

"I don't pay a lot of attention to them," said Prof. Chomsky on Monday night of the poll. "It was probably padded by some friends of mine!"

Pondering the absence from the list of younger intellectuals, David Herman asks in the new issue of Prospect: "Who are the younger equivalents to [Jurgen] Habermas, Chomsky and Havel? Great names are formed by great events.

But there has been no shortage of terrible events in the last 10 years." Only two of the Top 20 have yet to reach the age of 50.

Alternative perspectives

The choice of Prof. Chomsky will be welcomed and contested by many of the same names who responded delightedly or furiously to the award of the Nobel Prize for Literature to Harold Pinter last week.

In recognition of this, Prospect offers some alternative perspectives, with Robin Blackburn arguing for Prof. Chomsky's right to head the list as both a brilliant expositor of linguistics and a vital critic of the U.S. abroad.

Oliver Kamm, however, dismisses him as a knee-jerk anti-American who is cavalier about his sources.


 

 

Sunday, September 25, 2005

Apex court stays criminal case against Lapierre / Indian girl's one-rupee suicide / Money power dictated Delhi power privatisation'

Apex court stays criminal case against Lapierre

Legal Correspondent

NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court on Friday stayed the criminal proceedings
initiated against Dominique Lapierre, French author of a book on the Bhopal
gas disaster, and his publisher Shekar Malhotra by Madhya Pradesh
Director-General of Police Swaraj Puri. A Bench, comprising Justice K. G.
Balakrishnan and Justice P. P. Naolekar, issued notice to Mr. Puri and
Javier Moro, France-based publisher of It was Five Past Midnight in Bhopal,
on a petition from Mr. Lapierre and Mr. Malhotra seeking transfer of the
complaint outside Madhya Pradesh.

They said Mr. Puri was holding a powerful position and could influence
witnesses.

On his criminal complaint against Mr. Lapierre and Mr. Malhotra, a Jabalpur
court issued summons to the publisher to appear before it on September 26.

The complaint said the writer had not portrayed the incident properly as
well as the police role in the right perspective.

Civil suit

Mr. Puri also filed a civil complaint seeking a $20-million compensation and
to restrain the publishers from printing, selling and circulating the book.
The Jabalpur court issued notices to the author and the publisher on this
petition also

--

Indian girl's one-rupee suicide

Half of India's children are malnourished, a UN report says
A 12-year-old Indian girl committed suicide after her mother told her she
could not afford one rupee - two US cents - for a school meal.
Sania Khatun lived with her mother in a village north of Calcutta under a
tarpaulin sheet provided by the state.
Sania normally ate nothing at school but on Friday saw classmates eating
rice and asked for one rupee.
Her mother scolded her and when she returned from work found her daughter
hanged from the ceiling with a sari.
"She wanted just one rupee... but her mother could not give her the money
due to poverty," government official Nakul Chandran Mahato told the Reuters
agency.
'Snapped'
The mother, Jainab Bewar, is a widow who works as a maid in the village of
Paraspur, 200km (125 miles) north of Calcutta.
She normally fed her daughter with food she could get from the houses she
worked in.
India's Telegraph newspaper said Sania was tempted by the sight of
classmates eating puffed rice and oil cakes.

---

Money power dictated Delhi power privatisation'

DAMAGING INDICTMENT: Delhi Chief Minister Sheila Dikshit at her residence on
Wednesday. - PHOTO: PTI

NEW DELHI: In a severe indictment of the Delhi Government led by Chief
Minister Sheila Dikshit over the whole process of privatisation of the power
distribution network in the Capital, the Public Accounts Committee of the
Delhi Legislative Assembly has accused the powers that be of bending all
rules and colluding with business houses to "accrue monetary benefits'' to
them.

It has alleged possible involvement of one or more members of the Core
Committee set up by the Delhi Government for power privatisation in
favouring the conditional bidders for "monetary consideration'' by effecting
major modifications in the transfer scheme.

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Wednesday, September 07, 2005

06 Sept 1965: Indian Army invades W Pakistan / C-DIT releases free Malayalam software / America's shame: the aftermath of Katrina

ON THIS DAY
1965: Indian Army invades W Pakistan

Indian troops have invaded West Pakistan, crossing the border at three
points in an attack which appears to be aimed mainly at the city of Lahore.
Authorities in Delhi say their action was intended to prevent a direct
attack by Pakistani forces against India.
On 25 August, Pakistani soldiers launched a covert operation across the
ceasefire line, established in 1949 after the first Indo-Pakistani war, into
Indian-administered Jammu and Kashmir.

---

C-DIT releases free Malayalam software

THIRUVANANTHAPURAM: The Centre for Development of Imaging Technology (C-DIT)
has released the free software version of the official Malayalam language
software it had developed for the Department of Official Language.
The software, which works on Linux platform, consists of six Malayalam fonts
in Unicode and a special editor. It can be downloaded free of charge from
the Web site, www.clickeralam.org.
A Windows version of the software is also available.
The software was developed under the joint auspices of the State Information
Technology Mission and the Centre for Linguistic Computing Kerala - a joint
venture of the C-DIT.
Free software can be used, copied, studied, modified and distributed. The
free software movement is initiative by programmers collaborating across
cyberspace.

---

America's shame: the aftermath of Katrina

Arvind Sivaramakrishnan

A tale of systematic neglect, administrative incompetence, market-driven
environmental destruction, and desperate poverty is unfolding in Louisiana.

"AMERICA'S DIRTY secret." That is what a British TV news reporter, speaking
live from Louisiana, called the underclass of America's poor. A tale of
systematic neglect, administrative incompetence, market-driven environmental
destruction, and desperate poverty is unfolding in Louisiana. It is exposing
squalor that would shame a third-world country, as well as racial and
political divisions reminiscent of apartheid South Africa.

The facts themselves are grim enough. As if the rain brought by Hurricane
Katrina did not do enough, the dykes and levees built to keep the sea out of
the city of New Orleans collapsed for lengths of hundreds of metres. The
resultant flooding caused what may well amount to thousands of deaths,
untold billions of dollars worth of damage, and rendered the city
uninhabitable for what is now estimated to be another two years.

Minimal aid, in the form of basic food and water, is finally reaching those
who have survived. It is simply not known how many are still stranded in the
upper floors of their homes and apartment blocks, nor how many have
perished. Some experts have said the forensic task of identifying the dead
will be far harder than that which followed the terrorist attacks of
September 11, 2001, as the bodies in Louisiana are decomposing very quickly
in temperatures of 35 degrees Celsius. State officials say there is no
system for collecting and storing the bodies.

---

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Monday, September 05, 2005

A reminder program / A tutorial site / On-line office suite / Mother Teresa dies / us supreme court on public property


1997 Sept 05
Mother Teresa dies
Mother Teresa¸ the Nobel Peace Prize winner who devoted her life to helping
the sick and the poor¸ dies at the age of 87.
Full story:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/em/-/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/september/5/newsid_2499000/2499693.stm

---

A reminder program

As we get completely engrossed in our work on a computer, we may forget
important appointments, events and so on. A program that works in the
background and reminds us of important events at specified times will help
us a lot. The software, SwizzTool (http://www.specop.se/) is one such
product. Apart from helping you set-up reminder alerts, this program lets
you do such tasks as assigning hotkeys to programs, invoking a Google search
on the string stored on clipboard and so on.

A tutorial site

Numerous discussion forums and tutorials on a wide array of subjects that
help you become better at what you do are available on-line.

The programmingtutorials.com (http://www.pro grammingtutorials.com/), the
web portal with links to over three hundred programming language tutorials,
is an excellent service worth a visit

On-line office suite

To exploit the Net's `access from anywhere anytime' paradigm, several
desktop applications are migrating towards it. The availability of
high-speed links accelerates this trend. The on-line office-suite
application, gOffice, developed for helping netizens create/store documents
on-line with a browser, is the latest one in this genre.

gOffice (http://goffice.com/) features a web based word processor with
several tools we generally find in popular word processing packages like
MS-Word. It supports features such as spell check, editor with graphical
interface and so on. The document created with the application can be saved
as a PDF file on your local machine or can be sent to anyone as an e-mail
attachment. As the document can also be saved on the gOffice's server, you
can open/edit it from any place on the Net. Currently, on this web-based
office suite, which is free for personal use, only the word processing
component is implemented. Soon modules such as Worksheet and Presentations
will be made available.

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