Friday, April 27, 2007

untitled

The Democratic party controlled House of Representatives in the US today passed the Iraq pullout bill. Obviously Bush has threatened to veto this bill as soon as he gets it and now the house and the president are headed for a showdown. The house just like the rest of the country is totally polarized. The republicans and conservatives are still adamant about the war.
The civil war in Iraq is beyond the US armed forces and the troops are hopelessly caught in the middle. The US is now erecting a wall to divide the people of someone else's country. Read this story:
Building a wall in Baghdad instead of policy in Iraq

This just indicates how Bush and his folks have no idea what they are doing in Iraq. The justifications for this war have changed year to year ever since it started and all of them have been artificially manufactured. Being an outside observer I hope this bill passes because this US occupation in Iraq right from day one has been nothing but stupidity commited to cover up for some totally different failure.

These were some of the pro-pullout comments in the debate in the house...
"Our troops are mired in a civil war with no clear enemy and no clear strategy for success," said House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer.
"How many more terrorists will President Bush's foreign policy breed before he focuses a new strategy, a real strategy? This bill says enough is enough."
"He was wrong then. And he's wrong now. It's the will of one nation versus the stubbornness of one man."

Now the other side. I am just surprised people are saying these senseless things. Politicians are the same everywhere man. So power hungry that they'll join any two sentences with no logical connection just to defend their claim.
"[By pulling out] We will embolden our enemies and it's our kids and their kids who will pay a very, very steep price,"
Can't even comment on this. Makes no sense...
"We have a solemn obligation to the American people to finish the job we started."
The job was wrong to begin with and is still wrong to date. What obligation, do they even remember what it was originally after the Sept 11 attacks?
"Al-Qaida will view this as the day the House of Representatives threw in the towel,"
This is just some bravado...

Some articles covering the bill:

U.S. House approves Iraq pullout date, despite likely veto
House OKs Iraq Pullout

Wednesday, April 25, 2007

Blue Mountains...

Blue Mountains!!!

Visited the Nilgiri mountain ranges a couple of weeks back, this area is really ‘wild’ with the Mudumalai and Bandipur national forests at the base of these mountains. But in terms of wildlife the trip was fairly disappointing because the national forests were closed due to the danger of forest fires.

It was really dry all around. Check out how parched everything was…


Also in terms of trekking/hiking it was disappointing because we could do neither. But among the good things on this trip, one good thing was the weather on the mountains. Once you made your way up the mountains crisp cool breeze, clear skies and fresh air greeted you.

Oh by the way the drive up the mountains was extremely picturesque and challenging. The Zen performed beautifully, compared to some of the other bigger cars that kept getting into trouble on the steep climbs. The car was in first or second gear almost throughout, same thing coming down. The beauty around made it tough for me to keep my eyes on those 30 odd hair pin bends. My rubbernecking (rubberneck: To look about or survey with unsophisticated wonderment or curiosity) definitely gave some heartburn to the co-passengers, whose brunt I soon faced ;-)
Anyway once on top, taking all that fresh air in at the higher altitudes, you felt really rejuvenated. At night you could see about a gazillion stars in the sky. Spectacular show, it was...

Two incidents that happened were, one, seeing two porcupines darting across our jeep headlights in the middle of the night. I thought they were chickens but then I saw the spikes! Beautiful spikes with white streaks! These two porcupines looked as if they had just raided some food store in the middle of the night and were scooting away with the loot atop their heads.
The second incident was going to an animal watering hole in the middle of the night and just waiting...waiting in pitch dark, in silence. I had read somewhere that when one of our senses is deprived then the brain compensates by making the others more sensitive. This was definitely the case as we couldn't see much at all but our hearing was working overtime. There were 3 or 4 owls in the area each hooting away to glory in their own tone and rhythm. And then suddenly there was a small growl followed by a rustle and a soft sound of water trickling. It came from the opposite bank, just once, but we couldn’t spot anything or make anything out…

Here is the panoramic shot of the valley…


Thursday, April 19, 2007

Students for Bhopal


Students for Bhopal is a group that is trying to get justice to the people of Bhopal who suffered (and continue to suffer) in the toxic chemical leak from Union Carbide's pesticide plant during the very early hours of 3rd December 1984. This incident is now widely acknowledged as the worst industrial disaster ever. Union Carbide is a US based chemical company which cut corners and due to it's blatant negligence, methyl isocyanate and other deadly gases leaked into the atmosphere. Other than killing thousands (8,000) on that night the leak left nearly 150,000 people severely disabled for life. A total of 22,000 people have died since that tragic day.

Union Carbide is still killing people of Bhopal because it left without cleaning up chemicals which continue to daily seep into drinking water sources around the factory. Dow Chemical has since acquired Union Carbide and refuses to clean up the contamination and compensate people who have suffered due to this poisoning.

Some hard facts:

  • More than 27 tons of methyl isocyanate and other deadly gases turned Bhopal into a gas chamber. None of the six safety systems at the plant were functional, and Union Carbide’s own documents prove the company designed the plant with “unproven” and “untested” technology, and cut corners on safety and maintenance in order to save money.
  • Today, more than twenty years after the Bhopal disaster, at least 50,000 people are too sick to work for a living, and a recent study in the Journal of the American Medical Association confirmed that the children of gas-affected parents are themselves afflicted by Carbide’s poison.
  • Testing published in a 2002 report revealed poisons such as 1,3,5 trichlorobenzene, dichloromethane, chloroform, lead and mercury in the breast milk of nursing women living near the factory.
  • Yet when the Independent speaks of "rape", the Guardian of "disgrace" and Jon Snow of "a crime against humanity", they are not talking about THAT NIGHT - but of what has happened since to those who survived it. Today, more than 20 years after the disaster, Bhopal remains a humanitarian disaster.
  • Union Carbide left without cleaning it up. Tanks full of toxic chemicals have corroded and burst, dumping their contents onto the ground. Worst of all, twenty monsoons (three months of heavy rain each year) have washed the toxins Carbide left behind deep into the soil, poisoning the drinking water of the same people Carbide gassed 20 years ago.

Links that you can read up on this tragedy:

I would like to urge you all to sign up on the Students for Bhopal web site, subscribe to their newsletters/mails and try to participate in some of their initiatives like calling government officials in Madhya Pradesh...spread the word...

Tuesday, April 17, 2007

Audioslave - Revelations

In music videos I usually prefer 'band' videos. As in videos in which the band just performs, not in some outlandish setting or a live concert but something like a studio or a fixed set sort of place. Videos in which the band members just play the song as they actually would at any other time...anyway I just like such videos.

Audioslave made such a video for their song 'Revelations' that I really liked and found to be amazingly cool. There is another video that I like, 'Sweet Child O' Mine' by Guns N' Roses. The GnR one has a little too much glam in it than the Revelations one. You can watch both of them below for yourselves...



Thursday, April 12, 2007

My spirit doesn't feel like sleeping tonite...

We have been having terrible weather in B'lore over the past month or so. It has been hot and stagnant...but it rained today and the mercury dipped south!

Now the curtains are fluttering in an ever so light cool breeze...the water has 'chilled'. There is that wet earth smell in the air...there is an invigorating pleasantness and freshness all around. I am sure B'loreans will revel in this weather tomorrow but spare a thought for the unfortunate and unlucky ones who have no or inadequate shelter...

Tuesday, April 10, 2007

Superman spins a web?!?

Could you take my picture...
Cause I won't remember...

It was a very strange coincidence that about a week back when lazy dude, geek guy and I were more than a little 'elevated' and this song (Take a Picture by Filter) was playing in the car. Coincidence because we were in a state where quite possibly the next day we wouldn't remember what all had happened ;-)

It was after quite a long time that the 'Tools Team' decided to de-stress, unwind and chill out. After a very disappointing stint at 'Legends of Rock' things went into high gear when we hit the '13th floor'. Once there we had an Intel strategy meeting, a team strategy meeting and many other strategy meetings. Believe me not all the strategy meetings revolved around work! I only wish someone had taken minutes, ha! It sounds boring cause it looks like we were discussing work but you had to be there to see what we were up to. Plus we were having a tough time keeping our concentration because of you know, the 'surroundings' ;-). Once we stumbled out of 13th floor, Lazy Dude in fact acted contrary to his name, put in some extra effort and went back to wave g'nite to someone! One more funny incident was when Lazy Dude in his 'elevated' state remarked "Ha! What does Superman do. He just shoots something from his wrist, what is that he does na?" That's Spiderman, man!

Later at around 11 or 11:30 we were infact not even allowed to eat at one of the Coffee Day outlets. After looking at the 3 of us they politely made a lame excuse that they were only allowing to take away food. So we did take away the food and ate it on the bonnet of my car in total Bombay ishtyle...

Thursday, April 05, 2007

Mangalore Coast Trip

(Rough and better late than never)
Days: 3 days, 2 nights
Total distance driven: 1150kms
Places visited: Mangalore, Ullal Beach (base), Suratkal Beach, Udipi, St Mary's Isles, Maravanthe Beach, Shri Mookambika Temple @ Kollur.
Gripe: Weather didn't cooperate.
High points:
- 'Shark Tooth' on the beach under starry skies
- B'fast at a quaint place in Udipi
- Maravanthe
- 30km drive through the mountains to the Mookambika temple

Lighthouse @ Suratkal beach
Sunrise behind the lighthouse @ Suratkal beach

Sunday, April 01, 2007

Aaila! Tendulkar!

Tendulkar should consider quitting - Ian Chappell

I don't agree with the conclusion of this article but some of the points being brought up are correct. First off, I don't believe Tendu is playing for the sake of statistics.
One of the biggest problems is that Tendu does not have a role in the team. Give him a role and ask him to perform in that role and I believe he will get it done. Anyway here is the article...
ps: Navjot Singh Sidhu is the biggest ass on all of cricket TV today. This guy never talks logically and only uses clichés that make no sense. He doesn’t give other people a chance to talk at all, cutting them with some dumb lines that only he thinks are smart. He is so irritating that given a choice I would pick to even watch Mandira Bedi over him.

(via CricInfo)
Ian Chappell

In the fallout from India's early demise at the World Cup one of the major decisions will concern the future of Sachin Tendulkar.
Before anybody else makes a decision on what will happen to Tendulkar the player himself has to have a good long look in the mirror and decide what he's trying to achieve in the game. At the moment he looks like a player trying to eke out a career; build on a glittering array of statistics. If he really is playing for that reason and not to help win as many matches as he can for India then he is wasting his time and should retire immediately.
When you think that for a decade Brian Lara and Tendulkar went head to head in a wonderful battle of stroke play to establish who was the best batsman in the world, they are now worlds apart in effectiveness.
Lara's quick-footed tip toe through a terrific innings against a good Australian bowling attack when the rest of the West Indies top order succumbed easily was in direct contrast to Tendulkar's stumbling effort in the crucial Sri Lanka match. The amazing thing about Lara's brilliant career is the fact that he hasn't changed his style at all over seventeen years. This is a credit to his technique and mental strength, as the aging process generally makes a player more progressively conservative.
Tendulkar hasn't worn as well; his last three or four years have been a shadow of his former self. His double century at the SCG in January 2004 was a classic case of a great player really struggling. He came to the crease out of form and despite amassing all those runs and batting for in excess of ten hours he was no closer to recapturing his best touch than he was when he started out. It was a tribute to his determination but it was a sad sight to see; there are enough average players around that you don't won't to see a class one reduced to that level.
Tendulkar hasn't been as lucky as Lara; the Indian batsman has suffered a lot of injuries in this period where his play has deteriorated and there is nothing that melts your mental approach quicker than physical handicaps. Lara has been relatively free from injury and he certainly doesn't have the weight of numbers riding on his shoulders that Tendulkar does.
However, the population of the Caribbean might be small but they are extremely demanding. Despite all the fuss and the odd controversy that has surrounded Lara's career he has remained himself; this is my game and that is how I play. For whatever reason Tendulkar hasn't been able to maintain his extremely high standards for the last few years and unless he can find a way to recapture this mental approach he's not doing his team or himself any favours.
If Tendulkar had found an honest mirror three years ago and asked the question; "Mirror, mirror on the wall who is the best batsman of all?" It would've answered; "Brian Charles Lara." If he asked that same mirror right now; "Mirror, mirror on the wall should I retire?" The answer would be; "Yes."