Tuesday, December 31, 2013

Should old acquaintance be forgot, and never brought to mind ?

Should old acquaintance be forgot,
and never brought to mind ?
Should old acquaintance be forgot,
and old lang syne ?

CHORUS:
For auld lang syne, my dear,
for auld lang syne,
we'll take a cup of kindness yet,
for auld lang syne.
And surely you'll buy your pint cup !
and surely I'll buy mine !
And we'll take a cup o' kindness yet,
for auld lang syne.

CHORUS
We two have run about the slopes,
and picked the daisies fine ;
But we've wandered many a weary foot,
since auld lang syne.

CHORUS
We two have paddled in the stream,
from morning sun till dine† ;
But seas between us broad have roared
since auld lang syne.

My dream Colaba. Save the Backgarden!

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Friday, December 27, 2013

Aam Aadmi Party - Nominations For Lokabha Elections 2014

Aam Aadmi Party has announced its decision to contest the 2014 Loksabha Elections. It is now asking all honest people to join AAP and contest the elections. Aam Aadmi Party has been a common man's party and as it is the "Aam Aadmi" & "Aam Aurat" of this great country that can bring about a change to the system.
आम आदमी पार्टी ने 2014 के लोकसभा चुनाव लड़ने की घोषणा की है. यदी आप आम आदमी पार्टी के उमीदवार बनकर यह चुनाव लड़ना चाहते हैं, तो नीचे दिए गए तरीके से हमें अपनी जानकारी भेजें।

If you are are interested in contesting the Lok Sabha Elections with the Aam Aadmi Party, please follow the instructions below and send us your nomination form.
1. Please download and fill the form & sign on each page.
2. Send the complete form with a passport size photograph to: Pankaj Gupta, Aam Aadmi Party, A-119, Kaushambi, Ghaziabad - 201002 , UP.  
(Note: You may also send the Duly Filled Form after scanning on the e-mail ID : aapls2014@gmail.com)

अगर आप आम आदमी पार्टी के आगामी लोकसभा चुनाव, 2014 के प्रत्याशी बनना चाहते हैं तो कृपया
1. इस फार्म को डाउनलोड करें
2. फॉर्म को पूरा भरकर, अपनी एक पासपोर्ट साइज़ फोटोग्राफ के साथ, इस पते पर भेजें: पंकज गुप्ता, आम आदमी पार्टी, ए-119, कौशाम्बी, गाजियाबाद-201010, उत्तर प्रदेश
 
(कृपया ध्यान दें: आप भरा हुआ फार्म स्कैन करके इस मेल आईडी पर भी भेज सकते हैं : aapls2014@gmail.com)

Tuesday, December 10, 2013

South Mambai appreciates the Aaam Aadmi Initiative of Arvind Kejriwal and his team.

I have just become a member of the Aam Aadmi Party, India

Web Site

Democracy is popular self rule, but the current practice of democracy negates this ideal and reduces the citizens to mere subject. Aam Aadmi Party aims to restore power to the people, so as to realize the promise of Swaraj enshrined in our constitution.
 
"I am a Citizen of India. I am above 18 years of age. I am not a member of any political party. I believe in the objectives and thinking of the party and I am willing to fully participate in achieving the objectives of the party."


I have just become a member of the Aam Aadmi Party, India - form no 9000324043 - see http://www.aamaadmiparty.org/splash or  http://www.aamaadmiparty.org/join-us
South Mumbai Group - Facebook join https://www.facebook.com/groups/aapsouthmumbai/

Tuesday, November 26, 2013

26/11 - remembering our friends ..........

26/11 - Remembering the late - Ajit & Monica Chhabria, Sunil & Reshma Parikh, Sanjay & Rita Agarwal, Rohinton Maloo, Rohit Harjani, Lavina Harjani, Ashok Kapur, Anand Bhatt, Pankaj Shah, Vishnidas-Nilam-Gunjan Narang, Neeti-Uday-Samar-Kang, Rupinder Randhawa, Ashok Kamte, Hemant Karkare, Vijay Salaskar, Tukaram Omble and the rest

They were with us till only a few years ago. They are but memories today, framed as photographs on mantles and embedded in our hearts. We continue to shed tears as we remember them. For the loss is ours. At the same time life has gone on for us, their friends, their families and most of all, the next generation, their children. We will have learned to smile again so that we do not disappoint them, our loved ones in heaven. The most important aspect is the progress of the next generation. They are doing well. God Bless them.

Saturday, August 24, 2013

Marine Drive Road Caves in. What next?


@ Chowpatty Marine Drive, the water pipe bursts and the road caves in. Photo courtesy Marcus Ranney.

Unearthing Mumbai ?

 

Thursday, July 11, 2013

A story of destructive governance and citizens who did not speak out!

A story of destructive governance and citizens who did not speak out, the UPA-1 and UPA-2 regimes have set us back by several decades. A terrific article by Pratap Bhanu Mehta in the Indian Express which summaries how we have been made fools of for 10 years.  Read and weep!!  Or circulate to everyone you know – your life literally depends on it ….. Cyrus Cooper
 
While we were silent

Pratap Bhanu Mehta : Thu Jul 11 2013, 04:26 hrs

A story of destructive governance and citizens who did not speak out

First, the UPA came for the roads sector. They destroyed contracting. They slowed down road construction. They left highways half built. We did not speak out. After all, the only reason the NDA could have started the golden quadrilateral is because they wanted to spread Hindutva.

Next, they came for the airline sector. They let Air India suck more money from taxpayers. They let bad regulation destroy the private sector. They let crony banking sustain bad bets. They ensured India would never be an aviation hub. We did not speak out. After all, flying is what birds do, not humans. Besides, aviation is bad for climate change.

Then they came for the power sector. They confused creation of mega capacities with actual generation. They had no rational pricing plans. They were arbitrary in the awarding of licences. They could not make up their mind whether they wanted to protect the environment or destroy it. We did not speak out. After all, the only power that matters is political. Electricity be damned.

Then they came for education. They promulgated the RTE after 100 per cent enrolment. They expanded capacity, but cut-offs still rose. They regulated in such a way that there was a glut in some subjects and a shortage in others. They confused university buildings with building universities. We did not speak out. After all our, our low quality education left us incapable of speaking out.

Then they came for industry. They turned the clock back in every way and waged open war. Ensure that regulations become more complex and uncertain. Ensure that input costs rise. Ensure crummy infrastructure. Promulgate a land scam policy known as SEZ and sell it as industrial policy. They encouraged FDI. But they forgot which one they wanted: outbound or inbound. But we did not speak out. After all, India is a rural country.

Then they came for employment. There was some growth. But they decided that the only good employment is that which has the hand of the state. So the NREGA’s expansion was seen as a sign of success, not failure. By its own logic, if more people need the NREGA, the economy has failed. But we did not speak out. After all, the more people we have dependent on government, the more we think it is a good government.

Then they came for agriculture. First, they create artificial shortages through irrigation scams. Then they have a myopic policy for technology adoption. Then they decide India shall remain largely a wheat and rice economy; we will have shortages for everything else. Then they price everything to produce perverse incentives. But we did not speak out. After all, why worry about food production when the government is giving you a legal right? Is there anything more reassuring than social policy designed by and for lawyers?

Then they came for institutions. They always had. This has been Congress DNA for four decades. They drew up a list of institutions that remained unscathed: Parliament, the IB, bureaucracy and you name it. They then went after those. They used institutions as instruments of their political design. They demoralised every single branch of government. But we did not speak out. After all, this was reform by stealth. Destroy government from within.

Then they came for inflation. They confused a GDP target of 10 per cent with an inflation target. Inflation will come down next quarter, we were told. Then they tried to buy us out. Inflation: no problem. Simply get the government to spend even more. Then they pretended inflation is a problem for the rich. Then they simply stopped talking about it. We did not speak out. After all, for some, inflation is just a number

Then they came for the telecom sector. They got greedy and milked it. They got arbitrary and retrospectively taxed it. But we did not speak out. After all, new communication can be a threat to government. Besides, we can always revert to fixed lines. More digging is good.

Then they came for financial stability. They produced a large deficit. They brought the current account deficit close to an unsustainable point. They nearly wrecked the banking sector. They created every macro-economic instability you can imagine, which makes investment difficult. But we did not speak out. After all, what would you rather have: macro economic stability or a free lunch?

Then they came for regulation. It was back to the 1970s. More arbitrary regulation is good. More rules are good. Uncertainty makes business more adept. The answer to every administrative problem is enacting a new law. Multiple regulators are good because they represent the diversity of India. We did not speak out. After all, just like the religious confuse piety with mere ritual, the virtuous confuse regulation with outcomes.

Then they came after freedom. They promulgated more restrictive rules for everything: freedom of expression, right to assembly and protest, foreign scholars. They used sedition laws. They kept the architecture of colonial laws intact. They said they stood against communal forces. But then they let Digvijaya Singh keep the communal pot boiling. They matched BJP’s communal politicisation of terrorism at every step and then some. We did not speak out. After all, if they are not Hindutva forces, they cannot be a threat to peace and liberty.

Then they came for virtue itself. They preached, from the very summit of power: avoid responsibility. It will always be someone else’s fault. They legitimized being corrupt: you are entitled to it if you are the party of the poor. They encouraged subterfuge to the point that members of the cabinet were subverting each other. They pretended that integrity is a word that does not mean anything. To independent thinkers, they said: why think when there is 10 Janpath? We did not speak out. After all, virtue and thinking can both be outsourced.

Then they came for the poor. They visited their houses and slept in their homes. They liked the experience so much they decided to become growth sceptics. Enact policies that keep India in poverty a little longer. But we did not speak out. After all, once the poor have been used as an argument, all else is immobilized.

Then they came for the citizens. They used the secularism blackmail to reduce our choices. If you are not with us you are evil they said. Then they infantilised us. You are not capable of exercising choices so we will make them for you. They acted as if we were so stupid that the three topmost leaders felt no need to justify themselves to us. But we did not speak out. After all we do have the vote.

The writer is president, Centre for Policy Research, Delhi, and a contributing editor for ‘The Indian Express’

Friday, February 8, 2013

Property owners to take BMC to court over tax anomalies


Rajshri Mehta Times News Network 08.02.13

http://bit.ly/bmcptax

Mumbai: The civic body’s decision to compute property tax through a capital-value based system is set for legal intervention. At an urgent special general public meeting attended by nearly 500 people, the Property Owners’ Association (POA) has decided to file a writ petition in Bombay high court. The POA claimed that the new tax system was not only “irrational’’ but “unreasonable’’, too, as it also discriminated between the levy applicable on two properties located in the same vicinity.

The POA has demanded that the civic body compute tax under the old system of rateable value as the new system creates a divide between tenants and property owners, who in turn can evict the former for non-payment. “The tenants and members of co-operative societies do not seem to realize the implications of this decision. By 2015, when the restriction of computing tax at two times the existing value is removed, the tax levy will increase by 18 to 25 times,’’ said B R Bhattad, POA’s executive president. “If the tenant is unable to pay the rent liability under Maharashtra Rent Control Act 2000, the owner will file a suit to evict him. The owner has no option as he cannot increase the rent to recover the high tax dues, otherwise the civic body will attach his property and auction it. The tax should have a reasonable co-relation with the money required for the civic body to fulfil its obligations,’’ he added, pointing out flaws like area, RCC or load-bearing structure in the property data prepared by the BMC. Advocate Mulraj Shah said BMC has neither explained nor justified the reason for levying a different rate of tax at 1.33% and 2.66% of capital values for a shop and an office respectively.