Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Satisfaction ? Excellence ? Perfection ?

A German once visited a temple under construction where he saw a
sculptor making an idol of God. Suddenly he noticed a similar idol lying
nearby. Surprised, he asked the sculptor, "Do you need two statues of
the same idol?" "No," said the sculptor without looking up, "We need
only one, but the first one got damaged at the last stage." The
gentleman examined the idol and found no apparent damage. "Where is the
damage?" he asked. "There is a scratch on the nose of the idol." said
the sculptor, still busy with his work. "Where are you going to install
the idol?" The sculptor replied that it would be installed on a pillar
twenty feet high. "If the idol is that far, who is going to know that
there is a scratch on the nose?" the gentleman asked. The sculptor
stopped his work, looked up at the gentleman, smiled and said, "I will
know it."

The desire to excel is exclusive of the fact whether someone else
appreciates it or not. "Excellence" is a drive from inside, not outside.
Excellence is not for someone else to notice but for your own
satisfaction and efficiency…

--
http://www.fastmail.fm - Or how I learned to stop worrying and
love email again

Thursday, December 10, 2009

Aathimoolam IAF

Athimoolam's IAF reminiscences ... sorry saar for the language.
http://www.athimoolam.com/category/indian-air-force/

Tragedy of the Commons

The Tragedy of the Commons -- Elinor Ostrom's Nobel winning work
and related stuff:
http://www.indiana.edu/~iascp/LinPubs.html

This is what the Nobel Prize committee said about the author:

"Elinor Ostrom has challenged the conventional wisdom that common
property is poorly managed and should be either regulated by central
authorities or privatized. Based on numerous studies of user-managed
fish stocks, pastures, woods, lakes, and groundwater basins, Ostrom
concludes that the outcomes are, more often than not, better than
predicted by standard theories. She observes that resource users
frequently develop sophisticated mechanisms for decision-making and rule
enforcement to handle conflicts of interest, and she characterizes the
rules that promote successful outcomes."
_________

dB, dBm, dBV... calculator

dB dBV etc calculator/converter (needs Javascript):
http://www.sengpielaudio.com/calculator-db-volt.htm

For budding programmers...

Using VI on Linux... Beginners Tutorials
--------

* Vim 101: A Beginner's Guide to Vim -
http://www.linux.com/learn/tutorials/228600-vim-101-a-beginners-guide-to-vim

* Vim 201: An Intermediate Guide to Vim -
http://www.linux.com/learn/tutorials/243002-vim-201-an-intermediate-guide-to-vim

--------

Python GUI programming -- write a screen saver
----------------------------------------------

* Graphical UI programming in python
http://www.linuxplanet.com/linuxplanet/tutorials/6760/1/

From Music to Euclidean Algorithm for GCD (HCF) ....and other Fun Math links etc..

----
Music and Euclid's algo ?
=> http://plus.maths.org/issue40/features/wardhaugh/index.html
----
Q: What's the HCF (GCD) of 252 and 105 ?
When you are done, visit
=> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euclidean_algorithm
-----
Interactive Math Miscellany and Puzzles: Cut the Knot
=> http://cut-the-knot.org/
-----
More advanced: mathpages.com
=> http://mathpages.com/
----
Wolfram Mathworld -- extensive mathematics resource
=> http://mathworld.wolfram.com/
----

============
*Music Notation*

1. abc notation:
** http://abcnotation.com/
** http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abc_notation

2. LilyPond
** http://lilypond.org/web/

/A

Tuesday, December 8, 2009

"Varalaaru"

History in Tamil :

http://www.varalaaru.com/


--
http://www.fastmail.fm - mmm... Fastmail...

Indian Math :

http://www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/history/Projects/Pearce/index.html

--
http://www.fastmail.fm - Same, same, but different...

Monday, December 7, 2009

books online

http://www.readbookonline.net/fictionNovel/


--
http://www.fastmail.fm - The way an email service should be

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Mathematical Enrichment site (by U of Cambridge)

=> http://nrich.maths.org/public/index.php

NRICH is part of the family of activities in the Millennium Mathematics Project (http://mmp.math.org) , which also includes the Plus and Motivate sites.

/A

Monday, October 5, 2009

Reasoning, argumentation, fallacies...

Read about Abduction, Analogy, Cause to Effects reasoning, Effects to Cause reasoning, Inductive logic, Modal logic...

=> http://changingminds.org/disciplines/argument/types_reasoning/types_reasoning.htm

Syllogism and Syllogistic fallacies...
=> http://changingminds.org/disciplines/argument/fallacies/a_syllogistic.htm


Check out the main site as well..
=> http://changingminds.org/

/A

SoftPanorama.ORG -- rich site worth exploring

SoftPanorma: Open Source Software Educational Society
http://www.softpanorama.org/index.shtml

Including --

* Unix tools
http://www.softpanorama.org/Tools/index.shtml

* Algorithms
http://www.softpanorama.org/Algorithms/index.shtml

And
* Cope with Stress !
http://www.softpanorama.org/Social/Toxic_managers/stress.shtml

* What is Lysenkoism ?
http://www.softpanorama.org/Skeptics/lysenkoism.shtml

Enjoy !

/A

Shell stuff -- tips etc

Tips & stuff from ShellDorado --
Shell tips for beginners:
http://www.shelldorado.com/shelltips/beginner.html

/A

Monday, September 28, 2009

Vijaya Dashami - Maha's Thought for the day - 28 Sep 09

===========================================================
"The excitement of learning separates youth from old age.
As long as you're learning, you're not old"
-- Rosalyn S. Yalow.
===========================================================

Today is Vijaya Dashami - Happy Dasarah !

http://www.thaindian.com/newsportal/uncategorized/in-gods-name-kids-start-learning-on-vijayadashami_100252623.html

/A

Thursday, September 24, 2009

Garageband ? No... Linux MultiMedia Studio

http://lmms.info/home.php (Linux MultiMedia Studio)

/A

Child Walks Out On Toy Non-Proliferation Talks

Child Walks Out On Toy Non-Proliferation Talks

"The Feits had hoped to walk away from the dinner-table summit with a
cap on the acquisition of new toys and a workable plan for the reduction
of those already in their daughter's possession," said Nancy Flemming,
the Feits' neighbor and friend. "But after less than half an hour of
talks, Corinne said she wished she was never born and stomped to her
room. It was nothing short of a meltdown."

The long-standing toy-related conflict between the Feits and their only
child came to a head last week when the Feits announced that the rate at
which Corinne was amassing toys was unacceptable, and that her new habit
of storing toys in the garage and living room was in direct violation of
household rules. The Feits suggested the two parties "have a serious
talk."

Flemming, who witnessed the summit from a breakfast-nook stool, said the
talks began amicably, with all parties enjoying a snack of Oreo cookies
and milk.

"The cookies were a show of good will on the part of the Feits,"
Flemming said. "They generally discourage between-meal snacking, but
they wanted to make it clear that they were willing to compromise in
order to arrive at a point of agreement satisfactory to both parties."

Indicating that they had no plans to strip Corinne of playtime
capabilities, the Feits opened with an offer to allow her to continue to
acquire outdoor toys—including balls, bikes, and water guns—provided
that she reduce her board games by half.

"Corinne conceded that her board games were in disarray, and agreed to
nearly eliminate them if she could double her doll acquisitions,"
Flemming said. "That's when things turned ugly."

The elder Feits raised concerns that Corinne had accumulated enough
dolls to entertain herself 10 times over, and certainly more plush toys
than could be safely accounted for. Corinne countered that she did not
have nearly as many Bratz dolls as her classmate Jenny Holmes, arguing
that she had the right to pursue a relative degree of parity in the toy
race.

"The Feits categorically rejected Corinne's proposed increase in doll
acquisitions," Flemming said. "Prior to this move, Corinne had
demonstrated a willingness to concede certain points to her parents.
That changed as soon as the Feits tried to exact a binding commitment
from Corinne on the doll point."

Corinne not only questioned her parents' jurisdiction over her, she
openly defied it.

"Corinne said she didn't have to do what they said and they should just
go ahead and try to make her," Flemming said. "Then she intimated that
she could acquire toys through back channels, such as her grandmother. I
can only speculate that Corinne was hoping to undermine her parents'
authority with that gambit, but it hurt her cause."

Adam responded with the mandate that no new toys were to be brought into
the house for three months, at which time the situation would be
reviewed to determine whether Corinne had developed a greater sense of
responsibility.

"Corinne responded to her father's sanctions by screaming, 'I hate
you,'" Flemming said. "I doubt the two parties can hope for a peaceful
solution anytime soon. Certainly, a cooling-down period is in order."

Flemming said the Feits were very disappointed that the talks broke
down.

"Donna pointed out that toy reduction would serve Corinne's own
interests," Flemming said. "She warned that amassing a stockpile of toys
without proper containment devices, such as shelves or a toy box, could
lead to the needless destruction of toys. And Adam noted that
undocumented toy stockpiles could fall into the hands of hostile
neighbors, such as the Peterson boy."

Toy-proliferation experts expect the impasse to last at least until
morning.

--
http://www.fastmail.fm - Or how I learned to stop worrying and
love email again

Thursday, September 17, 2009

Links: GeoGebra, Munshi Premchand in English

* GeoGebra -- Geometry, Algebra
http://www.geogebra.org/cms/index.php

* Munshi Premchand -- 11 stories in English
http://www.scribd.com/doc/6309625/premchand11stories

--A

Monday, September 14, 2009

Rare audio tracks online (from British Library)

Go to British Library, Sounds:
http://sounds.bl.uk

Link to Story -- http://links.cbc.ca/a/l.x?T=jncickglgpffpjjaimincdpnmi&M=43

=========================================================
From: George Lessard <media@web.net>
Sent: Tuesday, 8 September, 2009 4:52:49
Subject: [Asiapacific-general] British Library releases 23, 700 rare
audio tracks online

British Library releases 23,700 rare audio tracks online
The British Library has made 23,700 rare music and sound recordings from
its massive collection, reputed to be one of the largest sound archives
in
the world, available for free online.
Full Story:
http://links.cbc.ca/a/l.x?T=jncickglgpffpjjaimincdpnmi&M=43

Archival Sound Recordings

Archival Sound Recordings is the result of a development project to
increase access to the British Library Sound Archive's extensive
collections. The British Library holds one of the world's foremost sound
archives with a collection of over 3.5 million audio recordings. These
come from all over the world and cover the entire range of recorded
sound
from music, drama and literature, to oral history, wildlife and
environmental sounds. You can search and browse information about all
the
sounds held in the British Library at our online catalogue.

This website delivers a selection of that rich audio heritage in the
form
of tens of thousands of digitised recordings and their associated
documentation. If you were to listen to all the recordings on this site
for eight hours each day, every day, it would take you around four years
to hear them all!

http://sounds.bl.uk

World and traditional music

Collections from Africa (general)

* Arthur Morris Jones Africa Collection

Collections from eastern Africa

* Kenneth Gourlay Uganda Collection
* Klaus Wachsmann Uganda Collection
* Peter Cooke Uganda Collection

Collections from southern Africa

* David Rycroft South Africa Collection
* Hans-Joachim Heinz Botswana Collection

Collections from western Africa

* Decca West African recordings
* Giles Swayne Senegal Collection

Collections from Asia (general)

* Colin Huehns Asia Collection

Collections from South Asia

* Guy Adam and Niel Nicholson Nepal Collection
* James Kippen North India Collection
* Music from India
* Nicholas Pierce Balochistan Collection

Collections from Australasia

* George Kingsley Roth Fiji Collection
* Raymond Firth Tikopia Collection
* Simon Seligmann Kiribati Collection

Collections from Europe

* Traditional music in England

Miscellaneous collections

* Ethnographic wax cylinders

Arts, literature and performance

* African writers' club
* Early spoken word recordings
* ICA talks
* St Mary-le-Bow public debates

Classical music

* Browse by repertoire
* Browse by performer
* Browse by conductor
* Browse by date

* Bach
* Beethoven
* Brahms
* Chopin
* Haydn
* Mozart

Environment and nature

* Amphibians
* British wildlife recordings
* Soundscapes

Jazz and popular music

* Oral history of jazz in Britain

Oral history

* Art, photography and architecture
* Early spoken word recordings
* Eminent scientists
* History of the Common Cold Unit
* Jewish survivors of the Holocaust
* Oral history of jazz in Britain
* Oral history of recorded sound
* St Mary-le-Bow public debates

--A

Kingdom of Loathing

Kingdom of Loathing
http://www4.kingdomofloathing.com/static.php?id=whatiskol

--A

Tuesday, September 8, 2009

Fwd: A Breath of Fresh Yoga

> A Breath of Fresh Yoga
>
>
> By Vicky Hallett
> Tuesday, September 8, 2009
>
> My favorite thing about yoga classes -- other than the part at the end
> when you get to lie down and act like a corpse -- is that the
> instructors always remind me to breathe. Pretty much without fail,
> whenever I get the cue "Don't hold your breath," I am. And as soon as I
> go for a deep, belly-expanding inhale, I feel amazingly able and at
> ease.
>
> It's no mystery why this happens. Stress causes us to tense up, while
> breathing brings oxygen to the muscles and allows us to relax. "It helps
> with concentration. It increases endurance. It slows your heart rate,"
> rattles off Alvaro Maldonado, co-owner of the FIT personal training gym
> in Dupont Circle. In short, full lungs do a heck of a lot more than just
> keep you alive, especially during strenuous physical activity.
>
> Any personal trainer worth his spandex knows the basic rules: You want
> to exhale on the exertion part of a movement, and inhale on the
> recovery. During cardiovascular exercise, short, shallow breaths are a
> clue that you're overdoing it. And if you can develop a pattern for your
> breathing, you're likely to last longer.
>
> But much of the time in gym settings, the breath takes a back seat to
> other concerns: what we're lifting, how we're squatting, when we're
> leaving. That may be why when Karen Sherman, a senior investigator at
> Seattle's Group Health Center for Health Studies, looked into treatments
> for chronic low-back pain in 2005, weekly yoga classes plus home
> practice appeared to be slightly more effective than weekly sessions of
> aerobic, strengthening and stretching exercises plus home practice.
>
> "What's the active ingredient?" asks Sherman, whose results were
> published in the Annals of Internal Medicine. No one knows why yoga was
> more effective than the other exercises, but Sherman believes part of
> the answer is attention to breath.
>
> "It's not that people don't think about breathing, but they don't give
> you the same language and imagery that creates more awareness," she
> says. "For someone with back pain, one of the possibilities is they
> haven't been paying attention to their bodies." If you're doing
> more-vigilant surveillance, there's a better chance you'll notice that
> you should stand straighter or move differently, and those tweaks could
> provide the treatment you really need.
>
> That bodes well for the future of the Mindfulness Center, a studio
> opening at 4963 Elm St. in Bethesda next week. (There's an open house
> this Saturday and Sunday -- find details on its Facebook page.) The
> concept is to blend meditation and fitness to create classes that focus
> on "mind, body and spirit, not just body," explains the center's
> founder, Deborah Norris, who is American University's
> psychologist-in-residence and a specialist in behavioral medicine. "You
> need to put it all together and pay attention to the fact that they're
> all connected."
>
> Scheduled classes include such offerings as "Mind Body Sculpt." Instead
> of merely telling students to lift a weight, Norris will tell them to
> also lift their hearts. Then she'll prod them: "Notice how it feels? How
> are your energy levels shifting?" "It's the workout of a traditional
> class, but mentally it's clarifying and puts you more at ease," she
> says.
>
> And part of that is done with -- you guessed it -- breathing. "When you
> focus on the breath, the brain focuses inward, and that seems to be good
> for us," Norris says. "The body speaks to us in feelings and sensations.
> We just usually don't listen until it starts screaming pain."
>
> When it comes to how to breathe, Norris is fairly nonpartisan. There are
> countless forms of breath control in yoga that have specific
> instructions about when to inhale, exhale and hold, and Pilates
> emphasizes a style of breathing that focuses on expanding the rib cage
> while keeping the abs fully engaged.
>
> "My approach is to tune into how the body chooses to breathe, watching
> the breath, allowing it to happen and observing every dimension," Norris
> says. "It's cool as it passes through the nostrils or mouth, warm as it
> enters the lungs. Is there movement in the chest or belly? Do your
> shoulders or back move? Do you feel it in your arms and legs?" No matter
> what your answers, you're likely getting the desired effect, which is a
> greater sense of self and a feeling of control.
>
> FIT's Maldonado taps into a similar approach with his weekly stretching
> and alignment class, which draws from Pilates, yoga and multiple dance
> techniques to enhance flexibility, coordination and performance. "The
> bottom line is, there isn't a specific way to breathe. We all have
> different rhythms, and we all have to find a way to send oxygen to the
> muscles," he says.
>
> Once you figure out how best to get air flowing in and out of your body,
> then you can attempt to master the sorts of moves he teaches. The bends,
> extends and reaches all rely on the power of the exhale to stretch your
> limbs farther. And if your tummy is bloated with air when you need to
> lean over, you'll block your own progress.
>
> There's also no cheating when it comes to breathing. "I can hear if
> they're relaxed and focused and the body is doing what it's supposed to
> be doing," Maldonado says. When they're not, his trick -- other than
> reminding them to inhale and exhale every few seconds -- is to tell them
> not to stiffen their faces. "If they're like this," he says,
> demonstrating a pained, tight expression, "they're not relaxed."
>
> Exercise can often seem like the opposite of relaxation. Our goal is to
> exhaust our muscles, shoot our heart rates up and overcome the
> competition (whether that be a person or a personal best). But
> performance actually improves when you figure out how to keep your calm
> while exerting yourself. "Breathing badly is something that's going to
> make you fatigued faster and hurts form, and that's what gets you
> injured," says Emory Land, a triathlon coach and assistant general
> manager of the Vida Fitness location at Logan Circle. "You'll never
> reach your potential."
>
> So, let this be a reminder to you -- and me: Don't hold your breath.
>
> --
> http://www.fastmail.fm - Accessible with your email software
> or over the web
>


--
http://www.fastmail.fm - Does exactly what it says on the tin

Wednesday, September 2, 2009

H1N1 and computer viruses

Fave topic of Amma's... but a Bunny got there first it seems:
http://www.bunniestudios.com/blog/2009/06/on-influenza-a/

--A

H1N1/Flu tips

(Please remove my email address if you choose to forward this further.
Thank you).

This is at:
http://rajeev2004.blogspot.com/2009/08/very-practical-tips-for-countering.html

Disclaimer: Not offered as medical advise; use at own risk; No warranties, no liabilities.

-----:Forwarded Message:-------

Some tips for prevention from AIMS doctor, although bit lengthy but
worth reading..

Friends,

Thanks to media hype about H1N1, several people who trust me have either
approached or called me to advise. The hype in media about the utility
of face masks and N95 respirators as a tool for general protection
against H1N1 can't be deplored enough. Yesterday, a friend who listened
wanted me to write down briefly what I advised so that he could tell
others in similar words. Hence this short email to friends whom I have
advised recently (and others whom I haven't yet). Please realize that
this is not an official advice, especially the one about face masks or
N95.

Most N95 respirators are designed to filter 95% particulates of 0.3µ,
while the size of H1N1 virus is about 0.1µ. Hence, dependence on N95 to
protect against H1N1 is like protecting against rain with an umbrella
made of mosquito net.

Tamiflu does not kill but prevents H1N1 from further proliferation till
the virus limits itself in about 1-2 weeks (its natural cycle). H1N1,
like other Influenza A viruses, only infects the upper respiratory tract
and proliferates (only) there. The only portals of entry are the
nostrils and mouth/ throat. In a global epidemic of this nature, it's
almost impossible not coming into contact with H1N1 in spite of all
precautions. Contact with H1N1 is not so much of a problem as
proliferation is.

While you are still healthy and not showing any symptoms of H1N1
infection, in order to prevent proliferation, aggravation of symptoms
and development of secondary infections, some very simple steps – not
fully highlighted in most official communications - can be practiced
(instead of focusing on how to stock N95 or Tamiflu):

1. Frequent hand-washing (well highlighted in all official
communications).

2. "Hands-off-the-face" approach. Resist all temptations to touch any
part of face (unless you want to eat, bathe or slap).

3. Gargle twice a day with warm salt water (use Listerine if you don't
trust salt). H1N1 takes 2-3 days after initial infection in the throat/
nasal cavity to proliferate and show characteristic symptoms. Simple
gargling prevents proliferation. In a way, gargling with salt water has
the same effect on a healthy individual that Tamiflu has on an infected
one. Don't underestimate this simple, inexpensive and powerful
preventative method.

4. Similar to 3 above, clean your nostrils at least once every day with
warm salt water. Not everybody may be good at Jala Neti or Sutra Neti
(very good Yoga asanas to clean nasal cavities), but blowing the nose
hard once a day and swabbing both nostrils with cotton buds dipped in
warm salt water is very effective in bringing down viral population.

5. Boost your natural immunity with foods that are rich in Vitamin C
(Amla and other citrus fruits). If you have to supplement with Vitamin C
tablets, make sure that it also has Zinc to boost absorption.

6. Drink as much of warm liquids as you can. Drinking warm liquids has
the same effect as gargling, but in the reverse direction. They wash off
proliferating viruses from the throat into the stomach where they cannot
survive, proliferate or do any harm.

All these are simple ways to prevent, within means of most households,
and certainly much less painful than to wait in long queues outside
Govt. hospitals.

Happy breathing!!
-----------

Monday, August 24, 2009

Tasting the light

Tasting the Light: Device Lets the Blind "See" with Their Tongues

A pair of sunglasses wired to an electric "lollipop" helps the visually impaired regain optical sensations via a different pathway

 

http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=device-lets-blind-see-with-tongues

 

 

 

Institute for Infocomm Research disclaimer: "This email is confidential and may be privileged. If you are not the intended recipient, please delete it and notify us immediately. Please do not copy or use it for any purpose, or disclose its contents to any other person. Thank you."

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

Scientists have captured for the first time the image of memory formation.

Scientists have captured for the first time the image of memory
formation.

An international team has in fact got the image of a mechanism,
specifically protein translation, which underlies long-term memory
formation, a finding which shows when a new memory is formed new
proteins are made locally at the synapse -- the connection between nerve
cells.

And, according to the scientists, this increases the strength of the
synaptic connection and reinforces the memory.

"An important step in long-term memory formation is 'translation', or
the production, of new proteins locally at the synapse strengthening
synaptic connection in reinforcement of a memory, which until now has
never been imaged.

"Using a translational reporter, a fluorescent protein that can be
easily detected and tracked we directly visualised the increased local
translation, or protein synthesis, during memory formation.

"Importantly, this translation was synapse-specific and it required
activation of the post-synaptic cell, showing that this step required
cooperation between the pre and post -synaptic compartments, the parts
of the two neurons that meet at the synapse.

"Thus highly regulated local translation occurs at synapses during
long-term plasticity and requires trans- synaptic signals," lead
scientist Dr Wayne Sossin of Montreal Neurological Institute and
Hospital said.

--
http://www.fastmail.fm - Faster than the air-speed velocity of an
unladen european swallow

Saturday, June 20, 2009

Win32 to Linux Application Crossover Chart

See http://www.grokdoc.net/index.php/Application_Crossover_Chart
(includes gamez!)

--

Mathematics the way she is taught

Scott Aaronson comments on Paul Lockhardt's complaint on the way Mathematics is taught: http://scottaaronson.com/blog/?p=410

And Paul Lockhard's complaint ? A Mathematician's Lament, actually --
is at a http://www.maa.org/devlin/LockhartsLament.pdf

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

Frolicking bull unearths big slice of history

Sanat K Chakraborty | Guwahati

A frolicking bull triggered off archeological interest after it dug out
a few cannon balls with its horns from a mound near a place called
Kajolichowk, about 30 km away from Guwahati.

The granite-type round balls — 165 of them — tumbled out after the
playful animal knocked at a heap, which were noticed by local people,
who later brought this to the notice of the authorities of the Assam
State Museum.

Experts believe that the cannon balls may date back to the Ahom rule in
the 17th century. The Ahoms were said to have come from Southern China
and set up their first kingdom by King Sukapha way back in 1228 and
ruled Assam for nearly 600 years.

The stone spheres of various sizes resemble the cannon balls kept in the
museum, which belonged to the Ahom age. "However, the antiquity of the
cannon balls can be established only after investigation," said
assistant curator of the State Museum Jiten Shyam.

Shyam, who rushed to the site, said the location of the cannon ball pile
looked like a fortification, which also sits well with the local name,
Kajolichowki. In Hindi, Chowki also means a watch-post.

Researchers like Shyam believed that there could be many more such
cannon balls in the site, which might be remnants of an armoury,
connecting it with the famous Battle of Saraighat between the Ahoms and
the invading Mughals of 1671.

The Mughals met with their most embarrassing defeat at Saraighat, even
as they made their last unsuccessful attempt to enter the Brahmaputra
valley.

The Ahom forces under the command of legendary Ahom general Lachit Bor
Phukan fought valiantly and defeated the mighty Mughals. The crafty
general deftly using his enormous knowledge of hilly terrain and war
craft resisted the great advancing forces of the Mughals at the
Saraighat.

Borphukan reclaimed Ahom territory on both sides of the Brahmaputra and
defended Guwahati by constructing huge ramparts surrounding the ancient
capital of Pragjyotispur.

It is believed that the site of the new archeological find might be one
of the military posts, which is not quite far from the site of Saraighat
battle.

Locals say that they used to find similar cannon balls from time to
time, but unaware of such a historically important site.

--
http://www.fastmail.fm - mmm... Fastmail...

Monday, June 1, 2009

Calcium in food

Calcium from food sources is better absorbed than calcium taken as supplements. Children absorb a higher percentage of their ingested calcium than adults because their needs during growth spurts may be two or three times greater per body weight than adults. Vitamin D is necessary for intestinal absorption, making Vitamin D–fortified milk a very well-absorbed form of calcium. Older persons may not consume or make as much vitamin D as is optimal, so their calcium absorption may be decreased. Vitamin C and lactose (the sugar found in milk) enhance calcium absorption, whereas meals high in fat or protein may decrease absorption. Excess phosphorous consumption (as in carbonated sodas) can decrease calcium absorption in the intestines. High dietary fiber and phytate (a form of phytic acid found in dietary fiber and the husks of whole grains) may also decrease dietary calcium absorption in some areas of the world. Intestinal pH also affects calcium absorption—absorption is optimal with normal stomach acidity generated at meal times. Thus, persons with reduced stomach acidity (e.g., elderly persons, or persons on acid-reducing medicines) do not absorb calcium as well as others do.

 

<from faqs.org>

Institute for Infocomm Research disclaimer: "This email is confidential and may be privileged. If you are not the intended recipient, please delete it and notify us immediately. Please do not copy or use it for any purpose, or disclose its contents to any other person. Thank you."

Monday, May 18, 2009

WikiBooks - Playing the Guitar, LaTeX typesetting.

WikiBooks on playing the Guitar :
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Guitar

WikiBooks on LaTeX typesetting :
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/LaTeX

Rajiv Malhotra on Westernized background

On his own "Westernized Background" and how it is perceived.
http://rajivmalhotra.sulekha.com/blog/post/2004/04/the-westernized-side-of-my-background.htm

"We have an ancient Indian tradition of engaging the 'other' using a technique called purva-paksha. This means you must first study the other's viewpoint very seriously and become an expert in it. Only then can you debate against it."

...

On the other hand, the west has invested serious resources to study Indian culture and thought rather than ignoring it. RISA is merely one example to prove my point. This started with the Jesuit College about 500 years ago that translated Sanskrit works into Latin (including many in science/mathematics still not declassified by the Vatican). Later it became more sophisticated Indology in 19th century: EVERY major European university had Sanskrit text studies as a large department. Today this is done not by the British Empire but mainly by the US Government, the churches, and various US private foundations funded by MNCs wealth. Today's South Asian Studies replaces colonial Indology as the west's purva-paksha of Indian thought and culture.....

...

The Avatar enters the theater of mundane life to teach how to live in the mundane kshetra.

So today's teachings must be for today's kshetra, which happens to be western dominated. Krishna starts with a SWOT analysis (SWOT means Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities and Threats) of both sides of the war, when he explains to Arjuna the capabilities of each of the main participants. This is called competitive analysis, an example of having knowledge of the kshetra – a very practical thing

"

/A

Kerala School of Mathematics, Kerala Astronomers...

* Kerala Astronomers and Eurocentrism
http://varnam.org/blog/2009/01/op-ed-in-mail-today-kerala-astronomers-and-eurocentrism/

(From Varnam -- http://varnam.org/blog/)

* Neither Newton nor Leibnitz - The Pre-History of Calculus and Celestial Mechanics in Medieval Kerala

http://www.canisius.edu/topos/rajeev.asp

/A

Monday, April 13, 2009

S N Balagangadhara & Rethinking Religion in India

=================================

Rethinking Religion in India:
http://www.youtube.com/user/cultuurwetenschap

S.N. Balagangadhara's profile:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S._N._Balagangadhara

=================================

Meher Baba

Meher Baba's books:
http://www.ambppct.org/meherbaba/BooksByMeherBaba.php

Yatra Tatra Sarvatra, Sanskrit, Flash game, Percussion TED talk

-----
* Blog worth reading: Yatra Tatra Sarvatra
http://yatratatrasarvatra.blogspot.com/
----
* Quick thoughts on Sanskrit....
http://thirtylettersinmyname.blogspot.com/2009/01/quick-thoughts-and-quotes-on-sanskrit.html
----
* Interview with Prof Lakshmi Thatachar -- in "Sanskrit Literature"
http://venetiaansell.wordpress.com/2009/01/26/an-interview-with-professor-lakshmi-thathachar/
----
* Reference: The Clay Sanskrit Library
http://www.claysanskritlibrary.org/

======================================
!!!! *** GAMES *** !!!

* Flash Element TD (Flash game)
http://novelconcepts.co.uk/FlashElementTD2/

======================================

**** PERCUSSION TIME ****

* TED Talks on YouTube
http://www.youtube.com/user/TEDtalksDirector

* TED talks talk by Evelynn Glennie on percussion and music with your whole body
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IU3V6zNER4g

* Percussion inspired by Evelynn Glennie's talk...
Hand drumming on drum kit
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lR12cGaf5H0

======================================
/A.

David de Rothschild sets sails to save the oceans from 'plastic death'

Read about the voyage through the pacific on seacraft 'Plastiki' --
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2009/apr/12/david-de-rothschild-plastiki-pacific

/A

Thursday, March 12, 2009

FDA Prepares Nation For Switch To Digital Food Format :--)

Urging the estimated 60 million Americans who have not yet made the
transition to the more advanced form of sustenance to do so as soon as
possible, acting FDA commissioner Frank Torti announced Wednesday that
the nationwide conversion to Digital Food (DF) will take place on
Apr.17, 2009. "The only thing consumers who currently rely on analog
foods will need is a digital converter box, which you can purchase at
any grocery store," Torti said at a press conference, adding that every
American household is eligible for a $40 coupon to digitize its current
pantry. "DF offers higher texture quality and better taste, as well as
multiple spice choices and interactive capabilities. I must stress,
however, that after the deadline you will no longer be able to eat your
current food." On the heels of the announcement, President Obama has
begun pressuring the Senate to pass legislation that would require all
food to be completely wireless by 2015.

--
http://www.fastmail.fm - The professional email service

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Malayalam & related -- Some blog links etc

Thirukkural and Malayalam:
http://jayathyvisheshangal.blogspot.com/2009/03/blog-post.html

Jayathi blog:
http://jayathyvisheshangal.blogspot.com/

Malayalam blogs

* Onam shopping in Trichur
<a href="http://ezhuthulokam.blogspot.com/2008/09/blog-post.html">à´šിà´²
à´“à´£ à´µിà´¶േà´·à´™്ങള്‍ - ഇത്à´¤ിà´°ി à´…à´¤ിà´¬ുà´¦്à´§ിà´¯ും</a>


* "Trichur travel blog"
<a
href="http://ezhuthulokam.blogspot.com/2008/08/blog-post_14.html">à´žാà´¨ും à´ªോà´¯ി
à´’à´°ു à´¯ാà´¤്à´°</a>a


* Suraj comments on quantumn phenomena and other stuff
http://surajcomments.blogspot.com/search/label/%E0%B4%B6%E0%B4%BE%E0%B4%B8%E0%B5%8D%E0%B4%A4%E0%B5%8D%E0%B4%B0%20%E0%B4%A4%E0%B5%86%E0%B4%B1%E0%B5%8D%E0%B4%B1%E0%B4%BF%E0%B4%A6%E0%B5%8D%E0%B4%A7%E0%B4%BE%E0%B4%B0%E0%B4%A3%E0%B4%95%E0%B4%B3%E0%B5%8D%E2%80%8D

----

Monday, March 9, 2009

stem cells

Vellore research centre makes stem cell breakthrough
9 Mar 2009, 0054 hrs IST, Jaya Menon, TNN


VELLORE: It's a breakthrough that may have the country's medical and
scientific community sitting up and taking notice. The Centre for Stem
Cell Research at Christian Medical College has succeeded in
reprogramming cells drawn from adult mice and making them function like
stem cells found in the human embryo.

It has opened a new chapter in stem cell therapy in the country, as the
technology can now be applied to generate similar stem cells from adult
human cells too. These can be used to study genetic disorders relating
to blood, muscle, brain and even diseases like diabetes. The use of
embryos to draw stem cells has been the subject of a controversy, and
the latest discovery may mean that embryos need not necessarily be used
in the process.

''This is an important milestone for India in stem cell research and
signifies a paradigm shift in the way diseases can be treated. We will
now begin work on human cells to generate disease-specific iPS cells to
study hereditary diseases,'' Dr Alok Srivastava, who heads the research
centre, said.

''For India, this means once we are able to take this on to human cells
also; we will not have to rely on external help for generating models
for studying and treating human diseases. With regard to clinical
significance, as anywhere else in the world, we need to be very careful
not to give an impression to people that this is going into human
treatment anytime soon. It could be years before that happens and it
will be only after the safety of use of such cells is clearly
established,'' he said.

In February, the research centre, supported by the department of
biotechnology, ministry of science and technology and CMC, was
successful in generating in mice these ''induced pluripotent stem (iPS)
cells'' which are similar to embryonic stem cells. Researchers will soon
move on to generating similar cells from normal and diseased human
cells.

The centre looks primarily at translational research - research that has
potential for clinical applications.

Embryonic stem cells have great capacity for self-renewal and are used
in regenerative medicine and tissue replacement. The induced pluripotent
stem (iPS) cells generated at the research centre may have the same
potential, researchers say. India is the fifth country, after Japan, US,
China and Britain, to achieve these results.

The iPS technology is relatively new and acknowledged worldwide as the
''ultimate manufacturing process''. Scientists can now use the human
skin or other cells like an assembly line to roll off cells that have
the ability to adapt themselves to any tissue in the body that requires
healing or replenishment.

--
http://www.fastmail.fm - Accessible with your email software
or over the web

Saturday, February 28, 2009

Biodiesel from Algae

Algae from the Ocean, a sustainable energy source ?
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/06/080626145543.htm

Comprehensive report on Algae for BioDiesel:
http://www.folkecenter.net/mediafiles/folkecenter/pdf/Report_algae.pdf

Resource links:
http://www.biodiesel.org/
http://www.oilgae.com/
http://www.greencarcongress.com/
http://www.unh.edu/
http://www.biofuelsdigest.com/

Various: Debating, Smoking (k)ills, History, Wild-Singapore links

**** Debating:
World Debating Website http://worlddebating.blogspot.com/

**** Smoking: Maddy's Thoughts: From the first puff to the last.
About acrid beedis and other nasties
http://maddy06.blogspot.com/2009/02/from-first-to-last-puff.html
(Note: Smoking Kills !)

**** Historic Alleys (by the same Maddy as above)
Learn about how Malabar endured Tipu... and the story of Moplahs vs Tipu.
http://historicalleys.blogspot.com/

**** Wild-Singapore. For Nature lovers.
For Wild-life and nature lovers, Singapore. Includes events this week etc.
http://wildsingaporehappenings.blogspot.com/

Monday, February 23, 2009

Friday, February 20, 2009

Study in Germany

* German Academic Exchange Program:
http://www.daad.de/en/index.html

* KMK -- Educational Exchange Service
http://www.kmk-pad.org/

* Auslandsschulwesen (Central Agency for German Schools Abroad)
http://www.auslandsschulwesen.de/

-----

Thursday, February 12, 2009

The Davos World Economic Forum (WEF), Competing Ideologies: Davos v. Belem

If "Another World Is Possible" ...
from
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=12144

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

The Davos World Economic Forum (WEF)
Competing Ideologies: Davos v. Belem

by Stephen Lendman
Global Research, February 3, 2009

Founded in 1971, the Geneva-based World Economic Forum (WEF) meets annually in Davos, Switzerland to bring together top business and political leaders as well as mostly neoliberal minded intellectuals, economists, journalists, and others.

WEF calls itself "an independent international organization committed to improving the state of the world by engaging leaders in partnerships to shape global, regional and industry agendas." It aims for "world-class governance (read dominance)." Its motto is "entrepreneurship in the global public interest (read for the top 1%)." This year's theme - "Shaping the Post-Crisis World" - a tall order addressing what they caused that's heading the world for a calamitous depression.

Its five-day 2009 meeting attracted over 2500 participants from 91 countries, including over 1170 CEOs and chairpersons from the world's most powerful companies. Others included 219 public figures, 40 heads of state, 64 cabinet ministers, and various other high-level business, government, think tank, media, academic, religious, organizational, and union officials. Noticeably different, according to Bloomberg, "was the virtual absence of Wall Street figures" as well as top Obama administration figures.

Annually, Davos becomes headquarters for the world's power elite to meet and review past achievements, challenges, and prospects for greater exploitation of world markets, resources, and people everywhere. Or put another way, to use money to create more of it, for themselves, of course.

Ordinarily the occasion is celebratory. Capitalism flaunts its successes and parties. This year gloom prevailed, and one topic above others took precedence: assessing the global economic crisis, its risks in the near and longer term, plotting strategies for the coming year and beyond, and avoiding an appearance of panic in an event drawing prominent media coverage.

Not easy with capitalism most in crisis since the Great Depression, no one sure how to right things, and attendees like George Soros believing today's problem "is larger than in the 1930s." Bloomberg headlined the mood: "Grimmest Davos Ever Brings Anger, Finger-Pointing at Bankers," and one observer noted that "the only good news in Davos was the weather."

Bloomberg added that "Almost everyone blamed the few bankers who showed up for the near-collapse of the financial system," with harshest criticism for Wall Street, the Bush administration, and Obama officials for their absence. Economist Kenneth Rogoff called this year the grimmest Davos ever. Abraaj Capital's CEO, Arif Naqvi said "People are looking for the solution, but don't yet have the question formulated." Other attendees predicted that conditions in 2010 may be no better.

The Financial Times' (FT) John Gapper wrote: "This was not the week to be seen in Davos and, if you were there, it was not the time to remain calm." He cited one debate with Black Swan author Nassim Taleb saying bankers should be punished and forced to return their bonuses. He described WEF founder Klaus Schwab as "pale-faced," considering "the impossible task this year - to forge harmony out of tension" and plan how to recover.

For many, Davos this year was "where the pent-up dismay and anger over what Wall Street wrought boiled to the surface" despite efforts to contain it. The stars were those who saw the crisis early and warned about it. Figures like Taleb and Nouriel Roubini who says the worst is still to come.

The FT reported that "The unrelenting economic gloom and the fragility of the banking system have cast a cloud over the global agenda and (managed) to dominate discussions. Drama did as well with Turkey's prime minister Erdogan storming out after an exchange with Israel's Shimon Peres over Gaza, but there was more. Despite its absence, America dominated geopolitical and financial concerns.

The Wall Street Journal reported that "The premiers of Russia and China slammed the US economic system in speeches (January 28), holding it responsible for the global economic crisis."

Implying but not naming America, China's Wen Jiabao said the financial crisis was "attributable to inappropriate macroeconomic policies of some economies and their unsustainable model of development characterized by prolonged low savings and high consumption; excessive expansion of financial institutions in blind pursuit of profit."

Putin, in contrast, was blunt in attacking a "unipolar world," saying it's "dangerous" to rely on the US dollar, and calling for the development of multiple, regional reserve currencies in addition to the dollar. He also mocked US businessmen who boasted last year that America's economy was strong and prospects sound. "Today," said Putin, "investment banks, the pride of Wall Street, have virtually ceased to exist," then added: "The entire economic growth system, where one regional center prints money without respite and consumes material wealth, while another regional center manufactures inexpensive goods....has suffered a major setback."

US officials didn't comment but former Fed vice-chairman, Alan Blinder said: "The sad thing is that we might have scoffed at (these comments) a while ago. But we really dragged the world down" economically. "No wonder (Klaus) Schwab looked so stricken," said FT's Gapper.

Davos is a secluded ski village. Protests are banned but not entirely. Dozens marched through the town and threw snowballs and shoes at Swiss police and the convention center. Among them were members of the Young Socialist and Green parties as well as Amnesty International representatives.

Things were violent in Geneva where Germany's Deutsche Welle reported that "Riot police fired tear gas and water cannons at bottle-throwing demonstrators protesting against the annual World Economic Forum in Davos." AP said hundreds turned out for a largely peaceful demonstration until police "chased black-clad protesters through (Geneva's) narrow streets as shoppers took refuge in bars and cafes."

Regional secretary for the trade union Unia, Alessandro Pelizzari, spoke for many in saying: "100,000 lost their jobs in Europe this week. And those responsible are in Davos." One of the protest organizers, Laurent Tettamenti, added: "The WEF is a symbol of the neoliberal policies of the last 20 years that have caused (today's) crisis. We have no confidence that the same people who caused (this) can solve it."

* The World Social Forum's (WSF) Alternative Vision

At a time of global crisis, WSF more than ever was crucial, relevant and vital. Founded by Brazil's Ethos Institute for Business and Social Responsibility chairman Oded Grajew, it held its first meeting concurrently with WEF in late January 2001 and continues doing it annually. Its motto - "Another world is possible." Today, it's essential.

WEF is "an opened space - plural, diverse, non-governmental and non-partisan - that stimulates decentralized debate, reflection, (and) proposals building. (It) experiences exchange and alliances among movements and organizations engaged in concrete actions towards....more solidarity, (and a) democratic and fair world."

The first three forums were in Porto Alegre, Brazil. It moved to India in 2004, then back to Porto Alegre in 2005. In 2006, it was "polycentric" - in January in Caracas, Venezuela and Bamako, Mali, then delayed until March in Karachi, Pakistan because of the area's earthquake. In 2007, it was in Nairobi, Kenya, then in 2008, it became a Global Call for Action and Mobilization by letting thousands of autonomous organizations worldwide hold simultaneous events in dozens of countries. The 2009 forum returned to the Amazonian port city of Belem in northern Brazil, about 60 miles upriver from the Atlantic Ocean.

* WSF's Charter of Principles

After its 2001 inaugural, WSF drafted Principles "to guide the continued
pursuit of (its) initiative."

Unlike predatory capitalism on display at Davos:

(1) WSF "is an open meeting place for reflective thinking, democratic debate of ideas, formulation of proposals," free exchanges among participants, and formulations of collective action plans. Participants are civil society individuals, groups and organizations committed to a new society "directed towards fruitful relationships among Mankind and between it and the Earth."

(2) WSF's "Another World Is Possible" theme is a "permanent process of seeking and building alternatives."

(3) WSF is "a world process."

(4) WSF supports global justice, democracy, human rights, equality, the "sovereignty of peoples," and opposes neoliberalism, predatory capitalism, complicit governments, and their destructive harm.

(5) WSF is a civil society meeting ground, not a body representing it.

(6) Forums are for participant exchanges, not to establish positions for WSF as a body or make it a "locus of power."

(7) WSF facilitates and circulates ideas and decisions "without directing, hierarchizing, censuring or restricting them, but as deliberations" and decisions by Forum participants.

(8) WSF is decentralized, "plural, diversified, non-confessional, non-governmental and non-party" locally and internationally "to build another world."

(9) WSF is committed to "pluralism (and) diversity." Government officials who accept the Charter Principles are welcome to attend. More on that below.

(10) WSF opposes totalitarianism and reductionist economic views. It stands in solidarity with all humanity in peace and harmony for a better
world.

(11) WSF is a Forum for debate, reflection and exchange of ideas on how to "resist and overcome" the domination of capital.

(12) WSF "encourages understanding and mutual recognition (among) participant organisations and movements, and places special value on (exchanges) among them."

(13) WSF aims to "strengthen and create new national and international links (to) increase the capacity for non-violent social resistance (against) dehumani(zing) the world."

(14) WSF aims to have a global agenda for "building a new world in solidarity."

* Themes and Solidarity in Belem

Over 100,000 attendees from 150 countries voiced common themes - Pan-Amazonia for the Forum's site, opposition to predatory capitalism, wars, inequality, injustice, intolerance, environmental destruction, prejudice, and elitism. For six days, hundreds of events took place in workshops, campings, seminars, conferences, speeches, testimonies, marches, cultural and artistic activities, exchanges, reflection, proposals, consensus-building for a better world, and ending with a "Day of Alliances" to decide on joint actions. In all, it was a mass coming together for a better world and an utter rejection of Davos and its ruling ethos.

* Latin American Leaders at Belem, Not Davos

On January 29, Venezuela's Hugo Chavez, Brazil's Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, Bolivia's Evo Morales, Ecuador's Rafael Correa, and Paraguay's Fernando Lugo criticized Washington in Belem.

Correa: "The guilty parties in this crisis try to give lessons on morality and good economic handling. The most powerful people on the planet have united to find a therapy for the dying. They're getting together - the central bankers, the representatives of the large financial firms, the people primarily responsible for the crisis." They caused it. Can we expect them to fix it? Correa called for a "common project," a 21st century socialism characterized by justice and efficiency, a return to state planning "for the development of the majority of the people."

He also attacked US-dominated institutions like the IMF and World Bank: "Using the art of deception they will try to confuse us into thinking the victims are the guilty ones. They are the ones responsible for the crisis. They are not the ones to give us lessons." Correa should know. He's a University of Illinois-educated Ph.D in economics.

Lula: the global crisis affecting Latin America wasn't caused by "the socialism of Chavez (or) the struggles of Evo (Morales)," but by wealthy Western states. It's their crisis, not ours. "And who is the god to whom they have appealed? Why, the state! (They) told us what we need in our poor countries. They thought we were incompetent." Look what they did. In attacking George Bush, he added: "The world cannot elect any more presidents that do not listen to social movements, that do not listen to the people."

Lula is a former factory worker and union leader, yet far from a popular president. Outside the event, several hundred in his United Socialist Workers Party (PSTU) protested his making concessions to bankers, business and Washington, yet doing little to stabilize employment for ordinary Brazilians.

Paraguay's Lugo is a former Catholic bishop and liberation theology adherent. He said his country changed "because of your movements' voices of hope" and quoted from the Guarani people's ancient aspiration that one day a "Land Without Evil" might be created. He added that "Latin America is changing and the hope is the north will change as well. We have seen the economic policies they said were so efficient fail."

Evo Morales used anti-imperialist slogans in condemning American interventionism and its regional military bases. He said "Before you are four presidents - four presidents (Lula spoke separately) who could not be here were it not for your fight. I see so many brothers and sisters here, from Latin America's social movements to European figures."

Hugo Chavez spoke about a new revolutionary path saying social movements have been in the "trenches of resistance" and must go on the "offensive" to create alternatives to global capitalism.

"Just like Latin America and the Caribbean received the biggest dose of neoliberal venom, our continent has been the immense territory where social movements have sprouted with the greatest strength and began to change the world....another world is necessary (and) is being born in Latin America and the Caribbean. Revolutions are no longer guerrilla battalions, no! This is a new revolutionary wave....This year will be hard, we must unite. Our socialism should not be a copy. Our socialism should be a heroic creation....Socialism of our America, a profoundly democratic socialism. This is our path."

For the ninth consecutive year, WSF's participants agreed that "Another World Is Possible." This year it's essential, now more than ever.

Stephen Lendman is a Research Associate of the Centre for Research on Globalization. He lives in Chicago and can be reached at
lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.
-----

Sanskrit lessons, Malayalam links, search for Muziris

Learn Sanskrit -- sample lessons
1. http://easysanskrit.chinfo.org/cif/view_sample.php

Some Malayalam links

1. Resource (many links):
http://www.cs.princeton.edu/~mp/malayalam/

2. Wiki Library (Malayalam)
http://ml.wikisource.org/wiki/%E0%B4%AA%E0%B5%8D%E0%B4%B0%E0%B4%A7%E0%B4%BE%E0%B4%A8_%E0%B4%A4%E0%B4%BE%E0%B4%B3%E0%B5%8D%E2%80%8D

3. Malayalam language resources
http://theory.tifr.res.in/bombay/history/people/language/malayalam.html

4. Malayalam Resource Centre. (ER&DC's products etc)
http://www.malayalamresourcecentre.org/

History: Search for Muziris -- The Muziris Heritage Project

* The search for Muziris: Pattanam, not Cranganore ?
Roman coins and pottery found by excavators
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/4970452.stm

* Comprehensive Web site on Pattanam excavations
http://www.webahn.co.in/index.html

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Delhi Public Library Book Search

Delhi Public Library Book Search: http://59.176.17.111/

Putin's speech at Davos

From
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123317069332125243.html

===========
The following text is a transcript of Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin's speech at the opening ceremony of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.

Good afternoon, colleagues, ladies and gentlemen,

I would like to thank the forum's organisers for this opportunity to share my thoughts on global economic developments and to share our plans and proposals.

The world is now facing the first truly global economic crisis, which is continuing to develop at an unprecedented pace.

The current situation is often compared to the Great Depression of the late 1920s and the early 1930s. True, there are some similarities.

However, there are also some basic differences. The crisis has affected everyone at this time of globalisation. Regardless of their political or economic system, all nations have found themselves in the same boat.

There is a certain concept, called the perfect storm, which denotes a situation when Nature's forces converge in one point of the ocean and increase their destructive potential many times over. It appears that the present-day crisis resembles such a perfect storm.

Responsible and knowledgeable people must prepare for it. Nevertheless, it always flares up unexpectedly.

The current situation is no exception either. Although the crisis was simply hanging in the air, the majority strove to get their share of the pie, be it one dollar or a billion, and did not want to notice the rising wave.

In the last few months, virtually every speech on this subject started with criticism of the United States. But I will do nothing of the kind.

I just want to remind you that, just a year ago, American delegates speaking from this rostrum emphasised the US economy's fundamental stability and its cloudless prospects. Today, investment banks, the pride of Wall Street, have virtually ceased to exist. In just 12 months, they have posted losses exceeding the profits they made in the last 25 years. This example alone reflects the real situation better than any criticism.

The time for enlightenment has come. We must calmly, and without gloating, assess the root causes of this situation and try to peek into the future.

In our opinion, the crisis was brought about by a combination of several factors.

The existing financial system has failed. Substandard regulation has contributed to the crisis, failing to duly heed tremendous risks.

Add to this colossal disproportions that have accumulated over the last few years. This primarily concerns disproportions between the scale of financial operations and the fundamental value of assets, as well as those between the increased burden on international loans and the sources of their collateral.

The entire economic growth system, where one regional centre prints money without respite and consumes material wealth, while another regional centre manufactures inexpensive goods and saves money printed by other governments, has suffered a major setback.

I would like to add that this system has left entire regions, including Europe, on the outskirts of global economic processes and has prevented them from adopting key economic and financial decisions.

Moreover, generated prosperity was distributed extremely unevenly among various population strata. This applies to differences between social strata in certain countries, including highly developed ones. And it equally applies to gaps between countries and regions.

A considerable share of the world's population still cannot afford comfortable housing, education and quality health care. Even a global recovery posted in the last few years has failed to radically change this situation.

And, finally, this crisis was brought about by excessive expectations. Corporate appetites with regard to constantly growing demand swelled unjustifiably. The race between stock market indices and capitalisation began to overshadow rising labour productivity and real-life corporate effectiveness.

Unfortunately, excessive expectations were not only typical of the business community. They set the pace for rapidly growing personal consumption standards, primarily in the industrial world. We must openly admit that such growth was not backed by a real potential. This amounted to unearned wealth, a loan that will have to be repaid by future generations.

This pyramid of expectations would have collapsed sooner or later. In fact, this is happening right before our eyes.

* * *

Esteemed colleagues, one is sorely tempted to make simple and popular decisions in times of crisis. However, we could face far greater complications if we merely treat the symptoms of the disease.

Naturally, all national governments and business leaders must take resolute actions. Nevertheless, it is important to avoid making decisions, even in such force majeure circumstances, that we will regret in the future.

This is why I would first like to mention specific measures which should
be avoided and which will not be implemented by Russia.

We must not revert to isolationism and unrestrained economic egotism.
The leaders of the world's largest economies agreed during the November
2008 G20 summit not to create barriers hindering global trade and
capital flows. Russia shares these principles.

Although additional protectionism will prove inevitable during the
crisis, all of us must display a sense of proportion.

Excessive intervention in economic activity and blind faith in the
state's omnipotence is another possible mistake.

True, the state's increased role in times of crisis is a natural
reaction to market setbacks. Instead of streamlining market mechanisms,
some are tempted to expand state economic intervention to the greatest
possible extent.

The concentration of surplus assets in the hands of the state is a
negative aspect of anti-crisis measures in virtually every nation.

In the 20th century, the Soviet Union made the state's role absolute. In
the long run, this made the Soviet economy totally uncompetitive. This
lesson cost us dearly. I am sure nobody wants to see it repeated.

Nor should we turn a blind eye to the fact that the spirit of free enterprise, including the principle of personal responsibility of businesspeople, investors and shareholders for their decisions, is being eroded in the last few months. There is no reason to believe that we can achieve better results by shifting responsibility onto the state.

And one more point: anti-crisis measures should not escalate into financial populism and a refusal to implement responsible macroeconomic policies. The unjustified swelling of the budgetary deficit and the accumulation of public debts are just as destructive as adventurous stock-jobbing.

* * *

Ladies and gentlemen, unfortunately, we have so far failed to comprehend the true scale of the ongoing crisis. But one thing is obvious: the extent of the recession and its scale will largely depend on specific high-precision measures, due to be charted by governments and business communities and on our coordinated and professional efforts.

In our opinion, we must first atone for the past and open our cards, so to speak.

This means we must assess the real situation and write off all hopeless debts and "bad" assets.

True, this will be an extremely painful and unpleasant process. Far from everyone can accept such measures, fearing for their capitalisation, bonuses or reputation. However, we would "conserve" and prolong the crisis, unless we clean up our balance sheets. I believe financial authorities must work out the required mechanism for writing off debts that corresponds to today's needs.

Second. Apart from cleaning up our balance sheets, it is high time we got rid of virtual money, exaggerated reports and dubious ratings. We must not harbour any illusions while assessing the state of the global economy and the real corporate standing, even if such assessments are made by major auditors and analysts.

In effect, our proposal implies that the audit, accounting and ratings system reform must be based on a reversion to the fundamental asset value concept. In other words, assessments of each individual business must be based on its ability to generate added value, rather than on subjective concepts. In our opinion, the economy of the future must become an economy of real values. How to achieve this is not so clear-cut. Let us think about it together.

Third. Excessive dependence on a single reserve currency is dangerous for the global economy. Consequently, it would be sensible to encourage the objective process of creating several strong reserve currencies in the future. It is high time we launched a detailed discussion of methods to facilitate a smooth and irreversible switchover to the new model.

Fourth. Most nations convert their international reserves into foreign currencies and must therefore be convinced that they are reliable. Those issuing reserve and accounting currencies are objectively interested in their use by other states.

This highlights mutual interests and interdependence.

Consequently, it is important that reserve currency issuers must implement more open monetary policies. Moreover, these nations must pledge to abide by internationally recognised rules of macroeconomic and financial discipline. In our opinion, this demand is not excessive.

At the same time, the global financial system is not the only element in need of reforms. We are facing a much broader range of problems.

This means that a system based on cooperation between several major centres must replace the obsolete unipolar world concept.

We must strengthen the system of global regulators based on international law and a system of multilateral agreements in order to prevent chaos and unpredictability in such a multipolar world. Consequently, it is very important that we reassess the role of leading international organisations and institutions.

I am convinced that we can build a more equitable and efficient global economic system. But it is impossible to create a detailed plan at this event today.

It is clear, however, that every nation must have guaranteed access to vital resources, new technology and development sources. What we need is guarantees that could minimise risks of recurring crises.

Naturally, we must continue to discuss all these issues, including at the G20 meeting in London, which will take place in April.

* * *

Our decisions should match the present-day situation and heed the requirements of a new post-crisis world.

The global economy could face trite energy-resource shortages and the threat of thwarted future growth while overcoming the crisis.

Three years ago, at a summit of the Group of Eight, we raised the issue of global energy security. We called for the shared responsibility of suppliers, consumers and transit countries. I think it is time to launch truly effective mechanisms ensuring such responsibility.

The only way to ensure truly global energy security is to form interdependence, including a swap of assets, without any discrimination or dual standards. It is such interdependence that generates real mutual responsibility.

Unfortunately, the existing Energy Charter has failed to become a working instrument able to regulate emerging problems.

I propose we start laying down a new international legal framework for energy security. Implementation of our initiative could play a political role comparable to the treaty establishing the European Coal and Steel Community. That is to say, consumers and producers would finally be bound into a real single energy partnership based on clear-cut legal foundations.

Every one of us realises that sharp and unpredictable fluctuations of energy prices are a colossal destabilising factor in the global economy. Today's landslide fall of prices will lead to a growth in the consumption of resources.

On the one hand, investments in energy saving and alternative sources of energy will be curtailed. On the other, less money will be invested in oil production, which will result in its inevitable downturn. Which, in the final analysis, will escalate into another fit of uncontrolled price growth and a new crisis.

It is necessary to return to a balanced price based on an equilibrium between supply and demand, to strip pricing of a speculative element generated by many derivative financial instruments.

To guarantee the transit of energy resources remains a challenge. There are two ways of tackling it, and both must be used.

The first is to go over to generally recognised market principles of fixing tariffs on transit services. They can be recorded in international legal documents.

The second is to develop and diversify the routes of energy transportation. We have been working long and hard along these lines.

In the past few years alone, we have implemented such projects as the Yamal-Europe and Blue Stream gas pipelines. Experience has proved their urgency and relevance.

I am convinced that such projects as South Stream and North Stream are equally needed for Europe's energy security. Their total estimated capacity is something like 85 billion cubic meters of gas a year.

Gazprom, together with its partners – Shell, Mitsui and Mitsubishi – will soon launch capacities for liquefying and transporting natural gas produced in the Sakhalin area. And that is also Russia's contribution to global energy security.

We are developing the infrastructure of our oil pipelines. The first section of the Baltic Pipeline System (BPS) has already been completed. BPS-1 supplies up to 75 million tonnes of oil a year. It does this direct to consumers – via our ports on the Baltic Sea. Transit risks are completely eliminated in this way. Work is currently under way to design and build BPS-2 (its throughput capacity is 50 million tonnes of oil a year.

We intend to build transport infrastructure in all directions. The first stage of the pipeline system Eastern Siberia – Pacific Ocean is in the final stage. Its terminal point will be a new oil port in Kozmina Bay and an oil refinery in the Vladivostok area. In the future a gas pipeline will be laid parallel to the oil pipeline, towards the Pacific and China.

* * *

Addressing you here today, I cannot but mention the effects of the global crisis on the Russian economy. We have also been seriously affected.

However, unlike many other countries, we have accumulated large reserves. They expand our possibilities for confidently passing through the period of global instability.

The crisis has made the problems we had more evident. They concern the excessive emphasis on raw materials in exports and the economy in general and a weak financial market. The need to develop a number of fundamental market institutions, above all of a competitive environment, has become more acute.

We were aware of these problems and sought to address them gradually. The crisis is only making us move more actively towards the declared priorities, without changing the strategy itself, which is to effect a qualitative renewal of Russia in the next 10 to 12 years.

Our anti-crisis policy is aimed at supporting domestic demand, providing social guarantees for the population, and creating new jobs. Like many countries, we have reduced production taxes, leaving money in the economy. We have optimised state spending.

But, I repeat, along with measures of prompt response, we are also working to create a platform for post-crisis development.

We are convinced that those who will create attractive conditions for global investment already now and will be able to preserve and strengthen sources of strategically meaningful resources will become leaders of the restoration of the global economy.

This is why among our priorities we have the creation of a favourable business environment and development of competition; the establishment of a stable loan system resting on sufficient internal resources; and implementation of transport and other infrastructure projects.

Russia is already one of the major exporters of a number of food commodities. And our contribution to ensuring global food security will
only increase.

We are also going to actively develop the innovation sectors of the economy. Above all, those in which Russia has a competitive edge – space, nuclear energy, aviation. In these areas, we are already actively establishing cooperative ties with other countries. A promising area for joint efforts could be the sphere of energy saving. We see higher energy efficiency as one of the key factors for energy security and future development.

We will continue reforms in our energy industry. Adoption of a new system of internal pricing based on economically justified tariffs. This is important, including for encouraging energy saving. We will continue our policy of openness to foreign investments.

I believe that the 21st century economy is an economy of people not of factories. The intellectual factor has become increasingly important in the economy. That is why we are planning to focus on providing additional opportunities for people to realise their potential.

We are already a highly educated nation. But we need for Russian citizens to obtain the highest quality and most up-to-date education, and such professional skills that will be widely in demand in today's world. Therefore, we will be pro-active in promoting educational programmes in leading specialities.

We will expand student exchange programmes, arrange training for our students at the leading foreign colleges and universities and with the most advanced companies. We will also create such conditions that the best researchers and professors – regardless of their citizenship – will want to come and work in Russia.

History has given Russia a unique chance. Events urgently require that we reorganise our economy and update our social sphere. We do not intend to pass up this chance. Our country must emerge from the crisis renewed, stronger and more competitive.

* * *

Separately, I would like to comment on problems that go beyond the purely economic agenda, but nevertheless are very topical in present-day conditions.

Unfortunately, we are increasingly hearing the argument that the build-up of military spending could solve today's social and economic problems. The logic is simple enough. Additional military allocations create new jobs.

At a glance, this sounds like a good way of fighting the crisis and unemployment. This policy might even be quite effective in the short term. But in the longer run, militarisation won't solve the problem but will rather quell it temporarily. What it will do is squeeze huge financial and other resources from the economy instead of finding better and wiser uses for them.

My conviction is that reasonable restraint in military spending, especially coupled with efforts to enhance global stability and security, will certainly bring significant economic dividends.

I hope that this viewpoint will eventually dominate globally. On our part, we are geared to intensive work on discussing further disarmament.

I would like to draw your attention to the fact that the economic crisis could aggravate the current negative trends in global politics.

The world has lately come to face an unheard-of surge of violence and other aggressive actions, such as Georgia's adventurous sortie in the Caucasus, recent terrorist attacks in India, and escalation of violence in Gaza Strip. Although not apparently linked directly, these developments still have common features.

First of all, I am referring to the existing international organisations' inability to provide any constructive solutions to regional conflicts, or any effective proposals for interethnic and interstate settlement. Multilateral political mechanisms have proved as ineffective as global financial and economic regulators.

Frankly speaking, we all know that provoking military and political instability, regional and other conflicts is a helpful means of distracting the public from growing social and economic problems. Such attempts cannot be ruled out, unfortunately.

To prevent this scenario, we need to improve the system of international relations, making it more effective, safe and stable.

There are a lot of important issues on the global agenda in which most countries have shared interests. These include anti-crisis policies, joint efforts to reform international financial institutions, to improve regulatory mechanisms, ensure energy security and mitigate the global food crisis, which is an extremely pressing issue today.

Russia is willing to contribute to dealing with international priority issues. We expect all our partners in Europe, Asia and America, including the new US administration, to show interest in further constructive cooperation in dealing with all these issues and more. We wish the new team success.

***

Ladies and gentlemen, the international community is facing a host of extremely complicated problems, which might seem overpowering at times. But, a journey of thousand miles begins with a single step, as the proverb goes.

We must seek foothold relying on the moral values that have ensured the progress of our civilisation. Integrity and hard work, responsibility and self-confidence will eventually lead us to success.

We should not despair. This crisis can and must be fought, also by pooling our intellectual, moral and material resources.

This kind of consolidation of effort is impossible without mutual trust, not only between business operators, but primarily between nations.

Therefore, finding this mutual trust is a key goal we should concentrate on now.

Trust and solidarity are key to overcoming the current problems and avoiding more shocks, to reaching prosperity and welfare in this new century.

Thank you.
====

Levers

EFL, FLE, LEF ??

http://www.edheads.org/activities/simple-machines/frame_loader.htm
http://library.thinkquest.org/CR0210120/Types%20of%20Levers.html
http://www.worsleyschool.net/science/files/lever/quiz.html

Shouldn't NRI's vote ?

http://www.petitiononline.com/abvindia/petition.html

Sunday, January 25, 2009

KL Saigal sings Jack and Jill...

KL Saigal sings Jack and Jill...
Topic LEVER 
http://www.edheads.org/activities/simple-machines/frame_loader.htm
http://library.thinkquest.org/CR0210120/Types%20of%20Levers.html
http://www.worsleyschool.net/science/files/lever/quiz.html

 

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Friday, January 23, 2009

By Bob Woodward 
21 Jan 2009 09:40:21 AM IST

 

10 lessons for Obama 

There’s actually a lot that President-elect Barack Obama can learn from the troubled presidency of George W Bush. Over the past eight years, I have interviewed President Bush for nearly 11 hours, spent hundreds of hours with his administration's key players and reviewed thousands of pages of documents and notes. That produced four books, totaling 1,727 pages, that amount to a very long case study in presidential decision-making, and there are plenty of morals to the story. Presidents live in the unfinished business of their predecessors, and Bush casts a giant shadow on the Obama presidency: two incomplete wars and a monumental financial and economic crisis.
Here are 10 lessons that Obama and his team should take away from the Bush experience.

1. Presidents set the tone. Don’t be passive or tolerate virulent divisions
In the fall of 2002, Bush personally witnessed a startling face-off between national security adviser Condoleezza Rice and defence secretary Donald Rumsfeld in the White House Situation Room after Rumsfeld had briefed the national security council on the Iraq war plan. Rice wanted to hold on to a copy of the Pentagon briefing slides, code-named Polo Step. “You won’t be needing that,” Rumsfeld said, reaching across the table and snatching the top secret packet away from Rice — in front of the president. “I’ll let you two work it out,” Bush said, then turned and walked out.
Rice had to send an aide to the Pentagon to get a bootlegged copy from the joint chiefs of staff.
Bush should never have put up with Rumsfeld's power play. Instead of a team of rivals, Bush wound up with a team of back-stabbers with long-running, poisonous disagreements about foreign policy fundamentals.

2. The president must insist that everyone speak out loud in front of the others
Vice president Dick Cheney was urging secretary of state Colin Powell to consider seriously the possibility that Iraq might be connected to the Sept 11 terrorist attacks. Powell found the case worse than ridiculous and scornfully concluded that Cheney had what Powell termed a “fever”.
Powell was right that to conclude that Saddam Hussein and Osama bin Laden did not work together. But Cheney and Powell did not have this crucial debate in front of the president — even though such a discussion might have undermined one key reason for war. Cheney provided private advice to the president, but he was rarely asked to argue with others and test his case. After the invasion, Cheney had a celebratory dinner with some aides and friends.
“Colin always had major reservations about what we were trying to do,” Cheney told the group as they toasted Bush and laughed at Powell.

3. A president must do the homework to master the concepts behind his policies
The president should not micromanage, but understanding the ramifications of his positions cannot be outsourced to anyone.
For example, General George W Casey Jr, the commander of the US forces in Iraq in 2004-07, concluded that President Bush lacked a basic grasp of what the Iraq war was about. Casey believed that Bush, who kept asking for enemy body counts, saw the war as a conventional battle, rather than the counterinsurgency campaign to win over the Iraqi population that it was.
“We cannot kill our way to victory in Iraq,” General David Petraeus said later.
In May 2008, Bush insisted to me that he, of all people, knew all too well what the war was about.

4. Presidents need to draw people out and make sure bad news makes it to them
On June 18, 2003, before real trouble had developed in Iraq, retired Army Lt Gen Jay Garner, the first official to head the Iraqi reconstruction effort, warned Rumsfeld that disbanding the Iraqi army and purging too many former Baath Party loyalists had been “tragic” mistakes. But in a meeting with Bush, none of this came up, and Garner reported to a pleased president that, in 70 meetings with Iraqis, they had always said, “God bless George Bush.” Bush should have asked Garner if he had any worries — perhaps even kicking Rumsfeld out and saying something like, “Jay, you were there. I insist on the ground truth. Don’t hold anything back.” Bush sometimes assumed he knew his aides’ views without asking them one-onone.
He made probably the most important decision of his presidency — whether to invade Iraq — without directly asking Powell, Rumsfeld or CIA director George Tenet for their bottom-line recommendation.
   
5. Presidents need to foster a culture of scepticism and doubt
During a December 2003 interview with Bush, I read to him a quote from his closest ally, British Prime Minister Tony Blair, about the experience of receiving letters from family members of slain soldiers who had written that they hated him. “And don’t believe anyone who tells you when they receive letters like that, they don’t suffer any doubt,” Blair had said.
“Yeah,” Bush replied. “I haven’t suffered doubt.” “Is that right?” I asked. “Not at all?” “No,” he said. Presidents and generals don’t have to live on doubt. But they should learn to love it. “You should not be the parrot on the secretary’s shoulder,” said Marine Gen James Jones, Obama’s incoming national security adviser, to Gen Peter Pace. Doubt is not the enemy of good policy; it can help leaders evaluate alternatives, handle big decisions and later make course corrections if necessary.

6. The president should embrace transparency
Some version of the behind-the-scenes story of what happened in his White House will always make it out to the public — and everyone will be better off if that version is as accurate as possible.
On March 8, 2008, Hadley made an extraordinary remark about how difficult it has proven to understand the real way Bush made decisions. “He will talk with great authority and assertiveness,” Hadley said. This is what we’re going to do. And he won’t mean it. Because he will not have gone through the considered process where he finally is prepared to say, I’ve decided. And if you write all those things down and historians get them, (they) say, ‘Well, he decided on this day to do such and such.’ It’s not true. It’s not history. It’s a fact, but it’s a misleading fact.” Presidents should beware of such “misleading facts.” They should run an internal, candid process of debate and discussion with key advisers that will make sense when it surfaces later.

7. Presidents must tell the hard truth to the public, even if it is very bad news
For years after the Iraq invasion, Bush consistently offered upbeat public assessments.
That went well beyond the infamous “Mission Accomplished” banner that he admitted last Monday had been a mistake. “Absolutely, we’re winning,” the president said during an October 2006 news conference. “We’re winning.” His confident remarks came during one of the lowest points of the war, at a time when anyone with a TV screen knew that the war was going badly.
On Feb 5, 2005, as he was moving up from his first-term role as Rice’s deputy to become national security adviser, Stephen Hadley had offered a private, confidential assessment of the problems of Bush’s Iraq-dominated first term. “I give us a Bminus for policy development,” he said, “and a D-minus for policy execution.” The president later told me that he knew that the Iraq “strategy wasn’t working.” So how could the United States be winning a war with a failing strategy?

8. Righteous motives are not enough for effective policy 
I believe we have a duty to free people,” Bush told me in late 2003. I believe he truly wanted to bring democracy to Afghanistan and Iraq. In preparing his second inaugural address in 2005, for example, Bush told his chief speechwriter, Michael Gerson, “The future of America and the security of America depends on the spread of liberty.” That got the idealistic Gerson so pumped that he set out to produce the foreign policy equivalent to Albert Einstein’s unified field theory of the universe — a 17-minute inaugural address in which the president said his goal was nothing less than “the ending of tyranny in our world.” But this high purpose often blinded Bush and his aides to the consequences of this mad dash to democracy. In 2005, for example, Bush and his war cabinet spent much of their time promoting free elections in Iraq — which wound up highlighting the isolation of the minority Sunnis and setting the stage for the raging sectarian violence of 2006.

9. Presidents must insist on strategic thinking
Only the president (and perhaps the NSA) can prod a reactive bureaucracy to think about where the administration should be in one, two or four years.
It’s easy for an administration to become consumed with putting out brush fires, which often requires presidential involvement.
A president will probably be judged by the success of his long-range plans, not his daily crisis management.
For example, in the Afghanistan and Iraq wars, far too little attention was devoted to what might come after the fall of the Taliban and the Baath Party. Some critical strategic decisions — to disband the Iraqi army, force Baathists out of government and abolish an initial Iraqi government council — were made without the involvement of the NSC and the president.
Obama would do well to remember the example of Clinton who began his presidency in 1993 after having promised to cut the federal deficit in half in four years.
The initial plan looked shaky but he stuck to their basic strategy and gained.

10. Presidents get contradictory data, and they need a rigorous way to sort it out 
In 2004-06, the CIA was reporting that Iraq was getting more violent and less stable. By mid-2006, Bush’s own NSC deputy for Iraq, Meghan O’Sullivan, had a blunt assessment of conditions in Baghdad: “It’s hell, president.” But the Pentagon remained optimistic and reported that a strategy of drawing down US troops and turning security over to the Iraqis would end in “self-reliance” in 2009. As best I could discover, the president never insisted that the contradiction between “hell” and “self-reliance” be resolved.

-THE WASHINGTON POST

© Copyright 2008 ExpressBuzz

 

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