ஒன்றிய அரசு…. https://thefederal.com/states/south/tamil-nadu/central-govt-is-now-called-ondriya-arasu-disruptor-dmk-sets-new-trend/

What’s in a name, after all! The Tamil Nadu (or Tamizhagam?!) Government has woken up to “Wokeism” indeed ?

Tis but thy name that is my enemy;
Thou art thyself, though not a government.

What’s a central government ? Is it not haughtiness, nor imperialism,
Nor tax-arrogance, nor highhandedness , nor any other part
Belonging to a federal big brother? O, be some other name!

What’s in a name? that which we call a union government
By any other name would smell as miasmic;

So Stalin would, were he not Thalapathi call’d,
Retain that dear perfection which he owes
Without that title.

CM Sir, doff thy name,
And for that name which is no part of thee
Take all thyself

(With my profound apologies to Sir William Shakespeare: Romeo and Juliet – (2.2.38-49)

Sudarshan Madabushi

If you’re ‘woke,’ this won’t be a joke — these words will make you choke

June 17, 2021 12:21 am

OPINION

BY DAVE PRICE
Daily Post Editor

The meanings of words are changing faster today than at any time I can remember. This is frustrating. I think we should all be able to agree on the definitions of words.

But many in government, academia, big business, the news media and those who consider themselves to be “woke” want to change the meanings of words to trick people into supporting unpopular ideas. The concept is from Orwell’s “1984.” He called it “Newspeak.”

To keep up with all of the new words and terms, I’ve assembled this list.

• “Safe injection rooms” — A city government opens up a room in a drug-infested area of town for addicts to inject their heroin (or whatever else they put in their arms). A lot of people think it’s a bad idea for government to condone the use of dangerous narcotics. But to get those naysayers to drop their objections, the government throws the word “safe” in front of words “injection rooms” to make this concept more palatable.

• “Safe parking” — You let a bunch of people who sleep in their cars or RVs stay in the same parking lot at night. What could go wrong? To get people to drop their fears, advocates decide to call it “safe parking.”

• “Authentic” — How come this is used by people or businesses that aren’t the least bit authentic?

• “Evidence-based” — This means the speaker is making up claims without any evidence. It’s synonymous with “data-driven.”

• “Transparent” — A favorite word of government employees who aren’t transparent. I’d rather have honest and helpful government employees than transparent ones any day.

• “Birthing people” — President Biden’s 2022 fiscal year budget has replaced the word “mothers” with “birthing people.” When a member of Congress asked about the change at a hearing last week, Office of Management and Budget Deputy Director Shalanda Young said the term “birthing people” wasn’t a mistake. “There are certain people who do not have gender identities that apply to female and male, so we think our language needs to be more inclusive on how we deal with complex issues,” she said. So next May, remember to get your mom a Birthing People Day card.

• “Faith leaders” — This is a clunky term to replace “ministers” or “pastors.” Another unwieldy term these days is “faith-based organizations.” How about the old fashioned term “churches and synagogues”?

• “Transported” — It’s grating to hear a newscaster say, “The victim was transported to a local hospital.” “Transported” makes me think of “Star Trek.” Instead of “transported,” how about the word “rushed,” as in “The victim was rushed to a local hospital”? And why is the word “local” needed in that sentence? Of course the victim went to a local hospital. If the ambulance took the victim to New Jersey, then that would be news.

• “Rent caps” and “rent stabilization” — They’re euphemisms for rent control. Most voters have figured out that rent control is a disaster because it doesn’t create more housing, and it leads to other problems like run-down neighborhoods. So advocates of rent control have changed the lingo. Months after California voters rejected rent control at the polls, the Legislature got away with passing rent caps. Same thing, different name.

• “Complete Streets” — A couple of mid-Peninsula cities have renamed their bicycle commissions “complete streets” commissions. It’s a biased term that implies that a street can’t be complete unless it has bike lanes. But there are many streets that are too dangerous for bikes. A few years ago, bike advocates in one city came out in favor of a bike-to-school route that went right by the entrance to a construction site with heavy trucks coming in and out all day. I’d rather have “incomplete streets” if it means saving the lives of kids.

• “World languages” — When my son started school, I was surprised to see that they were calling French, German, Spanish and Chinese “world languages” instead of “foreign languages.” I asked the principal and he said it was the term the feds used. Apparently the U.S. Department of Education felt the term “foreign” was off-putting to immigrants from other countries.

• “Shelter in place” — Why can’t the cops say, “Stay indoors”? Along the same lines, when a cop shoots somebody, why do they call it an “officer-involved shooting”? Just say the cops shot somebody.

• “Truth-teller” — Before anybody uses the term “truth-teller,” can they tell me what the truth is? People usually can’t agree on what the truth is. So I have a problem anointing any mortal as a “truth-teller.”

• “Whistleblower” — Same argument as “truth-teller.” Who knows if the so-called whistleblower is telling the truth or is a disgruntled former employee with an ax to grind?

• “The staff” — A term used in local government that allows the speaker to avoid naming a person responsible for something. It’s a great way to prevent the public from holding people in government accountable. Some newspapers go along with the ruse by constantly using the term “the staff” instead of naming individuals. It makes you wonder whose side the newspaper is on — the government or the readers?

• “Harms” — Since when did “harm” become plural? My Merriam-Webster doesn’t show a plural for “harm.”

• “Learnings” — If you learn more than one thing a day, then you’re learning, but you didn’t experience serial learnings.

• “Full stop” — Speakers throw this into a sentence when they want an exclamation point. It’s like a person holding up their fingers to make air-quotes. Apparently the speaker doesn’t think anybody is paying attention, so they say “full stop” to add some drama. Gov. Gavin Newsom does this all the time.

• “Socio-economically disadvantaged” — I think that’s a euphemism for poor, but I’m not sure. I don’t know why “poor” is an offensive term. I wasn’t offended when I was poor. I’ve not only been poor, but I’ve been dead broke. It was God’s way of saying I needed a better-paying job.

• “Food insecurity” — New term for hungry or worried that you might become hungry.

• “Unhoused” — This is a euphemism for “homeless.” A generation ago, “homeless” was touted as a way of replacing terms such as vagrant, tramp, hobo, bag lady and drifter.

• “Lived experience” — How is that different from actual experience? Or do some people have out-of-body experiences while others partake of experiences while still in their bodies?

• “Equity” — Activists have dropped the term “equality” in favor of “equity.” At the same time, their demands have changed from equal opportunity to equal outcomes. I don’t think anybody disagrees with the idea of an equal opportunity when it comes to housing, employment, education or a loan. But while there are laws to ensure equal opportunities, how can government guarantee equal outcomes? It’s like guaranteeing every kid in class will get an A regardless of how much effort they put in.

• “Nonprofit” — It used to define a charity run on a shoe-string budget. Now it’s big salaries, fancy offices and “woke” employees.

• “Wayfinding devices” — signs.

• “Signage” — A sign. It’s a word people use to make themselves sound important. Want to avoid using the word “signage” in a sentence? You can always replace it with “sign” or “signs” and the meaning will be the same.

• “Exclusionary zoning” — All zoning excludes certain uses and includes others. That’s what zoning is all about. Activists use the term “exclusionary zoning” to make it sound like a community is racist, yet zoning in every town is exclusionary.

• “Healthy Communities” — In practice, it means the government forces mom-and-pop markets to stop selling cigarettes and alcohol, but still allows Safeway, 7-Eleven and Costco to sell them.

• “Reach codes” — Extra laws (over and above what’s necessary in the building code) requiring property owners to carry out the environmental objectives of elected officials, such as banning natural gas. This is very clever. The elected officials get to take a bow and virtue signal while they pass the cost and the hassle on to residents who have no say in the decision.

This is just one man’s opinion. I know many of you will disagree. Feel free to email me your opinion. Let me know if it’s for publication or not.

Editor Dave Price’s column appears on Mondays. His email address is price@padailypost.com.

WHAT DOES IT TELL YOU ABOUT AMERICA THAT AFTER ALL THESE YEARS US PRESIDENTS STILL DON’T QUITE SEEM TO HAVE GOT THE FULL MEASURE OF A MAN CALLED VLADIMIR PUTIN?!

https://m.timesofindia.com/world/us/one-cold-dude-us-presidents-on-putin/articleshow/83539477.cms

Sudarshan Madabushi

TRUE COPYBOOK STYLE OF THE CHINESE IN THE DEADLY “ART OF WAR”

ONE YEAR AFTER THE CHINESE PLA AND THE INDIAN ARMY CLASHED AT THE BORDER IN GALWAN, LADAKH … AND WE LOST 20 SOLDIERS AND ONLY GOD KNOWS HOW MANY CHINA DID … I CAN SEE THAT CHINA’S STRATEGIC MOVES AGAINST US ARE STILL SO TRUE TO THE COPYBOOK SUN TZU’S PRESCRIPTIONS IN “THE ART OF WAR” …

THE WAR WITH CHINA HIGH IN THE HIMALAYAN RANGES OF LADAKH AND ARUNACHAL PRADESH WILL BE LONG AND BITTERLY COLD …. BUT AT TIMES MUCH HOTTER THAN COLD …

Sun Tzu said:

🇨🇳 Whoever is first in the field and awaits the coming of the enemy, will be fresh for the fight; whoever is second in the field and has to hasten to battle will arrive exhausted.

Well … the Chinese PLA arrived there in Eastern Ladakh first before India scrambled to defend against them there, didn’t they ?

🇨🇳 Therefore the clever combatant imposes his will on the enemy, but does not allow the enemy’s will to be imposed on him.

Well… It seems now that it is India that is going to have to negotiate its way in the long, grinding and tortuous path to both sides “falling back to “status quo ante positions on the border as they were pre-April 2020” … And it’s China that has to be persuaded (diplomatic “please, please”?) to budge.

🇨🇳 Appear at points which the enemy must hasten to defend; march swiftly to places where you are not expected.

Well … while India is kept engaged now in Eastern Ladakh , the Chinese are now showing up in greater force than ever before on the borders further east in Arunachal Pradesh and near Doklam, Bhutan too.

🇨🇳 You can be sure of succeeding in your attacks if you only attack places which are undefended.

Well… here we are in India with a borderline with China stretching for more than a 1000 miles east to west … right through neighbours like unreliable friend, Nepal, an exiled and brutalised Tibet and a meek and powerless Bhutan … Many are the spots and locations along this border that are undefended by India … and we know that China can take its pick of those anytime and in any which way — on land, by air or, if you come to think of it, even through the waters … of the River Brahmaputra?!

Sudarshan Madabushi

Dr Fauci now eats crow after Larry Summers: The Indian researchers were right after all … both on the 2008 US financial meltdown and the 2020 Lab Leak theory .

The bias is against Indian scientists … They get dismissed as “outlandish” because an Indian is not supposed to know better than a white westerner …

Remember back in 2007 an Indian economist Raghuram Rajan warned US economists about an impending financial meltdown that was about to happen. Larry Sunmers and other Western economists and Nobel laureates dismissed him as a “fearmonger” out of his depths in their august company. One year later in 2008 the US economy crashed and took down the world economy along with it.

The western academia and intelligentsia doesn’t realise that they ignore the Indian intelligence and wisdom at their own peril.

Sudarshan Madabushi

The Hindu “Agamas” and the Indian Constitution… the Writing on the Wall is dire and stark.

In November 2019, the Supreme Court of India pronounced a grave warning to the People of India in these words:

Let every person remember that the “holy book” is the Constitution of India, and it is with this book in hand that the citizens of India march together as a nation, so that they may move forward in all spheres of human endeavor to achieve the great goals set out by this “Magna Carta” or Great Charter of India.

The Constitution places a non-negotiable obligation on all authorities to enforce the judgments of this Court. The duty to do so arises because it is necessary to preserve the rule of law. If those whose duty it is to comply were to have a discretion on whether or not to abide by a decision of the court, the rule of law would be set at naught.

That was Chief Justices M/s Nariman and Chandrachud signing off on a judgement they together gave upon a public interest petition made to them to review another landmark verdict that had been earlier given by their own senior Bench colleagues, Chief Justices M/s Ranjan Gogoi, A.M Khanwalikar and Indu Malhotra, the latter one delivered in connection with what we all know is the vexatious social issue of a centuries-old canon of the Sabarimalai Temple in Kerala that prohibits entry of women into its hallowed precincts.

What were Chief Justices Nariman & Chandrachud talking about? In very unambiguous terms they made it clear to the People of India:

Today, it is no longer open to any person or authority to openly flout a Supreme Court judgment or order, given the constitutional scheme as stated by us hereinabove. It is necessary for us to restate these constitutional fundamentals in the light of the sad spectacle of unarmed women between the ages of 10 and 50 being thwarted in the exercise of their fundamental right of worship at the Sabarimala temple. Let it be said that whoever does not act in aid of our judgment, does so at his peril – so far as Ministers, both Central and State, and MPs and MLAs are concerned, they would violate their constitutional oath to uphold, preserve, and defend the Constitution of India”.

Let’s pause Kerala for a moment and go back to 2006 and see what happened in Tamil Nadu.

A government order issued by then Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK) regime allowed “any Hindu” with “requisite qualification and training” to become an archaka in Tamil Nadu where hitherto only members belonging to either a certain caste or denomination was qualified. The Order was challenged before the Supreme Court. After hearing extensive arguments over nine years, the court held (again it was Justice Gogoi) that priests can be appointed only in consonance with the Agamas wherever applicable, but also went on say that constitutional parameters and non-discrimination should also be respected. Two important aspects had to adjudicated on.

On the one hand, to ascertain if the government order violated the freedom of religion enshrined in the Constitution by being invasive in essential practices vital for the survival of the particular religion.

Second, it had to ascertain if the Agamas, which the petitioners insisted had to be devotedly followed in the appointment of priests, violated Articles 14 and 15 (right to equality) and 17 (abolition of untouchability). Article 17 came into play as Agamas invoke the concept of defilement and pollution of the idols in case its rules are violated and it clearly states untouchability in India stands abolished and its practice in any form is forbidden.

The Court accepted the fact that Agama rules for archaka appointments are not always necessarily caste-based since even some sections of Brahmins are not allowed to enter the sanctum sanctorum for the performance of pujas. But a certain religious “denomination”, the more important eligibility criteria for priesthood, is more sharply defined, such as membership in a particular gothra. So, Justice Gogoi averred that “denominations” are not necessarily caste- or class-based and hence if the Agama laid down that only a member of such “denomination” was eligible to serve as temple archaka, then that would not be violative of Article 14, 15 or 17.

It is on the strength of the above Supreme Court judgement that, in fact, today in the famous Chidambaram Nataraja Temple in Tamil Nadu, only members of the Chidambaram Deekshita denomination are eligible to serve as its archakas in the sanctum.

Today, the question in Tami Nadu is “What about Women serving as Archakas?”

Unfortunately, the question was largely ignored in the judgement delivered by Justice Gogoi. In the entire 54-page judgment of his, the word “women” finds mention only once, that too in a citation. However, it was even at that time then quite common knowledge in public domain that in several small non-Agama Amman temples in Tamil Nadu and other southern states, women were being appointed and serving as Archakas there!

That fact led one Justice of the Madras Court (Justice K. Chandru) to remark in the case of an Amman temple he was adjudicating: “Fortunately, the present temple is not trapped under any Agama sastras. The sub-cultural deities established in the southern parts of India are freed from the norms of Manu Smriti and hence women being subordinated to home-making alone was not warranted.” In practice, women have been systematically kept out of priestly roles with menstruation often cited as the reason. In none of the major Agama temples in Tamil Nadu would one find a woman archaka. In fact, it is only in the absence of the Agamas that women have achieved entering the “holy of holies”, as the sanctum sanctorum is claimed to be.

It is in the overall context of Supreme Court pronouncements and utterances above that today in June 2021, with the advent of the brand new DMK Government that has been elected back to power again after a hiatus of 10 years, that the question now of appointing women as archakas even in Agama-compliant temples in Tamil Nadu now raises its head again. The Minister for Hindu Temples and Religious and Charitable Institutions announced last week that around 200 archakas of all castes (not otherwise designated as denominations) having been trained in Agama saastra in government-sponsored institutions will be ready to be appointed as priests in temples. At the same time, he has announced a few days ago that Women in Tamil Nadu — who can as a class be designated neither as caste or a denomination — can also be trained to become temple Archakas if they so aspired to be so occupied in exercise of their right to equality under the Indian Constitution.

In the wake of all that has happened and is happening now, the writing on the wall is becoming clearer by the day for Hindus: the Legislature and the Judiciary are moving in a seemingly planned pincer movement against the ancient Temple Agamas of our land. In Agama temples, so-called denominations (not Brahmin castes) can reserve for themselves the exclusivity of archaka appointments but will have to allow women-priests to function too alongside them. And in non-Agama temples, any Hindu man or woman can serve as archaka. With such a far-reaching reform in temples being ushered in, it is believed that, at least in Tamil Nadu, social equality at last will be realized in the old caste and male dominated bastion of brahmins — the temple of God.

The temples in Tamil Nadu are now openly regarded even by the Judiciary as being “trapped” in Agama “saastras” fundamentally inimical to the provisions of the Indian Constitution. The Judges of the Supreme Court have categorically stated that the Constitution of India is the country’s only “holy book” and is holier than the Hindu Agama derived from the Vedas. Their Lordships have further said to the People of India.. rather to the Hindus of India… that it is the writ of the Supreme Court which will prevail over all other laws, even those of the Hindu temple called Agama. And the same Judiciary has further warned the Executive of the day not to forget its “non-negotiable obligation” “… to enforce the judgments of this Court. The duty to do so arises because it is necessary to preserve the rule of law. If those whose duty it is to comply were to have a discretion on whether or not to abide by a decision of the court, the rule of law would be set at naught.”

So, dear Hindus, please tell me now, isn’t the writing on the wall clear for the Agamas?

The Constitution of India, by which the Legislature of the Land swears it is acting, is against them; the Judiciary and the Executive are against them. With all three great and formidable pillars of the State arrayed against the the ancient codes of the Hindu Temple, are we not beginning to see happening the slow consigning of all but the empty shell of the Agama Saastras to the dustbin of History?

Sudarshan Madabushi

“ARCHANAI” IN TAMIL NADU TEMPLES TO BE PERFORMED ONLY IN TAMIZH LANGUAGE?

When I posted the above Thought on my Facebook Page wall yesterday and shared it with many friends of mine, I was reminded immediately by way of a cautionary call to be careful about my politically incorrect utterances which I received from a dear old friend and ex-professional colleague of mine who long ago emigrated to Canada.

He sent me a sweet message which I thought was as misinformed as it was well-intentioned:

“ Isnt Tamil front and centre of the state whose name begins with Tamil in its name ?? Isnt reaching more people and getting more of them to go to temples a good thing in the long run ?? Isnt Considering “Hindi” and “Tamil” as one and the same in Tamil Nadu, the “Ultimate irony” ? I am a dumb guy. I just like to ask dumb Questions.

Since he and I have a friendship going back 30 years, we often like to argue and engage in banter with each other vigorously at times … So, I responded to him rather candidly as below:

Tell me then is Tamil archanai going to suddenly begin drawing more record crowds of devotees to temples than those that we see already going there now?! Is there any Hindu peoples survey-finding to show that there are millions of Tamil people who don’t go to temples for worship because Archanai is not in performed in Tamizh language?

What rubbish !

Your question is course the politically correct one and it is the anodyne stand to take in present-day TamilNadu given its prevailing political and social atmosphere .. But my politically incorrect thoughts on the matter are these which in my free country I have a right to hold and give voice to:

1. Let me remind you that it is in this very same land of Tamil Nadu that for thousands of centuries temples had “archanai” and ritual were always performed in the Devabhaasha which both Tamil and Sanskrit were regarded to be during all those ages … It was tradition embraced by people since time immemorial ..

2. Tamizh language did not suffer in any way through those ages here in Tamil Naad because Kovil archanai was performed in Sanskrit . At least common people here did not think so. In fact , they knew that Tamizh flourished through the millennia in this land .. You only have to you look at the examples of Naayanmars and Azhwars … Not to mention the sangham Tamil literature centuries before them! And please tell me, how was Tiruvalluvar’s Tirukkural in any way affected during his own times by archanai in kovil being conducted in Sanskrit? Has he ever said or uttered a word against the use of Sanskrit in temples? And don’t we all know well that the “book launch event” of the greatest Tamizh epic of Kamba Ramayana was in fact held within the precincts of the Sri Rangam temple where there was no Chola Raja imposition against Sanskrit ?! And may I remind you again that even in modern times none can ever establish that Sanskrit archanai in Kovil had in any way stood as any kind of obstacle to the development of modern Tamil language . After all, wasn’t Ponniyin Selvan, a modern Tamil classic, written at a time when there was no mischievous, manufactured conflict or binary choice in the State between Tamizh and Sanskrit ?

3. So in my opinion, it is all arrant bunkum to say that imposition of Tamizh archanai in Kovils should be mandated by law and only then the great Tamil language will flourish . Tamil and Sanskrit have lived happily together and enriched each other for 1000s of years … so please spare us all the specious malicious anti-Sanskrit propaganda.

4. Let me also tell you that in the last 85 years, in Tamil Nadu , nothing substantially has really been achieved by way of developing the rich literary traditions of Tamil amongst the common people on the streets. We have today amongst us young generations of Tamil society who have scant if not pathetic knowledge of Tamil . Most of us here in Tamil Nadu now speak only the pidgin or cockney version of Madras or Kollywood cinema or “gaana music” Tamil. Stop any Tamil on the street today and ask him anything you might know about classical Tamil literature … and you’ll get only dumb stares back at you. Once on a TV show I watched an anchor went around on the streets of cities in Tamil Nadu picking young persons at random and asking them to name the 12 months of the Tamizh calendar year … guess what? … Nine out of ten such people could not do it … they knew only the names of the months in a year only in English !

5. It is pure malicious propaganda, post-truth and puerile bunkum to say that by introducing Tamil archanai in kovils great social change and equality will be ushered into this land. It is nothing but part of the vote-bank propaganda that politicians in the State time after time in election after election have perfected and employed as a most effective tool to divide the people of TamilNadu along the lines of hateful ideology stitched together with false narratives surrounding race and ethnicity .

Vaazhga Samskrtamum Tamizhum! Vaazhga Tamizhagam! Vaazhga Bhaaratham! Vaazhga Tamizhnaatin kovilgaL!

Jai Hind ! Bhaarath Maatha ki jai !

Sudarshan Madabushi

The Money that you and I keep earning as Users for FACEBOOK in India

There are 290 million users of the Facebook social-media platform like me in India ….and you’ll be surprised to know that in America, to which the above chart applies, there 100 million fewer users.

If in America , Facebook is now earning $16/- per user through advertiser-revenue, then that translates into earnings of roughly $ 3 billion annually. And by the same yardstick , one might estimate Facebook’s revenues from India to be roughly $5 billion!

So, why is Facebook then not willing to abide by the IT Laws of the Government of India?

If Facebook continues to hum and haw about compliance with the IT Law, why isn’t the Government of India not reading out the Riot Act to the Company?

Sudarshan Madabushi

GOOD OL’ “PHILOSOPHY AND ETHICS” IS THE ONLY EFFECTIVE VACCINE AGAINST “FAKE NEWS”?!

TED Talks ….

https://share.icloud.com/photos/06_AVjwHU2G2QOjbLVuOjTABQ

You watch the Video above and I’m almost sure you’ll say to yourself: “Gosh! And so finally it all boils down to this ancient grain of wisdom again … ?!”

It’s never going to be snazzy modern Technology that is going to be revealing the Truth to you … it has always always been and will always be good old Philosophy and Ethics that you have to fall back upon to protect yourself from what is false and everything fake in worldly existence.

Bhagavath Gita Ch.2. 16:

Na AsataH Vidyate BhaavaH Na AbhaavaH Vidyate SataH |
UbhayoH Api DruShtaH AntaH Tu AnayoH Tatva-darshibhiH ||

‘‘The unreal has no being and the real has no non-being; and the truth about both has also been seen by men who know the reality.’’

नासतो विद्यते भावो नाभावो विद्यते सत: |
उभयोरपि दृष्टोऽन्तस्त्वनयोस्तत्त्वदर्शिभि: || 16||

Sudarshan Madabushi