PJ's profileLink to PJs worldPhotosBlogLists Tools Help

Where am I?

Loading...
Better: A Surgeon's Notes on Performance
Wild Swans : Three Daughters of China
Tom Jones (Norton Critical Editions)
The Age of Shiva: A Novel
Click on list name to see quick reviews
Law Abiding Citizen
(500) Days of Summer
The Informant!
Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs
New York, I Love You
Wake Up Sid
Kismat Konnection
Jaane Tu Ya Jaane Na
Fashion
District 9
The Soloist
In Bruges
The Ugly Truth
Brüno
Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen
Cold Souls
Drag Me to Hell
The Hangover
The Taking of Pelham 1 2 3
Star Trek
Angels & Demons
X-Men Origins: Wolverine
Taken
Gran Torino
Bolt
Yes Man
Bedtime Stories
Dostana
I Love You, Man
Paul Blart: Mall Cop
Rachel Getting Married
Sunshine Cleaning
Underworld: Rise of the Lycans
Watchmen
Changeling
Delhi-6
The Class
Working Girl
Frost/Nixon
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
The Graduate
Wanted
Half Nelson
Chandni Chowk to China
Memoirs of a Geisha
Revolutionary Road
Suspiria
Ju-on: The Grudge 2
Mumbai Meri Jaan
Curse of the Golden Flower
The Reader
Milk
Slumdog Millionaire
The Kingdom
What Happens in Vegas
The Happening
13 Going on 30
The Virgin Suicides
Nick and Norah's Infinite Playlist
How to Lose Friends and Alienate People
Burn After Reading
Bernard and Doris
The Visitor
Quantum of Solace
Baby Mama
Sex and the City
District B13
Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa
Life in a... Metro
Rock On
Tropic Thunder
In the Name of God
Brick Lane
Hancock
You Don't Mess With the Zohan
Stagefright
Tell No One (Ne le dis a personne)
Vicky Cristina Barcelona
Smokey and the Bandit
The Dark Knight
Green Street Hooligans
WALL•E
Mamma Mia!
Jannat
The Pursuit of Happyness
Iron Man
The Incredible Hulk
One Two Three
Emmanuel's Gift
I dont typically finish a book... this list is a surprise to me too
This Child Will Be Great: Memoir of a Remarkable Life by Africa's First Woman President
Blind Eye: The Terrifying Story Of A Doctor Who Got Away With Murder
The Teacher Who Couldn't Read: One Man's Triumph Over Illiteracy
Team of Rivals: The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln
Gods Behaving Badly: A Novel
PMP Exam Prep, Fifth Edition: Rita's Course in a Book for Passing the PMP Exam
Something Rotten: A Thursday Next Mystery
The White Tiger
The Amber Spyglass (His Dark Materials, Book 3)
The Subtle Knife (His Dark Materials, Book 2)
Sacred Games: A Novel (P.S.)
The Well of Lost Plots (Thursday Next Series)
Lost in a Good Book: A Thursday Next Novel
The Eyre Affair: A Thursday Next Novel
Army of Devils (Able Team No 8)
Northern Lights (His Dark Materials)
After Dark
Genghis Khan and the Making of the Modern World
A Sentimental Education
Death in Venice (Dover Thrift Editions)
Death of Vishnu
Grace and Mercy in Her Wild Hair: Selected Poems to the Mother Goddess
Ladies Coupe
Loss of Innocence
Persuasion
Temptation
The Dhammapada
The Essential Lotus
The Fixer
The No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency
by 
My love affair with the stage
I dont believe in finishing books...I will breathe the characters till the last page.
The Post-American World
Zorba the Greek
Can Asians Think? Understanding the Divide Between East and West
Three Cups of Tea: One Man's Journey to Change the World... One Child at a Time
The Woman Warrior: Memoirs of a Girlhood Among Ghosts
Project Management For Dummies (For Dummies (Business & Personal Finance))
Midnights with the Mystic: A Little Guide to Freedom and Bliss
The Plot Against America
Tales of the City: A Novel (P.S.)
Dialogue with Death: A Journey Through Consciousness
How To Lose Friends And Alienate People: A Memoir
India After Gandhi: The History of the World's Largest Democracy
The Burning Library: Essays
Out of India: Selected Stories
The Fortune at the Bottom of the Pyramid: Eradicating Poverty Through Profits
Gandhi: 'Hind Swaraj' and Other Writings (Cambridge Texts in Modern Politics)
The Age of Turbulence: Adventures in a New World
I'm a Stranger Here Myself: Notes on Returning to America After 20 Years Away
Blink: The Power of Thinking Without Thinking
From Beirut to Jerusalem
The Last Mughal: The Fall of a Dynasty: Delhi, 1857 (Vintage)
Ladakh: Driving in the HImalayas Series
Possession: A Romance
Treasure of Khan
Genghis Khan: His Life and Legacy
Argumentative Indian
Hotel Honolulu
Mulamadhyamakakarika
Poisonwood Bible
Shalimar the clown
Good wine is a good familiar creature if it be well used.
Eat, Drink be Merry
Food and Wine in the deep south
Meals in the American Midwest

Link to PJs world

November 08

Ideas for India's future: A discussion with Nandan Nilekani

I just read a few chapters of Imagining India at a borders near by, here's an interesting discussion by the same author.



PRAGATI: THE INDIAN NATIONAL INTEREST REVIEW 

Human capitalism 

A discussion on ideas for India’s future with Nandan Nilekani, the Indian entrepreneur and businessman. He currently serves as the Chairman of the new Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI), after a successful career at Infosys Technologies Ltd. He recently published his first book, Imagining India.

Nitin Pai

Even before joining the Indian government to lead the national ID project, Nandan Nilekani — then chairman of Infosys Technologies — was engaged in a number of public policy initiatives. He is the president of the National Council of Applied Economic Research, a member of the National Knowledge Commission, a member of the board of governors of the Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay and is involved in numerous other governmental and nongovernmental initiatives. The range of his interests and his passionate commitment to India’s future comes out in his book Imagining India – Ideas for a new century. As indeed, in his voice when he spoke to Pragati.

How would you define India’s national interest? When we posed this question to Jaswant Singh, he said it was the preservation of the resilient core of Indian society that is the heart of India’s national interest, because it is Indian society that keeps the wheels turning whatever is the political structure of the state. According to K Subrahmanyam, India’s national interest is to ensure high rates of growth, alleviate poverty and ensure good governance.


Anything that we can do to make the country stronger, more equitable, more secure, more fair and which can truly leverage the extraordinary opportunity—that would be the national interest. The definition of Indian society is amorphous and is prone to multiple interpretations. My view is that it is very rare that nations get an opportunity to lift a billion people out of poverty. And due to a confluence of events that I have described in my book, we have a truly extraordinary opportunity that comes once in a millennium. It is in our national interest to make the most out of that opportunity and achieve economic independence and fulfilment for all our citizens—doing that would automatically address the other challenges that we have.

Human capital 

Your book is about ideas, and you have quoted a number of people and their ideas. If you were to pick one to focus the governance agenda of the coming central government, what would it be?

The most important idea and the central theme that I start off in my opening chapter is the change in our view of the population. For a long time, in part due to international pressure, we treated our population as a burden and something that needed to be controlled. But today, we’ve finally realised that people are our biggest strength, our assets and not liabilities, that human capital is what makes you tick. The moment you think of our people as human capital then automatically the challenge becomes how do we make sure they are healthy, educated, have roads to go to work and school, have lights to study at night, have jobs and can become entrepreneurs. The fundamental shift in the way we think about population is the central theme of my book and everything I talk about is how do we leverage and exploit that human capital, and what are the obstacles that you see in doing that.

Vegas weekend..

Vegas is know for gambling, partying and shopping, but I go to Vegas for the most amazing food, great shows and hotel decor!

http://www.exploringlasvegas.com/hotels/pictures/paris/paris_hotel_las_vegas.jpg

We were in Vegas last weekend and my aim was to hit every spot in Paris. Thats where we were staying, in the Red Room, which is really pretty.

http://z.about.com/d/hotels/1/0/8/o/2/paris_red_room.jpg

From the website.
"Timeless sensuality meets modern sophistication in our new Red Rooms. Cagley & Tanner's contemporary, fun design gives way to clean, classic bathroom layouts. Located on the highest floors of the hotel tower, the Red Rooms bring Paris to life with chic color palettes and signature sofas shaped like plump, puckered lips. We add thoughtful modern technology like 42" plasma-screen HDTVs and iHome units that combine iPod dock, alarm clock, radio and stereo sound."

First spot we hit was the La Creperie, little booth which has these amazing spinach crepes and bailey's coffee.

http://www.vegas.com/restaurant/images/lacreperie.jpg

Next we had some of the most amazing desserts next door at the JJ's Boulangeris. On the website they have a recipe for one of their sandwiches.

After a few hours of sleep, we went to Ceasar Forum for some shopping and Dinner. Incredible decor again, never seen shops in such a beautiful mall:

http://www.thegogglesdonothing.com/photos/d/633-3/caesars_lobby.jpg

Dinner at Il Mulino New York in the Ceasar Forum, incredibleIitalian restaurant on the 4th floor: "The cuisine at Il Mulino is influenced by the Abruzzi region of Italy, and is characterized by Old World style. The highest quality ingredients, which include veal and shelfish, are prepared at Il Mulino with a distinct blend of flavors."

https://images.anidori.com/xx/1043_3839.jpg

We had to skip dessert and rush to see Jubilee, which is the last surviving show girls show in Vegas. Its too bad those acts are going away, the incredible feathers, sets, songs and dances!

http://spgcreatives.com/images/jubilee.jpg

"Jubilee's lavish stage spectacular has been entertaining Las Vegas audiences for two decades. Experience the most glitter this side of Las Vegas, from million dollar sets to costumes by Bob Mackie.

 

Jubilee vignettes include the sinking of the Titanic and the spectacular destruction of the Temple of Sampson and Delilah. And of course, there are the world famous Las Vegas Jubilee dancers who have been voted "Best Showgirls" by the Las Vegas Review Journal's "Best of Las Vegas" reader's poll."


It was Halloween weekend, so obviously it was a great night for people watching.. we stood by Margaritaville to see those crazy costumes at the bloc party and then by Miracle Mile shops before we called it a night.

http://motiongroove.com/wp-content/gallery/gallery/las-vegas-sept-25-margaritaville.jpg


http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3428/3194563944_732a328990.jpg

Next day we had our morning coffee by the pool at Paris: Cafe Du Parc
"Hearty sandwiches and healthy salads are in abundance at this poolside bistro. Set in a manicured French garden beside our rooftop pool, du Parc caters to swimmers, sunbathers and anyone hungry for quick snack. This eclectic cafe offers convenience and exceptional food."


http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/5/5a/Swimming_pool_Paris_Las_Vegas.jpg

Brunch was in the Fashion Show Mall, at Cafe Ba Ba Re Ba

http://www.labelscar.com/wp-content/uploads/2006/08/Fashion-Show-Mall-01.jpg

http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3486/3695928711_d960825878.jpg

"The Sangria is seriously addicting and you could get by with drinks and a few small dishes and leave here very satisfied. They have Paella and it is very tasty but the Tapas is where the action is at. "

Then we walked around Encore and Wynn to find the perfect waterfall spot for a little taste of sweetness before we hit the road.

http://newsletter.visitwynn.com/media/img/didyouknow_waterfalls.jpg

Place was called Sugar and Ice and I had the perfect Affagato - espresso and ice cream.

http://myworldreviews.com/reviews/Sugar__Ice-133/figurebig-447.jpg
October 18

Death

love this quote:

Death must be so beautiful. To lie in the soft brown earth, with the grasses waving above one's head, and listen to silence. To have no yesterday, and no tomorrow. To forget time, to forgive life, to be at peace. -Oscar Wilde, writer (1854-1900)
October 16

Its Diwali!

I thought this was cute :-)

Aapko iss Diwali mein …

Chandragupt Ki Shakti
Meerabai Ki Bhakti
Hemendra Ka Gyan
Karan Ka Daan
Einstein Ki Buddhi
Nobel Prize Ki Siddhi
Gandhi Ki Ahimsa
India Ki Parampara
Vajpayee Ki Maryada
Nizaam Ki Sampada
Michael Jordan Ki Salary
Abdul Kalam Ki Vocabulary
Bhagat Singh Ka Deshprem
Sweetheart Ka Amarprem
Google Ke Share
Rupiyo Ke Dher
Tata Ke Senses
Ambani Ke Licenses
Birla Ka Bangla
Daler Ka Bhangra
Amitabh Ki Style
Madhuri Ki Smile
Shahrukh Ki Personality
Aishwarya Ki Popularity
World Tour Ka Ticket
Tendulkar Ka Wicket
Administrator Ke Passwords
Jokes Ke Forwards
Mercedez Ki Car
Diamond Ka Haar
Aur Logon Ka Dher Saraa Pyar Prapt Ho

… Wish you a Happy Diwali and a Prosperous New Year.
October 04

India-China Relations

interesting article in TOI today.

http://epaper.timesofindia.com/Default/Scripting/ArticleWin.asp?From=Archive&Source=Page&Skin=TOINEW&BaseHref=TCRM/2009/10/03&ViewMode=GIF&GZ=T&PageLabel=1&EntityId=Ar00100&AppName=1  

THE TIMES OF INDIA, SATURDAY WEEK OCTOBER 3-OCTOBER 9, 2009
 
CHINESE CHECKERS
Learning To Live With China
 

There’s a sense that New Delhi would prefer to play down reports of heightened tension along its border with the world’s new superpower. Is it because it doesn’t want to displease Beijing? Beyond the routine cut-and-thrust of diplomacy and defence, though, there’s a crucial, long-term dilemma that India, itself a wannabe superpower, needs to address: How does it deal with the inscrutable dragon in the room? 

INDRANI BAGCHI DIPLOMATIC EDITOR

There was a surprise in store this week for those who chose to brave Arunachal Pradesh’s damp cold and the three-hour rough ride from Tawang up to Bum La Pass, on the border with Tibet. They were greeted by “happy” arches erected by Chinese soldiers on the other side, to commemorate the 60th anniversary of the Chinese Communist Party in power. The Chinese were preparing to receive Indian soldiers for a celebratory lunch — and some unfinished business on border management.

Most of this bonhomie is likely to evaporate in just over a month’s time when the Dalai Lama reaches the 400-year-old Tawang gompa (monastery) to offer prayers. Historically, this region has had a close relationship with the Tibetan people. The sixth Dalai Lama, Tsangyang Gyatso, for example, was born in Tawang. So, it’s not unnatural for the current Dalai Lama (the 14th) to want to pay obeisance at the Tawang gompa. Still, anything that’s seen to accommodate the breakaway Tibetans gets Beijing’s hackles up, especially when it’s on land claimed by the Chinese.

And so it alternates — blow hot, blow cold — in the uncertain relations between India and China: one day, it’s jaw-jaw, another day it’s claw-claw. The inscrutable Chinese and the argumentative Indian find each other equally indecipherable. It’s not surprising, therefore, that India’s China policy rides a trough-peak roller coaster.

New Delhi has been playing down media reports of Chinese “incursions” in an apparent bid not to ruffle feathers in Beijing. Almost simultaneously, the ministry of external affairs was lashing out at China for stapling not stamping visas to the passports of Kashmiri Indians, a signal that J&K was disputed.

The rise and rise of China represents one of contemporary history’s tectonic shifts. For an India that fancies itself as an emerging superpower, learning to live with an assertive China is one of its greatest foreign policy challenges, especially as its ambitions are sometimes aligned with the Chinese and sometimes at odds. A People’s Daily commentary (Sept 15) points out, “India is still a lesser power than China in terms of its economic and military might, both conventional and non-conventional.”

How can New Delhi and Beijing achieve a steady state of equilibrium that gives both sides the comfort of predictability, and a resultant confidence in each other? That’s a question nagging not just India’s foreign policy mandarins, but students and practitioners of diplomacy worldwide. As one of the architects of India’s China policy (who will be unnamed as will be many interviewed for this story) says: “For India, coping with the rise of China is not a luxury; they’re right next door.”

Indian policy makers find China’s approach to India quite mystifying. On the border, China has vastly superior military machinery. Its economic muscle is much bigger. And yet it appears keen to avoid any confrontation along the 4,056-km undemarcated border. But on many issues of bilateral import, China takes a far more belligerent stand — like seeking to nix India’s bid for a place at the UN Security Council; mounting a last-minute scramble to stop the nuclear deal in Vienna; trying to keep India out of an Asian economic community; blocking ADB from giving Arunachal money for a water project; and denying Arunachal residents Chinese visas.

BULLY ON THE BORDER?

Indian officials will tell you China’s assertiveness is there for all to see — in Australia, in Japan, with the US. Susan Shirk, former diplomat and author of China: Fragile Superpower, tempers the growing unease about Chinese aggressiveness. “I don’t see China as being very assertive,” she told TOI Crest. “Its influence has certainly grown. But China makes a great effort to avoid being seen as aggressive, especially in international organisations and in diplomacy. With neighbours, China has been trying to prevent clashes, but that seems to have changed with India recently.”

Shirk is possibly referring to the contrast between Chinese attitude with, say, Russia, with which it has speedily worked out border problems, and its tardiness with India on border issues. In a conversation with TOI Crest, Ashley Tellis, author of Interpreting China’s Grand Strategy, described China’s reaction to India as “atypical”. “China has generally been muted with the countries on its periphery. Except India.”

That’s not sinking hopes. Said a senior Indian diplomat, “The last thing China wants now is an aggravation of a dispute with the only other rising power in Asia. They have a greater stake than us in de-escalating problems.” China analyst, Claude Arpi, offers a more nuanced view: “While the official stand is still the ‘peaceful rise of China’, some PLA generals believe ‘China cannot emerge in the midst of nightingale songs and swallow dances’. The official line is to avoid a confrontation that will lead nowhere for China.”

A greater symmetry on the border, where India is still at a severe disadvantage, would probably give more traction to this official line. “While China has mobilized huge resources to develop its side of the border, our policy has been to keep the border areas underdeveloped because we believed the inhospitable terrain would deter the Chinese from trying to get to Arunachal Pradesh, where China claims 90,000 sq km of territory,” says a senior government official. It’s only as recently as five years ago that India woke up and started beefing up both military hardware and border infrastructure.

In 2007, former foreign secretary Shyam Saran in a report proposed a big ramp-up of border infrastructure: for instance, two inter-basin roads spanning four rivers in Arunachal, crossed by seven north-south aligned roads at precisely the points where there is a “perception difference” with the Chinese. In Sikkim, where the Chinese have “activated” what was believed to be a “settled” border, India has only one roadlink (NH-31A), no railhead or airport.

The pace of construction has been maddeningly slow, often impeded by objections from the environment ministry, understandably hyper-sensitive about anything that threatens to unsettle the delicate eco-system of the eastern Himalayas. The glacial pace has meant that officials have had to think of innovative solutions. In Arunachal, where road building is painfully slow, one official said that entire construction teams were airlifted to the line of actual control (LAC), so that the road could be built backwards! In any case, India believes it is in its interest now to keep things quiet along the LAC as long as it is hamstrung by sloppy infrastructure and defences.

GLOBAL SWEEPSTAKES

In the global sphere, the story is somewhat different. Despite the pretence that the world is big enough to accommodate the rise of both India and China, the competition remains intense — over markets, construction orders, minerals, land banks – you name it.

Says Mohan Malik, professor Asian security at the Asia-Pacific Centre for Security Studies, Honolulu: “The steady emergence of India as a powerful player is not looked upon favorably by China. China’s strategic culture is to distrust strong, powerful neighbors and prefer small, weak, subordinate or client buffer states. A theme dominant in all Chinese commentaries over the last few years is that India’s growing power — backed by the US — would bring about a shift in the Asian balance of power detrimental to China.”

THE US FACTOR

One of India’s top strategic analysts, K Subrahmanyan, says India should take a page out of China’s own history to respond to Chinese aggressiveness. “In 1969, when China clashed with the Soviet Union and Alexei Kosygin wagged his finger at China, what did China do? It went over and made friends with the US.” Since 2000, that lesson has been well learnt in India. In 2005, the US-India strategic partnership created a greater diplomatic space for India, opened up a prospect of a counterbalance to China. It was US power that pushed the Indian nuclear deal through the NSG in 2008, despite Chinese machinations in Vienna.

But 2009 is another year. After the global economic meltdown last winter, the international context changed. Despite Manmohan Singh being seated next to Barack Obama at the G-20 banquet last week, the usefulness of the US as a strategic counterpoint to China has diminished, not least because the US and China are joined at the hip in the crisis. The US under Obama has been remarkably muted in its approach to China. As China has grown more assertive, for instance on views on the dollar, the US is seen to be retreating. While slapping cosmetic duties on Chinese tyres, Obama made sure he wouldn’t be available for the Dalai Lama when the Tibetan leader visits Washington.

China’s economic performance and clout makes it absolutely central to the global economic recovery, which gives China first dibs in the new international system, particularly as a new financial order is being crafted. India is preparing for a big battle there because China will do its damnedest to keep India out. “It is logical to expect the Chinese to want to stop us,” said one official resignedly.

Despite the US and China’s growing efforts to co-habit, India’s relationship with the US is still cited as one of China’s biggest concerns. Both Shirk and Tellis say two factors, one new, the other old — expanding US-India ties and India’s continuing accommodation of the Dalai Lama’s band of Tibetans — have made India a hot-button issue for Beijing. A September 14 article in the Chinese Communist Party’s theoretical organ, Qiu Shi, titled, “The strengthening of US-India military cooperation will change the strategic situation in South Asia”, argues that while this cooperation may not amount to a military alliance, it is a long-term arrangement and US could rope in India to realize its global and regional strategic objectives.

There’s another interesting situation building up on the climate front. As the world’s largest emitter of GHGs, there is now a scramble to get China “around” to sign a deal. It suits both India and China, for the moment, to hang together against the West, figuring the two together have a better bargaining chance. But the first country to strike a “deal” with the US (and it’s unlikely to be India) will abandon the other.

BUSINESS BATTLES

India’s poorly thought-out attitude towards Chinese skilled and semi-skilled workers as well as business enterprises (like Huawei) is another complicating factor. New Delhi allowed in all Chinese workers, including 25,000 semiskilled ones, on business rather than work visas. Now it wants to turf them out. And Beijing is deeply unhappy. While China’s foreign direct investment in India is very low, over the next couple of years, it stands to earn some $45 billion in contractual projects (current earnings: $12 billion). New Delhi faces a tight-rope walk. It wants skilled workers, but it also wants Chinese companies to replace semi-skilled ones with trained Indian workers. That will take time. And the pot will keep steaming.

TENSION OVER TIBET

Because the Dalai Lama and his followers have been in India for decades now, there is little attention in India on the Tibet issue. But we should not underestimate the huge potential for trouble it has between India and China. Says Tellis, “In the Chinese mind, India has a lock on domestic secession, particularly in Tibet. China is mortally afraid India could play a problematic role.” India has kept its nose clean on the Dalai Lama, who has the run of the country but only for spiritual purposes. But that doesn’t stop the Chinese from wondering whether India will use him for geopolitical ends. Indian strategists believe this anxiety drives China’s claim on Arunachal Pradesh and Tawang. But if China’s aggressiveness becomes more strident, India’s political options on the Dalai Lama could increase. Certainly, his upcoming trip to Tawang could be a subtle hint by India. After the Dalai Lama passes on, the ensuing political uncertainty could easily turn into military misadventure by China, if it’s tempted to “teach India a lesson.”

DEFENCE AND DIPLOMACY

In the military field, India, like China, is one of the biggest defense markets in the world. But India has an advantage, which it seldom appreciates, but which China feels acutely. India today can access sophisticated US weapon systems, and buy from Europe, Russia and Israel. China has an arms embargo from EU, and doesn’t get access to the high-end stuff from the US or Israel, leaving Russia as their main supplier. This is also said to be contributing to Beijing’s anxiety.

China has been steadily building stakes in India’s neighbourhood, a result of a lack of an Indian strategic vision. If India can’t mend relations with Bangladesh, or Myanmar, there’s only one other country that can fill that space. And if Sri Lanka gave Hambantota to the Chinese, it’s because India failed to come to Colombo’s aid. India’s strong moralising streak as well as its disregard for ruling elites in neighbouring countries is costing us.

But India’s learning. Apart from deepening ties with the US, it’s moving closer to Japan, Australia, South Korea and Vietnam, albeit at the old “Hindu” rate of growth.

China fears encirclement just as we do, except we know that India has the harder climb in the region. It’s big power politics.

RISE OF CHINESE NATIONALISM

Finally, there’s public opinion in both countries, which is today far sharper than the official tone. Not everyone in Beijing speaks the soft, nuanced tongue of the foreign ministry. There’s an increasingly nationalistic streak in Chinese public opinion and officially-sanctioned media commentary. Shirk traces this to the growing importance of Chinese public opinion and pressure on authorities to take a tough stand on emotive issues like Tibet. After the riots in Lhasa in 2008, it’s been elevated to a core issue of national sovereignty. “India was not viewed as a serious threat in China… but now some of the statements are becoming more symbolic and aimed more at China’s own public.” This basically means we can expect serious fireworks when Dalai Lama visits Arunachal Pradesh.

Sunday Times of London says that Thursday’s National Day parade is expected to trigger a spike in virulent nationalism, and the “enemy” most commonly spoken about is India. “Help the Maoists take over power in India to pay them back for hosting the Dalai Lama,” says a contributor to an internet site allowed by the Chinese censors.

In India, an assertive middle-class often finds the government response to Chinese “aggressiveness” somewhat spineless. The recent media hysteria over Chinese incursions in the border areas is symptomatic of a growing restlessness with “supine acceptance”. The media here is private and it hardly helps that the government is chary of sharing worthwhile information with the public, limiting itself to inanities.

THE WAY FORWARD

So, how do we go ahead and change the pattern of the ungainly Indo-Chinese dance? The discourse on all of these will have to be tempered and gradually modified for either New Delhi or Beijing to develop mutual trust and breathe easier. Some say this may never happen. K. Subrahmanyam says there is history behind the official Indian reaction. “India’s 1962 burden stems from the fact the defeat of Sela-Bomdilla was papered over and the nation never had the chance of a catharsis. That festering wound continues.”

At the same time, there’s growing realization in both the capitals that the simmering tension just can’t be allowed to get out of hand. As both the countries rise and become more influential, they will frequently rub each other the wrong way. If left uncontrolled, matters could indeed spin out of control.

Given the fundamentally divergent systems in both countries, Indian officials are reluctantly coming to the conclusion that good diplomacy is not just how they deal with the Chinese, but how these are explained in India.

India needs to build the kind of interdependences with China that will give both nations increased stakes in each other. Former foreign secretaries Shyam Saran and Shiv Shankar Menon have both proposed that India and China embark on collective security in some areas.

Economic strategists meanwhile suggest that India’s best deterrence is a continued 7-8% annual growth rate, which will give it greater confidence. India must also build a better neighbourhood based on mutual prosperity and connectivity. And it needs to strengthen its footprint in the Indian Ocean so has to have greater control over the sea lanes through which 80% of Chinese energy supplies travel.

Above all, India’s approach to China should be more strategic and proactive, because, China will be a long-term challenge. Therefore, engage, engage, engage.

May be the power of the chant will lead to a new learning of how to stay calm knowing there’s a 900-pound dragon in the room. It needs quiet confidence — neither bravado, nor obsequiousness.


********************

September 27

Nurture Shock

Arguing is a sign of respect... my mom would agree!

Parenting Tips: Praise Can Be Bad; Lying Is Normal


Author Po Bronson believes that kids today hear too much praise — much of it unearned. A couple of years ago, he wrote an article for New York Magazine on the subject, detailing how praise does not, in fact, lead to self-esteem and achievement as many parents seem to believe.

"Children today hear so much praise that they have decoded its real meaning," he explains to Robert Siegel. "When kids fail and all we do is praise them, there's a lot of duplicity in that, and kids begin to hear 'Nothing matters to my parents more than me doing great or me being smart,' and failure becomes almost a taboo subject."

Bronson expands on the subject of praise — and other child-rearing issues — in his new book NurtureShock, which he co-authored with Ashley Merryman.

He says he first became aware of the issue of overpraise as the coach of his son's kindergarten soccer team: "Until that point, I was telling the kids constantly, 'You're great, you're doing well' — even when they were dribbling the wrong way on the field."

But once he read the research on the praise, Bronson says, he decided to change the way he spoke to kids. Instead of offering praise indiscriminately, Bronson focused on saying things that the kids would perceive as sincere.

"Over time, I learned to let kids develop their own judgment about how well they had done," he says.

In addition to praise, Bronson and Merryman also tackle the subject of why children lie — and what parents can do about it. Lying, Bronson says, is a normal part of development.

Po Bronson
Enlarge

Po Bronson is the author of five books, including What Should I Do With My Life?.


Po Bronson is the author of five books, including What Should I Do With My Life?.

"Almost all kids will experiment with lying at least by the age of 4," he explains. "We should expect all children to attempt lying. The question is, 'What do we do with it over time?' "

Bronson advises parents not to threaten lying children with punishment: "It turns out that increasing the threat of punishment only turns kids into better and more frequent liars," he says.

"We're raised on this idea that 'no must mean no' ... but when [children] are older, we need to see that some arguing with parents is actually a good thing -- not a bad thing.

- Po Bronson

Instead, he recommends that parents pause children in the moment before they suspect a lie may be coming and say, "You make me really happy if you tell me the truth."

As for teenagers, Bronson says the best way to discourage lying is to set consistent rules, but to leave the door open to some negotiation.

"We're raised on this idea that 'no must mean no' ... but when [children] are older, we need to see that some arguing with parents is actually a good thing — not a bad thing," he says.

"[Teenagers often feel that] they have two choices: telling you the truth and leading to an argument, or just outright lying. Arguing over the actual rules is a better alternative and a very different thing than arguing over your authority as a parent to set rules," Bronson says.

More...
August 30

The future of Reading

How fascinating, I would really like to understand how to dissect different themes and teaches a class if everyone is reading different books. Maybe I can learn from that to teach math, since in my class I have all grades in one room - 5th through 12th.

August 30, 2009
The Future of Reading

A New Assignment: Pick Books You Like

JONESBORO, Ga. — For years Lorrie McNeill loved teaching “To Kill a Mockingbird,” the Harper Lee classic that many Americans regard as a literary rite of passage.

But last fall, for the first time in 15 years, Ms. McNeill, 42, did not assign “Mockingbird” — or any novel. Instead she turned over all the decisions about which books to read to the students in her seventh- and eighth-grade English classes at Jonesboro Middle School in this south Atlanta suburb.

Among their choices: James Patterson‘s adrenaline-fueled “Maximum Ride” books, plenty of young-adult chick-lit novels and even the “Captain Underpants” series of comic-book-style novels.

But then there were students like Jennae Arnold, a soft-spoken eighth grader who picked challenging titles like “A Lesson Before Dying” by Ernest J. Gaines and “The Bluest Eye” by Toni Morrison, of which she wrote, partly in text-message speak: “I would have N3V3R thought of or about something like that on my own.”

The approach Ms. McNeill uses, in which students choose their own books, discuss them individually with their teacher and one another, and keep detailed journals about their reading, is part of a movement to revolutionize the way literature is taught in America’s schools. While there is no clear consensus among English teachers, variations on the approach, known as reading workshop, are catching on.

In New York City many public and private elementary schools and some middle schools already employ versions of reading workshop. Starting this fall, the school district in Chappaqua, N.Y., is setting aside 40 minutes every other day for all sixth, seventh and eighth graders to read books of their own choosing.

In September students in Seattle’s public middle schools will also begin choosing most of their own books. And in Chicago the public school district has had a pilot program in place since 2006 in 31 of its 483 elementary schools to give students in grades 6, 7 and 8 more control over what they read. Chicago officials will consider whether to expand the program once they review its results.

None of those places, however, are going as far as Ms. McNeill.

In the method familiar to generations of students, an entire class reads a novel — often a classic — together to draw out the themes and study literary craft. That tradition, proponents say, builds a shared literary culture among students, exposes all readers to works of quality and complexity and is the best way to prepare students for standardized tests.

But fans of the reading workshop say that assigning books leaves many children bored or unable to understand the texts. Letting students choose their own books, they say, can help to build a lifelong love of reading.

“I feel like almost every kid in my classroom is engaged in a novel that they’re actually interacting with,” Ms. McNeill said, several months into her experiment. “Whereas when I do ‘To Kill a Mockingbird,” I know that I have some kids that just don’t get into it.”

Critics of the approach say that reading as a group generally leads to more meaningful insights, and they question whether teachers can really keep up with a roomful of children reading different books. Even more important, they say, is the loss of a common body of knowledge based on the literary classics — often difficult books that children are unlikely to choose for themselves.

Moree..
August 26

Paintings coming to life!

I went to see Pageant of the Masters last weekend and I had the best time of my life, the art that was a monument of different periods suddenly came to life.

From Wiki:
"The Pageant of the Masters is an annual festival held by the Festival of Arts in Laguna Beach, California. The event is known for its tableaux vivant or "living pictures" in which classical and contemporary works of art are recreated by real people who are made to look nearly identical to the originals through the clever application of costumes, makeup, headdresses, lighting, props, and backdrops.

The first Festival of Arts occurred in 1932, and the first presentation of the Pageant occurred in 1933. Since then, the two events have been held each summer, apart from a four year interruption caused by World War II".

What is it?

Ninety minutes of "living pictures" - incredibly faithful art re-creations of classical and contemporary works with real people posing to look exactly like their counterparts in the original pieces. An outdoor amphitheater, professional orchestra, original score, live narration, intricate sets, sophisticated lighting, expert staff, and hundreds of dedicated volunteers have won recognition for the Pageant as the best presentation of its kind.

MISSION STATEMENT:
Our mission is to promote, produce, and sponsor events and activities that encourage the appreciation, study and performance of the arts.

The 2009 Pageant of the Masters Theme is:

The Muse - 2009 Pageant of the Masters Theme at LagunaFestivalOfArts.com

When a painter faces a blank canvas or a sculptor picks up a chisel and confronts a mute block of stone, where do they look for inspiration to guide their hands and turn their efforts into art? The Muse, the 2009 Pageant of the Masters, will devote its uniquely theatrical celebration of the art of tableaux vivants - "living pictures" - to an exploration of the nature of artistic inspiration. For some it is a sacred calling, for others a deeply personal quest. For Paul Gauguin, a journey to the South Seas provided his work with a vibrant new direction; for Maxfield Parrish, the discovery of an ideal model became a key to many of his dreamlike paintings; for American sculptor Anna Hyatt Huntington, an abiding love for animals anchored her heroic visions. Huntington's work will be featured as part of another highlight: a special tribute to some of the world's great women artists. In every case, the stories of artists, their models and the resulting artworks will offer fascinating insights into the creative process. Playful and provocative, the 2009 Pageant promises another "inspired" summer of artistry.


Some of the paintings/sculptures that were brought to life with real people this year were:

http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/images/h2/h2_10.104.jpg

Sarcophagus with the contest between the Muses and the Sirens, Late Imperial, Gallienic, third quarter of 3rd century a.d.
Roman; in the Villa Nero, Rome, about 1640; later, in the Giardino Torrigiani, Florence
Pentelic marble

Overall 21 3/4 x 77 1/4 x 22 1/2 in. (55.3 x 196.2 x 57.2 cm)
Rogers Fund, 1910 (10.104)

On the front, the deities Athena, Zeus, and Hera, assembled at the far left, preside over a musical contest between the Muses and Sirens. The Muses, associated with man's highest intellectual and artistic aspirations, are defeating the Sirens, creatures that are half woman and half bird who lured men to destruction with their song. On each side is a rampant greyhound, the coat of arms of the Del Nero family, probably added in the seventeenth century.

http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/2008/01/08/arts/Italyspan.jpg

Antonio Canova’s marble statue of Napoleon’s sister Paolina Borghese Bonaparte as “Venus Victorious”

Divine Inspiration

http://www.bergerfoundation.ch/Vermeer/images/allegorie1.jpgThe Allegory of Faith
Johannes Vermeer

"The 'Allegory' is not one of Vermeer's most memorable works. The still-life in the foreground may non the less had some influence on the imaginary of his circle. We have two other pictures from the time of the 'Allegory'; in one of them the tapestry hanging, similarly painted, still lies in the same folds. These, the pair of London, are more modest and more characteristic; fortunately they convey more of the character of the painter's thought in this last phase."

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/d/d3/The_Madonna_of_Port_Lligat.jpg/300px-The_Madonna_of_Port_Lligat.jpg

The Madonna of Port Lligat is the name of three paintings by Salvador Dalí. The first was created in 1949, measuring 49 x 37.5 centimetres (19.3 x 14.8 in), and is now housed in the Haggerty Museum of Art in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Dali submitted it to Pope Pius XII for approval, which was granted. Dalí created a second painting in 1950 with the same title and same themes, with various poses and details changed, measuring 144 x 96 centimetres (57.7 x 37.8 in); as of 2008[update] the 1950 Madonna is exhibited by the Fukuoka City Art Gallery, Japan.

The paintings both depict a seated Madonna (posed by Dalí's wife, Gala) with the infant Christ on her lap. Both figures have rectangular holes cut into their torsos, suggestive of their transcendent status. In the 1950 version Christ has bread at the center of his figure. They are posed in a landscape, with a view of Port Lligat, Catalonia seashore in the background, with various surrealist details, including nails, fish, seashell, and an egg. The 1949 Madonna has a sea urchin; the 1950 Madonna has a rhinoceros and additional figures of angels, also posed by Gala. A poem and book based on The Virgin of Port Lligat by Fray Angelico Chavez, was selected as one of the best books of 1959 by the Catholic Library Association

The painting is referred to in the science-fiction novel Protector, by Larry Niven.


Mahana no atua

Mahana no atua

Paul Gauguin
also known as Day of the Gods

Objets d'Art

http://famousjewellers.com/Cnv0038.jpgDragonfly Brooch   Rene Lalique

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/c0/Claude_Monet_-_Le_dejeuner_sur_l%E2%80%99herbe.JPG
Le Dejeuner sur L'Herbe
Claude Monet

The Land of Make Believe

http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_FBGiekvlO5A/R2cBmNk-NQI/AAAAAAAAAPo/8jwzF0TPZ1E/s320/morning-maxfield+parrish.jpg
Morning
Maxfield Parrish
http://www.encore-editions.com/artists/Maxfieldparrish/thumbs/thm_Land_of_Make-Believe.jpg
Land of Make Believe
Maxfield Parrish

http://imagecache5.art.com/p/LRG/26/2692/4FNUD00Z/maxfield-parrish-garden-of-allah.jpg
Garden of Allah
Maxfield Parrish

http://www.yeodoug.com/resources/dc_french/angel_of_death/angel_01.jpgA front view of Daniel Chester French's "The Angel of Death and the Sculptor."

http://www.jahsonic.com/ElihuVedder.jpgThe Questioner of the Sphinx (Listening to the Sphinx) (1863) - Elihu Vedder

http://wpcontent.answers.com/wikipedia/commons/thumb/8/84/Jean_Auguste_Dominique_Ingres_-_Roger_Delivering_Angelica.jpg/300px-Jean_Auguste_Dominique_Ingres_-_Roger_Delivering_Angelica.jpg
Roger Delivering Angelica
Jean Ingres

Beauty vs. Beast
       
  a. Creature of the Black Lagoon
Universal Lithograph 1954 American
  b. Tarzan and His Mate
Warner Bros. Lithograph 1934 American

c. The Mummy
Universal Lithograph 1932 American

d. King Kong
RKO Warner Bros. Lithograph 1933 American

 
       

Act Two

   
       
12. Frida and Diego
 
   
  a. The Making of a Fresco
Diego Rivera Mural 1931 Mexican
  b. On the Borderline
Frida Kahlo Oil 1940 Mexican

     Tree of Hope
Frida Kahlo Oil 1946 Mexican
  c. Dreams of a Sunday Afternoon
Diego Rivera Mural 1948 Mexican
13. The Book of the City of Ladies
Unknown Illustration 1405 French
14. a. Joan of Arc   Anna Hyatt Huntington Gilt Bronze c. 1914 American
  b. El Cid Campeador
Anna Hyatt Huntington Bronze 1927-1943 American
15. Royal Portraits          
  a. Mme. Victoire
Adelaide Labille-Guiard Oil 1788 French

b. Mme Adelaide de France
Adelaide Labille-Guiard Oil 1787 French
  c. Mme. Louise-Elizabeth
Adelaide Labille-Guiard Oil 1788 French
16. The Hunt
Harriet Frishmuth Bronze 1921 American
17. Bacchanale
Malvina Hoffman Plaster 1925 American
18. The Horse Fair
Rosa Bonheur Oil 1853-1855 French
19. In Praise of Camille          
  a. L'Age Mur
Camille Claudel Bronze 1894-1903 French
  b. La Valse
Camille Claudel Plaster 1893 French
  c. La Fortune
Camille Claudel Plaster pre-1904 French
20. The Last Supper
Leonardo da Vinci Fresco 1495-1498 Italian

http://www.foot2mouth.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2007/07/avondmaal_davinci.jpg

August 09

Solvang, CA - The Danish Village

Who knew there was a place so cute near SB! We are staying in this perfectly quaint English Inn, in this wonderful Danish Village called Solvang.
 
 
 
From Wiki:

Solvang is a city in Santa Barbara County, California, United States. The city of Solvang is one of the communities that make up the Santa Ynez Valley. The population was 5,332 at the 2000 census.

Solvang was founded in 1911 on 9,000 acres (36 km²) of formerly Spanish land by a group of Danish educators, who traveled west to escape midwestern winters. The city is home to some bakeries, restaurants, and merchants offering a taste of Denmark in California. The architecture of many of the buildings follows traditional Danish style. There is a copy of the famous Little Mermaid statue from Copenhagen, as well as one featuring the bust of famed Danish fable writer Hans Christian Andersen. A replica of the Copenhagen observatory Rundetårn in the scale 1:3 was finished in 1991 and can be seen in the city centre.

Mission Santa Ines, one of the California missions, is both a National Historic Landmark and a California Historical Landmark. It is located near the center of the town, at the junction of State Route 246 and Alisal Road.

 

 
August 04

History of health