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I think right wing trolls have a point-Indians are intent on forgetting their (Hindu)
roots, sometimes to their detriment. I refer of course to the punar-janam genre of movies. Punar-janam (rebirth) is a belief in
Hinduism in which karma (actions)
determines what we become in our next life.
Admittedly, there is an icky part to it where they used this as a
justification for caste, but shorn of that, it is a fantastic (in every sense
of the word) plot device. You would think more film-makers would milk it given
that you already have a buy-in from a majority of your audience. Yet it’s been
25 years since Karan Arjun. [There were the shoddy Love Story 2050 and Karzzz
in the interim but they don’t count]. A new age punar-janam movie will have to of course star Ranveer Singh. Can’t
think of an actress could pull this off with conviction though.
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A Croatian has developed an electric supercar. That
is the second thing I have ever heard about Croatia.
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In the budget, the FM announced an income tax
declaration scheme that allows people to (belatedly) declare their true income
and pay a penalty of 7.5% (besides a 30% tax and a 7.5% Krishi Kalyan cess) on
this amount. It however excludes those already under the scrutiny of the tax
department from availing of the scheme. Important people from 2 of the ‘Big
Four’ accounting companies, see this as unnecessarily excluding people with
high income who have been picked up for scrutiny mechanically (some proportion
of returns are picked up every year for closer scrutiny as a matter of
routine). I may be missing something (likely, given how I know nothing about
taxation), but this seems like an incredibly stupid thing to say. If I got
picked up as a matter of routine, but I have undeclared income, I am obviously
going to want to turn my black money, white the legal way. It is the income tax
department’s good fortune that they picked up the right person. Why should they
let me get away by paying 45% only when they can presumably take me to the
cleaners?
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Now some devious foreign agents are making films
where seditious Indians are shown disrespecting our mahaan currency. What do you do with this bunch? [Answer: ban their films].
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I don’t get the bellyaching about the Pragati
Maidan building. It was built to serve a purpose-if it doesn’t serve that many
more, and the government wants to raze it for a modern, bigger structure, I
absolutely see no problem with that. Really, it’s not even that pretty. Or old.
·
Why are educated, urban, English speaking people
working in the print media now resorting
to polarising rhetoric? I admit, I never like anything R Jaganathan writes but this seems to make a broadly inoffensive
(even welcome) point- a ‘Hinduism Lite’ needs to be developed to engage more
people. Yet he decides to raise the bogey of ‘Hinduphobia’ (which is a
downright stupid construction in a Hindu majority country) to explain his idea.
To him, the environment is an excuse used by the ‘anti-Hindu lobby’ to oppose
the AoL Wold Culture Festival. Firstly, that’s not the benign way in which
Islamophobia [which inspires the term ‘Hindu-phobia’] plays out. Secondly you
don’t have to hate any religion to be
wary of self-anointed Godmen or oppose what seems like a misuse of resources
(the Army), arbitrary application of rules (with the NGT not staying the
festival because it was ‘too late in the day’), and perceived impunity with
which rules were flouted (with ‘Sri Sri’ refusing to pay a ‘fine’).
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The Tea Board of India is targeting some
specific export markets encapsulated by the term ‘KRUCIAL’-Kazakhastan, Russia,
US, China, Iran, Arab Republic of Egypt and Latin America. Is anyone else
worried that they might just be targeting the wrong markets, in pursuit of the
fun acronym? [The laborious use of ‘Arab Republic’ is a source of
comfort].