Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Cell-phone conversation between Osama-bin-Laden and Ajmal Kasab which was intercepted on 29th February 2011

It’s now official. The CBI has just released the cell-phone conversation between Osama-bin-Laden and Ajmal Kasab which was intercepted on 29th February 2011.

Ajmal Kasab says to Osama-bin-Laden:

“Salaam-ale-koom Osamamiya – you have made a cardinal mistake in seeking asylum in Pakistan, which is the most unsafe place in the world.

If you come and stay in India you will live for another 70 years – thanks to the great Indian judicial system with multiple options.

On top of it there is the presidential clemency and you could be sure no decision will be taken till the next millennia.

Take my own case! I am cooling my heels in an Indian jail. I abuse the press, police, politicians and the judiciary. nothing has happened.

Even an average Indian is an extremely nice guy.

If you slap him he won’t slap back. he’ll find a pen and paper and file a complaint before the police who will not act on it as they have to determine whether the particular police station has jurisdiction or not.

That is India!

But it is a haven for terrorists, drug peddlers, rapists, black marketers and money launderers.

The Indian bureaucracy, politicians, police, judges, press and good number of citizens are available for sale. only you must know the price tag.

And most importantly, whatever happens, you have two guys who will come to your rescue in case of any crisis, come what may – Rahul Gandhi and Digvijay Singh.

Khuda Hafiz Osamamiya”  

A mail to Shri Vinodbhai Pandya (Annasaheb Hazare’s representative in Ahmedabad) on 8th April 2011 – No Reply

Please find below a mail to Shri Vinodbhai Pandya, Annasahebs representative in Ahmedabad. The mail was sent on 8th April 2011 and three reminders were sent.

No reply till date!

This is the war against corruption! 😦

“Dear Shri Vinodbhai Pandya,

 The current war against corruption has stirred my soul. I am happy that I have been able to trace an activist like you and would like to join this movement to make India corruption free.

 Apart from the corruption by the public servants, which could be minimized by the Jan Lokpal Act, there is another very severe form of corruption which may be outside the purview of this proposed Act, but this corruption is affecting lakhs of people in India – the patients who visit doctors and hospitals to get cured.

 India today has over 25000 pharmaceutical companies and this kind of intensity of competition is not seen anywhere in the world.

 There is an unholy nexus amongst some medical professionals and some pharmaceutical companies to get their products prescribed by doctors for a price. This price (prize???) may include holiday trips in India and abroad – under the guise of medical conferences, cruises, safaris, capital goods, at times even cash.

 Doctors are under great pressure to prescribe a company’s products, whether a patient requires it or not. The already sick patient is ‘punished’ further because of the physician’s greed.

 Although corruption in any form is evil, this corruption is of the lowest order and probably the worst type of corruption as this nexus is harming the poor, the down-trodden and sick citizens of India.   

 I have been with the pharmaceutical industry for over thirty years right from the lowest position of a medical representative to the highest position, Head of Marketing and sales in two of India’s top companies. I left a cushy job to start my own management consultancy – this is my back ground.

 I am writing this to you so that the shady practices of some doctors and some pharma companies do not get overshadowed by the wickedness of crooked politicians.

 Can we also start a movement against this type of corruption?

In this regard, I shall be thankful if you can grant me an interview anytime after 15th April. You will have my full support on this.

With warm regards,

Vivek Hattangadi

Ahmedabad”

Cash, gold found at Sathya Sai Baba’s Bangalore ashram (IANS News)

Cash, gold found at Sathya Sai Baba’s Bangalore ashram

Bangalore, July 20 (IANS)

Cash, gold and silver were found Wednesday at late Sathya Sai Baba’s ashram near here when an inventory was done, an ashram spokesperson said.

Media coordinator of the Sathya Sai Trust A. Anantharaman told reporters that Rs.80 lakh (Rs. 8 million) in cash, six kg gold and 240 kg silver jewellery were found. The ashram is at Whitefield, about 25 km from the city centre.

The inventory was done in the presence of five trustees and Karnataka government officials, he said, adding the officials’ presence was sought by the trust.

This is the first time that inventory was done at the late Baba’s Bangalore ashram.

Three rounds of inventory at his main ashram in Puttaparthi in neighbouring Andhra Pradesh after his demise on April 24 have given a haul of nearly Rs.75 crore worth gold, silver and cash, say officials.

The Gold Plated Culture of Corruption – II

I read the lovely essay “Gold Plated Culture of Corruption” written by an unknown author and posted in my blog. The author has made some very valid points and the intelligentsia should ponder over them rather than react.

GOD DOES NOT NEED MONEY – He is the Almighty; He is a giver not a taker. All what we have today is because of him.

It is the greedy middlemen – the Brahmins and the ‘Godmen’ – who in the name of God crave wealth – and keep on craving for more.  Ultimately it is the middlemen, the Brahmins and the ‘Godmen’ who are the true beneficiaries of the ‘Gold Plated Culture Of Corruption’.

It is the middlemen – the Brahmins and the ‘Godmen’ – who keep on encouraging this corrupt practise – not God.

We will all recall, a few years back if one accidentally killed a cat it was a practice to offer a ‘golden’ cat to a Brahmin to absolve the person of this sin!  Who encouraged this? God? No – the middlemen – the Brahmins to satisfy their greed in the name of God!

Take the unhealthy practise of performing ‘Shraddh’ (12th / 13th day ceremonies after death) – who are the beneficiaries? The Brahmins!

 The inhuman practise of untouchability – who is responsible – the middlemen –   The Brahmins.

Although I am a Brahmin, a Saraswat Brahmin by birth (and proud to be one) , today, I am more anti-Brahmin than perhaps even E. V. Ramaswamy, but for different reasons. I am against those practises of the Brahmins which have led to the regression of our dear country. It is because of these practises, 600 million Indians do not practise our Sanatan Dharma (Hinduism) but some other religion and our dear Bharatmata is now divided into three countries! I hold the Brahmins responsible for this. And unlike EVR, I believe in God.

However, I do not believe in some of the brahminical practises like ‘Shraddh’ (i.e. 12th day/13th day ceremony where the Brahmins are fed). Why should the Brahmins feast after my death? Why not utilize the same money for the needy like the orphans, or old people homes or the dumb animals (who are also the creatures of God).

Great saints like His Holiness Parijnanashram Swami loved our dumb friends and the down-trodden   

In my Will I have stated that after my death, no Brahmin or a priest should be called for the religious rituals. No ‘Shraddh’, no ‘besna’  – and the best way to respect my memory is to pleadge the amount intended for ‘Shraddh’ / ‘besna’ to an orphanage.

I have pledged my body and organs to B.J. Medical College, Ahmedabad – if I die here here in Ahmedabad – or else to an appropriate place. And this is exactly what my late father did!

GOD DOES NOT ACCEPT MONEY IN RETURN FOR HIS FAVORS NOR DOES HE NEED IT.

It is the middlemen – the Brahmins and the Godmen who need it, or rather are greedy for it.

It is this brahminical culture of corruption which is permeating our society. It is we Brahmins who are responsible for most of the ills of our nation including the gold-plated corruption.

The backlash of ‘reservation culture’ we are facing today is because of the inhuman brahminical practices of our forefathers.

The gold found in the vaults of temples and in the abode of Godmen is as ‘valuable’ (read – useless) as the desert sands of Jodhpur, Bikaner or Jaisalmer, if it is not put to proper use!

The recent rumors and stories being circulated that a 70 year old person I Kerala died because of ‘the wrath’ of God – when he tried to open the vaults of Padmanabha Temple (Kerala) is baloney. Whoever thinks that God has an ill will towards His subjects is guilty of blasphemy. This again is a rumor spread by some Brahmins of Kerala. Which God will ever like to see His subjects suffering? Probably God will show His wrath only if people use this gold to fulfill the greed and not the needs of His subjects and if this wealth is put to wrong use!

Let us stop this gold plated culture of corruption. When God graces us, and if we have a desire to thank Him, donate that money to orphanages, old age homes or patients of cancer – To the needy; not to the greedy.

The Gold Plated Culture of Corruption – I

The Gold Plated Culture of Corruption

Original Author – Unknown

Our media reports corruption episodically. One independent incident of greed follows another.

Let us set all that aside and look at it differently.

No race can be congenitally corrupt. But can a race be corrupted by its culture?

To know why Indians are corrupt let’s look elsewhere. What patterns and practices distinguish us?

First: Religion is transactional in India. We give God cash and anticipate an out-of-turn reward. Our plea acknowledges that we aren’t really deserving. The cash compensates for our lack of merit.

In the world outside the temple walls, such a transaction has a name:”bribe”.

In India God accepts cash from us, not good work, for which there is no reward. We don’t expect something from God in return for sweeping our neighborhood streets. We go with money.

Observe this in another way.

Why does not the wealthy Indian give cash to temples, but donates gold crowns and such baubles? To ensure his gift isn’t squandered on feeding the poor. Our pay-off is for God. It’s wasted if it goes to man. See what this has produced.

In June 2004, “Business Standard” reported that Tirupati couldn’t melt down 8,000kg of gifted gold ornaments because devotees had stuck precious stones to their gift. This 8 tonnes of metal, worth Rs.1,680 crore but actually useless, was gathering dust in temple vaults.

In 2007, Vellore’s Sripuram temple was built with 1,500kg of gold. By weight alone it is worth Rs. 325 crore.

In June 2009, The Hindu published a report of Karnataka minister G. Janardhan Reddy gifting a crown of gold and diamonds worth Rs. 45 crore to Tirupati. According to the temple’s website, Tirupati got 3,200kg silver and 2.4 kg of diamonds in just one year. The temple encourages such giving, according to a report in “The Telegraph” in April 2010. Those who gifted a kilo of gold, worth over Rs. 21 lakh, got “VIP darshan” (which means cutting the queue) of the idol. In 2009, 500kg was deposited with the Indian Overseas Bank. On 11 February, according to The Hindu Business Line, 1,175kg of gold was deposited with SBI, and the temple trustees had yet another 3,000kg of gold hundy.

In May 2010, according to The Economic Times, 1,075kg of gold was deposited by Tirupati with the State Bank of India (SBI) for safe keeping.

What will they do with all this metal?

Gold-plate the walls of the temple, lending a new meaning to the phrase “India Shining”?

This work was halted by the Andhra Pradesh high court in December, not because it was wasteful – such things aren’t vulgar to Indians – but because it might have damaged wall inscriptions.

India’s temples collect so much of this stuff they don’t know what to do with it. In February, 17 tonnes of silver, worth Rs. 117 crore, was found in an Odisha temple. The priests say they had no idea it was even there. But the devotees keep giving. Tirupati alone gets between 800kg (The Economic Times’ estimate) and 1,825kg (The Telegraph’s estimate) of gold a year.

When God accepts money in return for his favours, what is wrong with my doing the same thing? Nothing.

This is why Indians are so easily corruptible.

Our culture accommodates such transactions morally. This is the key. There is no real stigma. The demonstrably corrupt Indian leader can harbor hope of a comeback, unthinkable in the West.

Our moral ambiguity towards corruption is also visible in our history. This is our second point.

Any number of books on Indian history tell us of the capture of cities and kingdoms after guards were paid off to open gates, and commanders paid off to surrender.

This is unique to India.

We read of battles won after battalions evaporated.

Our corrupt nature has limited warfare on the subcontinent. It is striking how little Indians have actually fought compared to ancient Greece and modern Europe.

The Turks’ battles with Nadir Shah were vicious and fought to the finish.

In India fighting wasn’t needed, bribing was usually enough to see off our armies.

The invader willing to spend a bit of cash always brushed aside India’s kings, no matter how many tens of thousands peopled their infantry.

Little battle was given at the “Battle” of Plassey. Clive paid off Mir Jaffar and all of Bengal folded to an army of 3,000.

There was always a financial solution to taking our forts.

Golconda was captured in 1687 after the secret back door was left open.

In 1700, the fort of Parli, west of Satara, the headquarters of the Maratha government, fell after it took a bribe from Aurangzeb.

In 1701, Aurangzeb invested the Panhala fort for two months without success. Then he bribed the Maratha commandant Trimbak, who let the Mughals in.

Aurangzeb took the forts at Wardhangarh, Nandgir, Wandan and Chandan without fighting.

Khelna fought the Mughals (led by the mercenary Sawai Rajputs of Amber) superbly till commandant Parashuram accepted his bribe and gave up the fort.

According to The Cambridge History of India, Torna was the only fort captured in that long campaign without bribes.

Allahabad was taken by the Mughals in April 1720 when Girdhar Bahadur left the gates open after being promised governorship of Awadh.

The same year Asir opened its gates to Nizam-ul-Mulk after a bribe.

The Raja of Srinagar gave up Dara Shikoh’s son Sulaiman to Aurangzeb after abribe.

Shivaji took Kondhana (which he renamed Sinhagad) after the Mughal commander was bribed.

The Mughals lost Penukonda to the Marathas in 1706 after the commandant was paid off.

We must understand that this isn’t one man bribed alone. He must share that money with his officers, who must in turn pass it along to the infantry and cavalry. Everyone participated in this treason.

Question is: Why do we have a transactional culture while civilized nations don’t?

The answer is that we haven’t learnt to trust one another as Europeans have.

Indians do not buy the theory that we can all rise if each one of us behaves morally, because that is not the message of our faith. This is the third point. Our faith assures us that God will deliver for us individually, but we must deliver to him too.

When Europeans came here they built schools (there were zero schools in Gujarat before Mountstuart Elphinstone built the first 10 in the 1820s). When we go to Europe we build more temples. Patels alone have built 12 Swaminarayan temples in Britain. Unfortunately, the European is tolerant and the Indian quite shameless, though it’s true also that he’s unaware of what he’s doing. He’s practising his magic in a culture where it isn’t needed. He doesn’t need God’s favours in a society that isn’t corrupt, that is moral, that is equal. All he needs is hard work, which he’s quite capable of giving.

Some might say the doctrine of our faith doesn’t support this behaviour. That shouldn’t concern us here. We’re talking about its practice, the way we do religion, rather than its philosophy, which is ultimately meaningless.

The way we do it is Hobbesian. We are up against everyone else, except God-and even he must be bribed.

 

Excerpts from ‘Speaking Tree’ of 10th July 2011 (A TOI publication) on temple wealth

Excerpts from ‘Speaking Tree’ of 10th July 2011 (A TOI publication) on temple wealth

 

True wealth is that which enriches our lives in some way. Gold has value only if it is transacted. Locked away in a dark cellar, it has absolutely no value.

 

The concept of wealth-generation is only about two-years old. Before that even kings did not know what to do with their gold and riches. If that gold can be put to use for common benefit, then it creates wealth. Otherwise it is dead investment.

 

In discussions about the new found treasure, nobody even remembers Bhagwan Padmanabha.  A temple is considered big when it generates huge income.. if a thousand gold coins all look the same, then there is no rarity also. So keep just one or two in museum to study them and utilize the rest for the welfare of the people.

 

Absolute freedom or bliss-experience comes to those seers who are free from desire and anger, who are detached and who work for the welfare of all beings.

Sai Baba of Shirdi

There are many Saints, who leaving their houses, stay in forests, caves or hermitages and remaining in solitude, try to get liberation or salvation for themselves. They do not care for other people, and, are always self-absorbed.

Sai Baba of Shirdi was not of such a type.

He had no home, no wife, no progeny, nor any relations, near or distant. Still, He lived in the world (society).

He begged His bread from four or five houses, always lived at the foot of the Neem tree, carried on worldly dealings, and taught all the people how to act, and behave in this world.

Rare are the Sadhus and Saints who, after attaining God-Vision, strive for the welfare of the people.

Sai Baba was the foremost of these, and, therefore, says Hemadpant – ” Blessed is the country, Blessed is the family, and Blessed are the chaste parents where This Extra-Ordinary, Transcendent, Precious and Pure Jewel (Sai Baba) was born ”

( Source – Shri Sai Satcharita {Originally written in Marathi by Hemadpant} and Published by Shri Sai Baba Sansthan, Shirdi )

Another treasure trove at Satya Sai abode – 906 gms gold in form of managalsutra! (sic)

Another treasure trove at Satya Sai abode Gold, Silver Worth Rs.77 Lakh Seized From Yajur Mandir

TIMES NEWS NETWORK Puttaparthi: (News in Times of India – Ahmedabad 3rd July 2011)

Skeletons continued to tumble out of Prashanti Nilayam with the Anantapur district authorities on Saturday seizing gold, silver, diamond ornaments worth Rs 76.89 lakh from Yajur Mandir, the abode of Satya Sai Baba who passed away on April 24 this year.

Anantapur joint collector Anita Ramachandran told TOI that the precious metals and other items were seized during an inspection carried out by a team of district officials headed by her on Saturday. The inspection began in the morning and continued till the evening. “I inspected four rooms in Yajur Mandir except the Babas room from which the inventory of the items and cash lying there has already been made. In these four rooms, I found large number of silverware, gold ornaments, a diamond ring, costly watches, silk robes of the Baba, silk saris and pens,” Ramachandran said.

In all, the seizure of the precious metals included 116kg of silver in the form of ornaments, utensils, etc, worth Rs 56 lakh, 906 grams of gold, mostly in the form of mangalsutras, (sic) worth Rs 15 lakh, and a diamond ring worth Rs 3 lakh. “We have not valued the other items,” the joint collector said and added that all the items were in the safe custody of the district authorities. The total value of the precious metals was estimated at Rs 76.89 lakh. Saturday’s seizure heightens the controversy already surrounding the working of the Sri Satya Sai Central Trust that has come to the limelight after Sai Baba was taken ill in the last week of March and his demise on April 24 this year.

“If the working of the trust is above board, as its members are repeatedly claiming, why did not the gold and silver items surface in the inventory of Yajur Mandir that the trust members carried out recently,” questioned district officials. Satya Sai Baba

ANYONE WITH UNACCOUNTED WEALTH IS AN ENEMY OF THE NATION!

Yet a section of the people from the progressive and enlightened Chitrapur Saraswat community wants to turn a blind eye and defend unaccounted wealth of self-proclaimed Godmen!

Even the educated are not from blind faith – or is it the herd mentality pervades?

They may try to gag an individual, but can gag the truth? Can they gag the press and the BBC? How many mouths can they try to shut?

Third richest man does not have 98 kg gold or 312 kg silver or $ 120 millions of unaccounted wealth

Warren Buffet and the 5 BHK home tweet16EmailPrint..BankBazaar.com, On Friday 1 July 2011, 1:51 PM

Quick-quiz. Match the place of residence given below to the following men. World’s Richest Man —

 Carlos Slim

World’s Second Richest man — Bill Gates World’s

Third richest man — Warren Buffet World’s

Fourth richest man — Bernard Arnault

Where do they stay?

1.World’s Largest House

2.World’s 2nd largest house

3.World’s 3rd largest house

4.World’s 4th largest house

Answer: None of the answers given above matches the place of residence of the men given above.

Isn’t that so odd?

The richest men not living in the biggest houses.

Then, what is the use of having so much money?

The shocker: The 3rd Richest man in the world stays in a five bedroom house brought in 1958 and that today is valued at around USD 700,000 (although this works out to Rs 3.5 crore if we take the current exchange rates, it is only around a crore in PPP terms).

Today almost 10% of Indians would be having a house in excess of Rs 1 Crore.

So does that mean that Warren Buffet is a miser?

With over $50 Billion in wealth, he still stays in a 53-year-old house that too with “just” five bedrooms. He surely must be bluffing about his wealth, because, we know for sure he is not bluffing about the house! Or is he? Well not at all. His known public wealth is 50 billion dollars and growing. So why does the world’s third richest man stay in such a small house? No, Warren Buffet is not stingy or miserly by any means; not anyone who donates 30 Billion to charity can be one. Rather, he has mastered the art of creating wealth.

Wealth is not created just by investing, but, also by avoiding unnecessary expenses. It’s not called stingy, rather, it’s called Frugality. This frugality has helped him grow his wealth year on year. His logic is simple: An extra ten rooms in the house is not going to create any major difference to him.

 However, the same money if invested rightly (of which he is a master) can be made to grow to probably ten times the same amount. Yes, it is not easy for all of us to be like him. Others might say that he can “afford” to be frugal because he already has so much wealth and does not need to worry about anything else. True, but he has stayed the same way even when he was poor! If Warren Buffett can do it on such a large scale, we can at least do it on a smaller scale. The secret lies in falling in love: In love with growing wealth.

If you can fall in love with the happiness that one gets by seeing his wealth grow, you will automatically start repelling the evil twin: spending.

Initially it may be very difficult and you may not even be able to follow. But, once you get accustomed to it. you realize that the pain of sacrificing current consumption is much smaller as compared to the thrill of creating long term wealth.

The 20,000 Rupees saved by going for a simple phone (rather than a gold studded one) can in the coming years grow into Rs 200000/- and give you the power to be a giver. The fundamental is to make sure we give priority to the needs and minimize the wants.

 Happy frugality

From Yahoo! Mail

Andhra Pradesh government asking the Sai Baba trust to show its account books

Sai Baba and the problem of hard cash

By Ramakrishna S R

Senior Editor, News

The Andhra Pradesh government has suddenly woken up to problems in Puttaparthi, and is asking the Sai Baba trust to show its account books.

Holy men and their ashrams are considered out of bounds for tax officials and governments. What prompted Hyderabad’s sudden interest in Puttaparthi affairs?

Last week, police stopped a car and found it was loaded with Rs 35 lakh in cash. It was on its way from Puttaparthi to Bangalore. After denying any connection with the money, trustees are now saying it was donated by a devotee, and was meant for building a memorial for Sai Baba.

There’s a lot of suspicion in the air. Devotees are protesting what they see as mismanagement of the trust’s affairs, and shopkeepers, whose business depends on a constant flow of domestic and international visitors, have already observed a bandh.

The police action, including the arrests of three men after the car haul and the questioning of Baba’s nephew Ratnakar, might not have taken place if Baba were around. When was the last time you heard of any police or tax trouble at Puttaparthi or Bangalore? Last week’s incidents suggest the trust many not have it so easy any more.

Today’s Deccan Herald reports the government is worried that people in privileged positions within the trust are quietly carting away the riches of Sai Baba’s spiritual empire. The Congress government is trying to restore the respect commanded by the trust when he was alive, according to the Bangalore paper.

Here’s another report from yesterday: “Trustees of Sathya Sai Baba on Tuesday offered to pay tax on the enormous piles of cash and gold discovered in his private chambers in Andhra Pradesh. On June 17, The Sri Sathya Sai Central Trust members found 98 kilograms of gold and jewellery, 307 kilograms of silver articles and Rs 115.6 million  in cash on unlocking Yajur Mandir, the private chamber of Sri Sathya Sai Baba at his Prashanti Nilayam Ashram.”

Ashram politics is notorious. That’s because there’s so much money, power, and influence to be enjoyed without accountability. Yet, says R Jagannathan in First Post, the government should not take over the Sai Baba trust. At best, it should fix problems in Puttaparthi and step out as quickly as possible.

He writes: “India’s flawed secularism has meant that temples and Hindu trusts are progressively being taken over by the government, or being legislated into various forms of government control, on the plea that they are being badly run. This is facilitated by the rapacity of politicians, who want to control temple resources for their own vested interests… If governments were that good at running institutions, we would not have seen our public sector telecom and airline companies go to seed so quickly… The crux of the problem is this: the same kind of hanky-panky plagues church and mosque trusts, too, but they are protected from excessive government interference by the mere fact that they are minority institutions. The government simply can’t touch them.”

There’s no question institutions such as Sai Baba’s run charitable hospitals and educational institutions well. (It is also true their achievements shine because the government fails so miserably in providing health care and education). But, on the other hand, holy men and their mutts are also infamous as havens for politicians to park their ill-gotten wealth. The netas pay back by gifting them government land and protecting them from the prying eyes of tax and government officials.

Devotees who visit holy places don’t seek receipts when they make contributions to the hundis. They trust their gurus and babas implicitly. What should the government do when faced with institutions with lots of wealth and little transparency?