Showing posts with label Essay. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Essay. Show all posts

Tuesday, 6 October 2015

Essay Fact Machine - It will be updated often

Health

  • Mental Health
    • According to WHO Mental Health Atlas 2011, 38% of people living in mental hospitals are estimated to have stayed there for a year or more. 
Quotes in general

  • Love and truth
    • “When I despair, I remember that all through history the way of truth and love have always won. There have been tyrants and murderers, and for a time, they can seem invincible, but in the end, they always fall. Think of it--always.” - Gandhi
Data
  • Accidents
    • 33% of deaths due to over speeding
    • 33% of world's road accident deaths registered in India

ALL ARE WELCOME TO CONTRIBUTE

Monday, 28 September 2015

3 Issues related to Internet Governance | 66A, Net Neutrality and Encryption Policy

  1. 66 A
  2. Net neutrality
  3. Encryption policy
    1. Encryption, a process in which digital messages are scrambled so they can’t be accessed by anyone other than those they are meant for, is a means to ensure freedom of expression and to keep information secure in the digital world. The aliases one uses in the social media environment can be a fun way to keep casual users from identifying you. But that isn’t enough. The digital world also comprises criminals and terrorists, and repressive regimes. Some of them would not only want to know who you are and hack into your information and messages but also have the means to do so. Encryption keeps intruders at bay. So, on Monday when the draft was released, experts and netizens could quickly figure out that the provisions had the real potential to undermine encryption. 
    2. a public safety vs privacy issue
    3. Examples of other countries objecting
      1. FBI Director James Comey even complained to U.S. lawmakers recently: “We cannot break strong encryption.” 
      2. British Prime Minister David Cameron has already created a stir by calling for a ban on strong encryption.
    4. Problem - David Kaye, UN Special Rapporteur on freedom of expression, wrote in a report in May: “It is a seemingly universal position among technologists that there is no special access that can be made available only to government authorities, even ones that, in principle, have the public interest in mind.”

Saturday, 5 September 2015

Problems and Solutions of Indian Muslims as Explained by Vice President of India Shri Hamid Ansari Ji

Why in news?
  • Hamid Ansari’s recent speech on Indian Muslims was a creative and thoughtful celebration of India, Islam and democracy.
  • In the last few days, leaders from the BJP and the VHP have demanded an apology from him over his representation of the status of Muslims in India.
Is rising Muslim Population a threat?
  • A community of 180 million people amounting to 14 per cent of the population is not a demographic threat but a cultural possibility. 
  • The Indian Muslim contributes not just to India but to the culture of Islam across the world. 
  • Muslims were an integral part of the freedom struggle and an integral part of independent India. Yet, he remarks, injustice has been done to them.
What Ansari said?
  • He emphasises that India is among the countries with the highest number of Muslims.
  • According to Ansari problems of Muslims are:
    • Trauma of Partition continues for them
    • identity and security
    • education and empowerment
    • equitable share in the largesse of state
    • a fair share in decision making
    • He slams the Muslims as being “trapped in a vicious circle and in a culturally defensive posture that hinders self-advancement.”
    • Tradition is made sacrosanct but the rationale of tradition is all but forgotten -->  Jadeediyat or modernity has become “a tainted expression. He claims that critical thinking is needed both for “the affirmation of faith” and “the well-being of the community”. He also contends that a fixation on the questions of identity and dignity create a defensive mode of thinking.


Solutions
  • He commends the spirit of Sabka saath sabka vikas (Development for all), one that captures the spirit of inclusiveness and representation that resonates the tenor of what he is trying to communicate.
  • He exhorts the Mushawarat, a grouping of “respected minds,” to focus on issues concerning women, youth and the marginalised, who constitute “the overwhelming majority” of Indian Muslims. 
  • Mr. Ansari’s plea to the community to think along plural, secular and democratic lines is hard-headed and clear. 
  • He remarks astutely that the way we solve a problem might add to the problem and quotes “a close observer” who pointed out that “agitation against discrimination can arouse the very emotions that foster discrimination.”
  • heals old wounds and does it without inflicting no new ones. 
  • The Muslim is, here, easy with her identity, comfortable in her Indian citizenship and confident that she can solve problems within the framework of Indian democracy. This is cultural confidence, citizenship and constitutionalism at its creative best.
  • A Muslim problem is no longer merely a Muslim problem but an Indian one to be shared with the wider community. 
  • Mr. Ansari emphasises that a lack of communication among communities has frozen the diversities of Indian society.
  • In his speech, problem-solving is not only creative but plural and democratic. The Indian thought experiment, whatever its flaws, becomes a model relevant for the world. 
  • It combines an ethics of memory, interpretation and innovation.
  • Mr. Ansari claims that the struggle for actualisation should be constitutionally imaginative; reciprocal in that a community does not get warped through isolation; and yet adaptive without losing a sense of integrity. Such a vision of change goes beyond Islam to become a model for thought experiment and lived change, also relevant in other contexts.

"In this sense, Mr. Ansari’s speech is a celebration of Islam, India and democracy — creatively done, thoughtful yet immaculate in its arguments. It deserves to be celebrated, debated, re-invented. India must match Hamid Ansari in creating a democracy for the future where a conversation of religion and democracy creates new orders of justice and creativity. Thank you Mr. Vice-President", said Shiv Visvanathan, a professor at Jindal School of Government and Public Policy.

Saturday, 29 August 2015

262 Law Commission Report on Death Penalty



  • In what will be a reversal of its earlier stand, the Law Commission of India is set to recommend abolition of death penalty in the country from the statute books, except in cases where the accused is convicted of involvement in a terror case because death penalty has no demonstrated utility in deterring crime or incapacitating offenders, any more than its alternative — imprisonment for life. 

Friday, 5 June 2015

Fight Against Hunger and State of Food Insecurity Report, 2015


The Millennium Development Goal of halving the proportion of chronically undernourished people in developing countries by 2015 is within reach. But progress must accelerate by the end of this year
Hunger Stats
  • Hungry Population —>  800m which is ~10% world Population
  • Chronically Hungry - 780m in developing countries
    • Decline in hungry people since:
    • 2005 - 167m
    • 1991 - 200m

Thursday, 21 May 2015