Wednesday, 6 August 2014

Behind British Minister of Faith @SayeedaWarsi’s Resignation Over #Gaza


Her choice is bold and dramatic, and it sends a strong statement that political will requires moral courage

Politicians don’t often quit out of principle. They especially do not quit out of moral principle. But, on the rare occasion that they do, it is dramatic
That’s what happened Tuesday morning, when Sayeeda Warsi, the United Kingdom’s first Minister of Faith and the first Muslim to serve as a Cabinet minister, resigned in protest of her government’s approach to the crisis in Gaza. “For some weeks, in meetings and discussions, I have been open and honest about my views on the conflict in Gaza and our response to it,” she wrote in her resignation letter to Prime Minister David Cameron, which she posted on Twitter. “My view has been that our policy in relation to the Middle East Peace Process generally but more recently our approach and language during the current crisis in Gaza is morally indefensible, is not in Britain’s national interest and will have a long term detrimental impact on our reputation internationally and domestically.”
Cameron replied in a statement, thanking her for her work and regretting her decision. “Our policy has always been consistently clear–the situation in Gaza is intolerable and we’ve urged both sides to agree to an immediate and unconditional ceasefire,” he said.
At first glance, one might assume that this story is simply “Muslim minister resigns over U.K. support for Israel.” Warsi is, after all, the first Muslim to serve in so high a position, and soon after her resignation, she called for an immediate arms embargo against Israel in an interview with the Huffington Post UK.
But that’s almost certainly too simplistic an understanding of what happened. Warsi has built her professional career on a foundational principle that religious and historic divides do not necessitate irreconcilable divisions or violence. She made it her mission to help create a government that, as she often said, would “do God” and advocate for faith’s place in society. That meant working for people of all faiths. She spoke out against Islamophobia and worked to make sure British government was inclusive for Muslims. In 2012 she let the U.K.’s largest ministerial delegation to the Vatican. Last year she came to Washington, DC, to speak out against the global persecution of Christians. One of her main goals was to encourage the international community to develop a cross-faith, cross-continent commitment to protect Christian minorities. Religious persecution,she told me at the time, is the biggest challenge of the 21st century. “It is about working up the political will,” she said. “It is about getting some consensus, it is about politicians being prepared to take on these difficult challenges.”
Her personal faith story is also one that bridges divides often thought to be unbridgeable. She is the daughter of Pakistani immigrants and grew up in a Muslim family with a blended theological background that included both Shias and Sunnis. “We were taught to respect and love other faiths as much as we loved our own, and I suppose, you know, quite strong teachings that you can only truly be a Muslim if you also are Christian and Jewish before that, that actually Islam is just an extension of the other faiths and it has been a process where various books have been revealed at various times,” she told me. “I don’t see there is a collision course between people of faith, I actually do think it is instinctively based up on the same values.”
Her whole story is rooted in commitment to a higher calling. It makes her decision to resign is all the more dramatic, and it sends a strong statement that political will requires moral courage. “I always said that long after life in politics I must be able to live with myself for the decision I took or the decisions I supported,” she said in her resignation letter. “By staying in Government at this time I do not feel I can be sure of that.”

#Manopause?! Aging, Insecurity and the $2 Billion Testosterone Industry


These drugs promise to pump up men who feel deflated. But are they safe?

Tuesday, 5 August 2014

The Truth About Sonia (#TheTruthAboutSonia) #OneLifeIsNotEnough-



No one crosses Sonia Gandhi and tells tales. P.V. Narasimha Rao had to resort to fiction and even then he stopped the book just after his protagonist became prime minister. Arjun Singh published his memoirs posthumously but they were suitably abridged by the family to minimise damage to the First Family.
K. Natwar Singh, 83, is an unlikely candidate for rebellion. A proud Nehruiite, who spent 31 years in the Indian Foreign Service and 24 years in the Congress, he is still given to fondly recalling his one-time friend Sonia.

Read: Madam Sonia said I had to be fixed, says Natwar 

He talks about the many hours he has spent in her company, discussing books (she introduced Gabriel Garcia Marquez's One Hundred Years of Solitude to him in 1988), people (she told him things she said she hadn't told even Priyanka and Rahul) and political gossip (they discussed Bill Clinton's affair with Monica Lewinsky).

"She would even pass chits to me, with jokes, in the middle of state dinners," says Natwar. He spent many sessions with her working on her speeches, travelled with her to foreign destinations, and even ran sensitive errands for her, such as working on Congress leaders to accept her prime ministerial choice, Manmohan Singh.

Watch full interview:  Narasimha Rao wasn't Sonia's first choice as PM, says Natwar Singh

So when he decides to tell almost all in his new book One Life Is Not Enough, you can understand why she is worried-and why, as he likes to repeat, she came to his Jor Bagh home with daughter Priyanka to ask him not to publish the book. Does she regard the book as a cry for attention? Or as vengeance for having been abandoned after the Volcker report in the Oil-for-Food scandal? Her army of antagonists will regard it as live ammunition.

Among the many startling disclosures in the book, Natwar writes that she said no to becoming prime minister because Rahul told her he would take "any possible step to prevent his mother" if she did so. In the book, he writes, he gives his mother 24 hours to change her mind, a threat that has her in tears. Given that recently he was in direct competition to become prime minister, it is clear that Rahul remains conflicted about power, a reality that will do nothing to lift Congress morale.


And will further damage Rahul's credibility as the party's white knight. Natwar also reveals that Sonia had a mole in virtually every major ministry, including his-in an interview to India Today, he adds that Sanjaya Baru, media adviser to then prime minister Manmohan Singh, was right when he said in his book, The Accidental Prime Minister: The Making and Unmaking of Manmohan Singh, that all files went to her for clearance.
Natwar also gives details of how she kept both Narasimha Rao and Manmohan Singh on edge. Rao complains to him that her aloof attitude is affecting his health. Manmohan calls him to his hotel suite in Bangkok in 2004 and tells him how lonely he is-only a month into the 10 years he was in office. It's as much an autobiography as it is a portrait of one of the nation's most powerful politicians ever. Natwar chronicles her transformation from a diffident, nervous, shy woman to an ambitious, authoritarian and stern leader, almost Bourbonesque in that she never forgives or forgets. He calls her "arrogant", "deliberately capricious", "Machiavellian", a "prima donna" and describes her behaviour as "vicious" and "venomous". She emerges as someone with strong dislikes, who never forgets a mistake or forgives a betrayal-whether it is an indiscretion by Jairam Ramesh or Arjun Singh reportedly speaking of her being surrounded by a 'coterie'.

Watch full interview: Rajiv sent troops to Sri Lanka without telling Cabinet: Natwar Singh  

No one is spared, even if it is her mother-in-law's old associate Kenneth Kaunda, who makes the cardinal error of staying with his old friend-the late Lalit Suri, who lost favour with Sonia for reasons Natwar will not disclose. "The list of such people who fell out with her is very long," he says.

It all boils down to the Oil-for-Food scandal which Natwar believes he was made scapegoat for. He notes how the Justice R.S. Pathak committee cleared him but how the truth about who the money actually went to has yet to come out. Natwar talks of the 70,000 pages of documents recovered by former UN under secretary-general Virendra Dayal which were submitted to the ED and not heard of again. When he asks Pathak why they were never examined, he tells him "it's a long story". Natwar believes he was hung out to dry by the Congress and made to bear the cross at the explicit instructions of Sonia Gandhi. As he says: "Not even a leaf moves in the Congress without her knowing."

But even all that damage to Sonia is nothing compared to what is perhaps his most brutal blow: No Indian, he writes, would have ever behaved the way she did. He says she has an un-Indian core which is very distinct, manifest in the unemotional way she can cut people out of her life. "She has been in India since she was 19, she has imbibed everything Indian, and has never put a foot wrong. But there is 25 per cent of her which can never change," he tells India Today.

Excerpts: Nehru, my first PM 

All this will be music to the ears of the BJP. He knows that but dares any Congressman to suggest that it is part of a conspiracy by the BJP-no matter that his son Jagat Singh is a BJP MLA from Gopalgarh, Rajasthan, and no matter that the book ends with Natwar meeting Prime Minister Narendra Modi to offer advice on foreign policy.

Excerpts: Working for Indira

There is more in the book that will delight critics of the Nehru-Gandhi family. Natwar, a Nehru loyalist, writes of the love India's first prime minister had for Edwina Mountbatten and the fact that he discussed many state secrets with her in their letters-"he had many affairs, so what?" he says.

He calls Rajiv Gandhi "the noblest human being" but points out his folly in trusting his coterie, so much so that his pal Arun Singh almost brings India to the brink of war with Pakistan with General K. Sundarji, without informing the prime minister. Indira Gandhi is the only one who escapes his criticism-even though she often puts him firmly in his place.

Excerpts: Rajiv Gandhi, a prisoner of coterie 

It is a place, at the feet of the dynasty where every grateful Congressman resides for eternity in unquestioning servitude, that Natwar has dared to arise from. In a considerably diminished Congress, will others follow?

Monday, 4 August 2014

#HappyBirthday Sir, #President @BarackObama (The World's Strongest Man)


“You cannot grow this economy from the top down. You grow this economy from the middle class out. We’re not going to go back to what we were doing before. We’re moving forward.” : Barack Obama

About Barack Obama
President Obama was born in Honolulu, Hawaii on August 4th, 1961, to a father from Kenya and a mother from Kansas. Growing up, he was also raised by his grandfather, who served in Patton’s army, and his grandmother, who worked her way up from the secretarial pool to become vice president at a local bank.

After working his way through school with the help of scholarship money and student loans, President Obama moved to Chicago, where he worked as an organizer to help rebuild communities devastated by the closure of local steel plants.

He went on to Harvard Law School, where he was elected the first African-American president of the Harvard Law Review. After graduating, President Obama went on to lead one of the most successful voter registration drives in state history, and continued his legal work as a civil rights lawyer and a professor teaching constitutional law at the University of Chicago.

Barack Obama was first elected to the Illinois State Senate in 1996. During his time in Springfield, he passed the first major ethics reform in 25 years, cut taxes for working families, and expanded health care for children and their parents. Elected to the U.S. Senate in 2004, he reached across the aisle to pass the farthest-reaching lobbyist reform in a generation, lock up the world’s most dangerous weapons, and bring transparency to government by tracking federal spending online.

Barack Obama was sworn in as president on January 20th, 2009. He took office in the middle of the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression, at a time when our economy was losing 800,000 jobs a month. He acted immediately to get our economy back on track. Today, the private sector has added back more than 5 million jobs. There’s more work to do, but we’re on the right track.

In his first term, the President passed the landmark Affordable Care Act, helping to put quality health care within reach for more Americans. He ended the war in Iraq and is working to responsibly end the war in Afghanistan, passed historic Wall Street reform to make sure taxpayers never again have to bail out big banks, and cut taxes for every American worker—putting $3,600 back in the pockets of the typical family. He’s fought for equal rights and a woman’s right to make her own health decisions. And he’s made a college education more affordable for millions of students and their families.

The President believes an economy that's built to last starts with a strong and growing middle class—that’s why he has a plan to create jobs and restore economic security to working families. He’s been driven by the basic values that make our country great: America prospers when we’re all in it together, when hard work pays off and responsibility is rewarded, and when everyone—from Main Street to Wall Street—does their fair share and plays by the same rules.

KENYA MEETS KANSAS
Barack Hussein Obama was born in the two year old US state of Hawaii to a white American mother and a black Kenyan father. Obama Sr. grew up herding goats in a small Kenyan village where school was a tin-roof shack. Obama Sr. married and had one son. But in 1959, Obama Sr. left his newborn son and his again pregnant wife for a scholarship at the University of Hawaii. This would not be the last time ambition came before family. It was there that the University’s first black student met the Kansas born, Ann Dunham. Despite the differences in their personalities, Obama Sr. was an assured intellectual whereas Ann was awkward and shy, the couple married. At the time, Ann was three months pregnant. Obama Sr. lied to her that he’d divorced his African wife and mother of four of his children. Six months later, in Honolulu, on 4 August 1961, Barack Obama was born.

But Obama Sr. again put academia before his second family by leaving for a Harvard scholarship. Ann was just 20 when he left. Barack was just two. Obama Sr. and Ann soon separated and in 1964, she filed for divorce.

MUSLIM STEPFATHER
Ann met another student, Lolo Soetoro. They married and after two years moved to Soetoro’s native Indonesia in 1967. From the relative affluence of Hawaii, the six year old Barack was now confronted every day on his doorstep with the extreme poverty of a Third World country. Within six months, Barack was fluent in the local language. Each day started at 4am with his mother waking him to give him additional English lessons before Catholic school. His Muslim stepfather taught him everything from how to change a flat tyre to opening in chess. He imbued Barack with the values of Islam but didn’t convert him. His mother Ann was raised Christian but taught her son to be sceptical of religion.

In 1970, his mother had a daughter. When he was ten, Barack returned to Hawaii with his mother where he secured a scholarship. There was just one other black student at his school.
Barack’s father visited him just once.

DRUGS, DRINK & MALCOLM X
When Barack’s mother returned to Indonesia, her parents raised him. His grandparents tried their best during his basketball playing teenage years which often saw drinking and drug use, including marijuana and ‘blow’, American slang for cocaine. Politically, he was attracted more to Malcolm X than Martin Luther King. In 1979, Barack enrolled at college in Los Angeles. His mother divorced Soetoro.

THE STUDENT YEARS
Finally based in America, Obama transferred to New York to study political science at Columbia University. In 1982, he received news of his father’s death in a car accident in Africa. After over a year in the corporate sector, in 1985, Obama moved to Chicago and did three years as a community organiser. In a place devastated by steel plant closures, he represented the unemployed and homeless. And every year there, he saw how gun violence cost the lives of scores of children and hundreds of others.

It was there that he attended a sermon by the radical Reverend Jeremiah Wright. It caused him to weep. (Entitled ‘The Audacity to Hope’, he adapted it for his breakthrough speech at the Democratic Convention and for his second book.) At the time, Obama seriously considered becoming a preacher.

Instead, he went to Harvard Law School. He hoped it would enable him to achieve the things that grass roots activism couldn’t. Before beginning his studies, he went to Kenya to meet his father’s family and better understand his African heritage. Back in America, in 1988 he met his future wife Michelle Robinson, at that time an attorney. A descendent of slaves, she was immersed in the issue of race. And as her best friend was the daughter of the civil rights activist Jesse Jackson, she could introduce Barack to the Democratic political classes.

FIRST BLACK PRESIDENT
In 1990, Obama became President. Albeit the first black president of the Harvard Law Review. For the first time, Obama made the news nationally. In 1992, he ran a voter registration campaign which secured 100,000 new voters, mostly from the African American community. It helped elect the first female African American Senator. That same year he married Michelle. They would later have two daughters, Malia and Sasha.

In 1994, his mother Ann was diagnosed with cancer. Ann moved back to Hawaii to live near Obama’s now widowed grandmother. His grandmother buried her daughter in 1995. Ann’s difficulty in paying for her medical bills as she died directly informed her son’s later attempts to reform the American health care system. That year, on the back of his rising profile, Obama published his first book, ‘Dreams from My Father’.

RISE AND DEFEAT
In 1996, Obama was elected as State Senator for Illinois from the 13th district, which encompassed mostly impoverished areas of Chicago's south side. To secure the position, he had to defeat a former ally. Such actions showed he had the political muscle to take power. In 1999, unlike his father had done, Obama put his family first when his daughter became ill. In staying with her, he missed a crucial vote on gun control. Partly as a result of his absence, the gun control measure failed. It would cost him, and others, dearly.

In 2000, Obama took on former Black Panther, Bobby Rush, a well known fourth term incumbent, in the Democratic primaries for the US House of Representatives. Rush destroyed him. Obama later said his earlier gun vote absence had eliminated any slim chance he had of victory. Rush’s son had been shot the year before by a drug dealer. Some, however, believed Obama’s absence was career motivated. Back then, few professional American politicians progressed very far with a hard line on gun ownership. Rush would be the last politician to beat Obama in an election.

‘THERE IS THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA’
In 2003, Obama launched his campaign to be elected to the US Senate. An early opponent of the Iraq war, he impressed potential President John Kerry enough to be invited to give the keynote speech at the Democratic Convention in 2004. In it, the 42 year old Obama explicitly rejected the division of America into blue liberal and red conservative states. Instead of an America divided into Democrat and Republican states, he said he believed only that ‘there is the United States of America’. Obama went on to win his Senate seat by a landslide of 70 per cent against his Republican rival. Obama was sworn in as senator in 2005.

As a senator, Obama served on the Health, Education, Labour and Pensions Committee. One of the first laws he helps pass allows voters to go online and see where their taxes are spent.

As a candidate in the Democratic Primaries in 2007, Obama went head to head with Hillary Clinton. In 2008, he won. The Republican he then had to beat was the elderly war vet John McCain. McCain countered the novelty appeal of Obama by for the first time ever, making the Republican Vice President nominee a woman. But Sarah Palin was even more inexperienced than Obama. And Obama’s mere two years in the Senate wasn’t an issue for a young electorate weary of two terms of George W Bush.

As McCain withered, and Palin imploded, Obama gained ground. Significant victories included Ohio, a virtually all white state. The day before the Presidency was announced, Obama’s grandmother, the woman who had raised him during his difficult teenage years, died from cancer.

BYE-BYE PRESIDENT BUSH
On 4 November 2008, Obama made history. He secured 52.9 per cent of the popular vote. The new President assembled his team making his old adversary, Hillary Clinton, secretary of state.

Within days he ordered the military to start preparing to withdraw from Iraq, a war started by Bush. He also reversed Bush’s ban on federal funding to foreign establishments allowing abortion. He would also later reverse Bush’s limitations on funding stem cell research and repeal a two decade old law of 'Don't Ask Don't Tell' that banned openly gay people from the military. And in a country where many deny climate change, Obama championed alternative energy. But ever the politician, he saved the troubled car industry, securing jobs: And future votes.

‘GIVE ME YOUR TIRED, YOUR POOR...’
...is an extract from the poem engraved in the Statue of Liberty. But in the world’s wealthiest nation 49 million live below the poverty line. Nearly 1.5 million children are homeless. And almost one in seven Americans are without health insurance. Health reform, including the reduction in ballooning costs, was one of Obama’s key election promises.
In 2009, despite huge opposition, he covered an additional four million uninsured children with healthcare provisions. But in 2010 the Republicans retook the House of Representatives - where federal legislation is passed- ensuring other reforms could either be blocked or neutered.

OBAMA V OSAMA
In his first Presidential year, Obama had been named as the Nobel Peace Prize laureate. And he did indeed end the American mission in Iraq. This, however, was no pacifist President.
In 2011, he ordered the revenge killing of the architect of 9/11, Osama Bin Laden. And partly through the controversial use of drone attacks, Obama would come close to strategically defeating al-Qaeda. His intervention in Libya, unlike Bush’s, had international support, and again unlike Bush, relied on air power rather than ‘boots on the ground’. It directly led to the fall of Gaddafi.

But American elections are largely decided on domestic issues, not foreign. His support of gay marriage won over many of his supporters but further alienated many Republicans. And despite inheriting the worst economic crisis since the 1929 Depression, many thought it would be the stagnating economy that would lose him the 2012 election.

ROMNEY WHO?
Obama’s Republican rival was the business millionaire, and ex Mormon missionary, Mitt Romney. It was expected to be close. It wasn’t.

Romney’s business past proved to be a liability rather than an asset. Obama’s team painted him as part of the elite that had put the country into decline and then profited from the recession. Then there were further questions over Romney’s tax returns. And Romney was further damaged when it was alleged that he’d been connected to the outsourcing of American jobs to foreign countries. And whereas Obama sought to unite, Romney was revealed to believe in divisions with his comments that he believed nearly half the country were dependent on state aid.
In November 2012, Obama again won.

I’LL GIVE YOU MY GUN WHEN...
...you pry it from my cold, dead hands’ was a saying popularised by the hugely influential National Rifle Association. The NRA lobbies for the Second Amendments right to ‘bear arms’. In December 2012, the saying again became a grim reality after Adam Lanza shot dead 20 children, six staff, and then himself, at the suburban Sandy Hook Elementary School. The atrocity joined a long list of school spree killings.

When Obama called for gun reform the NRA responded with a call to arm teachers. Then in January 2013, Hadiya Pendleton, a 15 year old girl was shot dead near Obama’s home. The week before she’d performed at his second inauguration. Her killing highlighted the huge urban death toll from guns even in a state with some of America’s strictest gun laws. His reforms called for a ban on assault weapons and universal background checks on gun license applications.

Obama is the first President in well over a century to come from an urban background and to see gun reform through the prism of the city, rather than the countryside. But the hugely popular gun lobby argues that America protected its first families, established its independence and helped free the Western world from Nazism and totalitarian Communism, all at the point of a gun.

Obama took on healthcare reform in his first term in one of the world’s worst recessions and gun control in his second when Republicans had rarely felt so defensive. Few believed he could achieve his goals.

But it wouldn’t be the first time that America’s first African American President achieves the seemingly impossible. 

Fast Facts: 
Obama was sworn in as president on the bibles of Martin Luther King and of Abraham Lincoln, both key figures in the freeing of African Americans. 

Obama once claimed to have been proud to have campaigned in all 57 states. There are only 50. 

After Obama suggested gun reform, many gun sellers sold out of the assault rifle used in the Sandy Hook killings, the AR-15.

In 2008 and 2011 Obama had to produce two separate copies of his birth certificate to prove he was born in the US state of Hawaii and was therefore eligible to be the President of America. 

He has admitted to struggling with his attempts at quitting smoking, having to "strenuously" chew nicotine chewing gum.

Barack was known as ‘Barry’ when he was a child.

His Swahili first name means ‘blessed’.

His maternal grandfather fought for Patton in the Second World War while his grandmother worked on a bomber assembly line .

Barack Obama supports the ‘Hammers’, the English Premier League Football team, West Ham.

Sunday, 3 August 2014

Anat Admati (@anatadmati)


The economist who dared to say the bankers have no clothes

One of the most amazing things about the debate we’ve had over financial reform since the crisis of 2008 is that we haven’t really questioned the system itself, only the state of individual institutions. Stanford professor Anat Admati, whose book The Bankers’ New Clothes, which she co-wrote with Martin Hellwig, has become a call to arms for reformers globally, has done just that. Rather than focus on the details of stress tests or Dodd-Frank regulations, Admati has asked a simple, powerful question: Why do banks, even under new postcrisis rules, do business with 95% borrowed money when no other business would dream of it? Why are banks special? Her answer: They aren’t, and financial reform needs to go much further to reflect that. “Is this complicated, risky system the best we can have?” she asks. Thanks to Admati, central bankers, global policymakers and economists are starting to wonder that too.

Lydia Ko (@Lko424)


She's leading golf’s youth movement

When I first arrived on tour, several veterans were kind enough to share a few words of wisdom. The most common guidance was, without fail, to “stop and smell the roses.”
The ensuing two decades have flown by, and it’s hard to believe I’m now cast in the elder-statesman role. While I probably could’ve done a better job heeding their advice during my career, it still resonates with me to this day.
Lydia Ko is exceptionally talented, mature beyond her years and well liked by golf fans and competitors alike. She is responsible for sparking increased interest in our sport not just in her native South Korea and adopted homeland of New Zealand but also among juniors across the globe.
Her early, record-breaking success brings with it incredible pressure  and she’s doing a fantastic job handling the many responsibilities that accompany stardom. Her future is very bright. All I can add is to enjoy the ride!

Jenji Kohan #JenjiKohan



Creator of unforgettable characters

A force of nature. That’s what pops into my head every time I have the opportunity to see Jenji Kohan in person. A force of nature. And it’s not just because of the brilliantly badass blue, green or sometimes purple hair. It’s because of the brain underneath it.
A smart businessperson, Jenji was one of the first creators to sign on to make content for Netflix, making her a bold early disrupter of the television model. And we are all the better for it. Because Jenji creates television in a way no other writer creates television. From Weeds’ drug-dealing mom Nancy Botwin to … well, every single woman behind bars inOrange Is the New Black, Jenji’s characters are richly layered and iconic. The characters she creates are dark, twisted, funny and startlingly honest. She’s turned criminals into women we know, women we care about, women we root for.
Just as important and in a way that is shamefully rare today, Jenji’s characters are a breathtaking riot of color and sexual orientation onscreen. Jenji shows a passion for diversity by creating characters of all backgrounds who are three-dimensional, flawed and sometimes unpleasant, but always human.
But then, what else could we expect from a force of nature?