Hi There,
If you’re looking for more recent posts from me, go to
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or
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Broadcasting my thoughts
Hi There,
If you’re looking for more recent posts from me, go to
My blog on blogspot
or
My blog on Wordpress
Posted in Uncategorized.
– January 30, 2010
This is something I found while trawling the internet for reports of a “Black Diwali” for the Armed Forces. I think it reflects the simmering anger of those in the services.
SCPC: A Soldiers Lament to the President
While we awaited the pay commission bounty
The IAS got there first
and now, President Aunty
We have no choice but to be blunt
We are third class citizens,
though manning the front
The bureaucrats who decide things for us
Have truly shown their animus
And we who defend our dear nation
Have again been shown our lower station.
When the seventh pay commission comes around
We will no doubt lose more ground
Then Colonels would equal civilian clerks
In salary, status and other perks
Generals will wait on worn out chairs
Outside IAS Officers’ lairs.
A once proud service is now so degraded
That though their uniforms still be braided
They are demoralised and wait to retire
And then take up their pens to fire
At those they served all their life
In times of peace and in times of strife.
The lesson from this, our children we tell
Is that, if in life you want to do well
And this, I am sure, every soldier endorses
Do not ever join the forces.
Just become a doctor or a pleader
Perhaps, even better, a political leader
Or an IAS officer, with his red light
Why face the enemy, why risk a fight
When the nation you guard
does not value you much
And treats you merely like a handy crutch
To support the government in civil disorder
Or when the enemy threatens the border
But when the time comes to share the pie
They get all antsy and ask - why???
So Madam President, hear us out
A change is going to come about
And we, the most courageous of all
Will soon be replaced by the petty and small
Alas, your government would be squarely to blame
For this avoidable national shame.
Kishore Asthana
Posted in Blogs.
– September 27, 2008
This is my latest effort at painting from picture postcards. The photograph may look shiny in places because this painting is still in the process of drying.
If you have seen this view before and can recognise it, then you have probably lived and/or
travelled to Europe and I”ve done a decent job of painting it
Posted in Hobbies.
– July 29, 2008
Someone forwarded this article to me, and I think it”s worth a thought , at the very least!
Stand up for the Indian soldier
Harsh V Pant
The minister would not have dared to make such a comment had the protestors been a part of his or his
party”s vote bank. The fact that the Indian armed services do not go public with their grievances does not mean that they do not have any concerns and the fact that they have been forced to come to the streets should make the minister and his government acknowledge how desperate the situation might be.
The Indian government is fooling itself if it thinks that by dragging its feet on the issue of the armed
forces dissatisfaction with the recommendations of the Sixth Pay Commission, it can make the issue
go away.
A country that refuses to respect its armed forces will eventually end up getting forces that will not
respect the nations” aspirations. A country makes a sacred contract with its soldiers that while he/she will lay down his/her life when called upon to do so, the nation will take good care of his/her and his/her family”s needs to the extent its resources would permit.
This contract underpins the very survival of a nation as when its territorial integrity and political
independence are under threat, the nation looks upon the only instrument that can protect
it — its armed forces.
While all governments have to look for a considered bargain between their commitments and power and
between power and resources, a responsible government will always be aware of the serious implications of not spending adequate resources on defence.
The debate as it has been made out to be in some quarters between defence and development is a spurious one. Unless adequate provisions are made for defence, no state will be able to pursue its developmental agenda. This is much more important for a country like
sides of its periphery.
A government can keep spouting pious rhetoric about global peace and non-violence but it realises
fully that force is the ultima ratio in international relations. Politics among nations is conducted in the brooding shadow of violence. Either a state remains able and willing to use force to preserve and enhance its interests or it is forced to live at the mercy of its militarily powerful counterpart.
Even Nehru, after neglecting defence for all the years after independence had to eventually
concede in 1962 that India”s military weakness “has been a temptation, and a little military
strength may be a deterrent.”
The Indian public and press remain apathetic on defence issues. We make Kargil into a television spectacle, an opportunity for our journalists to try to show their temporary bravery by going to the frontlines for a few hours and getting the excitement of covering a war from the inside. And then when it is all over, our soldiers have been interred into their graves, we move on to new and more exciting spectacles — to our song and dance reality shows and saas-bahu sagas, forgetting that soldiers are still on guard.
This is a nation that will cry with Lata Mangeshkar [Images] when she sings Aye Mere Watan Ke Logon but will not make any effort to understand the real problems and concerns of its soldiers. It is a sign of the highly skewed priorities of the Indian media that the rising turmoil and dissatisfaction within the ranks of nations” armed forces is being given only perfunctory coverage.
It is an issue of nation”s very survival yet the media seems busy with its devotion of superficialities. Every rave and rant of Bollywood actors is religiously covered, detailed
dissection of seemingly never-ending cricket matches are conducted, exorbitant
pay rises in the corporate sector make it to the headlines but the one issue
that can make or break the future of this country is consigned to the margins.
We continue to pray at the altar of our false heroes while our real heroes continue to face neglect and
scorn.
The armed forces feel they have never got their due from various pay commissions over the years but the
government in its wisdom decided to keep the armed forces away from any representation in the latest Pay Commission. The dominance of bureaucrats meant that while the interests of the bureaucrats were well-recognised, the armed services once again ended up getting a raw deal.
The discontent is so serious that some of the best and brightest in our services have refused to go
for the Higher Command Courses and more and more are seeking an early retirement. Indian armed forces are desperately trying to fill vacancies as other professions are luring the young of the country.
Against the sanctioned strength of 300 per batch, the
The reason is pretty obvious: One can”t think of any major power in the world that treats its
soldiers the way
for help from a callous politico-bureaucratic elite.
Our politicians remain more than willing to waste tax payers money by routinely boycotting Parliament and have never shied away from increasing their own pay and allowances, claiming
that they remain underpaid. Yet those who defend the sanctity of Parliament are
given a short shrift.
The abysmal knowledge of defence issues that pervades the Indian political class probably gives them an illusion that the country is being protected by divine blessings.
Political apathy and bureaucratic design are rapidly eroding the self-esteem of our forces. A functioning
liberal democracy needs a loyal soldier that can take care of the state”s security, allowing the state to look after its citizenry. In
Dr Harsh V Pant teaches at King”s College
You can read the article with comments here
Posted in Blogs.
– June 22, 2008
My fourth oil painting, and one of the reasons why I don”t blog regularly
Posted in Hobbies.
– March 25, 2008
The music was moving up a notch from “foot tapping” to “lets hit the floor” .
She was looking around for him, wondering what kind of a dancer he would
turn out to be, IF he asked her to dance. He was standing by the bar, a
drink in one hand and a cigarette in the other, talking to some
friends, not looking her way. She didn't know whether to swallow her
pride and ask him ,or to give him the silent treatment later. Before
she could make up her mind, a friend of his asked her to dance, and she
said "Yes". They had just begun to dance, when he reached
them, smiled at his friend and cut in , to dance with his wife. She
couldn't stop smiling after that because she was dancing with him.
They had been married for four months and this was their first dance. She
felt as if this was how things were going to be between them, that he
would probably nevertake the first step unless pushed, but she was happy that he would….. eventually.
She was both right and wrong, for , you see, although he rarely asked her
to dance , they were never missing from the dance floor when either of
their favourite songs were playing.
Posted in Just rambling.
– August 19, 2007
I cant sing,but I can embed—music from You Tube—so be warned unwary Ilander,from now on this space is going to be “RETROBLOG”. In case you didn”t know already, the video will run intermittently the first time you try to play it, so if you want to hear the song the way it should be heard, play it a second time. Anyway, enough said, here”s a golden oldie I grew up listening to:)
Oh and by the way, IF you want to hear a slightly different version of this song, you should click here
Posted in Music from You Tube.
– August 15, 2007
One of my favourite 80″s tracks….Enjoy
Posted in Music from You Tube.
– August 15, 2007