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Showing posts with label Girish. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Girish. Show all posts

Wednesday 21 December 2022

Great rendition of 'Bin Tere' by Vaishnav Girish





The Original Song - Please comment below on which one is better



All Songs of Vaishnav Girish






 

Saturday 25 June 2016

Likely Scenarios after the Brexit vote?



By Girish Menon

Now that a majority of Britons have voted to leave the EU, Nigel Farage has denied his claim to fund the NHS, David Cameron has resigned and the markets have fallen; so what happens next?

Scenario 1: The Status Quo

The Conservative party will elect a leader who will try to develop a national consensus on the EU. . S/he will then embark on negotiations with the EU and this time the spooked EU leaders will concede enough to make a difference. S/he will conduct another referendum in 1-2 years time and the UK will continue to be a part of the EU.

Scenario 2: The Nightmare

True Eurosceptics with strong neoliberal leanings will come to power. They will fan xenophobic forces to mask the budget cuts to public services. They will negotiate trade deals from a weak position, dilute workers' rights and help their rich funders convert England into another Russia.

Scenario 3: The Ideal

There will be intense and honest soul searching across the EU. A realisation will dawn that inequality is the major cause for the rise of fissiparous forces. The EU will become a transparent organisation with accountability. It will ensure a Universal and Unconditional Basic Income, Free Education, Free Health and subsidised Housing for all its citizens.


There could be many more scenarios which will be variations on the above themes. I hope the EU will choose scenario 3 but as a betting man I think it will choose scenario 1. The case for scenario 1 becomes stronger as the government is in no hurry to invoke Clause 50 which is the next step to start the Brexit negotiation and Boris Johnson appears subdued after the victory.

Monday 18 August 2014

Dhoni's Revenge




As the brickbats from aficionados of Test cricket kept piling on the abject Indian cricket team at the Oval yesterday, I was pleasantly amused by Dhoni's comment at the press conference following the Indian surrender. He stated, as quoted on Cricinfo, "Don't be so jealous of IPL". It made me ponder if Dhoni and his teammates have affected their revenge in such a cold blooded and undetectable manner.

Australia and England along with purists and other conservatives in cricket have for the past so many years been shouting that India did not care for Test cricket. The ICC however predicted that the new power structure in the ICC would restore Test cricket to its halcyon days. And this five Test series with India would showcase the new superpower's commitment to the 'soporific' game. Yet, by ending the Oval and Old Trafford Tests in three days Dhoni's men have put paid to such plans.

Given India's quick and abject defeats in two consecutive series in England, which county chief will have the gumption to bid   to host India's next Test match. The ECB have been running an auction and handing out Tests to the highest bidder. County grounds like the Oval hoped to attract the 'brown pound' in order to make a profit. With India's capitulation I doubt if future visits by the Indian team will attract the demand that we have seen recently.

The counties may hope to attract the 'white pound' to compensate for the Indian diaspora's absence. But cricket as a sport is dwindling in popularity as the coffers of most counties will reveal.

Indian advertisers might also be mad at the team's performances as the 'brown eyeballs' would be switching channels to avoid the shambles put up by Dhoni's men. They may henceforth demand the negation of 'home advantage' and creation of pitches that suit Dhoni's men. Thus match fixing, frowned upon by the ICC, may make a re-entry in the form of scripted matches all in the name of entertainment.


In the process, Dhoni's men would have wreaked sweet revenge not only on the lovers of Test cricket and the ICC but also on Andersen. For after all, what will his record as England's highest wicket taker be worth, if Test cricket is dead and the only records worth mentioning are set in the IPL?