Showing posts with label Dirty Politics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dirty Politics. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

Truth You Never Thought Of

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Salary & Govt. Concessionsfor a Member of Parliament (MP)

Monthly Salary : 12,000

Expense for Constitution per month :10,000

Office expenditure per month :14,000

Traveling concession (Rs. 8 per km) : 48,000( eg.For a visit from kerala to Delhi & return: 6000 km)

Daily DA TA during parliament meets :500/day

Charge for 1 class (A/C) in train:Free (For any number of times)
(All over India )

Charge for Business Class in flights : Free for 40 trips / year (With wife or P...A.)

Rent for MP hostel at Delhi : Free

Electricitycosts at home : Free up to 50,000 units

Local phone call charge : Free up to 1 ,70,000 calls.

TOTAL expense for a MP [having no qualification] per year :32,00,000 [i.e . 2.66 lakh/month]

TOTAL expense for 5 years : 1,60,00,000

For 534 MPs, the expense for 5 years :
8,54,40,00,000 (nearly 855 crores)

AND THE PRIME MINISTER IS ASKING THE HIGHLY QUALIFIED, OUT PERFORMING CEOs TO CUT DOWN THEIR SALARIES…..

This is how all our tax money is been swallowed and price hike on our regular commodities. ......
And this is the present condition of our country:



855 crores could make their life livable !!
Think of the great democracy we have........ .....
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Monday, April 6, 2009

NASTY INDIAN POLITICS and THE ......

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I would have crushed Varun under a Roller: Lalu
6 Apr 2009, 1902 hrs IST, PTI
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KISHANGANJ(Bihar): RJD chief Lalu Prasad on Monday said he would have "crushed" BJP candidate Varun Gandhi under a roller for his anti-Muslim
speeches if he had been the country's Home Minister.

"Had I been the country's home minister, I would have crushed Varun Gandhi under a roller and destroyed him without caring for the consequences for his hate speech against Muslims," Prasad told an election meeting here.

The Railway minister recalled how he and his party had frustrated the "communal" BJP's bid to storm to power at the Centre in 2004 Lok Sabha polls and taken on those raking up the issue of Congress president Sonia Gandhi's foreign origin.

Attacking Bihar chief minister Nitish Kumar, the RJD chief alleged, "Nitish is sitting in the lap of L K Advani, who was directly involved in pulling down the Babri mosque, but his dream will never come true."

LJP President and Union minister Ramvilas Paswan, who was also present, charged Kumar with 'misleading' the minorities by claiming to be secular "while playing into hands of the BJP".

The two leaders were speaking after the filing of nomination by RJD candidate and Union minister Taslimuddin for Kishanganj Lok Sabha seat.
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Sunday, April 5, 2009

Why Varun, Mamata Faked a Foreign Degree

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Earlier this week, Varun Gandhi was revealed to have done a Mamata Banerjee. The BJP politician's claim of holding degrees from the London School of
Economics (LSE) and London's School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS) were found inaccurate. The revelations seemed to echo the row over Trinamool Congress chief Mamata Banerjee's much-flaunted doctoral degree from East Georgia University a few years ago. The university, it was discovered, didn't exist.

But Gandhi and Banerjee may be just the two better-known faces of a rampant Indian problem. By all accounts, it's common to find doctors, engineers, professors and businessmen flaunting fancy foreign degrees, many of which are fake.

So, are Indians simply so hung up about a 'phoren' degree they want one even though they have no claim to it? Is this proof we love all things 'phoren'? Or do we have a talent and aptitude for deception and fakery? "Foreign things have a status value which the swadeshi doesn't," says social scientist Shiv Vishwanathan. In other words, another instance of our love of the foreign tag, a colonial hangover.

More important, when people tom-tom degrees from non-existent universities, it should be seen as an "appeal to an intellect they don't possess", adds Vishwanathan.

Dipankar Gupta, professor of sociology at Delhi's Jawaharlal Nehru University says that "a degree from either the UK or the US matters a lot (to) people in the developing world". But he adds that any dispassionate analysis shows "that some international universities are superior to ours and it helps to study there. But for many, it's not about acquiring knowledge, it's about showing off."

It is a platitude that India still prizes education above most other attributes. A highly qualified person commands more respect than one without. This increases manifold if the degree is from, say Oxford or Cambridge.

But Gupta says it's surprising prominent Indians flaunt real or fake foreign degrees. "It just shows their hypocrisy. They need either foreigners or foreign degrees to prop them up."

Headhunters admit false educational achievements on resumes are a besetting headache.

Ronesh Puri, MD of headhunter Executive Access, says, "At least 30-40% resumes are incorrect." Vishwanathan says this trend shows the "second-rate understanding of education."

Similarly, the resume of Ashwin Kapadia, vice-chancellor of South Gujarat University, claimed he had a Ph D in alternative medicine from a Sri Lankan university. But it didn't exist.

Sometimes, discovery of a fake degree can save lives. A few years ago, police caught 'Dr' Vikramjeet Singh, who claimed a degree from the Karanganda Medical Institute in Kazakhastan. He was employed by a Delhi hospital.

The University Grants Commission has published a list of 22 fake universities. Uttar Pradesh topped it with nine. The only cheering detail is Indians aren't the only ones flaunting fake universities. It's a reality everywhere. It says something that John Bear and Allen Ezell's study of the history and the economics of the slide toward fake degrees is titled 'Degree Mills, The Billion Dollar Industry That Has Sold Over A Million Fake Diplomas'.
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