Wednesday, September 30, 2015

Beef Eaters have always had it coming in India.


Read just now a rumour circulated by one of the notorious houses about someone being lynched due to beef. While every life lost is saddening, what is even more saddening is the complete lawlessness in which marauding gangs can lynch and loot at will. This is not the kind of ill governance to be afforded by a nation that wants to leapfrog into the most powerful on the earth. What however is most tragic is the lack of sensitivity to Hindu issues, and where any such minor infraction is met with tonnes and tonnes of ridicule heaped on the so-called majority populace. It is as if the entire community is to blame for what may or may not have happened in Dadri.
There is a section of aggressive minority-ism bogeymen who appear every now and then to expose their farcical "liberalism" that is another word for gross anti-Hinduism in India. These liberal retards think they own the nation and can override anything that the nation holds sacred, that the founding fathers of the constitution put in as a directive principle, that the Supreme Court has upheld, that even the Mughals and British Colonialists had respected and that majority of the states in India have ratified.
Traditionally cows are considered sacred in Hindu India. Hinduism is based on the concept of omnipresence of the Divine, and the presence of a soul in all creations including bovine.The concept of slaughtering cows among the militant minorities and useful liberal idiots from the hindu community arose from the historical invasions of Islamists who enforced dhimmitude and humiliation on the vanquished Hindu subjects. For example, In 1756–57, in what was his fourth invasion of India, the founder of the Durrani Empire, Ahmad Shāh Durrānī sacked Delhi and plundered Agra, Mathura, and Vrndavana. On his way back to Afghanistan, he attacked the Golden Temple in Amritsar and filled its sacred pool with the blood of slaughtered cows. These are the kind of traditions our Liberals retards seek to uphold.
In independent India there was a committed intent to protect cows.
The "Preservation, protection and improvement of stock and prevention of animal diseases, veterinary training and practice" is Entry 15 of the State List of the Seventh Schedule of the Constitution. Presently 24 out of 29 states in India currently have various regulations prohibiting either the slaughter or sale of cows.
Prohibition of cow slaughter is a Directive Principles of State Policy contained in Article 48 of the Constitution.Almost 95% of the slaughter houses in India are illegal, purportedly serving to the illegal demands of the liberal community that can go to any lengths to satiate their illegitimate and illegal quirks.
On October 26,2005 the Supreme Court of India , in a landmark judgement upheld the constitutional validity of anti-cow slaughter laws enacted by different state governments in India.
History
It is said that the Chola King Manu Needhi Cholan killed his own son to provide justice to a cow. The ancient sculptures of Indus valley civilizations and the continued worship of Nandi proves the eminent place of bovines in traditional Indian society.
In medieval times, The Mughal emperor Babar ruled in 1526 that killing cows was forbidden. In his Wasiyyat namd-i-majchfi (Persian: secret testament) to his son and successor, Humayun, dated First Jamadi-ul-Awwal 935 Hijri (11 January 1529), Babur instructed that hearts of people of Hindustan can be won by keeping bigotry aside (implying that Hindu community wishes should be respected). This restriction on cow slaughter continued until Ahmad Shah's rule in 1754, although there was a reversal in 1645 under the reign of ultra-Islamist Aurangzeb, who revived cruel subjugation of dharmic communities. He imposed cow slaughter to humiliate the Hindu subjects, as mentioned in 9th Sikh Guru Tegh Bahadur's memoirs. However, after Aurangzeb, the resurgent Maratha and Sikh empires banned cow slaughter again.
Even while the British, who were habitual beef eaters forced slaughter, the rebellion of 1857 against the British East India Company, led by both Hindus and Muslim sepoys was based on the reverence of the cow. Every social movement like Arya Samaj also stressed on cow protection.
In the late 1800s, Some incidents precipitated by the British led to Hindu-Muslim riots in Mumbai, Rangoon, Azamgarh, etc on the issue of cow slaughter. In the backdrop of violent riots, Queen Victoria mentioned the cow protection movement in a letter, dated 8 December 1893, to then Viceroy Lansdowne, writing, "The Queen greatly admired the Viceroy's speech on the Cow-killing agitation. While she quite agrees in the necessity of perfect fairness, she thinks the Muhammadans do require more protection than Hindus, and they are decidedly by far the more loyal. Though the Muhammadan's cow-killing is made the pretext for the agitation, it is, in fact, directed against us, who kill far more cows for our army, &c., than the Muhammadans."  It is since then that the protection of beef-eating people crept into Indian Governance, in spite of most great freedom fighters of the time actively participating in cow-protection movements. It became a fight between the elite and the masses since then.
Post-Independence Congress-led governments, who were but an extension of the colonial Raj, continued with the encouragement of cow-slaughter in the name of scientific temperament and rationalism. It also went so far as to release grants and loans for setting up of modern slaughter houses, which the Hindu Nationalists call the Pink Revolution.
Jayaprakash Narayan in his letter to then Prime Minister Indira Gandhi calling for a ban on cow slaughter, Narayan wrote, "For myself, I cannot understand why, in a Hindu majority country like India, where rightly or wrongly, there is such a strong feeling about cow-slaughter, there cannot be a legal ban"
The opposition to cow-slaughter in India therefore has variously been motivated by Anti-Hinduism, Jehad, Elitism, Subjugation, or Colonialism. It is unfortunate our liberals mock the tradition of the majority population of their own nation to prove themselves as true inheritors of the worst sort of Invaders and British the country has seen.
And that my dear friends is the history of the COW in India. One that has moved and threatened mighty empires, one that has the potential to kill. Every local beat officer in each village should be cautious of an affront to the cow anywhere. But that's hard to expect from the UP govt, which has gone beyond all limits of decency in it's blind pursuit of bloody power.

Saturday, September 26, 2015

10-things I have learned to do when at a Presidential/PM event

10-things I have learned to do when at a Presidential/PM event


For those who are close to the power centers in Center or states, you may please stop reading further. 

For others like me who have so far been comfortable in our six degrees of separation from the high tables, this is for you.

Like the donkey who ferried the idol assumed he was the one being revered by every passer-by, When I got my first invitation card to a presidential event, I imagined I had finally arrived. Better sense prevailed soon after as I realized it was my b-card. In any case, here I was, thrown into the unknown of a super-formal non-event followed by lunch.

So how should one approach an official event, how is one expected to conduct oneself, and what does one try to achieve from events like this. I have learnt a few ground rules that I can share with the audience of this blog, who I assume will find an occasion in the near future to be in the good books of the powers-that-be. Assume it’s the PM’s swearing in.

     1.      Usually there is the anthems, and entertainment, followed by speeches, photos and interactions. And Lunch. Always get your phone battery charged. It helps to kill time, live tweet your life’s success moment, and if you’re lucky get some good pics of the performing entertainment squad.

      2.      This one is about what you should NOT do. It is unlikely that you’ll find the good fortune to say much to the chief guest, much less heard, even if he’s shaking hands with you for that extra millisecond. Please don’t try your elevator pitch. He’s been there. Done that.

     3.      This is what you should do. Always manage to trace a camera guy, and assure him you’ll buy your photographs from him. In most events photographers display several pics they know can be sold anyway, but it’s good to be sure. Mark him out as you near the PM. When you get that millisecond, say HI, and ask for that pic! Bongo, that’s what you came here for!

    4.      Live tweet. Such events afford the best occasion to get some RTs from despicable tweeple who love to ignore you.

     5.      If you’re one of the speakers at the podium, please remember no one wants to hear what you say, and everybody gives a damn to what your organization’s mission and vision are. Just make a few good jokes, keep them awake and get back to your seat pronto.

     6.      As soon as the formal event closes and lunch is open, run to occupy the 1st table near the reserved tables, which are anyway reserved for important people who are way out of your league. This way you’ll be in physical proximity of someone important. If you’re lucky, one of those important people may trip and drop some eatables on you, in which case you get to so some serendipitous networking.

     7.      Once the table is occupied, you need not rest on your laurels. The queue at the food counter may look terrifying, but it’ll be much worse later, and you may end up reaching empty dishes of the best food. If you’re on an ultra-VIP table and are being served, well , bad for you, because now you are at the mercy of the overworked understaffed Stewarts, who are just too slow while you either kill time being ignored by important people, or try and compete with your table-mates for self-importance.   

     8.      Avoid alcoholic drinks. I have a theory they dilute it so much that even if you try your best, you’ll still not get to the stage of switching to your mother tongue.

     9.      Lunch being over, don’t forget to buy your pic you had so painstakingly ordered.

     10.   Don’t try to impress the artistes who performed at stage before the speeches. Will just cost you a couple of beers with no returns.


Please let me know if you found these tips helpful.

The achievements of Ancient Hindu society before the Abrahimic crusades

The achievements of Ancient Hindu society before the Abrahimic crusades
[ My piece originally hosted at merimarzi.com]


We live in a strange country. This was succinctly put by the PM in his Ireland speech[1] yesterday when he said that Irish children can sing hymns in Sanskrit. But if we tried the same in India, there’d be hells falling with “secularism-in-danger” brouhaha.

Most of the 4 pillars has actively participated in self-flagellation of our own capabilities over centuries, ably egged on by the institutional and monetary might of the 5th column after independence. We therefore learn that invaders kept coming drove after drove to vanquish the vulnerable pagan barbarians who willingly fell from one slavery unto another, or so the story goes. The examination of this popular historic school is a subject of another post. But in spite of the best efforts of our eminent historians, they haven’t been able to count the servitude of our uncultured roots beyond the 800 ADs when the Arabs first appeared on Bharat’s horizon.

Let’s look at the post Islamic Hindu struggle for independence, which is often whitewashed, later. It’s not surprising that the Whites dismantled our own traditional Gurukul[2] schooling methods to introduce us to a method which indoctrinates our educated masses into self-hate. In the bargain, we lost a large part of our wisdom, passed on from guru to shishya over millennia, mostly by Smriti or memory! We now learn that the world’s regions are described as the West (America being “discovered’ by Columbus, with no credits the original inhabitants), Middle East(Which is west of India), Far East(Not so far from India), Latin America and so-on. Such is the Europe-centric world view through which we try and understand our own roots.

Recall the controversy created in Jan 2015, when participants recounted the achievements of Indian Science in the Indian Science Congress. Captain Anand Bodas, a retired principal of a pilot training facility, dedicated an entire lecture to the ancient airplane technology. “There is a reference to ancient aviation in the Rigveda,” Bodas said. And he wasn’t talking of Air India!

Today let’s have a glimpse of the many achievements in the scientific front which were again later discovered by Europeans, and claimed to be their own. Sample these stellar examples which have been locked away in our ancient books:

     1> Atomic Theory[3]:  
Before one of illustrious leaders in India espoused on his theories of Jupiter escape velocity for Dalits and radioactive corpses, John Dalton (1766 – 1844) from England was widely credited with the development of atomic theory. However, a theory of atoms was actually formulated by Acharya Kanad[4] around 650 BC. His real name is said to be Kashyap. It was Kanada who originated the idea that anu (atom) was an indestructible particle of matter. He also stated that anu can have two states - Absolute rest and a State of motion. 2500 years later Dalton became father of this.

2> Lalitha Sahasranama[5], told by Hayagreeva[6] to Agasthya[7] muni, describes the Goddess as the super consciousness/Brahman that pervades even the sub atomic particles within matter. "Paranjyotih parandhamah paramanuh paratpara"[8]. The word "anuvu[9]" for atom, and other particles have been used in Hindu literature for centuries.

     3> Scientists have unearthed an ancient city of Mohanjodaro, where there is evidence to show an atomic blast[10] dating back thousands of years, from 8,000 to 12,000 years, destroying everything most of the buildings and by estimates about half a million people. This needs further research, but the cooperation required between the modern states of India and Pakistan is hard to come by to facilitate this research.
      
    4> Much before India discovered our ever quarrelling political parties to annihilate all parliamentary functioning, The Mahabharata clearly described a catastrophic blast that rocked Bharatvarsha. "Bhramastra[11],  A single projectile charged with all the power in the Universe...An incandescent column of smoke and flame as bright as 10,000 suns, rose in all its splendor...it was an unknown weapon, an iron thunderbolt, a gigantic messenger of death which reduced to ashes an entire race.” Historian Kisari Mohan Ganguli[12] says that Indian sacred writings are full of such descriptions.
  
      5>Newton’s Law:
In years before the Congress party if India established the theory of ceaseless falling, Hindu astronomer Bhaskaracharya[13] stated in Surya Siddhanta[14], (~400-500 AD) that “Objects fall on the earth due to a force of attraction by the earth. Therefore, the earth, planets, constellations, moon and sun are held in orbit due to this attraction.” Approximately 1200 years later (1687 AD), Sir Isaac Newton rediscovered this phenomenon and called it the Law of Gravity.
         
      6> Medicine :
Today the world is acknowledging that allopathy, the cornerstone of medical science in modern world, is actually an inexact science. And it has started to wake up and take note of several millennia of past knowledge by human civilizations. Acharya Charak’s "Charak Samhita[15]," is considered as an encyclopedia of Ayurveda[16] spanning more than 100,000 herbs and their medicinal values, which have not only been used in last 2000 years but have also been rediscovered by the west today. This has given many of our liberals the confidence that the principles, diagnoses, and cures described in ancient Hindu texts might also be useful for so-called modern lifestyle diseases like diabetes, tuberculosis, heart disease etc .
7
     7>  Sushruta Samhita[17] is from the father of surgeries, Sushruta[18] which describes about 300 surgical procedures and 125 surgical instruments for surgeries like cesareans, cataract, artificial limbs, Rhinoplasty (restoration of a damaged nose), 12 types of fractures, 6 types of dislocations, urinary stones and even plastic surgery and brain surgery as well as accurate use of Anesthesia.

    8>.      Shrimad Bhagavatam[19], 3rd canto, 30th chapter, gives a vivid description of the growth of the embryo[20] in the mother's womb. If we compare the information given therein with the information given in textbooks like Gray's Anatomy, there are striking similarities.

    9. Vimanas: 
A little before Wright brothers were noticed by the West, in 4th Century BC text called Vymaanika-Shaastra[21] by Maharshi Bhardwaj, was discovered in a temple in India in 1875. This book shockingly describes in great detail the  operation of ancient vimanas including information on steering, precautions for long flights, protection of the airships from storms and lightning, and how to switch the drive to solar energy, or some other “free energy” source. Vimanas were said to take off vertically or dirigible. The text contains references to more than 70 authorities and 10 experts of air travel in antiquity.

   10.   Wind Energy:
Sage Kanva[22] in Rigveda sections 8/41/6 in Jagati meter of God wind explains the science of wind. It is said, Kanva Rishi, a descendent of Sage Angirasa, looked after Shakuntala when she was abandoned by her mother and father (rishi vishwamitra). Bharat, the son of Shakuntala was also brought up by him.
  
   11.   Fire:
Sterilization is based on the presumption that nothing survives fire. Recent advancements have shown, however, that microbes called 'fire bacteria' survive even in fire. Compare this with the claim in Vedas that there are living entities everywhere - even in fire.

   12.   Meditation:
Sankhya[23] Darshan defined the term "Dhyaan or Meditation" as “the state of mind when remains without any subjectivity / objectivity i.e. without any thought (when the mind is away from worldly objects). Concept of Samkhya is supposed to be given by Sage Kapil[24] (6th century BC) in his Samkhya-pravachana-sutram consisting of 527 aphorisms in six chapters. Most celebrated works of Samkhya are Samkhya-karika (seventy verses) of Ishwar Krishna (3rd century AD) and commentary on it by Vachaspati Misra (850 AD) called The Tattvakaumudi. Sage Kapil teaches that there is an unbroken continuity from the lowest inorganic to the highest organic forms. The source of world according to him is Prakriti (fundamental nature).

   13.   Creation of Universe
In a shocking scholarship for the entrenched beliefs and thoughts of his time, Kapil Muni rejected the thesis of God having created the Universe. He enumerated twenty-five principles responsible for the manifestation of the Creation (Samasara), out of which Purusha and Prakriti are eternal and independent of each other.

   14.   Science of Yoga:
The art of Wellness through Yogic practices was introduced by Acharya Patanjali[25], who prescribed the control of prana (life breath) as the means to control the body, mind and soul. His 84 yogic postures effectively enhance the efficiency of the respiratory, circulatory, nervous, digestive and endocrine systems and many other organs of the body.

   15.   Mathematics and Astronomy:
Most of us know the contributions of Aryabhatt[26] around 475BC in his treatise of mathematics and astronomy called “Aryabhattam[27]”. Aryabhatt was the first to proclaim that the earth is round, it rotates on its axis, orbits the sun and is suspended in space - 1,000 years before Copernicus published his heliocentric theory.

    16.   Yajur Vedic verse: "Brahmaanda vyapta deha bhasitha himaruja..." describes Shiva as the one who is spread out in Brahmaanda[28]. Anda means an egg depicting the shape of the galaxy. In many scriptures, the word Bhoogala[29] is used, Gola meaning round. Indians, since long have always known that Earth was spherical.

  17.   Distance of the Sun : Bhaskaracharya's mathematical works called "Lilavati[30]" and "Bijaganita[31]" are considered to be unparalleled. In his treatise "Siddhant Shiromani[32]" he writes on planetary positions, eclipses, cosmography, mathematical techniques and astronomical equipment. In the "Surya Siddhant[33]" he makes a note on the force of gravity. He calculated the time taken by earth to orbit the sun: (5th century) 365.258756484 days

   18.   BOTANY and Zoology: Author of various books such as "Bruhad Samhita" and "Bruhad Jatak, Varahamihir's book[34] "panch siddhant", Bruhad noted that the moon and planets are lustrous not because of their own light but due to sunlight. He was also an expert in geography, constellations, botany and zoology. In his botanical treatise, he enumerates several cures for various diseases afflicting plants and trees.

   19.   The mysterious Siddhars[35]: Several centuries before the advent of Doaremon and his gadgets to Rahul Gandhi’s favourite Nobita, there were some in India who had acquired strange powers. The Siddhars were followers of the God Shiva and according to different texts there were 18 of them. Their teachings and findings were written in the form of poems in the Tamil language. Agasthya[36] of 7th century BC (considered as one of the saptarishis, or son of God Brahma) and then his disciple Acharya Patanjali were said to be the first Siddhar Saints. These 18 saints were said to have secret practices that enabled them to attain 8 sidhhis which let them control time and space, to transform the body, manipulate matter at the molecular level and achieve immortality. 8 major siddhis were
                           I.          To become tiny as the atom within the atom (Anima);
                         II.          To become big in unshakeable proportions (Mahima);
                        III.          To become as light as vapour in levitation (Laghima);
                        IV.          To become as heavy as the mountain (Garima);
                         V.          To enter into other bodies in transmigration (Prapti);
                        VI.          To be in all things, omni-pervasive (Prakamya);
                      VII.          To be lord of all creation in omnipotence (Isatvam);
                    VIII.          To be everywhere in omnipresence (Vasitvam)
There are 10 secondary siddhis described Bhagavata Purana that include the following:
                           I.          Being undisturbed by hunger, thirst, and other bodily appetites;
                         II.          Hearing things far away;
                        III.          Seeing things far away;
                        IV.          Moving the body wherever thought goes (teleportation/astral projection);
                         V.          Assuming any form desired;
                        VI.          Entering the bodies of others;
                      VII.          Dying when one desires;
                    VIII.          Witnessing and participating in the past times of the gods;
                        IX.          Perfect accomplishment of one's determination;
                          X.          Orders or commands being unimpeded.

These above mentioned examples clearly point out the ned for much thorough analysis of our own body of knowledge that existed before the invasions started in India. Howevere, even mentioning this becomes blasphemy in a world taken over by the small-minded. Liberals were aghast when in the same Science Congress this happened:

"We in India are the inheritors of a thriving tradition of Indian science and technology since ancient times' mathematics and medicine, metallurgy and mining, calculus and textiles, architecture and astronomy,” said Modi, who is a Hindu nationalist. “The contribution of Indian civilization to human knowledge and advancement has been rich and varied.”

Was Modi and the others wrong about lauding our ancestors? In the light of examination of facts, which are not what liberals want to hear, the claim holds true!


REFERENCES AND RECOMMENDED READING:



[9] Indian Atomism section in https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atomism