Tuesday, June 1, 2010

Who is Going To be the mayor?

As you all know that the election result is going to be announced today now it is just a matter of time we get a new mayor. Who you think will be the new mayor. Is it from TMC or CPIM or Congree. The time will tell the story till now you can see the game of politics has alredy started. Just take look at this incident. They are the twain who were not supposed to meet after their breakup over the Indo-US nuclear deal; certainly not in West Bengal. Yet, a day before the results of the Bengal municipal polls are to be declared, political circles were excited by indications that the CPM was willing to walk the extra mile to support a Congress nominee as the next mayor of Kolkata in case the Trinamool Congress failed to score an outright win.
It all started with a meeting between finance minister Pranab Mukherjee and CPM’s Sitaram Yechury on Tuesday. Yechury stoutly denied there was any effort for a post-poll Congress-CPM tie-up, claiming the issue did not even figure in the discussion he had with Mukherjee. But Yechury’s vehemence wasn’t convincing because it did not sit well with the CPM’s “whatever it takes” resolve to stop Mamata from taking control of Kolkata. “If there is a difference of 10 seats between the Left and the Congress in Kolkata, we can support a Congress mayor. What is wrong? We did this in Siliguri,” a CPM leader said.
The Left’s anxiety can easily be understood. Mamata represents the most
formidable threat it has faced in the state and it fears that her win in the municipal polls will provide her with a ballast strong enough to put an end to the more than three-decade-old CPM rule.
The audacious Marxist manoeuvre is aimed at widening the rift between the Congress and the Trinamool, which saw the two parties going it alone in the municipal polls and has given the CPM hope that it may just be able to dodge a rout. CPM strategists recognise very well the virtue of alliances — the reason for the
Left Front’s durability. They also realise that a Mamata-Congress combination, which got the better of the CPM in the 2009 Lok Sabha polls, will be far more difficult to beat in the assembly elections.
The plot to split the Congress and the Trinamool got a boost because of the persisting divergence between the UPA partners on a host of issues and, more importantly, the refusal of the former to accept Mamata’s political suzerainty.

Thursday, May 27, 2010

IYC LOOKING FOR YOUNG POLITICIAN CUM MEMBER

INDIAN YOUTH CONGRESS is looking for new members. Anybody can join them by simple downloading the application form and submitting it to the zonal congress office. Not only this as a part of talent hunt the IYC is also conducting election in every state among the youth congress members for various post of President to Delegate. So if you really want to be a IYC member and want to participate in the election then visit the given link for more details..

http://iyc.in/sns/pg/pages/view/402016/

If you are serious about joining and participating in the election then hurry up and become a member as soon as possible because in some state the election has already been held. And in some place it is going to held in some few weeks and in other state the date are yet to be declared. If you want to be a young leader of the country and willing to work with the National Congress then join it as early as possible..
THE COUNTRY IS WAITING FOR YOU .......

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Now or Never

India has no option but to get ready for "star wars" in the future, with countries like China working overtime to develop advanced ASAT (anti-satellite) capabilities with "direct-ascent" missiles, hit-to-kill "kinetic" and directed-energy laser weapons.

The defence ministry's spanking new "Technology Perspective and Capability Roadmap" seems to recognize this overriding necessity, outlining as it does a wide array of high-tech offensive and defensive capabilities Indian armed forces will need over the next 15 years.

Identifying priority areas ranging from space warfare, ballistic missile defence (BMD) and combat drones to electronic warfare, NBC (nuclear, biological, chemical) defence and submarines equipped with AIP (air-independent propulsion), the roadmap holds that "technological superiority is increasingly going to be the decisive factor in future battles". The 76-page MoD roadmap to "provide the industry with an overview" about military requirements by 2025 does seem ambitious as of now, given the present poor state of the country's defence-industrial production base.

Nevertheless, it gives significant insight into what India plans to acquire in terms of futuristic military capabilities. The roadmap, after all, draws heavily from classified as well as unclassified parts of Army, IAF and Navy doctrines, the still-evolving long-term integrated perspective plan (2012-2027) and DRDO's S&T roadmap, among others. While India is already working in some of these sectors, the roadmap underlines the need to get cracking in the others as well. Ever since China shocked the world with an ASAT weapon test to destroy a satellite in January 2007, alarm bells have been clanging in the Indian defence establishment.

The MoD roadmap, on its part, identifies development of ASAT weapons "for electronic or physical destruction of satellites in both LEO (2,000-km altitude above earth's surface) and the higher GEO-synchronous orbits" as a thrust area.

Apart from "EMP (electromagnetic pulse) hardening" of satellite and sensors to protect them against ASAT weapons, it says armed forces want to induct satellite systems for intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance missions in a major way. The uses range from synthetic aperture radar all-weather imagery and precision targeting to automatic target recognition technology and high-speed communication.

Army's need for "directed energy weapons (DEWs)" is also spelled out in the roadmap. These include mobile air defence to engage enemy rockets, missiles, fighters and helicopters, as also DEWs to neutralize UAVs at a distance of 8-10 km. Moreover, precision weapons and dazzlers are needed for swift counter-terrorist operations with minimum collateral damage.

Another thrust area is UAVs, especially armed ones like the American Predator and Reaper drones equipped with Hellfire missiles. "UAVs with advanced sensors and weapons are going to dominate all facets of the future battlefield,"
it says.

Perspectives on the global economic meltdown

Bill Gross, who runs the world’s biggest mutual fund at Pacific Investment Management Co., said investors should seek “less levered” countries like China, India and Brazil that are “less easily prone to bubbling.” “The old established G-7 and their look-alikes as they de-lever have lost their position as drivers of the global economy.”

Gross recommended that investors should look for “a savings-oriented economy, which would gradually evolve into a consumer-focused economy,” adding that miniature examples of China, India and Brazil would be excellent examples.

China’s growth is forecast to accelerate to 10 percent this year, the International Monetary Fund said in a forecast released today, up from the 9 percent projected in October, after 8.7 percent last year. India’s economy will expand by 7.7 percent in 2010, the report said, compared with the October forecast of 6.4 percent.

Emerging and developing economies will increase 6 percent this year, a 0.9 percentage point increase from the previous forecasts, according to the report. Next year they will expand 6.3 percent.

Gross increased the $201.7 billion Total Return Fund’s investment in developed markets outside the U.S. to 16 percent from 5 percent in December, bringing it to the most since October 2004, according to Pimco’s Web site.

The U.K. is “a must to avoid,” Gross wrote in the commentary published today. “Its gilts are resting on a bed of nitroglycerine. High debt with the potential to devalue its currency present high risks for bond investors.”

Among developed countries, Gross recommended Canada and Germany. “Given enough liquidity and current yields, I would prefer to invest money in Canada,” Gross wrote. “Its conservative banks never did participate in the housing crisis and it moved toward and stayed closer to fiscal balance than any other country.”

“Germany is the safest, most liquid sovereign alternative,” Gross wrote. However, “its leadership and the EU’s potential stance toward the bailouts of Greece and Ireland must be watched. Think AIG and GMAC and you have a similar comparative predicament.”

Monday, May 24, 2010

Politics

WHO IS GOING TO WIN THIS ELECTION??

CPM

TMC

CONGRESS