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In his weekly column in The Times of India, Swaminathan Aiyar writes that Aadhaar is not the biggest threat to privacy as there are several other ways a person’s data can be hacked and compromised. Aiyar says that cyberspace is a global commons defying all regulation.
He quotes a top cybersecurity expert who estimates that every email and phone call is monitored by at least a hundred invisible entities, of whom 52 per cent are private actors and 48 per cent are state actors (of more than one country).
Dear fanatic Hindus, if you don’t want to be made a laughing stock in front of the rest of the world then please stop your violent obsession with cows, is how Tavleen Singh begins her weekly Indian Express column.
She questions why the Hindu fanatics aren’t being deployed for Swachch Bharat or not going and teaching basic literacy to the disadvantaged children. Singh also supports caring for the cows at a national level, but not the murderous barbarism fuelling the cow protection.
As you head for Gorakhpur from Hisar, a mere 40km drive, you can hardly sense the importance of being there, is the mournful beginning of Deepender Deswal’s column in The Tribune.
A village, which lost 1,503 acres, made way for Nuclear Power Corporation of India Limited (NPCIL) to build a 2,800 MW — 700x2 MW in first phase — nuclear plant.
All political parties, the ruling BJP included, opposed it, sat on long dharnas with local protesting residents. Many of them, especially the BJP, then, backtracked, after coming to power in 2014.
Meghnad Desai’s weekly wisdom in his column in the Indian Express focusses on the swathes of trolls, patrolling the internet, threatening any and all free speech they disapprove of. The Swedish Embassy was targeted for having Barkha Dutt, and author Swati Chaturvedi at an event and were told all Swedish goods coming into the country will be boycotted.
Desai argues that this sort of incident is something all upholders of free speech must voluntarily resist.
At this time of the year, Kolkata’s haze of heat was punctuated by the scintillating red of the gulmohar trees that, unlike their slightly reticent cousins in Delhi, were in full bloom, is how Pavan K Varma picturesquely begins his Asian Age column.
He writes of a recent panel discussion where the upcoming Presidential Elections were discussed, as was the shape the country’s future politics will take after BJP’s recent sweep of the Uttar Pradesh elections.
Is it possible for a disparate group of regional satraps to eschew their personal egos and local priorities to come together as a convincing force to oppose the BJP? For the Opposition to be effective, it must be able to present a credible alternative vision of India, and also show why this vision would be in the greater interest of India.
There may come a time for a nation when the whole of it shares the same mood – be it of anger or despair – and for P Chidambaram, that time for India has come in 2017, as he writes in his weekly Indian Express column.
He writes that a narrative is seemingly emerging from various strands of conversations and comments that the India imagined in 2014 is “falling apart.”
He writes of voices of Opposition like Mr A S Dulat, a former director of R&AW: ‘There is a sense of hopelessness. They (Kashmiris) aren’t afraid to die...This has never happened in the past’ and ‘Kashmiris are disappointed to see that nothing happened after (Mr) Modi took over. Where has (Mr) Vajpayee’s insaniyat ka daira gone?’
Kesavan argues that the entire practice of giving honorary degrees to heads of states is wrong as “universities are meant to be autonomous, self-governing institutions, not ready-to-hand props for public diplomacy.”
He further states that such an act is a way that the university diminishes itself and negates its own autonomy
Triple talaq is a personal matter best left to individuals to decide for themselves, is the musing Karan Thapar begins his weekly column with, in the Hindustan Times.
He writes that if triple talaq infringes human rights and the State is expected to uphold, it must not become an issue on which political parties take opposing sides.
In a lighter selection this week, Mini Kapoor writes about why the physical editions of the book work better, for her column in The Hindu.
Keeping a list of books read in life, running your eyes through the list is to know not only the reading life, but glimpse the curvature of your personal evolution, intellectually and emotionally, she quotes Pamela Paul, the editor of The New York Times Book Review.
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Published: 07 May 2017,07:00 AM IST