Saturday, November 14, 2009
My Is a Freak Machine
Tuesday, October 6, 2009
Sex and Spirituality
Friday, January 16, 2009
Love Hum
My Love Rhyme
Any day any time I think of you,
It feels I never thought about you
I claim, I was stupid to do so
And never rid of my mind of you.
The day you sent me a letter from away
I was nothing a stoned about you.
I searched the pain can finish me
But again you came the way I was just heading to.
Never failed to remember you
Possibly I was buried beneath of your mind too.
Friends says, I am the freaking guy to just get the pain
And advised not think of you.
I couldn’t get drunk so enough
And felt just brunt the letter you sent,
Couldn’t reach the fire where it was
Dark was just ahead of mine.
Save the minute I had left with me
Searched the picture of the you been with me.
Mad I am so did that way
Love is so blind that made me do always.
Can you just tell me where I was wrong!
Is it my love or the affection I had with you?
Days gone days old they said to me,
But I know I never away from you.
Forgive me I did that so,
I feel no where I should go.
Left a box with my songs
To hum it when I will not be beside you.
Loves takes always and give nothing to remember it words
It just made us feel that it was.
Any day any time I think of you,
It feels I never thought about you.
Tuesday, December 23, 2008
Some Heros of Our Country
1931, 1st Indian Flag adopted by Congress"At the stroke of the midnight hour, when the world sleeps, India will awake to life and freedom. A moment comes, which comes but rarely in history, when we step out from the old to the new, when an age ends, and when the soul of a nation, long suppressed, finds utterance." - Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru, 15th Aug'1947
Independence, the most desired word for us. I have always dream about the freedom fighters who sacrificed their life for India. I always want to collect their stories, their pictures and their sacrifice.
Few I have posted here.
Khudiram Bose:
He was the first youngest freedom fighter. He was hanged at the age of 19 (August 19, 1908).He never feared for death.
He was under aged to give death sentence. The judges asked for life imprisonment, but he had chosen death. He wanted to inspire the youth of India to help and free the motherland from British.
His death inspired lot of Indian youth not only in India, but also the Indians who were staying abroad.
But the one thing that surprised everyone was that as he was hanged he was still smiling.
Madan Lal Dhingra:
Madan Lal Dhingra (1887 - 1909) was an Indian Indian freedom fighter ,political activist, a revolutionatry studying in England, where he killed Sir William Hutt Curzon Wyllie, a British official, which is hailed as one of the first acts of revolution (killing an invader on his own land) in the Indian independence movement in the 20th century.This statement was said just before he died at the gallows:
I believe that a nation held down by foreign bayonets is in a perpetual state of war. Since open battle is rendered impossible to a disarmed race, I attacked by surprise. Since guns were denied to me I drew forth my pistol and fired. Poor in health and intellect, a son like myself has nothing else to offer to the mother but his own blood. And so I have sacrificed the same on her altar. The only lesson required in India at present is to learn how to die, and the only way to teach it is by dying ourselves. My only prayer to God is that I may be re-born of the same mother and I may re-die in the same sacred cause till the cause is successful. Vande Mataram!"
Benoy-Badal-Dinesh (Benoy Basu, Badal Gupta, Dinesh Gupta):

Benoy Basu

Badal Gupta

Dinesh Gupta
3 heroes, 3 talented students...just in their young age they have sacrificed their life for motherland.
Benoy Basu (22 yrs), Badal Gupta (19 yrs) and Dinesh Gupta (18 yrs) On 8 December 1930, went to kill Col NS Simpson at Writer's Building,The Inspector General of Prisons, who was infamous for the brutal oppression on the prisoners in the jails.
Entered the Writer's Building dressed in European costume and killed Simpson.
Monday, December 17, 2007
No girl child for Indians...Please

IN the 1980s, it was a suspicion. In the 1990s, it was a near certainty. In 2001, it became indisputable fact. India may be known for many things but it now has the distinction of being known as the nation that likes to ensure that girls are never born. The 2001 census figures of the 0-6 years sex ratio are a stark illustration of this reality. We are facing a national emergency, an epidemic that will have far-reaching social consequences.
The adult sex ratio in India has been declining for several decades. That itself was reason for concern. But the sharp decline in the child sex ratio in the last decade from 945 to 927 is a devastating indictment of our society. Sex-detection and sex-selective abortions are today spreading like an infectious disease, from the rich to the poor, from the upper castes to the Scheduled Castes (SC) and even to the Scheduled Tribes (ST). No one wants girls anymore. Eliminate them now instead of dealing with the problems of raising a girl, goes the thinking behind the deadly actions.
At a recent seminar in Delhi organised by Action India and the Nehru Memorial Library, the Census Commissioner, Dr. J. K. Banthia presented a visual horror story. He showed maps graded in different colours according to the 0-6 sex ratio. The growing number of districts where the 0-6 sex ratio has fallen below the 800 mark was deep red. And the reds were popping up in every State, in ever greater numbers.
The "Top of the Pops", so to speak, the districts with the worst child sex ratio were all in Punjab and Haryana, two of India's wealthiest States. The worst of these 10 was Fathegarh Sahib in Punjab with a child sex ratio of just 766. And the best of the worst was Gurdaspur, also in Punjab, with 789. What a range — 766 to 789 and all within two States. The other eight districts were Kurukshetra and Sonipat in Haryana and Patiala, Ambala, Mansa, Kapurthala, Bhatinda and Sangrur in Punjab.
The districts with the best child sex ratios were divided between Arunachal Pradesh, Jammu and Kashmir, Chhatisgarh, Orissa and Sikkim. East Kameng in Arunachal Pradesh had a child sex ratio of 1035 (that is 1,035 girls to every 1,000 boys) while North Sikkim, at the bottom of the list had a child sex ratio of 995. The national average is 927.
In the 1980s, when women's groups first exposed the use of technology, devised to detect genetic abnormalities, to determine the sex of the child, only a few people were alarmed. The media was virtually unresponsive. The problem seemed restricted to the metros. We thought that only the better off could afford the technology. No one expected that within two decades, sex-detection techniques would become so widespread, and affordable, that they would be available all over the country with devastating consequences on the child sex ratio. What is more alarming is that the disease of sex-selection is not restricted to certain castes and classes. Dr. Banthia's latest figures revealed that even among the SCs and STs, where the average child sex ratio has always been higher than in the general population and better than the national average, it has begun to dip substantially. Thus while in 1991, the child sex ratio for STs was 985 (against a national average of 945), in 2001 it had fallen to 973. And amongst SCs, the figures were 946 in 1991 and 938 in 2001.
A madness catching on
In 1991, not a single district in India had been recorded with a child sex ratio of less than 800. In 2001, there were 14. In 1991, only one district recorded a child sex ratio of between 800-849. In 2001, this number had risen to 31. At the other end of the spectrum in 1991, 21 districts had a child sex ratio of over 1,000. In 2001, only five districts were in this range. In other words, while the number of districts with abysmally low child sex ratios is increasing, the number with higher than average child sex ratios is declining. The madness is catching on.
There is now substantial data that reveals that private as well as government facilities are used for sex-selective abortions despite the law that prohibits it. Government doctors admit that there is no way they can ensure that a woman who comes to them for an abortion has not already detected the gender of the foetus. Reports have also shown that apart from abortions, if a female child is born despite all efforts to ensure that this does not happen, the baby is abandoned at the doorstep of hospitals. This has been documented in Punjab.
What are we to do about this problem? Surveys in Haryana and Punjab have revealed that some women genuinely believed that if their numbers decline, their value would increase because men will not find brides. Instead, men are buying brides from other States for as little as Rs. 5,000 (in Haryana a buffalo costs Rs. 40,000). These women are available to all the men in the family. Instead of being valued, women are now becoming targets of violence in districts with the lowest sex ratios.
Education makes no difference
There is also an assumption that education and economic independence will ensure that women assert their rights, including their right to reproductive choice. But a survey by Action India of women in Delhi revealed that even highly educated women have resorted to as many as eight abortions to ensure that they only give birth to a son. In this country, education and economic progress seem to make no dent on attitudes. On the contrary, these are getting more embedded.
Government intervention has been in the form of a law that is inadequate and poorly implemented. Furthermore, in its desire to curtail the growth of the population, the government has been pushing the two-child norm. Women's groups argue that the combination of son preference and the two-child norm, and the widespread availability of sex-detection techniques, will ensure that fewer girls will be born in the future.
Son preference, sex selection, female foeticide, whatever we want to call it, is a damning indictment of India in the 21st Century. Men, women, doctors, nurses, health workers, the media, and the government — we are all involved. We boast of our prowess in IT. Yet technology is being used in this country to fashion a future without women, or with very few of them. Is this progress?
Saturday, September 29, 2007
India Demolished Pakistan

Wat a Match it was......We won the Twenty-20 worldcup...The young brigade rocked the stadium with their sensational cricket & nerve game. This is wat happens when youth takes the charge..
We won, We Rocked & We thrilled....
But wat about Pak Captain Malik's Caption..."All Muslims will be sad because they lost against INDIA"..... Wat a shame...
Dude think about your countrys Muslims......In India All the muslims Celebrated This Win...And We Rock


