You have to be yourself. Be very honest about who you are. And if people like you, that's fine. If they don't, their loss.
Sunday, June 26, 2011
Thursday, May 26, 2011
Indian Gastrodiplomacy to Help Feed Perceptions of an Emergent India
As an emergent India is asserting itself within the ever-evolving global power dynamic, India is having a vibrant discussion about public diplomacy and nation-branding, and how to engage in channels of public diplomacy as a means to project its emergence; now is the perfect time for India to start cooking up a gastrodiplomacy campaign.
Public diplomacy works to communicate culture and values to foreign publics; gastrodiplomacy uses culinary delights to appeal to global appetites, and thus helps raise a nation's brand awareness and reputation.

Indian Gastrodiplomacy
India is a natural spot to conduct gastrodiplomacy ("Samosa Diplomacy"), as India's mark on global cuisine is profound. It was the quest for India's spice bounty flavored the European age of exploration and sent intrepid navigators sailing around the Cape of Good Hope to reach India's shores. As Shashi Tharoor noted, today in Great Britain -- the isle that once considered India to be her crown jewel -- Indian curry houses employ more workers in the UK than the iron, steel, coal and shipbuilding industries combined.
In an age of increasing obesity and heart disease in the West as related to Western diets, as well as diseases outbreaks like BSE, E. coli and salmonella that have plagued meat supplies, India's more healthy vegetarian diet could be a source of soft power for India. India would be wise to take the advice of Beatles legend and vegetarian enthusiast Paul McCartney, and declare an "International Vegetarian Day."
Yet so much of what passes for Indian food abroad stems from its northern Punjabi cuisine. India would be wise to start promoting the delicious and fresh cuisines that are found in its southern regions like the banana-leaf sadya thalis with its delectable coconut chutneys, idlys (lentil cakes) and vadas (donut fritters) or the rice and black lentil crepe dosa stuffed with masala potatoes and onions.
Meanwhile, India would be smart to promote the delicacies that are found at a more local level.Indian street food never seems to make its way to Western palates, which have sadly been missing out on the multitudes of dishes that local Indians savor. Also, it is culinary fare that is often a bit more posh and pricey. The hearty, cheap and delicious street food treats like chole (fiery chickpea curry) with puri (fried bread), aloo tikki (potato croquettes stuffed with spices and served with mint, tamarind and yogurt) and a multitude of various savory chaat snacks.
And what is dinner without dessert? Indian sweets like the immaculate barfi (condensed milk squares), kulfi (sweet, creamy traditional Indian ice cream) and the delectable gulab jamun (fried dough balls swimming in rosewater syrup) could all be after-dinner favorites for an Indian gastrodiplomacy campaign. Of course, such would go well with a cup of India's famous spiced tea -- the sweet, milky and gingery chai.
In Delhi, the Indian Ministry of Tourism -- in collaboration with a variety of other ministries and tourist boards, helps host the popular tourist destination Dilli Haat, a rural market-style center to showcase Indian crafts and cuisine from all across India's varied 28 states. Such efforts should be distilled into a traveling cultural diplomacy campaign sent abroad, much like the innovative Malaysian night market initiative, to bring wide-ranging examples of Indian cuisine and culture to wider global audiences. When culinary diplomacy is combined with cultural diplomacy, it is at its most successful as it engages all the senses.
Indian cuisine has always been an informal part of Indian public and cultural diplomacy; what is required today is a more focused use of gastrodiplomacy in its public diplomacy efforts. As India is conducting public diplomacy and cultural outreach campaigns, like the immaculate India Callingevent in Los Angeles or the wildly successful Maximum India festival in Washington, DC, to introduce global audiences to the cultural reality of an emergent India, it is also time for India to engage in more robust gastrodiplomacy to raise the cultural awareness for all of India's cuisine heritage.
A gastrodiplomacy diplomacy campaign could help raise Indian brand awareness, spur tourism and introduce global diners to the authentic Indian palate. A bit of digestive diplomacy is just the dish to help pique global interest and appetites in the new India.
Paul Rockower is a gastronomist and graduate of the Master's of Public Diplomacy program at the University of Southern California. Rockower works as a Public Diplomacy Guru with INDIA Future of Change, an organization that conducts Indian public diplomacy and nation branding.
Sunday, May 1, 2011
Don't Copy if you can't PASTE
A popular motivational speaker was entertaining his Audience. He Said:
"The best years of my life were spent in the arms of a woman who wasn't
my wife!" The audience was in silence and shock. The speaker added :
"And that woman was my mother!"
Laughter and Applause!!!
A week later, a top manager trained by the Motivational speaker tried to
crack this very effective joke At home. He was a bit foggy after a
drink. He said loudly to His wife who was preparing dinner, "The
greatest years of my life were spent in the arms of a woman who was not
my Wife!" The wife went; "ahhhh!" with shock and rage.
Standing there for 20 seconds trying to recall the second Half of the
joke, the manager finally blurted out "...and I can't remember who she
was!"
By the time the manager regained his consciousness, he was on a hospital
bed nursing burns from boiling water.
Moral of the story...
Don't Copy if you can't PASTE
Dedicated to all one sided lovers .....Engineering Students
I won't bombard u with sentiments..:)..this is a story of a final year who has tried everything on his self-proclaimed love. ;)
And now he is saying.....
मुश्किल है अपना मेल प्रिये, ये प्यार नहीं है खेल प्रिये|
तुम mechanical की नहली हो, मैं mineral Dep का सत्ती हूँ...
तुम Intel Chip Processor हो, मैं जन्मजात ही बत्ती हूँ|
तुम्हे आदत CCD की, मैं मेस की रोटी खाता हूँ...
तुम फैशन Queen कैम्पस की, मैं कभी-कभार नहाता हूँ|
तेरे चाहने वाले सैकड़ों हैं, मेरे Wingi मेरी उड़ाते हैं..
मुझे Block किया है लोगों ने, तुझे खोज के Friend बनाते हैं|
तुम srijan की भाँती पोपुलर, मैं dep.-freshers के जैसा हूँ,
तुम Foreign training की Stipend हो, मैं Paid Intern का पैसा हूँ|
तुम Rajdhani की AC , मैं main building का पंखा हूँ....
तुम स्वर्ग की भांति दर्शनीय , मैं दहन के बाद की लंका हूँ|
मैं यहाँ के प्रोफ का Lecture हूँ, तुम Top सर्च हो DC की..
मैं Chewtiyon का बकर हूँ, तुम Clge idol pratibimb की |
तुम batch top karne ka celebration, मैं Endsem की रात हूँ...
तुम G.Sec की हो प्रोपोसल, मैं kartavya Volunteer की बात हूँ|
मैं छेदी का टिंकू, तुम Truffle Sundae CCD की..
मैं B.C. Session से बेदखल, तुम नयी सी Topic GD की|
तुझे देख log खुश हो जाते,
मुझे देख "WHAT THE HELL" प्रिये....
अब.................
मुश्किल है अपना मेल प्रिये, ये प्यार नहीं है खेल प्रिये..
P.S.- No offenses Junta. :)...Inspired frm sumones wall..but a small editing by me.:P
Labels:
College Life,
Engineering Students
yaaro ab to jana hai.....
yaaaro,ab to jana hai,
lagata hai abhi to kal hi aaye the,
kuch sapne apne.. kuch paraye the,
kuch sach hai ...kuch fasana hai,
yaaaro, ab to jana hai....
ankho me thodi udaaasi hai,
kuch jayenge bichud,thodi si mayoosi hai,
lekin naye sapno ki udaan hai
zindgi ka naya taraana hai
yaaro ab to jana hai...
jaise bhi the yeh din baade yaad ayenge
kcuh tum logo ki dhundhli yaade chor jayenge
waquat gaya sochne ka
kya khoyenge kya payenge
ab to bas un yaado ko dil basana hai...
yaaro ab to jana hai...
bahut se dost mile ..
kuch zigri yaar mile....
clg ki har junior me..
hamko sachcha pyar mile..
internal ka panga,,practical ka parcha
marks hame kam har baar mile..
phir bhi ab to muskrana hai
yaaro ab to jana hai...
dekhta hu jab me sochta hu ye
kal tak tha jo naya ,aj puarana hai...
dil to chahta nahi ki choru tujhe..
lekin nayei zindgi,nayi duniya ko jana hai..
naye par khulenge naye aasmano me
yeh bhi pata nahi ki aage
looh ke thapede ya mausam suhana hai
yaaro, ab to jana hai.......
yaaaro ab to jana hai....
Why the poor want to stay very poor ...????

I agree that the poverty data are wrong, but not because they have been fudged. Rather, poor people are increasingly lying to surveyors about their true living standards, and this is inflating apparent poverty.
Devesh Kapur, Lant Pritchett and other researchers cite a telling example of this in a research survey last year on the conditions of dalits in Uttar Pradesh. The researchers hired local facilitators to assist the survey. Answering questions, one dalit claimed to be badly off. But as the questions proceeded, the facilitator realized that the person proposed for marrying his cousin was this dalit's son. On discovering this, the dalit declared he was actually well off, and had lied about being poor to ensure he did not lose access to subsidies! He jumped from understatement to overstatement in a trice.
Poor people respond to incentives like anybody else. When surveys started some decades ago, the poor probably told the truth, since they did not think this would hurt them. But over the decades, the government has started targeting subsidies more sharply at those below the poverty line (BPL). Till the late 1990s, there was a single subsidized price for all food grains at ration shops, but after that, an especially low price was decreed for BPL folk. BPL targeting is used for other entitlements, such as job cards under NREGA.
In such circumstances, it is absurd to expect that people who rise above the poverty line will admit this to surveyors, and risk losing their benefits. A significant proportion will understate their consumption. So, surveys will capture less and less of what people really consume.
Is this happening? Yes, indeed. Back in 1972-73, consumption measured by the NSSO surveys amounted to 87% of consumption estimated by national accounts (which measure GDP). But this proportion of consumption captured by the NSSO has steadily declined over the years, fell to just 48.8% in 2005-06, and further to an all-time low of 43% in the latest 2009-10 survey.
Leftists claim that this is entirely because the rich are hiding their consumption to evade the taxman, and that the consumption of the poor is accurately captured. Phooey! Income tax rates have crashed from 97.75% to 30%, wealth tax has been abolished and the use of white money has improved substantially in real estate transactions since 1972-73. In every way, the rich have less incentive to hide their consumption today, while the poor have more incentive.
GDP data show Indian consumption rising fast. But NSSO data show consumption rising slowly. Bhalla calculates that in the two years between 2007-08 and 2009-10, NSSO data shows consumption plummeting 7%, as calamitous a fall as during the Great Depression!
This is plainly fiction. We all know that GDP and consumption kept rising, with new cell phone connections increasing by 15 million per month. Explanation: the NSSO captured 47% of consumption in 2007-8 but only 43% of consumption in 2009-10.
Let's return to the official poverty estimates, warts and all. A new poverty line has been adopted based on the Tendulkar Committee recommendations. According to this new formula, poverty declined from 45.3% in 1993-94 to 37.2% in 2004-05, a decline of 0.73 percentage points per year. In the next five years to 2009-10, poverty declined by 1.04 percentage points per year. This is a significant improvement, though it looks too low in an era of fast growth. But remember, there was a major drought in 2009-10, which would have depressed consumption below trend.
Besides, a better way of judging poverty reduction is to ask what proportion of the poor rose above the poverty line between the start and end of the period. Measured in this way, poverty reduction between 1993-94 and 2004-05 was 1.65% per year, and improved to 2.8% per year in the next five years to 2009-10. This is a big gain even without adjusting for undercounting of consumption. That's welcome news.
In any event, we need to adjust the poverty estimates for the falling proportion of consumption captured by NSS surveys. There is no space in this column to go into the statistical issues involved. But some statistical changes are necessary to bring the NSSO data closer in line with reality.
Fear has ability to numb senses
Strange as it may sound, sometimes the eye cannot register what it sees. Or the ears do not hear the sounds they listen to. There are many surprises and contradictions in our sensory perceptions which we should understand as we get older. For example, one would expect several eyewitness accounts of the same incident to concur on all aspects. But talk to any criminal investigator and you would be surprised at the amount of variance that emerges from such eyewitness reports when under trauma.
The victim of a mugging, it has been found, generally perceives the person who assaulted him to be larger and more menacing than he actually is. That is because the mind of the victim, out of fear, already has conjured up that vision while the incident is underway, overriding the images that are streaming in from the lens of his eyes. It is a time when reality — as seen through his eyes — has been relegated to the backseat by his mind. Similarly, people in an earthquake always believe that their harrowing experience lasted more than it actually did.

One can understand that human powers of observation become suspect when under traumatic conditions. But the sad aspect is that in many cases, our powers of observation are compromised for long periods in normal times. That is because we choose to see only what we wish to see and choose to hear what we want to hear.
What I am talking about is that even a standard reply by someone will elicit different responses from us at different times; depending on our mindset and how we wish to interpret the signal. For example, if you are extremely upset with your son for whatever reason, even if he would genuinely ask you how you are when you returned from a walk, you are likely to snap at him and perhaps tell him it was none of his business! That same question in the same tone would, at better times, be answered with a lot of warmth and affection.
Why the change in your response? The answer to that lies in yourself; it was your mental condition of being upset that triggered off a negative response in the earlier example. And that is so true in all our responses; they depend on our state of mind at that point of time.
It does not deserve any great insight to see the irrationality of such behaviour and decide that we must make amends and change such an attitude. Every response of ours must be independent of our mental makeup at that point in time and should be on its own merit.
And while the benefits to the people we deal with are apparent, it also has a lot of advantages for ourselves. For starters, we will not be misunderstood. Nor will we be manipulated. Because if the people around you know you are a person of moods, they can play the game to their own advantage as well!
- Anupam Kher
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