Monday, 20 May 2013

Manipur Bir Tikendrajit House in total disarray

NEW DELHI, May 19 : A rudderless ship, that is what Manipur Bir Tikendraji House at Chanakyapuri, South Delhi has been reduced to with the staff running around trying to keep the House in order. When The Sangai Express visited the State house, there .....

Incentives for Everesters

IMPHAL, May 19: The State Government will consider incentives that may be given to the five Manipuri mountaineers who have successfully scaled the world’s highest peak Mt Everest, informed the Chief Minister while talking with The Sangai Express. The.....

Governor, CM, Dy CM congratulate So far, six from State have scaled Everest

IMPHAL, May 19: Governor Gurbachan Jagat, Chief Minister O Ibobi and Deputy Chief Minister Gaikhangam have congratulated the team of the 1st North East Mt Everest Expedition 2013 on summiting the highest peak of the world. Gurbachan Jagat said that the.....

Cleanliness drive at Ima Keithel

IMPHAL, May 18: With an objective to keep Ima Keithel neat and clean, Blooming Manipur, Kangla (Facebook Group), Manipur Times, Manipur Photography Club, European Manipuri Asso-ciation (EMA) and Manipur Cycle Club jointly organised a cleanliness drive at .....

KNF celebrates raising day

IMPHAL, May 19: The Kuki National Front (KNF) celebrated its 26th raising day at Camp Ebenezer, Sadar Hills yesterday with more than 200 cadres and leaders. The raising day celebration started with a mass fasting prayer. Addressing the gathering KNF p.....

AIDS Candle Light Memorial Day Observed Solemnly NGOs urge for amended AIDS policy

IMPHAL, May 19 : While observing the International AIDS Candle Light Memorial Day at JN Dance Academy today, 16 NGOs have urged the authorities to implement an amended Manipur State AIDS policy within three months. Generally, International AIDS Candle.....

Rongali Bihu

IMPHAL, May 19:The Asom Samaj Manipur hosted Rongali Bihu celebration at Devalaya Mandir, Kalibari (Thangal bazar) today with Education Minister M Okendro Singh gracing the celebration as the chief guest. While Okendro conveyed warm wishes to the Assam.....

To check frauds and money swindling Economic offence wing set up

IMPHAL, May 19: With the primary objective of checking the practice of swindling money from the public by non-banking financial companies (NBFC), an Economic Offence Wing has been set up in Manipur Police Department. The Economic Offence Wing was set .....

Guardians' body takes up street vendors' cause

IMPHAL, May 19: Noting that upper floors of the three market complexes at Khwairamband keithel are yet to be occupied, All Manipur Students' Guardians' Organisation has proposed that the Government of Manipur provide trading slots to women street vendors .....

DU admissions

IMPHAL, May 18 : Delhi University has announced the dates for undergraduate admissions for the academic session 2013-2014. It will commence on June 5 and continue till June 19, said a press release issued by Naga Students’ Union, Delhi. Unlike las.....

Ex-rebels are not untouchables : Dy CM

IMPHAL, May 19: Stating that the State Government has initiated several measures to bring insurgents on the path of peace, Deputy Chief Minister Gaikhangam has called upon all the people not to view or treat former rebels who have laid down arms and retu.....

UG cadres surrender

IMPHAL, May 19: Security forces of Red Shield Division recovered a huge cache of arms and ammunition buried under ground in 2007 by a cadre of UPPK at the foothills of Thangjing ridge, said a PIB (DW) release that identified the UG cadre as SS Capt Moiran.....

ZU concerned

IMPHAL, May 19:Zeliangrong Union (Assam, Manipur, Nagaland) has expressed concern over the death of an NSCN (IM) cadre in a reported gunfight with ZUF cadres yesterday. In a press release, ZU (AMN) said that it has always been working for maintaining p.....

Tousem body

IMPHAL, May 19:Development Committee Tousem Block 52-Tamei AC has drawn the attention of Chief Minister O Ibobi regarding bad road conditions of the Sub-Division. In a press release, the committee said that the Chief Minister had promised during his vi.....

Hurt in mishap

IMPHAL, May 19:Three youngsters, who were riding a brand new Yamaha FZ motorcycle, met with an accident in front of Mantripukhri headquarters of 69 Bn CRPF this evening. According to an informed source, the biker trio hit the road median and rolled sev.....

MLA inspects

IMPHAL, May 19:Ahead of the monsoon season, Yaiskul AC MLA E Chand today conducted a field inspection of the vulnerable sections of Imphal river bank within Yaiskul Assembly segment together with IFC officials. Observing that many excavations dug up fo.....

Hate the person who breaks traffic rules

If you think no one is watching then you are mistaken! But unfortunately, I am not a traffic cop who will jump in front and enforce you fine for breaking the traffic rule. It is the general Indian nature of carelessness and interpretation of pampered free.....

Traditional healing methods with special reference to Manipur

By Dr K Paochunbou Every ethnic community in Manipur has well-established knowledge, skills, beliefs and practices relating to promotion of positive health and avoidance of sickness even before the hospital oriented system of medicine. In an old civiliza.....

Mis-selling Insurance

By Dipankar Jakharia Not a single week goes by when I am not asked by my readers about an ULIP policy they have invested and now feels as if they have been ripped-off by it. I have written many a times before and ready to write many a time in future abou.....

World Migratory Bird Day 2013

Large scale climatic changes, as have been experienced in the past, are expected to have an effect on the timing of migration. Studies have shown a variety of effects including timing changes in migration, breeding as well as population variations due to .....

My Turn

By : Ranjan Yumnam

What makes a good politician ?

Can there be a ‘good politician’? Wait a second. Does the phrase seem to be an oxymoron that tickles Ranjan Yumnamyour jugular vein or one that makes your blood boil? Politicians should not necessarily evoke these kind of strong emotions in us. There exist good politicians who are visionaries, nation builders and statesmen who have left behind extraordinary legacy. The only hitch is that we have so few of them. And in Manipur context, trying to find one good politician is like searching for a needle in the haystack. Sometimes you won’t even be able to find enough haystacks to begin with!  

That sets me pondering why the tribe of good politicians is fast dwindling and becoming an endangered species. The answer is simple. Conscientious and qualified people seldom enter politics, and even if they do, public shoo them away during the elections. The men of the world, the contractors, the moneyed and the corrupt of dubious credentials are the ones who will be garlanded atop garish trucks when the results of the elections are announced. And as the system goes, these dimwits will take control of our future and drag it back to the Middle Ages. 

No less of the blame should be borne by the public. The public in general are jokers and opportunistic maggots. They will pay lip service on choosing the best people as their leaders. But in elections after elections, the only times, when they have the real power to rectify the situation, they have repeatedly sided with the wrong guys, seduced by their ingenious tricks such as cash-for-votes and other clever turn-ons. It reminds me of the self-destructive propensity of innocent girls from good families who often fall head-over-heels for bad boys—a fact ingrained in the popular cultural lore that has given many parents sleepless nights.  

Maybe it’s the freakonomics at play. People vote for the person who they think will give them tangible personal benefits in the near future instead of someone who offers promises of collective good like better roads, electricity, etc in an unknown future that seems a far-fetched possibility. Now throw in some recent findings of human psychology, and then I think we have a deadly cocktail formula of what drives the voters’ behaviours during the elections. 

Studies have shown that people are more likely to opt for instant gratification then defer it for bigger satisfaction in the future. This is irrational but it’s true. We prefer spending money on useless stuff now that won’t improve the quality of our lives to saving it for a significant project later or rainy days.  

The same pattern of this irrational human behaviour is manifested during elections. The short-term benefit of getting some paltry cash or other inducements in exchange for your vote is stupid, or naive at best. By overemphasizing on instant and momentary gains, we have let the election process become a competition in flexing money and muscle power at the expense of real issues that need to be deliberated. In the prevailing political culture, there are no debates, no demonstration of mastery over key issues by the candidates on TV or public rallies. Instead, the political discourse is dominated by inane personal attacks/counter attacks mounted by political rivals against one another that have little connection with issues of public importance. 

It is baffling then why men of intellect and great vision hardly reach the political pinnacle and contribute to the betterment of the society while former jailbirds easily win people’s hearts and elections. Let me explain this dichotomy by using an analogy. 

The analogy is: a politician is like a newspaper. The most popular newspapers with the largest circulation are most often cheap and shallow newspapers peddling dribble. The opposite is true of high-brow newspapers that purvey serious and quality journalism. That is why The Times of India beats The Hindu by a large margin in terms of readership, and in America, USA Today dwarfs the most respected newspaper on earth, The New York Times. Respectability doesn’t guarantee readership and a large readership is also not a marker of quality. In fact, the correlation between quality and popularity (in readership) is very slim. What explains for this counter-intuitive trend? 

Here’s why. Popular newspapers publish gossip, news and images intended for shock or sexual titillation, rumours and other sensational content in order to hook as many readers as possible—from the sweepers in the streets to the nubile somethings in colleges, the lowest common denominator. Most of what they print is trash.   

Politicians share this unique paradox of popularity vs. respectability. People adore the rogue MLA who can create spectacular nuisance, emote theatrics and extract concessions from the Government for his workers. The intellectual politician may be highly respected, but when it comes to the dirty wheeling and dealing of the politics, he is held back by his own status/sense of ethics and therefore has fewer followers like The New York Times. To be likeable, politicians are expected to think like the ordinary electorate and serve their short term interests, and even break bread with the crazy voters who hand out vigilante justice by setting fire to houses of alleged criminals in front of TV cameras, which is so common nowadays. No wonder, the intellectual politician ends up being a misfit.

The fact that thoughtful politicians do not connect well with the ordinary voters should not in any way lead to the premature conclusion that we should not give political space to them. In an ideal democracy, electorates should delegate to the elected leaders certain issues which are beyond their comprehension but which must be addressed on their behalf. The expert is better positioned to devise policies and programmes which the public will never be able to appreciate before their impact is felt. 

“A lot of times, people don’t know what they want until you show it to them,” Steve Jobs famously said of his iconic Apple devices. Steve Jobs didn’t involve focus groups to create iMac, iPhone and Ipad because the products he wanted to design were beyond what a focus group would ever visualize. They are category defining products never imagined before by any other companies, much less by a rag tag focus group. 

The intellectual politician should be the political variant of Steve Jobs. He should listen to the voices of the ordinary people but he should not be completely swayed by them. He should draw upon his expertise and superior faculty and show, as Steve Jobs did with his cool gadgets, what public projects, legislation and positions on key issues would be most beneficial for them in the long run and feasible for the short term.

sBut at the end of the day, the choice is whether to be a good politician or a popular politician. The Hindu or the Mumbai Mirror? 

Too often, we have seen good knowledgeable politician degenerating into a typical neta. Take Barack Obama, President of America. He was the quintessential politician who had all: a multicultural background, a law degree, a clean personal life, teaching experience and an exceptional oratorical skill. He was the man America hoped will change the world after Bush messed it up with wars. Four years into his presidency, he is now seen among the weakest and mediocre presidents America has had.

What really happened to Obama? My guess is that he has abandoned his initial idealism for the sake of winning the second term. He has become subservient to his constituencies, and has not been able to assert the agenda close to his heart. 

The lesson to be learnt is that you can’t be both popular and good in politics. You have to choose one. To be good, one has to take unpopular decisions and not succumb to the short term wishes of the people. And most importantly, one should not seek re-election that inevitably compels the person to shift focus from the real political mission to mollycoddling the voters to get their support. 

If you need an icon for a good politician, Nelson Mandela is the one. He could be the president of South Africa as long as he wants, but he ditched it after holding the office for the first term. 

Professors, thinkers and the intellectuals. Listen up. If you want to change Manipur, come out and contest elections and serve for five years as a good politician. Just for one term. Hell, we don’t want to see you again. And we don’t want you to be popular. We won’t demand jobs for ourselves and relatives, contract works or freebies. Just give us our roads, electricity, water, functional hospitals, scho-ols and colleges. And a good night sleep everyday.

Olivia

Most of us are interested in improving something about ourselves: our productivity, our sanity, our organization, our happiness, our effectiveness, our impact on the environment, our minds, our dreams.When you complete a list of action steps, your instinc

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