Socialism is immoral

Protest the quota system
End entitlement benefits for freeloaders
Support the death penalty for terrorists and anti-nationals
 FAKE STINGS AND SECULAR GAMES:
      The deep rooted conspiracy to subvert the political process [link]
 Achievers
 Archives
April 2006
May 2006
June 2006
July 2006
August 2006
September 2006
October 2006
November 2006
December 2006
January 2007
February 2007
March 2007
April 2007
May 2007
June 2007
July 2007
August 2007
September 2007
October 2007
November 2007
December 2007
January 2008
February 2008
March 2008
April 2008
May 2008
June 2008
July 2008
August 2008
September 2008
October 2008
November 2008
December 2008
January 2009
February 2009
March 2009
April 2009
May 2009
June 2009
July 2009
August 2009
September 2009
October 2009
November 2009
December 2009
 Links
  What folks are saying
Youth for Equality
Anti-reservation movement
Indian Constitution
Good work by you
 Latest
  CLIMATEGATE: The market is the best peer reviewer
The Grand Asymmetry: The Swiss Minaret Ban
CLIMATEGATE: The biggest "scientific" scandal ever...
Mushroom Clouds
The Overground - Part I
Ifs and Bhatts
Mourning Norman
Clean chits before charges
Just another state
Uighurs! Welcome!
 Feed
RSS RSS
Atom Atom
Feedburner Feedburner
Monday, April 30, 2007
 Since the Indian feminists will not report this...

Some 150,000 women have been detained in Iran for violating strict new Islamic dress code rules, the country's top police officer has announced. "During the first four days [since the code came into effect] we have picked up 150,000 women who were not properly veiled, but many of them were released after they signed an admission of guilt and a formal apology," General Ismail Ahmadi Moghaddam told journalists. An unspecified number of the women taken into custody were also forced to undergo psychological counseling, Moghaddam said.

"Only 13 of these women are still being held and they will have to stand trial," he explained.

No prizes for guessing what is happening to those 13 women.

Here is a video of an actual arrest scene:

Link courtesy: Michelle Malkin.

Reservation IIT IIM OBC SC ST Quota Arjun Singh Creamy Layer Merit JEE Mandal Commission Arpita Majumdar lathicharge medical strike nanopolitan Abinandanan Barbarianindian The Other India Affirmative Action

posted by barbarindian at 6:57 PM Permalink 0 comments

Friday, April 27, 2007
 Abi's experiments with the truth
God must be highly biased against sperms. Millions race towards their ultimate salvation, only one makes it. Bias is a heavy word, it is a loaded word and definitely not to be thrown around randomly, especially by amateurs. I have always maintained that there is no real moral argument against communism, followers of Ayn Rand will perhaps disagree. It is quite another matter that true communism has been dreadfully hard to implement. But think about it, socialism is the perfect refuge for scums and manipulators. Dictators are exposed. Kings are vilified. The socialist sits on a moral high ground and passes his judgement. Meanwhile his cash register keeps ringing.

Just how enamored you have to be of your prejudices to be blind to reality to that extent? Abi did it several times in the past and was duly exposed. He does it again and gets his ass handed to him on a platter. Notice how he tries to evade the issue. His next move will be quoting articles with a "liberal" bent from American newspapers and journals ad nauseum.

Spaceman Spiff has done an excellent job of chronicling the whole episode.

Reservation IIT IIM OBC SC ST Quota Arjun Singh Creamy Layer Merit JEE Mandal Commission Arpita Majumdar lathicharge medical strike nanopolitan Abinandanan Barbarianindian The Other India Affirmative Action

posted by barbarindian at 9:29 PM Permalink 1 comments

Thursday, April 26, 2007
 Welcome to the $1,000,000,000,000 Club!
India finally joins the exclusive list of rich and privileged countries with a GDP above 1 trillion dollars. Gives you a warm fuzzy feeling, doesn't it? It certainly does, to some of the kids in the picture.

I guess they are happy that we will soon be sending some 33,000 of their token brethren like this one to the finest educational institutes of our country. After all, they made it happen.

Reservation IIT IIM OBC SC ST Quota Arjun Singh Creamy Layer Merit JEE Mandal Commission Arpita Majumdar lathicharge medical strike nanopolitan Abinandanan Barbarianindian The Other India Affirmative Action

posted by barbarindian at 7:49 PM Permalink 1 comments

Tuesday, April 24, 2007
 Intensive Lessons
One of the pages on this blog that gets a lot of hits is Communist Quotes. I haven't been able to update the page as promised, irking some readers.

Well, despair no more. The guys at Chor-Bharti are doing it for us. For an assortment of the looniest stuff from the socialist block, read that blog regularly.

For the real fun stuff however, you need to go back to the bigger guys, like Dilip D'Souza. For instance, check out this amazing quote from Madam Suzanna Roy:

Nehru and Gandhi were generous men. Their paradigms for development are based on assumptions of inherent morality. Nehru's on the paternal, protective morality of the Soviet-style Centralised State. Gandhi's on the nurturing, maternal morality of romanticised village Republics. Both would work perfectly, if only we were better human beings. If only we all wore khadi and suppressed our base urges - sex, shopping, dodging spinning lessons and being unkind to the less fortunate. Fifty years down the line, it's safe to say that we haven't made the grade. We haven't even come close.
This comes from someone who probably banged half her graduating class in Architecture school and thereafter kept shagging every director that came her way (some twice her age and married too) to land two-bit roles. Her only novel so far features a brother and sister duo who can't keep their hands off each other. She builds bungalows that invites court summons. Some urge control this.

Anyway.

There is a lot of news on the quota front. RealityCheck and Lex are providing good coverage. As usual a lot of people are hopeful that instead of being a temporary obstacle to another socialist ponzi scheme, this may actually yield something good. I am sorry to burst your bubble, the quotas will come, it is a matter of time.

I think the picture is getting a lot clearer now. Soon a law will be enacted to take away the autonomy from IIMs. There is already talk of a constitutional amendment. I believe at the very least, those who made it through the OBC quotas this year will have their seats preserved for the next session. But the Government will try it best to get them in this session.

What this means is that the admissions may get delayed till September, or even December. The guys who make it to IIT/IIMs this year will get a taste of "accelerated learning". Yours truly has some experience in that department. Man, it sucks. Marathon classes at breakneck speed, groupmates screaming that the assignment was due yesterday.

To these students, my advise would be to stay off booze and that playboy magazine. Yeah, it might help to control those urges.

Reservation IIT IIM OBC SC ST Quota Arjun Singh Creamy Layer Merit JEE Mandal Commission Arpita Majumdar lathicharge medical strike nanopolitan Abinandanan Barbarianindian The Other India Affirmative Action

posted by barbarindian at 6:00 PM Permalink 2 comments

Saturday, April 07, 2007
 Data is a bitch, lotsa OBCs are rich
Selective amnesia (no violence by OBCs in the pro-quota protests), denial (demand for data is new, no one demanded data before, data is inaccurate, data is sufficient), pretense of extreme naivete (not a vote bank measure), absurd demands (asking individuals to conduct census) conspiracy theories (upper caste judges are biased) and sometimes outright lies and fabrication (exhibit 1, exhibit 2, exhibit 3, exhibit 4 , exhibit 5 - more to follow) - this is the stance the socialists have adopted after the recent stay on their latest ponzi scheme.

As usual an army of experts have descended like vultures to defend the Government's legal position. Psephologist (had to look it up) Yogendra Yadav has his own ideas about how the OBC count should be conducted. Legal expert V. Venkatesan has his own interpretation of the law and verdict, which needless to say contradicts the SC stand.

Indra Sawhney case can not be a legal precedent because,
  1. it is about Government jobs, not about admissions to schools
  2. simply because it was filed when the 93rd amendment wasn't in place
  3. a specific ruling does not automatically preclude all future legal challenges related to the issue
Our constitution is huge. It is growing bigger and bigger. Perhaps someday it will approach the size of the Indian Act. Clearly we are moving away from the accepted norm of a democratic country. The constitution is supposed to provide fundamental principles. The law provides the details. Then comes the executive part, typically a commission and other bodies who implement the law.

You can legally challenge:
  1. what is put into the constitution if it is vague, ambiguous, contradictory and/or if it is against the spirit of the fundamental principles
  2. what is made into laws, if it is vague, ambiguous, incomplete, contradictory and/or if it is not in accordance to the constitution
  3. the implementation if it is vague, ambiguous, incomplete, contradictory and/or if it is not in accordance to the constitution and/or if it is not according to the law
The Constitution. Consider the 93rd amendment itself:
2. Amendment of article 15.-In article 15 of the Constitution, after clause (4), the following clause shall be inserted, namely:

(5) Nothing in this article or in sub-clause (g) of clause (1) of article 19 shall prevent the State from making any special provision, by law, for the advancement of any socially and educationally backward classes of citizens or for the Scheduled Castes or the Scheduled Tribes in so far as such special provisions relate to their admission to educational institutions including private educational institutions, whether aided or unaided by the State, other than the minority educational institutions referred to in clause (1) of article 30.
As you can see, this scam needed amending one article in the fundamentals section and over-riding two more. Note how many special provisions there are - centrally aided, minority etc. Stretching it a bit thin, aren't we? Note the phrase: socially and educationally backward classes. Doesn't say castes. This is obviously intended to appease Muslims and Christians depending on which assembly election is coming up next. Private institutes are not exempt, minority institutes are.

The Law: Now, the Act itself, namely the The Central Educational Institutions (Reservation in Admission) act, 2006:
3. Reservation of seats in Central Educational Institutions. - The reservation of seats in admission and its extent in a Central Educational Institution shall be provided in the following manner, namely:
[...]

(iii) out of the annual permitted strength in each branch of study or faculty, twenty-seven per cent. seats shall be reserved for the Other Backward Classes.

Note how the socially and educationally backward classes became other backward classes. Now, it would be naive to pretend that such a huge exercise involving a huge legislative body and so many legal experts didn't know what they were doing. They knew exactly what they were doing and that there would be challenges. Also check out the exclusions section. Already there are violent demands to repeal this section.

The Implementation - The National Commission of Backward Classes, some examples:
[...]
(e) Castes and communities, which in terms of caste system, are identified with traditional crafts or traditional or hereditary occupations considered to be lowly or undignified.
[...]
3. Castes and communities, of which the proportion of graduates is at least 20% less than the State or district average.

Note that finally, socially and educationally backward classes becomes Castes and communities. Also note how vague some of the definitions are. Lowly and dignified according to who? See how cleverly the backwardedness criterion is restricted to the state/district level. It is a very clear appeasement of Tamil Nadu politicians. Unfortunately for them, latest data clearly disqualifies either the whole group or at least many of the castes from OBC status.

Technical perhaps, but here is an example. Dr. Ramadoss claimed that the creamy layer should not be excluded because it is not in the constitution. Unfortunately, if you accept the NCBC changing the SEBC to Castes and communities, you have to accept the creamy layer, because it is part of NCBC implementation. Also, the NCBC was set up in 1993 with provisions for examination every 10 years.

The only way some of the technicalities could be trumped is by giving the OBCs the historically oppressed status. The constitution does not yet do so.
There is no way this thing can pass muster in a reasonable legal system and functioning democracy.
You can muscle it in or stall admissions for everyone, but then again do not pretend to be all hoity toity holy upholders of justice. Justice has nothing to do with it. As is well known, the beneficiaries would be dudes like this. Hardly deprived in any sense.

But then again, the whole thing was designed to benefit dudes like that.

Reservation IIT IIM OBC SC ST Quota Arjun Singh Creamy Layer Merit JEE Mandal Commission Arpita Majumdar lathicharge medical strike nanopolitan Abinandanan Barbarianindian The Other India Affirmative Action

posted by barbarindian at 2:30 PM Permalink 8 comments

Friday, April 06, 2007
 Remove Tamil Nadu OBCs from Reservation Eligibility List

Sources:
Indian Constitution
India Government Act
NSSO - National Sample Survey Organization
NCBC - National Commission of (pretending to be) Backward Castes

Note: If you have any questions about the data, please do not hesitate to email us.

Reservation IIT IIM OBC SC ST Quota Arjun Singh Creamy Layer Merit JEE Mandal Commission Arpita Majumdar lathicharge medical strike nanopolitan Abinandanan Barbarianindian The Other India Affirmative Action

posted by barbarindian at 9:38 PM Permalink 0 comments

Thursday, April 05, 2007
 Catch-22
{Please click on the images to see a larger version}

In my previous post I analyzed the TN situation with data available from the NSSO 1999-2000 survey. It was pointed out to me that I misunderestimated the urban population percentage. Well, have no fear, the exact figures are available from the 2001 census. Now, the contention was that urban population is less than what I had claimed. Now I am using data even more recent than the NSSO figures, so there is no scope for dispute. You can say that ideally I should use the latest rural/urban population percentage but it will distort the picture since the educational survey figures are from 1999-2000.

As you can see above, TN OBCs as a whole do not qualify the NCBC criteria. I also repeated the analysis by varying the backwardedness among the 181 OBC castes assuming a Normal distribution:


Here is another chart, this time it compares TN OBCs with All India average:


In light of the recent developments, people are reacting strangely, which is understandable. Some folks believe that data exists and it is adequate. Some others believe the NSSO data is grossly inaccurate. Then there are absurd questions being asked.

Meanwhile, our esteemed leaders still do not want a caste based census. Our PM is down to hopes and prayers now.

For the rest of India, the NSSO data does not prove anything conclusive. When these surveys were done, the quotas were already in effect for decades. The only way to find out is by conducting a rigorous caste based census. This data will then need to be analysed against a caste based survey of student population and an expanded rank list of entrance examinations (say 10 times the number actually admitted).

This exercise however is a question of political will and honesty. No one knows what the data might reveal. The conjecture is that we will see that some dominant OBC castes are not backward at all and that these castes monopolize most of the reserved seats. For politicians it is a classic catch-22 situation. To fight the SC stay they need reasonable data. Reasonable data might threaten their political careers.

The right question to ask is, do you want quota or do you want social justice?

Reservation IIT IIM OBC SC ST Quota Arjun Singh Creamy Layer Merit JEE Mandal Commission Arpita Majumdar lathicharge medical strike nanopolitan Abinandanan Barbarianindian The Other India Affirmative Action

posted by barbarindian at 8:15 PM Permalink 2 comments

Wednesday, April 04, 2007
 Cold stare of hard data
{Please click on the images to view a larger version.}

This is the data available from the NSSO Report 1999 - 2000 for education levels across social groups. This is the latest data available for educational attainment, although more recent figures are available as far as the OBC count is concerned. The first two segments (urban and rural) are quoted verbatim from the report. I calculated the total figures, by using a population weighted average.

Let's recap the NCBC education criteria for qualifying as OBC:
  1. Castes and communities, whose literacy rate is at least 8% less than the State or district average.
  2. Castes and communities of which the proportion of matriculates is at least 20% less than the State or district average.
  3. Castes and communities, of which the proportion of graduates is at least 20% less than the State or district average.
For the moment we will ignore the district and the community part. Too vague, besides no district level data is available anyway. We also take a conservative estimate and assume an OR condition for the above although NCBC does not elaborate. For Mandal, you had to qualify in all the above.

If you look at the image above, you will see that the OBCs actually lead (or just marginally lag) the state average in almost all counts, except in the numbers for graduates per thousand. Overall in TN there are 38 graduates per thousand OBCs as opposed to the state average of 42 per thousand which is about a 10% lag. This clearly indicates that some OBC castes will not qualify the NCBC criteria. Only in the urban areas, OBCs lag the state average by about 25% in terms of graduates per thousand. But that fact alone does not qualify all OBC castes for quotas, even by the conditions laid down by NCBC.

A summary of the above is as follows.

I did some further calculations, just to arrive at a ballpark estimate of how many OBC castes might actually qualify. Absent the exact numbers for each caste, this seems to be hard to do. However, you can easily assume a normal distribution for the graduates per thousand figure for different castes. This is valid under central limit theorem. We have the overall average, which is 38 per thousand. We also know that to qualify, a caste needs to have less than 33.6 graduates per thousand (42 state average, less 20%). We also know TN has about 181 distinct OBC groups. Thus, all you need to do is assume different standard deviations and determine how many castes might qualify.

Obviously, you can not really go beyond a standard deviation of about 13, but I computed it anyway. As you can see, at best 60 - 70 caste groups can qualify.

I did the same thing, this time for the urban numbers only. The relevant numbers are: 68 per thousand (OBC), 91 per thousand (state average) and 72.8 (91 less 20%) to qualify.

Here also there is no need to go beyond 23 for the StDev. If we just take urban figures, about 100 out of 181 caste groups just might qualify.

A caveat of this analysis is that much of the numbers include those who are currently availing quotas. In which case there is no way to find out unless we repeal the quotas for a few years, which I am sure is not going to happen.

Of course everyone knows that in TN the quotas are being cornered by a dozen or so rich and powerful OBCs. But the socialists will never admit to it nor will they let anyone conduct a proper statistical survey of all relevant information. The quotas will remain a slap on the face of the truly backward.


Reservation IIT IIM OBC SC ST Quota Arjun Singh Creamy Layer Merit JEE Mandal Commission Arpita Majumdar lathicharge medical strike nanopolitan Abinandanan Barbarianindian The Other India Affirmative Action

posted by barbarindian at 8:35 PM Permalink 5 comments

 The Chor-Bharti Bloggers are a lot of fun
The Chor-Bharti guys are a lot of fun. First they link to a post from RealityCheck in their humor section. Then Shivam Vij finds a streak of violence in Reality Check. I suppose Shivam is the most peace-loving guy in the universe.

You have to give it to those guys though, if there is one thing they believe in, it is the idea that the sheer number of posts or links strengthen ones argument. Quite obviously the SC stay on the quotas didn't go down well with the socialist lobby. Apparently questioning the validity of using an almost century old survey makes one racist.

I have always maintained that quotas of any form are a gross aberration. They are immoral by their very design. In any case, the constitution recognizes quotas in its current avatar (what happened to the promised review process every 10 years, God only knows). Like it or not, at some point or other you are going to see rich OBC kids waltzing into our nation's premier institutes.

Apparently the Chor-Bharti folks believe the caste list is valid in its entirety and enough data exists to prove it. It is easy to see that no real data exists, first about the real count of OBCs, second about which ones among them are even eligible. As a matter of fact, there is no objective guideline that exists about the definition of SEBC.

First, a brief comparison of the original Mandal criteria and the current NCBC guidelines:

Mandal Educational:
Castes/classes where the number of children in the age group of 5-15 years who never attended school is at least 25 per cent above the state average. Castes/classes where the rate of student drop-out in the age group of 5-15 years is at least 25 per cent above the state average. Castes/classes amongst whom the proportion of matriculates is at least 25 per cent below the state average.

NCBC Educational:
1. Castes and communities, whose literacy rate is at least 8% less than the State or district average.
2. Castes and communities of which the proportion of matriculates is at least 20% less than the State or district average.
3. Castes and communities, of which the proportion of graduates is at least 20% less than the State or district average.
You can easily see that they diluted the criteria without asking, on the sly. 25% became 20%, while it should have been the other way around. Perhaps the biggest con job is how the various criteria will be applied. Mandal had a point system for social, educational and economic criteria. The current guildelines do not state anything in this regard. The definitions are extremely vague. What does district level average mean? If some dudes are backward in one district, does that make them eligible statewide? How about the disparities between the states? You can not pretend to be backward in one state and claim your share in a national institute.

The current guidelines are grossly inadequate and non-objective. Forget about the current stay, if one OBC dude sues the center for being thrown out of the list while another gets the benefits, the Government does not have a legal leg to stand on. Meanwhile, the Economic criteria fell through the cracks. No one is even talking about that anymore.

Clearly some powerful OBC groups are cornering most of the benefits. For details, please see my next post.

Reservation IIT IIM OBC SC ST Quota Arjun Singh Creamy Layer Merit JEE Mandal Commission Arpita Majumdar lathicharge medical strike nanopolitan Abinandanan Barbarianindian The Other India Affirmative Action

posted by barbarindian at 7:14 PM Permalink 0 comments