Friday, September 18, 2015

Maneka Gandhi about Cows

Maneka Gandhi challenges the view the milk is good for humans.

Pritish Nandy talks to Central Govt minister Maneka Gandhi about the controversy she has stirred.

You have come out very strongly against milk. Why are you so hostile to it?

There are three reasons. The first is health. The health of people is compromised by milk. Two, I am against cruelty. The third reason is the pollutants in milk.

Would you like to explain why you think milk is unhealthy?
There is this belief that milk is a complete food and an important source of protein, iron and calcium. Not only does it have no iron, milk in fact blocks the absorption of iron. As far as calcium is concerned, the ability of the body to absorb calcium from milk is barely 32 per cent. Whereas it can absorb, say, 65 per cent from cabbage and 69 per cent from cauliflower. As far as protein is concerned, milk has less protein than any vegetable. Even if it had more, it would be useless for human beings require only 4-5 per cent of their daily calorie intake in proteins. Even if you just have chapattis and potatoes for instance, you will get more than that.

So milk is not the best food in the world as it has been touted for generations?
Even if it was, no one can digest it. Certainly no Asian, no African. Why do I not eat plastic? The reason is: I have no enzyme to digest it. We do not have lactase in our body and so we cannot digest lactose. If we cannot digest milk, how do we get any of its ingredients? Apart from this, milk has something called IGF-1. All cancer studies show that when IGF-1 rises in your body you get cancer. All the IGF-1 in milk stays in the body, making you prone to cancer. Milk also has a very strong role to play in causing asthma. In fact, asthma patients all over the world are told to avoid milk and milk products.

The problem with doctors in India is that they are not taught nutrition in medical colleges. So they have a limited knowledge of food. Their knowledge of nutrition comes from the same source as yours and mine – grandmothers and teachers. Add to this the confusion caused by our local religious leaders, particularly the ones who espouse vegetarianism.

What is specifically wrong with milk? What is specifically harmful?
The calcium contained in milk actually becomes a health hazard as the undigested portions of it are deposited in the urinary system and become kidney stones. Another condition milk aggravates rather than alleviates is osteoporosis or bone loss. Studies have shown that it is excess protein rather than lack of calcium that causes this. So the more milk you drink, the more you are prone to osteoporosis. Countries like Sweden that have the highest milk consumption also have the highest incidence of osteoporosis.

Another misconception is that milk helps ulcers. Ulcers are caused by the corrosion of the stomach lining. When you drink milk it gives you immediate relief from pain. But that is only temporary. Milk actually causes acidity and further destroys the stomach lining. Besides, ulcer patients who are treated with dairy products are found to be two to six times more prone to heart attacks. This seems only logical because milk is designed to be the food on which a calf increases its body weight four times over in one month! It is so naturally high in fat that it leads to obesity, the cause of all modern disease. Ayurveda actually lists milk as one of the five white poisons.

Indians have been drinking milk for centuries. All of them did not fall sick.
It depends on what you call illness. Most people regard arthritis, osteoporosis, asthma, headaches and indigestion as normal for the body and look on cancer as an act of god.

By looking at milk as evil, are we not turning our back on our tradition and culture?
For thousands of years people thought the sun went around the earth. Copernicus was the first person who said it did not. There was a huge backlash against him. Indian tradition also talks of sati, thuggee and eating opium. Should they be legalised now?

I have written a book on Hindu names for which I had to read every single sastra. Nowhere was there any mention of milk being drunk. There is ghee mentioned and that too for havans. Unfortunately, our memories are short and the things we are most adamant about are those we know the least about. Dr Spock is the guru when it comes to child nutrition. Now he apologises for having advocated milk and says children must be kept away from it.

Dr Kurien has described the dairy industry as the gentle industry. You claim it is just the opposite?
No industry can be gentle. The fact that supply caters to demand makes the cow the ultimate victim. It may have been gentle when each household had its own cow and treated it as a member of the family. Not any longer.

How is milk produced now?
The cow is forced into yearly pregnancies. After giving birth she is milked for 10 months but will be artificially inseminated during her third month so that she is milked even when she is pregnant! The demanded production of milk is more than her body can give. So she starts breaking down body tissue to produce milk. The result is an illness called ketosis. Most of the day she is tied up in a narrow stall, usually wallowing in her own excrement. She gets mastitis because the hands that milk her are rough and usually unclean. She gets rumen acidosis from bad food and lameness. She is kept alive with antibiotics and hormones. Each year 20 per cent of these dairy cows are sent illegally by truck and train to slaughterhouses. Or they are starved to death by letting them loose in the cities.

It is no secret that the slaughterhouse in Goa was made by Amul Dairy. No cow lives out her normal life span. She is milked, made sick and then killed. Even worse happens to her child. The male calves are tied up and starved to death. Or sent to the slaughterhouses. It is not by chance that a calf is no longer called bachda in India. It is called katra, which means one who is to be killed. Even Dr Kurien admits that in Mumbai every year 80,000 calves are forcibly put to death.

But the doodhwalas love their cows. They live off them.
Have you seen how cows are milked? In the villages they practise phukan. A stick is poked into the cow’s uterus and wiggled, causing her intense pain. Villagers believe this leads to more milk. In the cities they are given two injections of oxytocin every day to make the milk come faster. This gives her labour pains twice a day! Her uterus develops sores and makes her sterile prematurely. Oxytocin is banned for use on animals but it is sold in every cigarette shop around a dairy. Every illiterate milkman knows the word. In human beings, oxytocin causes hormonal imbalances, weak eyesight, miscarriages, cancer. Recently, Gujarat started raiding dairies for oxytocin. In one day, they found three-and-a-half lakh ampoules in Ahmedabad alone!

You mentioned pollution in milk. What does that mean?
The ICMR did research on milk for seven years and took thousands of samples from across India. What did they find? Large amounts of DDT, poisonous pesticides called HCH. Under the food adulteration act only 0.01mg/kg of HCH is allowed. They found 5.7 mg as an average! They found arsenic, cadmium and lead. This causes kidney damage, heart disease, brain damage and cancer. Their findings, based on 50,000 samples, were released at a press conference. What did Dr Kurien and the Operation Flood people have to say? More samples should have been taken!

Other things put in your milk are sewage water, vegetable oil and liquid soap. In some cases we have found that earthworms are put in because they excrete slime which increases the density of the milk!

You have said that drinking milk is akin to drinking a cow’s blood?
Milk and blood come from the same source – the body cells of the cow. Every time you drink a glass of milk, remember it comes from a sad, suffering mother whose own child was killed before her eyes and who herself will be killed when she dries up.

Won’t the stoppage of milk lead to thousands being unemployed?
A large number of people are dependent on smuggling, thievery, begging, drug pushing, gun-running and terrorism. Do we buytheir products to help them?

What is the substitute for milk?
What is the substitute to a placebo? Anything else. To me, soya bean milk, green vegetables, dal are all effective substitutes. My son has never drunk milk in his life. He is six feet tall and has never been sick for even a single day!

While there may be an element of truth in what she says and the it will not be surprising to find that cows in a pitiable state at the diary farms, it will be hard to accept that milk cause all the problems that she has listed down.

Monday, September 14, 2015

10 TYPES OF PURIFICATIONS

10 TYPES OF SHUDDHIS/PURIFICATIONS :

1. Body gets purified...
    by WATER & EXERCISE

2. Breath gets purified...
    by PRAANAAYAM

3. Mind gets purified...
    by MEDITATION

4. Intellect gets purified...
    by KNOWLEDGE

5. Memory gets purified...
    by MANAN & CHINTAN

6. Ego gets purified...
    by SEVA(SERVICE)

7. Self gets purified...
    by SILENCE (MAUN)

8. Food gets purified...
    by POSITIVE THOUGHTS
    WHILE COOKING & EATING

9. Wealth gets purified...
    by GIVING/DONATING

10. Feelings gets purified...
      by LOVE

Share with friends and spread goodness all around...

Think Positive ...
Act Positive. . ..
Speak Positive ....!         

Your Family

1. Your Mother - Who is the first person to welcome you in this world.

2. Your Father - Who is the first person to go through all the hardships just to see you smile.

3. Your Sibling - The first person to teach you the art of 'sharing and caring'.

4. Your Friend - The first person to teach you how to respect people with different opinions and viewpoints.

5. Your Life partner - The first person to make you realize the value of sacrifice and compromise.

6. Your Children - The first little person to teach you how to be selfless and think about others before yourself.

7. Your Grandchildren - The only creatures who make you want to live the life, all over again ... !!

Perfection a Habit

Apparently,the American Computer Giant IBM decided to have some parts manufactured in Japan as a trial. In the specifications, they set standard that they will accept only three defective pieces per 10,000 pieces.
When the delivery came to IBM there was a letter accompanying it.
"We, Japanese people, had a hard time understanding North American business practices. But the three defective parts per 10,000 pieces have been separately manufactured and have been included in the consignment in a separate package mentioned -- 'Defective pieces as required; not for use.'
Hope this meets your requirement.

In some workplaces Perfection is a Habit, not an Attitude!!

Friday, September 4, 2015

Teachings from Mahabharatha - Devdutt Pattanaik

Sometimes you just have to go ahead and do things and take responsibility for the consequences, whatever they may be. By Devdutt Pattanaik

The Mahabharata is full of colourful characters and they have lots of lessons for various contexts of corporate life, not least for a new CEO. Here are six things one must not do if one has just become a leader.

Do not be a Bhisma 

Bhisma was the grand patriarch of the Kuru clan who had the power to determine the time of his death. In other words, he had no expiry date. And so he kept on living, from generation to generation, hoping to solve all problems and create a perfect world. In the end, he had to be pinned to the ground with a thousand arrows, immobilised so that the war could be sorted out between the Pandavas and the Kauravas. He did not accept the inadequacy of others. He did not create a talent pool. He refused to believe the world could function without him. He convinced himself he was indispensable.

Lesson: The organisation has to function even without you and you cannot do everything.

Do not be a Drona

Drona was the tutor of the Kuru princes and he fought for the Kauravas against the Pandavas. While he claimed loyalty to the Kurus, his real obsession was his son, Ashwatthama. Krishna knew this and spread the rumor that Ashwatthama had been killed in battle. This broke Drona's heart and he lost the will to fight.

Lesson: Do not have favorites. You exist for the organisation, not to nurture favourites.

Do not be a Karna 

Karna was a foundling raised by charioteers who aspired to be an archer. He was supported by the Kauravas, who found his talent useful. He was derided by the Pandavas, who felt he should follow his family vocation and not aspire beyond his class/caste. Karna continuously suffered from what is called the status anxiety. It became an obsession.

Lesson: Do not try to belong to a club where you feel unwelcome. You do not need other people's approval to feel validated. Focus on task at hand.

Do not be a Yudhishtira 

Yudhishtira was the eldest Pandava who always spoke the truth, respected the elders and wanted to be a model for everyone. Yet, it was his addiction to gambling that had resulted in loss of Pandava fortune and the resulting war.

Lesson: Don't try to be perfect. You are not. Nobody likes someone who is always perfect. They come across as oppressive. Life is not perfect. So admit vulnerability. And remember, shareholders love ethics, so long as it does not come in the way of their profits.

Do not be a Bhima

Bhima was a Pandava who swore to kill each and every Kaurava and even drink their blood in order to avenge the humiliation of his family at their hands. He went about it with a force that frightened all. Yet for all his work, he was overshadowed by the more charismatic Arjuna. Most people assume Arjuna is the hero of the Mahabharata, when Bhima did the real work.

Lesson: While doing your work don't get so obsessed with achievements, that someone else takes away your glory. Make sure you are the face of your achievements.

Do not be an Arjuna 

Arjuna was the greatest archer in the world, so focused that he could strike the eye of a flying bird without being distracted by the clouds above or the trees below. But when he entered the battlefield of Kuru-kshetra, he looked beyond the target and realised his enemy was his family. He feared if he killed them, the whole social fabric would unravel. These thoughts paralysed him, until Krishna came to his rescue and gave him a discourse that enabled him to get back into the fighting spirit.

Lesson: While caution is good, do not let analysis lead to paralysis. Sometimes you just have to go ahead and do things and take responsibility for the consequences, whatever they may be. You cannot be successful all the time, or good all the time. And it's okay to fail.

My addition to this

Do not be a Dhritarashtra
Dhritarashtra wanted everything for his son, knowing fully well that he was not as good as the Pandavas. He was not just physically blind, he was blinded in his thoughts too by the love of his son. This ultimately led to the downfall of not just his sons, but also of his kingdom and today everybody curses him.

Lesson: Do not practice nepotism in any form, nepotism towards one's relative, or nepotism towards the friends. Understand the short comings of the people and ensure that the right one in is given the right job at the right time.

Maturity Defined

What is Maturity ?

Definition provided by Buddhist Lamas.

Maturity is when you stop trying to change people, and instead focus on changing yourself.

Maturity is when you accept people for who they are.

Maturity is when you understand that everyone is right in their own perspective.

Maturity is when you learn to "let go".

Maturity is when you are able to drop "expectations" from a relationship and give for the sake of giving.

Maturity is when you understand that whatever you do, you do for your own peace.

Maturity is when you stop proving to the world how intelligent you are.

Maturity is when you focus on positives in people.

Maturity is when you do not seek approval from others.

Maturity is when you stop comparing yourself with others.

Maturity is when you are at peace with yourself.

Maturity is when you can differentiate between "need" and "want", and you can let go of your wants.

Maturity is when you stop attaching "happiness" to material things.

If any one of these qualities is still missing in you, then you can for sure know that you are not fully mature as yet!

Boundless Human Desire

Are we earning to pay builders and interior designers, caterers and decorators?

Whom do we want to impress with our highly inflated house properties & fat weddings?

Do you remember for more than two days what you ate at someone's marriage?

Why are we working like dogs in our prime years of life?

How many generations do we want to feed?

Most of us have two kids. Many have a single kid.

How much is the "need" and how much do we actually "want"??
Think about it.

Would our next generation be incapable to earn, that we save so much for them!?!

Can not we spare one and a half days a week for friends, family and self??

Do you spend even 5% of your monthly income for your self enjoyment?
Usually...No.

Why can't we enjoy simultaneously while we earn?

Spare time to enjoy before you have slipped discs and large prostates.

We don't own properties, we just have temporary name on documents.

GOD laughs sarcastically, when someone says,
"I am the owner of this land"!!  

Do not judge a person only by the length of his car.

Many of our science and maths teachers were great personalities riding on scooters!!  

It is not bad to be rich, but it is very unfair, to be only rich.

Let's get a LIFE, before life gets us, instead....

A lovely little girl was holding two apples with both hands.

Her mum came in and softly asked her little daughter with a smile; my sweetie, could you give your mum one of your two apples?

The girl looked up at her mum for some seconds, then she suddenly took a quick bite on one apple, and then quickly on the other.

The mum felt the smile on her face freeze. She tried hard not to reveal her disappointment.

Then the little girl handed one of her bitten apples to her mum,and said: mummy, here you are. This is the sweeter one.

No matter who you are, how experienced you are, and how knowledgeable you think you are, always delay judgement.

Give others the privilege to explain themselves.  
                           
What you see may not be the reality. Never conclude for others.

Which is why we should never only focus on the surface and judge others without understanding them first.

Those who like to pay the bill, do so not because they are loaded but because they value friendship above money.

Those who take the initiative at work, do so not because they are stupid but because they understand the concept of responsibility.

Those who apologizes first after a fight, do so not because they are wrong but because they value the people around them.

Those who are willing to help you, do so not because they owe you any thing but because they see you as a true friend.

Those who often text you, do so not because they have nothing better to do but because you are in their heart.

Those who take out time to chat with you, does not mean they are jobless or less busy, but they know the importance of keeping in touch.

One day, all of us will get  separated  from each other; we will miss our conversations of everything & nothing; the dreams that we had.

Days will pass by, months, years, until this contact becomes rare... One day our children will see our pictures and ask 'Who are these people?' And we will smile with invisible tears  because a heart is touched with a strong word and you will say: 'IT WAS THEM THAT I HAD THE BEST DAYS OF MY LIFE WITH'.

Send this to all that you will never forget.

Put this on the whatsapp of those who made you smile in any type of way.

It might surprise you but look at how many will be sent back.

Thank you for making me smile sometime in my life.

Tuesday, September 1, 2015

Open Letter to Hardik Patel from a Fellow Gujarati

Dear 22 year old, Hardik Patel,

I, another 22 year old fellow Gujarati, am writing this letter to discuss what has happened in Gujarat in last 48 hours. You, me and all fellow countrymen are aware about the peaceful protest that you have been leading since last few days. To be honest, I didn’t know you until 25th August 2015. The movement of Patidar community asking for reservation is going on in Gujarat since a month, but I heard your name for the first time on 25th August, when you lead the Maha Rally in Ahmedabad. And I believe there are lacs of Gujaratis like me who heard about you on the very same day. We thought the entire movement was being executed voluntarily by all the Patidar fellows, but the rally got a face on 25th August (at least as we fellow Gujaratis know it). I noticed couple of things when you addressed the rally in Ahmedabad. Listing down some of the points here.
1. Firstly, you were gathered to ask for reservation for Patidar community from Gujarat government. Both the community and government would have understood you, if you have addressed them in Gujarati language. Gujarati language would have left a good impact too. But you started with Hindi and completed your entire one and a half hour speech in Hindi. Which took us by shock. Your audience were Gujarati, then why did you choose Hindi?
2. Secondly, Patidars were gathered in the rally to ask and talk about reservation. You talked about reservation for like ten minutes. Your rest of the speech was to defame Gujarat government and our Prime Minister Narendra Modi. You were clearly trying to impose your political views on fellow Gujaratis.
3. Thirdly, we all noticed the tone of your speech. “Ham log pure Hindustan ko apni Aukaat dikha denge!” Who are you? Al Queda leader? Aren’t you a fellow Hindustani too? How can you use such a dreadful tone while addressing the rally of lacs of people?
4. Fourthly, the most annoying thing about you was your arrogance. You challenged Chief Minister Anandiben Patel to come to you and accept your application? Who are you to order a Chief Minister?
5. Fifthly, you clearly provoked the rally towards violence. “Agar hamari mange nahi sweekari to lanka jala denge!” When you are leading a peaceful protest, you don’t make statements which can provoke people to incline towards violence. But you clearly did that.

With these five points, I cleared my perspective about you from what I observed in your first speech in Maha rally. Now I will try to enlighten you with the knowledge I gained in last two days. Please have a look at my detailed observation on various points related to your peaceful protest.

Is reservation really possible?
First and foremost, according to the Supreme Court of India, reservation can only be given to the population less than 50% of total population of a particular state. Which means maximum 50% of citizens of a particular state can get the benefits of reservation.
27% of the total population of Gujarat comes under OBC (Other backward class) and 22% of the total population of the state comes under SC/ ST (Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes). Which means 49% of total population of Gujarat already comes under reservation, which cannot exceed according to the judgement from the Supreme Court of India. So technically, more reservation is not possible.

Do you really need reservation?
Firstly, I would like to translate Patidar. Patidar is a Gujarati word for landowner. And as the name suggests, Patidar is one of the wealthiest castes across Gujarat. Patels dominates all industries in Gujarat taking from diamonds to real estates to textiles. Majority of diamond polishing industries of Surat are owned by Patels. Maximum Indian immigrants in USA belong to Patel community. Patels dominate motel industries in USA.

When I witnessed first rally asking for Anamat in Surat, I saw people joining the rally in their Mercedes cars. Can you imagine a guy coming in a Mercedes to ask for the stamp of backward class? Indigestible. Isn’t it?