Shakib, Mahmudullah make up for Mortaza’s absence

July 15, 2009 by riajulhaque
Tamim Iqbal was named Man of the Match for his maiden Test century, West Indies v Bangladesh, 1st Test, Kingstown, 5th day, July 13, 2009

Tamim Iqbal was named Man of the Match for his maiden Test century which enabled his team to post a substantial target © © DigicelCricket.com/Brooks La Touche Photography

Bangladesh achieved just their second win in Tests, and their first overseas, and their newly appointed captain Mashrafe Mortaza, who was off the field as a result of an injured knee, was all praise for his deputy Shakib Al Hasan for leading the team to victory in his absence. West Indies were set a testing target of under 277 on a turning track, and the spinners Mahmudullah, who took a five-for and finished with eight wickets in his debut Test, and Shakib shut them out of the game with ten overs left in the day. The spin duo took eight wickets between them – while ensuring Mortaza’s absence wasn’t felt – to derail a makeshift West Indies team and take a 1-0 lead in the two-Test series.

“Special thanks to Shakib for handling the team very well,” Mortaza said at the end of the Test. “I feel much better now after this victory.”

Bangladesh began the day in a strong position, leading by 252 with five wickets in hand. Tamim Iqbal, who scored his maiden Test ton, had said yesterday that Bangladesh were eyeing a target of around 300. However, an impressive spell from Darren Sammy, who took 5 for 70, brought about a quick end to the Bangladesh innings on the fourth morning which, in hindsight, worked to their advantage as they gained more time to bowl out West Indies. Though they made early inroads, the visitors faced stiff resistance from the West Indies tail, who rallied behind a valiant, unbeaten 52 from David Bernard. But, despite the defiance, the spinners struck at timely intervals to see off the anxious moments that threatened to undermine Bangladesh’s dominance.

When asked if the early end to Bangladesh’s innings worked in their favour, Mortaza said: “We were looking to bat until lunch and get a lead of about 300 or more, but we lost our last five wickets quickly.

We have good spinners like Shakib and Mahmudullah and they bowled really well, so special thanks to them and the rest of the bowlers because we were operating one bowler short because of my injury – and we still won.”

Though Mahmudullah appeared the best bet for being named Man of the Match, it was Tamim Iqbal who walked away with the honour for his determined century in the first innings. His 240-ball 128 formed the backbone of Bangladesh’s impressive lead, and he singled out his time spent at the crease as the stand-out feature of his innings. “Facing 240 balls is the main thing I have learnt,” he said. “I haven’t played as many balls before [in an innings] in international cricket, and having spent that much time in the middle will help me a lot in the future.”

Though the conditions were favourable for spin and that Bangladesh took full toll, Tamin admitted the pitch was easy to bat on. “It was a flat wicket, and if you concentrate hard and look to bat straight, it’s a good track to score on.

“I’m just 20 and have played only 11 Tests, I think there are a lot more [innings like these] to come.”

Shakib and Shahadat fined for excessive appealing

July 15, 2009 by riajulhaque

Bangladesh allrounder Shakib Al Hasan and fast bowler Shahadat Hossain have been fined for excessive appealing during the first Test against West Indies in St Vincent which concluded on Monday. Shakib was docked 10% of his match fee while Shahadat was fined 5%. Imrul Kayes, the opening batsman, was let off with a reprimand for the same offence.

Andy Pycroft, the ICC match referee, found the players guilty during the final day of the Test as Bangladesh chased their first Test victory away from home.

“The effect of prolonging the appeal is just the same as appealing more than once which means pressurising the umpires,” Pycroft said. “I can understand the enthusiasm and excitement on the field as the Bangladesh players were sensing a long-awaited victory and their first in the West Indies but excessive and prolonged appealing on more than one occasion is against the spirit of the game and has no place in the game.

“Imrul is relatively new to international cricket as he is playing only his third Test match and I am willing to accept that he didn’t fully appreciate the importance of adhering to the ICC Code of Conduct. But I am sure he has now learnt his lesson and will avoid repeating the same mistake again.”

Boss is always Right!

September 27, 2007 by riajulhaque

Once PVNR (PV Narasimha Rao), Advani and Laloo Prasad Yadav were going in an auto. They meet with an accident and all three of them die.
Yama DharmaRaj was waiting for this moment. He asks PVNR and Advani to go to HEAVEN. But, for Laloo, Yama had already decided that he should be sent to HELL.

Laloo is not at all happy with this decision. He asks Yama as to why this discrimination is being made. All three of them served public. Similarly, took bribes, misused public post etc. He felt that there should be a formal test or a concrete way to decide this, and should not be just based on opinion.

Yama agrees to this and asks all three of them to appear for English test.
PVNR is asked to spell “INDIA” and he does it correctly.
Advani is asked to spell “ENGLAND” and he too passes.
It is Laloo’s turn and he is asked to spell “CZECHOSLOVAKIA”.
Laloo protests that he doesn’t know English. It is not fair that he is given a tough question and thus forced to fail.

Yama agrees to conduct a written test in Hindi (to give another chance assuming that Laloo should at least feel that Hindi is ideal).
PVNR is asked to write “KUTTA BOLA BHOW BHOW”. He writes it easily and passes.
Advani is asked to write “CHIDIYA BOLI CHI CHI”. He too passes.
Laloo is asked to write “GHODA DAUDA TABDAK TABDAK…..” Tough one. Fails.

Laloo is not happy. Being a history student, he preferred only to be tested in History.
Yama says this is the last chance and he would not take any more tests.

PVNR is asked: “When did India get Independence?”. He replied “1947″ and passed.
Advani is asked ” Who ordered the Jaliaan Walla Bagh massacre?” He replied “General Dyre”.
It’s Laloo’s turn now. Yama asks him “Name all the people who died in the Jallian Walla Bagh Massacre?”
Laloo accepts defeat and agrees to go to HELL.

MORAL: IF YOUR BOSS IS DETERMINED TO SCREW YOU, ANTICIPATE IT AND BE PREPARED TO ACCEPT IT. THERE IS NO ESCAPE.

American English Proverbs

September 9, 2007 by riajulhaque

A

  1. Absence makes the heart grow fonder.
  2. Actions speak louder than words.
  3. After the feast comes the reckoning.
  4. All that glitters is not gold.
  5. An apple a day keeps the doctor away.
  6. The apple doesn’t fall far from the tree.

B

  1. Bad news travels fast.
  2. Barking dogs seldom bite.
  3. Beauty is in the eyes of the beholder.
  4. Beggars can’t be choosers.
  5. The best things in life are free.
  6. Better a live coward than a dead hero
  7. Better late than never.
  8. Better safe than sorry.
  9. The bigger they are, the harder they fall.
  10. A bird in the hand is worth two in the bush.
  11. Birds of a feather flock together.
  12. Blood is thicker than water.

O

  1. Old habits die hard.
  2. One good turn deserves another.
  3. One man’s gravy is another man’s poison.
  4. One swallow does not a summer make.

C

  1. Charity begins at home.
  2. Clothes do not make the man.
  3. Curiosity killed the cat.

D

  1. Do as I say, not as I do.
  2. Don’t bite off more than you can chew.
  3. Don’t bit the hand that feeds you.
  4. Don’t count your chickens before they’re hatched.
  5. Don’t cry over spilled milk.
  6. Don’t judge a book by its cover.
  7. Don’t judge a man until you’ve walked in his boots.
  8. Don’t look a gift horse in the mouth.
  9. Don’t put all your eggs in one basket.
  10. Don’t put off for tomorrow what you can do today.
  11. Don’t put the cart before the horse.

F

  1. Familiarity breeds contempt.
  2. The first step is always the hardest.
  3. A fool and his money are soon parted.
  4. Forewarned is forearmed.
  5. A friend in need is a friend indeed.
  6. A friend who shares is a friend who cares.

G

  1. Good things come in small packages.
  2. The grass is always greener on the other side of the fence.

H

  1. Haste makes waste.
  2. He who hesitates is lost.
  3. He who laughs last, laughs best.
  4. Hindsight is better than foresight.

I

  1. If at first you don’t succeed, try, try again.
  2. If you can’t beat them, join them.
  3. If you can’t stand the heat, get out of the kitchen.
  4. Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery.
  5. In unity there is strength.
  6. It never rains but it pours.
  7. It takes two to tango.

L

  1. Leave well enough alone.
  2. A leopard cannot change its spots.
  3. Lightning never strikes twice in the same place.
  4. Look before you leap.
  5. Love is blind.
  6. Love makes the world go round.

M

  1. Make hay while the sun shines.
  2. Man does not live by bread alone.
  3. A man is known by the company he keeps.
  4. Might makes right.
  5. Misery loves company.
  6. A miss is as good as a mile.
  7. Money does not grow on trees.

N

  1. Necessity is the mother of invention.
  2. No news is good news.
  3. No pain, no gain.
  4. Nothing hurts like the truth.
  5. Nothing ventured, nothing gained.
  6. You can lead a horse to water, but you can’t make him drink.
  7. You can’t have your cake and eat it too.
  8. You can’t teach an old dog new tricks.
  9. You have to take the good with the bad.
  10. You reap what you sow.
  11. You’re never too old to learn.

P

  1. The pen is mightier than the sword.
  2. Possession is nine-tenths of the law.
  3. Practice makes perfect.
  4. The proof of the pudding is in the eating.

R

  1. The road to hell is paved with good intentions.
  2. Rome wasn’t built in a day.

S

  1. The spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak.
  2. The squeaking wheel gets the oil.
  3. Strike while the iron is hot.

T

  1. There is no honor among thieves.
  2. There’s more than one way to skin a cat.
  3. There’s no fool like an old fool.
  4. There’s no place like home.
  5. Too many chiefs, not enough Indians.
  6. Too many cooks spoil the broth.
  7. Two heads are better than one.
  8. Two’s company, but three’s a crowd.

V

Variety is the spice of life.

W

  1. The way to a man’s heart is through his stomach.
  2. When in Rome, do as the Romans do.
  3. When the cat’s away, the mice play.
  4. Where there’s smoke, there’s fire.

Y

  1. You can lead a horse to water, but you can’t make him drink.
  2. You can’t have your cake and eat it too.
  3. You can’t teach an old dog new tricks.
  4. You have to take the good with the bad.
  5. You reap what you sow.
  6. You’re never too old to learn.

Sequence of political events leading to our liberation war

September 9, 2007 by riajulhaque

200 years of Anti British Movement  

1947: Independence (and partition) of India

21 February 1952: Bangla Language Movement (Ekushe)

(1952-69): Movement for Provincial Autonomy

1969: Mass Movement

 1970’s Election: Peoples’ mandate for autonomy

7 March 1971

25 March 1971: Bangalee massacre by Pakistani army

26 March 1971 (past midnight 25 March): Mujib declares war of independence

A tale of intrigue, injuries and incidents

September 9, 2007 by riajulhaque

 

 

If you wanted to write about Shoaib Akhtar, going by his figures would be among the worst ways to do it. Nine years, 43 Tests, 169 wickets, 133 ODIs, 208 wickets; it’s not even a tenth of the story. A few seasons on from his finest performance over a full series, his knees and one ankle were crocked, chit-chat about his action continued, he faced a two-year lay-off after failing a random drugs test (he was later acquitted) but missed the Champions Trophy in 2006 and the World Cup in 2007. Cricinfo casts a glance at the troubles, travails, intrigues, injuries, incidents, controversies and scandals of the Rawalpindi Express

1996 Dropped from the Pakistan squad for the Sahara Cup against India on grounds of indiscipline and poor attitude. His international debut is thus delayed by over a year.

1997 Tours England with Pakistan `A’ and makes an impact on and off the field; is cited for indiscipline by the Pakistan manager in the end of tour report. Finally makes his international debut in November in the second Test against West Indies in Rawalpindi.

1998 February brings his first major impact; 5 for 43 in Pakistan’s first Test win in South Africa.

1999 The breakthrough year; starts with those two balls in Kolkata and continues through the World Cup, where he ends not only as one of the leading wicket-takers, but also its leading star. Soon after, he signs a contract to play for Nottinghamshire. He ends the year by being called for the first time in his career in Australia by umpires Peter Willey and Darrell Hair and John Reid, the match referee; a pattern for highs followed inevitably and immediately by lows is set.

2000 Bowling action is cleared early in the year but a rib injury forces him to miss the start of the county season. A side strain then forces him out for the rest of the season and then a shoulder injury rules him out of England’s visit to Pakistan in the winter. Knee and ankle injuries are also added to the catalogue before the year is out.

2001 Returns in March for his first international outing in ten months against New Zealand. Five wickets suggests he is back but breaks down with a hamstring injury nine balls into the next game…and is called again by umpires Steve Dunne and Doug Cowie. A report from the University of Western Australia concludes his action is the result of “unique physical characteristics.” Pakistani officials say the report `clears him’. Misses much of England summer tour due to injury and poor health and is called again in November in Sharjah. Again, he is `cleared’ by the University in December.

2002 Hit by a brick from the Dhaka crowd in January, forcing him to miss end of tour. Recovers to destroy New Zealand twice at home, in the process bowling the first-ever 100 mph delivery. Blitzes Australia twice later in the year but is banned for an ODI after throwing a bottle into the crowds in Zimbabwe. Caught ball tampering in first Test, though he escapes punishment. A knee injury rules him out of the Test series against South Africa.

Injuries have continued to plague him throughout his career © Getty Images

2003 Axed from Pakistan team after a poor World Cup and told by PCB chief Tauqir Zia to clean up his act or be removed from team forever. Recalled in May for a triangular in Sri Lanka and promptly becomes the second player ever to be banned for ball tampering. Appointed vice-captain for Test against South Africa and is served up a lawsuit by a Pakistani citizen for attending a fashion show on a night of religious significance. Banned for one Test and two ODIs for abusing Paul Adams in the first Test. Misses Test in New Zealand with calf and groin injuries but is photographed one day before enjoying a jet-ski ride, much to his management’s chagrin. Typically, returns for second Test, helps Pakistan win with a stupendous seven-wicket burst (11 in the match) and gets injured again in the ODI series.

2004 A disappointing series against India ends with a back injury in the final Test. Unable to bowl for the rest of the match, he comes out to bat later, freely smacking boundaries in a 14-ball 28. Inzamam publicly questions the authenticity of the injury. Amid disquiet over his commitment and attitude, Shoaib is called before a medical inquiry which eventually finds his injury to be a genuine one. Returns to the squad where on the tour to Australia at the year’s end his true Jekyll and Hyde nature comes out. He fights a lone battle against Australian batsmen in the first two Tests, but in the process is disciplined by match referees (for sending Matthew Hayden on his way) and injures his shoulder at Perth. By the time of the last Test in Sydney, looks physically spent and rumours of disciplinary breaches and problems with the team management emerge.

2005 Starts the year with a hamstring injury and misses most of the VB Series. Hamstring keeps him out of the India tour and fitness problems preclude his inclusion for the tour to the Carribean. On the bright side, he is offered a Bollywood role. Relationship with both Inzamam and Bob Woolmer erodes steadily and his stock is at its lowest ebb when he is verbally maligned by Worcestershire chairman John Elliott for being a disruptive influence. Comes back for the series against England after proving his fitness in a training camp, finishes with 17 wickets, and silences any number of critics with a rehabilitated performance. Ankle injury surfaces in the last Test at Lahore.

2006 Questions are raised about his action again, this time, by Greg Chappell after the Faisalabad Test against India. Ankle injury becomes a stress fracture and rules him out of the ODI series. All the while rumours fly about ICC concern over his action although no official action is taken or statement made. Injury forces him to miss the Sri Lanka tour and doctors discover soon after a degenerative knee condition which threatens to end his career. Is due to undergo surgery, the results of which will determine whether or not he can continue playing but speculation about whether it is his action or his injury which have forced him out intensifies.

2006 Banned for two years after testing positive for the banned substance Nandrolone, Shoaib was sent back to Pakistan and missed the Champions Trophy. The verdict, however, was overturned by a three-man tribunal a month later.

2007 Things look bright for the bowler as he is named in a 30-man squad for the World Cup. After not initially being picked for fitness reasons, the selectors have a change of heart and recall him. He makes a successful return against South Africa in the second Test, taking four wickets in the first innings. But a hamstring injury forces him to miss not only the second innings, but also the rest of the tour. A televised spat with Bob Woolmer results in Shoaib being fined by the board. Later, after much deliberation, Shoaib is declared unfit to take part in the World Cup due to injury at the very last minute. Speculation has it that his exclusion was from fear of being dope-tested by the ICC, and that traces of Nandrolone were still present in his body.

2007 A fit-again Shoaib is named in the Asia XI squad to take on an Africa XI but is withdrawn by the Pakistan board after declaring himself unavailable for Pakistan’s tour of Abu Dhabi. Shoaib is included in the squad for Scotland and later named in the team for the inaugural ICC World Twenty20. He leaves a training camp in Karachi without permission and is fined at a disciplinary hearing. On appeal, a second hearing suspends the fine and charges and puts Shoaib on a six-week probationary period. A dressing room spat with Mohammad Asif in South Africa results in Shoaib being sent back home prior to the event.

TOP 10 CHINESE PROVERBS

September 6, 2007 by riajulhaque
  1. The participant’s perspectives are clouded while the bystander’s views are clear.
  2. Pick the flower when it is ready to be picked.
  3. If you don’t go into the cave of the tiger, how are you going to get its cub?
  4. Follow the local custom when you go to a foreign place.
  5. It’s is impossible to change your basic characteristics.
  6. Once bitten by a snake, you are even frightened by a rope that resembles a snake.
  7. Your neighbor’s wife looks prettier than your own.
  8. When you go up to the mountain too often, you will eventually encounter the tiger.
  9. Elephant tusks cannot grow out of a dog’s mouth.
  10. When the tiger comes down from the mountain to the plains, it is bullied by the dogs.

minus 2 theory & some calculations

September 6, 2007 by riajulhaque

Recently whenever we open a magazine or browse web-pages of bangla newspaper , we see writings on minus two theory.

i have some queries about the so called political model, they are -

how many variables are there in the theory

from what figure the number two will be subtracted?

if we implement minus two from the unique number of political figures then shall we expect we will be a country like Asian tiger within 20 years?

Coffee with Maharaj

August 29, 2007 by riajulhaque

August 28, 2007

Ganguly: renaissance man and bat-twirler par excellence © Getty Images

Sourav Ganguly, Puma bat in hand, is ensconced in a large sofa in the coffee shop of the Marriott Royal hotel, a gothic structure in Bristol’s College Green area. Overlooking him – Maharaj to many in Bengal – are portraits of English monarchs. He’s served coffee by a Bengali waitress, who blushes when asked for the bill: “For you, sir, it’s complimentary.”

A few metres from the hotel stands a life-size statue of Raja Ram Mohan Roy, a political hero in Bengal and a pioneering Indian social and religious reformer. Ganguly had paid a visit to the spot that morning and garlanded the icon. Roy, who died in Bristol, played a big part in Bengal’s Renaissance movement back in the early 19th century; about two hundred years on, Ganguly was to achieve the cricket equivalent. It was under him that India took their first steps towards improving their abysmal away record.

“Enormous,” he thunders, when asked how much India have improved on their travels over the last few years. “Honestly our overseas performance since 2000 has been very, very good. The tag of ‘we don’t travel [well] abroad’ is not fair.”

He’s fidgeting with his bat, twirling it as if getting ready to enter the field. It’s probably the same chunk of wood that transformed into a wand during his incandescent 57 at The Oval, an innings that effectively put a seal on the Test series. “I don’t think we would have lost either way yaar,” he shrugs when asked about the stunner. “But I’m batting well.”

Surely India’s new Mr Dependable is doing more than just batting well? “The good thing is its been under crucial situations. Like at The Oval. Even in Nottingham [his 79 in the second Test], the morning session against the new ball turned the Test match in our favour. That’s what is expected of you when you’ve been around for so long.”

More bat twirls. This is fast resembling Lt. Daniel Kaffee’s quirky baseball manoeuvres in A Few Good Men.

***

Before he arrived at the Marriott, Ganguly spent half an hour patiently attending to media requests. At the end of India’s practice session at the County Ground, reporters from nine television channels hovered around him, taking turns to ask three to four questions each. Switching effortlessly between English, Hindi and Bengali, he patiently responded to all. It’s almost as if he had slotted it as ‘media day’. He’s not the captain anymore, hasn’t been for a couple of years, and isn’t forced to face the press every other day.

“Obviously not being captain has helped,” he says, gently feeling the Puma marker on his bat. “When you’re captain you get involved in a lot of things. You’re trying to get the best out of players and subconsciously, without knowing, it gets to you. At the end of the day you return to the room tired. You’re working on everyone, on the team, on yourself. Slowly, slowly it affects you.”

An hour earlier Rahul Dravid responded to a variety of questions, first from the television media, then radio, then print, then radio again. Some questions related to India’s crushing loss in the first one-dayer, others left him speechless. “Sachin Tendulkar has scored two hundreds on this ground from No. 4,” cried out one reporter, implying that Tendulkar should bat at that position in the second ODI. Dravid deflected it with, “Thanks for telling me”, before breaking into a laugh.

“It’s hard work yaar,” says Ganguly. “I understand what Rahul goes through and I keep on telling him, ‘You should not take things to heart’. Because there are too many things happening. If he starts worrying about everything, he’ll be a goner. I’m sure he understands. He knows what he’s doing.”

Ganguly would know best. Five years ago, during India’s previous tour to England, it was him in the hot seat. So hot was the seat that he ended up rubbing people the wrong way. ‘Lord Snooty’, they termed him. Yet on all his three trips, starting with his fairytale start in 1996, he has left an indelible imprint with his batting.

“I love coming to this country,” he beams. “The facilities, the travel, the hotels … it’s comfortable, it’s not tiring. We’ve been here for more than two months and honestly I’m not tired, I’m not homesick. It’s great, man. It feels like home.”

I think nobody has the right to talk about Sachin Tendulkar’s game. It’s just a phenomenon

 

But where’s the naked aggression? Surely he doesn’t plan to leave without baring his chest on the Lord’s balcony? “It’s gone down, yaar,” he says, like a teenager who has been stood up on his first date. “But it will go down. As captain you’re involved immensely. You get worked up, you get carried away. It slowly dies down once you’re a player. You realise you’ve to take the back seat.”

That back-seat team, comprising Ganguly, Tendulkar, Anil Kumble and VVS Laxman, have played a big part in Dravid’s performance at the steering wheel on this tour. It’s a series when they needed to chip in, especially with no coach to take the pressure off Dravid. With such a wealth of sounding boards, Dravid has rarely been short of ideas.

Nobody knows which is trickier: asking Ganguly about India coaches or doing the reverse. His relationship with John Wright often got messy; the one with Greg Chappell ended in the ugliest divorce in Indian cricket – one that was played out in public.

Now, for the first time in his international career, India are without a coach. So, Mr Ganguly, how has it been? “We have coaches,” he says matter-of-factly. “Robin [Singh] and Venky [Prasad] have been superb. Their man-management skills have been worth watching. Chandu Borde has been nice. When he got appointed, a lot of people said, he’s 73. He may not be the most active because of his age but the batting ideas he gives … he stands behind in the nets, watches every ball. That’s all you need.”

Both Robin and Prasad played under Ganguly, and the air of matey-ness between them is apparent. Ganguly insists the dressing-room atmosphere has been relaxed and, with the finesse that he would use to thread a gap between point and gully, proceeds to fire some salvos.

“The youngsters have enjoyed themselves. It’s been a lovely dressing room, a free dressing room. No hiccups, not many controversies off the field, not too much rubbish going around. Which has been good. It’s been fantastic.” With the exception of “rubbish”, which is spewed out, all the other words are uttered in a measured tone.

“You don’t need a professor at this level,” he says. His expressions don’t change but the tone goes up just a notch. “You don’t need to treat international players like students. What are you going to teach Sachin Tendulkar, Rahul Dravid or Anil Kumble? What are you going to tell them? [There are] minor things which you notice in the nets you come and tell them, ‘This is what I feel, this is how you can do it better’. And Mr Borde does it perfectly.”

 

***

There’s an exaggeratedly mellow tone about Ganguly. At 34 it is but natural. It’s an age when bankers and doctors start the best phase of their professional lives but one when cricketers are expected to slink away silently. Ganguly may be playing the best cricket of his life, but he has nowhere to go.

“They say with age your reflexes slow down. I’ve not felt it,” he says, admiring the green grip on his bat before twirling it even faster. “As a batsman playing fast bowling, when playing somebody like Chris Tremlett, with a bit of bounce, I’ve not felt it. In South Africa I faced the pace. When I came back to India you had Lasith Malinga bowling at 150, Dilhara Fernando bowling at 150. I never felt I was late.

During the masterful fifty in The Oval Test: “That’s what is expected of you when you’ve been around for so long” © Getty Images

“It’s how well you look after yourself yaar. Rahul is 34-35, I don’t see him change in his batting. Rahul produced his best knocks between 30 and 34. Matthew Hayden is 35, Gilchrist is 34-35, Steve Waugh, Allan Border … I’ll give you a whole lot of names. Unless or until you’re special like Tendulkar or Lara … look at Chanderpaul. His batting has gone to a different level.”

He realises his coffee has turned cold. But he wants to continue a train of thought. He quickly takes a few sips before coming back to Tendulkar and Lara. “They’re exceptions. The best two batsmen I’ve seen. Ricky Ponting comes close but …”

Tendulkar he has observed at close quarters – played with him, been led by him, captained him, and is now back to playing with him. Mention the name and he reacts with a spontaneous “great”. No thought, just a sudden “great”. The two have been like true chums on this trip, constantly motivating each other and chirping away incessantly in the slips.

“We’ve opened in one-day cricket a lot, nearly 150-160 games,” he says, shadow-practising the right-hander’s square cut. “We know each other’s batting, what the other guy wants to do, what the other guy is trying to do.”

So, like the rest in their mid-30s, should Tendulkar be at the height of his powers too? The response arrives in a tone that says, ‘Stop talking rubbish.’ “When you play for 18 years you can never be the same,” he says. “Especially when you have been so brilliant. But he’s still one of the best.

“That innings at The Oval, which he played, I told him after the Test match, ‘It’s an innings for everyone to watch, for every youngster to watch and learn.’ For somebody who’s got 25,000 runs, they kept hitting him on his body. He was not hitting the ball well. Still he stood there and batted, batted, batted, batted, batted. And he got an 80. It shows the hunger of that man.”

One gets the feeling that by using “batted” five times in the sentence Ganguly is trying to explain the greatness within the struggle, the humility in seeing oneself exposed yet achieving the end result. He thinks for a moment before considering the best option. “I think nobody has the right to talk about Sachin Tendulkar’s game,” he says. “It’s just a phenomenon.” With a thud, he plonks his bat on the red carpet.

***

Ganguly is soon set to join Tendulkar and Dravid in an elite club; he stands within touching distance of 300 one-day caps. It’s a milestone he could reach during the fifth match of the ongoing series, at Headingley.

Ganguly is 34. It’s an age when bankers and doctors start the best phase of their professional lives, but one when cricketers are expected to slink away silently. Ganguly may be playing the best cricket of his life, but he has nowhere to go

 

These days he values every innings highly, knowing full well that the “job” might last for only a “year or two”. Ganguly tries to draw an analogy to explain.

“Every time you walk out and perform, it’s that feeling of, ‘Man, I belong at this level’. It’s not about money. As a journalist, you interview a Maradona or a Sampras or a Tiger Woods and you feel, ‘Yeah man, I’ve done a great job. This is what I’ve worked for.’ Similarly in my profession it’s the satisfaction you get by hitting a good cover-drive, or defending well to somebody bowling at 90 miles an hour. It’s a job satisfaction thing.”

How would he have reacted if, in the spring of 1996, when he had all but given up playing for India, someone had said he’d play 300 one-dayers? “I’d have said, ‘Tell me where you want to go for dinner and I’ll take you.’”

His dinner plans for tonight involve Monty Panesar, his former Northamptonshire team-mate, who ran him out two days ago. He grins a wry grin when told that he was Monty’s first international run-out victim. “Lovely fellow,” is the only response.

Which brings us to the end of one the more engaging bat-twirling sessions in recent memory. For the audience, comprising the waitress, three English monarchs and myself, it has been a fascinating experience. With Ganguly there is no other way.

Siddhartha Vaidyanathan is assistant editor of Cricinfo

Frank William Abagnale, Jr.

August 28, 2007 by riajulhaque

Frank William Abagnale, Jr. (born April 27, 1948) is a former cheque con artist, forger and imposter who, for five years in the 1960s, passed bad cheques worth more than $2.5 million in 26 countries. During this time, he used eight aliases — even more to cash bad cheques. Currently he runs Abagnale and Associates, a financial fraud consultancy company. His life story provided the inspiration for the feature film Catch Me if You Can, nominally based on his ghostwritten biography of the same name.BiographyBorn and raised outside New York City in Westchester County, he was the third of four children born to a French mother, Paula Abagnale, and an American father, Frank William Abagnale, Sr. Frank had two brothers and one sister. He attended Iona Preparatory School, a Catholic school in New Rochelle, which was run by the Irish Christian Brothers. In 1962, when he was 14, his parents divorced. The experience was so traumatic, he ran away two years later. It was the last time he saw his father, though he renewed contact with his mother after seven years. He did, however, call his father during his extradition from prison in Europe after escaping from an airplane. [1]One of the early signs of his future as a fraudster came when after purchasing a car, he persuaded his father to lend him his Mobil card. With this card, he would purchase large quantities of car parts, such as tires, batteries, and engines. The purchases were on paper only, the goods were never taken off the shelves. In an agreement with the gas station attendant, he would then immediately return the items for cash for less than the price at which they were purchased, the remainder being pocketed by the attendant. Not realizing that the card was in his father’s name, he conned his dad out of $3400, doing this to pay for dates, before the local Mobil branch sought his father out for questioning and expecting payment. Upon being confronted, Abagnale confessed to his father that “it’s the girls that make me crazy,” but escaped punishment from the incident. Later, his mother placed him for four months in a special Catholic Charities school for juvenile offenders.Living alone in New York City after running away, he became known as the “Big Nale”, later shortened to just “Big”. He decided to exploit his mature appearance and alter his driver’s license to make it appear that he was ten years older to get a job. However, Abagnale, posing as a high school dropout in his mid-twenties, quickly learned the more education one has, the more one is paid. Desperate to survive, he soon began working as a con artist to earn money.Bank fraudHis first con was writing cheques on his own overdrawn account, an activity which he discovered was possible when he was forced to write cheques for more money than was in the account. This, however, would only work for a limited time before the bank demanded payment, so he moved on to opening other accounts in different banks, eventually creating new identities to sustain this charade. Over time, he experimented and developed different ways of defrauding banks, such as printing out his own almost-perfect copies of cheques, and cashing them and persuading banks to advance him cash on the basis of money in his accounts; money which of course never materialized as the cheques deposited in it were rejected.One of Abagnale’s famous tricks was to print his account number on blank deposit slips and add them to the stack of real blank slips in the bank. This meant that the deposits written on those slips by bank customers ended up going into his account rather than that of the legitimate customers. He collected over $40,000 by this method before he was discovered. By the time the bank began looking into his case, Abagnale had collected all the money and had already changed his identity.

Impersonations

Pilot

For a period of two years Abagnale masqueraded as Pan Am pilot “Frank Williams” to get free rides around the world by deadheading on scheduled airline flights (a practice in which pilots receive free transportation from other airlines as a professional courtesy, when their employer requires them to fly out of another city on short notice). Everything from food, airline tickets, and lodgings was billed entirely to Pan Am. In order to do this, he made a counterfeit Pan Am ID card from a sample model while posing as a businessman and obtained a FAA pilot’s certificate by buying a display plaque, which he copied and resized down to ID card form. He purports to have forged a degree from Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University. He also obtained a Pan Am pilot’s uniform by claiming that the dry cleaners had lost his. The newspapers knew him as “Skyway Man” and “The James Bond of the Sky”.

Physician

Later, he impersonated a pediatrician in a Georgia hospital under the name “Frank Williams”. He chose to do this after nearly being caught by police after getting off a flight in New Orleans. Aware of possible capture, he retired to Georgia for the time being, and he put his previous occupation as a doctor on an application for an apartment, for fear that the owner might check with Pan Am. After becoming friends with a real doctor who lived next door, he became a resident supervisor as a favor for him until they found someone who could take the job. He did not find the job difficult because the supervisor does not do any actual medical work. However, as a medical layman, Abagnale was nearly discovered after almost letting a baby die of oxygen deprivation (he had no idea what the nurse meant when she said there was a “blue baby“). Abagnale was able to fake his way through most of his duties by letting the interns handle most of the cases that came in during his late night shift, for example setting broken bones and other such tasks. After 11 months, the hospital finally found another replacement and he returned to the air.

 

Attorney

He also forged a Harvard University Law transcript, passed the bar exam of Louisiana and got a job at the office of the state attorney general of Louisiana at the age of nineteen. This happened while he was posing as Pan Am First Officer “Robert Black”. He told a flight attendant he had briefly dated that he was also a Harvard law student. The flight attendant introduced him to a lawyer friend. Abagnale was told the bar needed more lawyers and was offered a chance to apply. After making a phony transcript from Harvard, he prepared himself for the compulsory exam. Despite failing twice, he claims to have passed the bar exam legitimately on the third try after two weeks of study, because, “Louisiana at the time allowed you to (take) the Bar over and over as many times as you needed. It was really a matter of eliminating what you got wrong.”[2]In his biography, he described the premise of his legal job as a “gopher boy” who simply fetched coffee and books for his boss. However, there was a real Harvard graduate who also worked for that attorney general, and he hounded him with questions about his tenure at Harvard. Naturally, Abagnale couldn’t answer questions about a university he never attended, and he later resigned after eight months working to protect himself, upon learning the suspicious graduate was making inquiries into his background.

Teacher

He purports to have forged a Columbia University degree and taught sociology at Brigham Young University for a semester working as a teaching assistant.[3] To teach the class, he read a chapter ahead of his students.

Capture and imprisonment

Eventually he was caught in France in 1969 when an Air France attendant recognized his face from a wanted poster. When the French police apprehended him, all 26 of the countries in which he had committed fraud wanted him to be extradited. He first served prison time in Perpignan’s House of Arrest in France; a one year sentence that was reduced down to six months, where he nonetheless almost died. His stay in Perpignan left him fearful of spending more time in another version of the prison.Then he was extradited to Sweden where he was treated fairly well under the Swedish law. During trial for forgery, his defense attorney almost had his case dismissed by arguing that he had ‘created’ the fake cheques and not forged them, but his charges were reduced to swindling. He served six months in a Malmö prison, only to learn at the end of it he would be tried next in Italy, where prison standards were much like that of Perpignan. Later, a judge revoked his United States passport and deported him to the U.S. to prevent further extradition. He was sentenced to 12 years in a federal prison for multiple counts of forgery.[4]

 

Alleged Escapes

While being extradited to the U.S., Abagnale claims to have escaped a British VC-10 airliner as it was turning onto a taxi strip at New York’s JFK International Airport. Abagnale purported in his biography (originally published in 1980) to have removed the toilet knobs in the plane’s lavatory and squeezed through a two-foot-square hatch cover before dropping ten feet to the tarmac below. Under cover of night he scaled a nearby fence and hailed a cab to Grand Central Terminal. After stopping in the Bronx to change clothes and pick up a set of keys to a Montreal bank safe-deposit box containing $20,000USD, Abagnale caught a train to Montreal’s Dorval airport (now Montreal-Pierre Elliot Trudeau International Airport) to purchase a ticket to São Paulo, Brazil, a country with which the U.S. has no extradition treaty. He was caught by a constable of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police while standing in line at the ticket counter and subsequently handed over to U.S. Border Patrol.Before being sentenced to 12 years in the Federal Correction Institution at Petersburg, Virginia in April 1971, Abagnale also purportedly escaped the Federal Detention Center in Atlanta, Georgia while awaiting trial, which he considers in his book to be one of the most infamous escapes in history. During the time, U.S. prisons were being condemned by civil rights groups and investigated by congressional committees. In a stroke of luck that included the accompanying U.S. marshal forgetting his detention commitment papers, Abagnale was mistaken for an undercover prison inspector and was even given privileges and food far better than the other inmates. The FDC in Atlanta had already lost two employees as a result of reports written by undercover federal agents, and Abagnale took advantage of their vulnerability. He contacted a friend (called in his book “Jean Sebring”) who posed as his fiancee and slipped him the business card of “Inspector C.W. Dunlap” of the U.S. Bureau of Prisons which she’d obtained by posing as a freelance writer doing an article on “fire safety measures in federal detention centers.” She also handed over a business card from “Sean O’Riley” (later revealed to be Joseph Shea), the FBI agent in charge of Abagnale’s case, which she doctored at a stationery print shop. Abagnale then told the guards that he was indeed a prison inspector and handed over Dunlap’s business card as proof. He then told them that he needed to contact FBI agent, Sean O’Riley on a matter of urgent business. O’Riley’s phone number was dialed and picked up by Jean Sebring at a payphone in an Atlanta shopping-mall posing as an operator at the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Later, he was allowed to meet with O’Riley in a predetermined car outside the detention center unsupervised. Sebring, incognito, picked Abagnale up and drove him to an Atlanta bus station where he took a Greyhound to New York, and soon thereafter, a train to Washington D.C. Abagnale bluffed his way through an attempted capture by posing as an FBI agent after being recognized by a motel registration clerk. Still bent on making his way to Brazil, Abagnale was picked up a few weeks later by two New York City police detectives when he inadvertently walked past their unmarked police car.[5]

 

Legitimate jobs

In 1974, after only serving less than five years, the United States federal government released him on condition that he would help the federal authorities against fraud and scam artists—without pay.[4] After his release, Abagnale tried several jobs, from a cook, grocer, and movie projectionist, but he was fired from most of these upon having his criminal career discovered via background checks. Finding them unsatisfying, he approached a bank with an offer. He explained to the bank what he had done, and offered to speak to the bank’s staff and show various tricks that “paperhangers” use to defraud banks.That same year, Abagnale made an offer to the bank that if they did not find his speech helpful, they owed him nothing; otherwise, they owed him $50 and would spread his name to other banks. Naturally, they were very impressed, and he began a legitimate life as a security consultant.He later founded Abagnale & Associates[6], which advises the business world on fraud, and organizes lecture tours. Through this system, he raised enough money to pay back all those he scammed over his criminal career. Abagnale is now a multi-millionaire through his legal fraud detection and avoidance consulting business based in Tulsa, Oklahoma where he currently lives with his wife, whom he married one year after becoming legitimate, and has three sons.

Media appearances

In 1977, Abagnale appeared on the TV quiz show To Tell the Truth, along with two contestants also presenting themselves as him. Video excerpt Clips from this episode appeared in Catch Me if You Can interspersed with new footage featuring actor Leonardo DiCaprio in his place.In the early 1990s Abagnale featured as a recurring guest on the UK Channel 4 television series Secret Cabaret. The show was based around magic and illusions with a sinister, almost gothic presentation style. Abagnale featured as an expert exposing various cons.In the film Catch Me if You Can, Abagnale has a bit-part role as a French policeman who arrests his onscreen counterpart (Leonardo DiCaprio).In 2007, Abagnale appeared in a short role as a speaker in the BBC TV series The Real Hustle. He spoke of different scams run by fraudsters.

Books

In 2002, Abagnale wrote The Art of the Steal. In the chapters, he listed common cons and ways to prevent consumers from being defrauded. He also talked about identity theft and the advent of Internet scamming.[7]

Abagnale has made over 20 million dollars from his three books [citation needed]

Portrayal of Abagnale

Abagnale and portrayer Leonardo DiCaprioLeonardo Dicaprio portrayed Abagnale in the 2002 Steven Spielberg film Catch Me if You Can. The film is based on his exploits as described in his book of the same name (ISBN 0-7679-0538-5), but alters many aspects of his life story for dramatic purposes. 

Another win for market democracy

August 14, 2007 by riajulhaque

For the Indian capital markets, dismantling of the Controller of Capital Issues (CCI) in 1991 marked the first step towards freedom. Till then, it was this government agency that decided the price at which companies could come out with initial public offerings. Yet this new system was prone to misuse.

Following the stock market scam of 1992, the government set up the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi). The objective was to ensure the orderly functioning of the capital markets and thereby restore confidence among retail investors who were badly shaken by the scam. One could say that the democratisation of capital markets was set into motion with the birth of Sebi.

The opening up of the Indian equity market to foreign institutional investors was a landmark event. The stock market in those days was very illiquid , and largely controlled by a cartel of influential brokers. Such was the brokers’ stranglehold on the market that the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE) was uncharitably nicknamed the Brokers’ Stock Exchange. Increased presence of institutional investors improved liquidity and also broke the iron grip of the brokers’ lobby on the market.

But with trading still conducted on the floor of the BSE, freedom for retail investors from the dubious practices of their brokers was yet far. Broking fee in the early 90s was as high as Rs 2 on every Rs 100 worth of transactions — nearly 20 times the fee today. Also, these investors were routinely fleeced by brokers, who would not confirm trades during the day and then mark up buy trades to the highest price of the day and mark down sell trades to the lowest for the day. The advent of screenbased trading by the NSE changed this. With competition, brokerage rates went on a downward spiral, and it still continues. The monopoly of the BSE was finally broken.

“The image of the stock broking industry in general, and stock brokers in particular, has improved in a big way over the years,” says BSE broker Ramesh S Damani. “Till the mid-90 s, the broking industry was a backwater business, understood by few people, and controlled by a handful of players. But it is a much better democratic set up now,” he adds.

The other major landmark was the introduction of dematerialisation of shares in 1997 with the setting up of the National Securities Depository Ltd (NSDL). This spelt freedom for investors from perils of ‘bad delivery’ in the form of fake or tainted share certificates.

Earlier, a few reckless brokers going bust could spell trouble for the system as whole. This was rectified when exchanges introduced a stringent margin system that put restrictions on positions individual players could take up without creating a potential crisis situation. The exchanges put in place guarantee funds (Trade Guarantee Fund by the BSE and Settlement Guarantee Fund by the NSE), which ensured that investors would not be deprived of their dues if the brokers with whom they were dealing, went bust. The guarantee funds also ensured that the settlement process went through smoothly even if some brokers were broke.

The arrival of mutual funds (MF)provided an alternative avenue of investments for retail investors wanting a capital market exposure.

Morgan Stanley mopped up Rs 1,000 crore in its maiden equity fund — a close-ended fund with a 15-year lock-in period. Investors literally queued up to subscribe the fund, but without being aware of the difference between a mutual fund unit and a share, leave alone the distinction between a closeended fund and an open-ended one. For them the Morgan Stanley scheme was just like any other IPO, which would list at a premium to the facevalue of Rs 10. By the time Morgan Stanley had begun deploying its funds, stock prices had begun to flail. Investors who had enthusiastically bought the fund were shocked to find the net asset value (Rs 9.40) below par on the day of listing.

During that time there was another open ended fund that was operating silently by the name of Kothari Pioneer, which was later on taken over by Franklin Templeton. The prima fund gave a return of 100% within eight month of its operations. It was an open ended fund and investors loved it. Amitabh Jhunjhunwala, who was the fund manager of the scheme, became the first celebrity in the fund management industry and later went on to head Reliance Capital.

Mutual funds have come a long way after 1994. Now we have sector funds, index funds, balanced funds and MIPs. Yet the bulk of the customer for mutual funds is through corporates which invest in the fixed income or liquid funds of MFs. Experts believe that the still stunted retail investors participation will improve.

In 2000 when the futures market became active, there was confusion initially and a feeling that investors in India will find it troublesome to get hooked to equity derivatives, which were very popular in the global markets. But stock futures on Indian bourses today stand at the forefront in the evolution of tradable financial products in the country. Nowhere in the world do stock futures see the kind of volumes the way they see in India.

Across the world, Index futures are more popular while stock futures play second fiddle. India is one of the few countries where index-related products are not as popular as stocks. Stock futures have a lot in common with the badla trade that was prevalent on the BSE for a long time. Investors who used to carry forward their stocks by paying an interest charge were hooked on to futures very easily as these two products had a lot in common.

While the stock futures market is very liquid, the same cannot be said about the options market. There is virtually no options market in India, feel fund managers and thus for hedging they prefer futures to options. Index options are getting more popular than the options on stocks.

The range of investment products on offer widened in 2000 with the launch of the country’s first exchange traded fund (ETF), managed by Benchmark MF. The Nifty Bees as it is called, invests in the Nifty Fifty stocks and is traded on the exchange like a stock. The ETFs started getting attention only about a year ago when institutional investors realised the potential of these products in terms of costs and liquidity. Now many funds have their ETFs and they are getting good responses from investors—retail as well as institutional.

The latest ETF that is gaining popularity in the country is the gold ETF and this fund gives investors the option to hold gold in paper form. Since the NAV of the gold ETF is linked to the London price and liquidity is increasing, the gold ETF is seeing a lot of retail participation as compared to stock ETFs.

The evolution from closed ended mutual funds and equity to derivatives and ETFs is a small step when compared to the developed world. But what matters is that it is in the right direction. The rest will be taken care of by time.

Adam Smith

August 14, 2007 by riajulhaque
I.                   Background

A.   Scottish professor of philosophyB.   Considered one of Enlightenment’s most original thinkerC.   Spoke for truth, not special interestsD.  Believed that no society could be flourishing and happy if most of its citizens were poorII.                Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of NationsA.   Published in 1776B.   Established a basis for modern economicsC.   Argued that mercantilism wasn’t the best economic plan
1. Stifling government regulations
2. Unfair privileges for state-approved monopolies
D.  Better Plan- Free competition
  1. Protected people from price gouging
E.   Government should limit self to 3 essential duties
1. Defense against foreign invasion
2. Maintain civil order with courts and police
3. Sponsor certain indispensable public works and institutions
F.    Felt employers and workers were motivated by narrow self-interests- encouraged itIII.             “Invisible Hand”
 A. Prices naturally controlled by supply and demand
 B. Increased wealth of both wealthy and poor

         C. Main argument for economical liberalism

Computer Women – Which Type Are You?

August 13, 2007 by riajulhaque

“Don’t worry about people stealing your ideas. If your ideas are any
good, you’ll have to ram them down people’s throats.” Howard Aiken

“Life is moderately good play with a badly written third act.” Truman
Capote

“He who stops being better stops being good.” Oliver Cromwell

“Everyone gets their rough day. No one gets a free ride. Today so far,
I had a good day. I got a dial tone.” Rodney Dangerfield

“Crime is the soul of lust. What would pleasure be if it were not
accompanied by crime? It is not the object of debauchery that excites us,
rather the idea of evil.” Marquis de Sade

“Good management is the art of making problems so interesting and their
solutions so constructive that everyone wants to get to work and deal
with them.” Paul Hawken

==================================

Today’s Featured Humor : -)   -  – Computer Women – Which Type Are You?

Computer Women

Which Type Of Woman do you like ?

a.. HARD-DISK Woman: She remembers everything you say and do, FOREVER.
!!!

c.. WINDOWS Woman: Everyone knows that she can’t do anything right, but
you can’t live without her.

d.. EXCEL Woman: They say she can do a lot of things but you mostly use
her for only four of your basic needs.

e.. SCREENSAVER Woman: She is good for nothing functional, but at least
she is exciting, colourful, and lots of fun!

f.. INTERNET Woman: Difficult to access and hard to keep running .!!!

g.. SERVER Woman: Claims to be available to you, but Always busy when
you need her.

h.. MULTIMEDIA Woman: She has a way of making horrible things look very
beautiful.

i.. CD-ROM Woman: She always has you on the move, going faster and
faster.!!!

j.. E-MAIL Woman: Out of Every ten things she says, eight are plain
nonsense.

k.. VIRUS Woman: Also known as “WIFE”; when you are least expecting
her, she shows up, installs herself, and starts gobbling up all your
resources. If you try to uninstall her, you will lose almost every thing. If
you don’t try to uninstall her, you will still have nothing.

Dawood’s detention a blow to D-company

August 8, 2007 by riajulhaque

MUMBAI/ISLAMABAD: The sensational news of the detention of Dawood Ibrahim, Chhota Shakeel and Tiger Memon by the ISI in Pakistan, first published by TOI on Tuesday, has sent shockwaves in D-company.

“Dawood’s USP was his invincibility, which has been destroyed. He, Shakeel and Tiger are in ISI’s custody,” police sources said.

Dawood’s sister Haseena Parkar and other family members here are reported to be praying for his safety. Dawood is known to be in touch with his relatives here, but for the past several days he has been incommunicado, which is worrying them.

Meanwhile, Chhota Rajan, Dawood’s arch rival, claimed Dawood was a free man in Pakistan. It was unclear on what basis he made the claim from his undisclosed destination abroad, but said, “I am gunning for Dawood and I will not rest till I achieve my aim.”

Sources told TOI that ISI may either hand them over unofficially to the US forces in Afghanistan or eliminate them.

Since Pakistan has always insisted that Dawood is not on its soil, it is not making an official announcement about his detention. But police sources confirm that the don and his two associates are detained in a safe house near Quetta, Baluchistan.

Pakistan interior ministry reiterated Islamabad’s position on Tuesday while officially denying reports of Dawood’s arrest by the ISI.

“Nobody by the name Dawood Ibrahim has been arrested by the security forces,” Pakistan interior ministry spokesperson Brig (Retd) Iqbal Cheema told the media in Islamabad.

Deep Thoughts

August 6, 2007 by riajulhaque

ON DEEP THOUGHTS
A day without sunshine is like night.
ON HIGHER EDUCATION
College is a fountain of knowledge…and the students are there to  drink.
ON MATHEMATICAL TRANSFORMS
A polar bear is a rectangular bear after a coordinate transform.
ON YOUTH
“Some people say that I must be a horrible person, but that’s not true.  I have the heart of a young boy — in a jar on my desk.” — Steven King, 3/8/90
ON PROBLEM SOLVING
When the only tool you own is a hammer, every problem begins to  resemble a nail. — Abraham Maslow
ON MATERIALISM
He who dies with the most toys, is, nonetheless, still dead.
ON ECONOMICS
The cost of living hasn’t affected its popularity.
ON PUBLISHING OR PERISHING
I am returning this otherwise good typing paper to you because someone  has printed gibberish all over it and put your name at the top. — English Professor, Ohio University
ON REVISIONIST HISTORY
What was sliced bread the greatest thing since?
ON DATING
When aiming for the common denominator, be prepared for the occasional division by zero.
ON LAMENTATION
Of all the things I’ve lost, I miss my mind the most.
ON POETIC LOVE
When you’re swimmin’ in the creek And an eel bites your cheek That’s a Moray! — Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers
ON MODERNISM
Q: How many surrealists does it take to screw in a light bulb?
A: Two. One to hold the giraffe and the other to fill the bathtub with brightly colored machine tools.
ON MATERIAL SCIENCE
Character density: The number of very weird people in the office.
ON EXTINCTION
Save the whales. Collect the whole set.
ON HUMILITY
To err is human, to moo bovine.
ON EXPLANATION OF THE END
“… one of the main causes of the fall of the Roman Empire was that, lacking zero, they had no way to indicate successful termination of their C programs.” — Robert Firth
ON PROPHECY
The meek shall inherit the earth—they are too weak to refuse.
ON NUMBERS
Grabel’s Law: 2 is not equal to 3—not even for very large values of 2.
ON WORLD POLITICS
Diplomacy is the art of saying “nice doggy” until you can find a rock.
AND FINALLY, ON DRUGS AND DEVELOPMENT
There are two major products to come out of
Berkeley: LSD and UNIX. We  don’t believe this to be a coincidence.

In Silicon Valley, Millionaires Who Don’t Feel Rich

August 6, 2007 by riajulhaque

MENLO PARK, Calif. — By almost any definition — except his own and perhaps those of his neighbors here in Silicon Valley — Hal Steger has made it.

Mr. Steger, 51, a self-described geek, has banked more than $2 million. The $1.3 million house he and his wife own on a bluff overlooking the Pacific Ocean is paid off. The couple’s net worth of roughly $3.5 million places them in the top 2 percent of families in the United States.

Yet each day Mr. Steger continues to toil in what a colleague calls “the Silicon Valley salt mines,” working as a marketing executive for a technology start-up company, still striving for his big strike. Most mornings, he can be found at his desk by 7. He typically works 12 hours a day and logs an extra 10 hours over the weekend.

“I know people looking in from the outside will ask why someone like me keeps working so hard,” Mr. Steger says. “But a few million doesn’t go as far as it used to. Maybe in the ’70s, a few million bucks meant ‘Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous,’ or Richie Rich living in a big house with a butler. But not anymore.”

Silicon Valley is thick with those who might be called working-class millionaires — nose-to-the-grindstone people like Mr. Steger who, much to their surprise, are still working as hard as ever even as they find themselves among the fortunate few. Their lives are rich with opportunity; they generally enjoy their jobs. They are amply cushioned against the anxieties and jolts that worry most people living paycheck to paycheck.

But many such accomplished and ambitious members of the digital elite still do not think of themselves as particularly fortunate, in part because they are surrounded by people with more wealth — often a lot more.

When chief executives are routinely paid tens of millions of dollars a year and a hedge fund manager can collect $1 billion annually, those with a few million dollars often see their accumulated wealth as puny, a reflection of their modest status in the new Gilded Age, when hundreds of thousands of people have accumulated much vaster fortunes.

“Everyone around here looks at the people above them,” said Gary Kremen, the 43-year-old founder of Match.com, a popular online dating service. “It’s just like Wall Street, where there are all these financial guys worth $7 million wondering what’s so special about them when there are all these guys worth in the hundreds of millions of dollars.”

Mr. Kremen estimated his net worth at $10 million. That puts him firmly in the top half of 1 percent among Americans, according to wealth data from the Federal Reserve, but barely in the top echelons in affluent towns like Palo Alto, Menlo Park and Atherton. So he logs 60- to 80-hour workweeks because, he said, he does not think he has nearly enough money to ease up.

“You’re nobody here at $10 million,” Mr. Kremen said earnestly over a glass of pinot noir at an upscale wine bar here.

Not every Silicon Valley millionaire, of course, shares that perspective.

Celeste Baranski, a 49-year-old engineer with a net worth of around $5 million who lives with her husband in Menlo Park, no longer frets about tucking enough money away for college for their two children. Long ago she stopped bothering to balance her checkbook. When too many 18-hour days running an engineering department of 1,200 left her feeling burned out and empty, she left and gave herself 12 months off.

Yet like other working-class millionaires of Silicon Valley, she harbors anxieties about her financial future. Ms. Baranski — who was briefly worth as much as $200 million in 2000 but cashed out only $1 million before the collapse of the tech bubble — returned to work in March.

Along with two partners, she founded a software company, Vitamin D, and already she is resigned to the sleepless nights and other stresses that await her. “I ask myself all the time,” Ms. Baranski confessed, “why I do this.”

Working inside a start-up has always been invigorating, she says. But she and her husband, 62, who also works, have concluded that she must stick with it if they are to continue to live the life they enjoy here.

Recently the couple hammered out an agreement: Ms. Baranski will work at least five more years for the sake of their bottom line.

“People around here, if they have 2 or 3 million dollars, they don’t feel secure,” said David W. Hettig, an estate planner based in Menlo Park who has advised Silicon Valley’s wealthy for two decades.

The Luck Factor

Many of the more modest millionaires here feel sheepish, even guilty at times, about their piles of cash. Talent played in a role in their financial success, but so did being at the right place at the right time.

 

“I always ask myself, ‘Do I deserve it?’”
NAME Celeste Baranski AGE 49 NET WORTH $5 Million CURRENT JOB Co-founder, software start-up

“They recognize that if they happened to walk into a different office,” said Marilyn Holland, a Menlo Park psychologist who has been counseling the Valley’s elite for 25 years, “things would have turned out very differently.”

That is one big difference between these working-class millionaires and the country’s wealthiest tycoons, who tend to see themselves as pillars of the community worthy of the hundreds of millions of dollars, perhaps billions, they now possess.

“A lot of the money here is accidental money,” said Bruce Karsh, 51, an engineer who puts his net worth at $2 million to $4 million. “People weren’t setting out to become gazillionaires.”

Ms. Baranski is one of them. The daughter of a college professor who died when she was 12 and left her mother to raise three children, she began college intending to become a musician. But worries about the debt she was racking up prompted her to transfer to the engineering school, where she eventually earned a master’s in electrical engineering.

That today she is worth around $5 million, said Ms. Baranski, who helped to put herself through school cleaning houses, “was unimaginable in my 20s.”

“I always ask myself, ‘Do I deserve it?’ ” she said. “It never feels like you do, because that’s a lot of money.”

Ms. Baranski is hardly the only working-class millionaire asking herself this question. Ms. Holland said she regularly works with multimillionaires who wonder why they are so well compensated when others, like teachers, who contribute so much to the world, are not.

The lucky moment in Ms. Baranski’s career came when she took a job as the head engineer at Handspring, the hand-held device maker, in September 1999. By the end of 2000, Ms. Baranski’s stock holdings briefly made her one of the wealthier women in Silicon Valley.

At quick glance, Ms. Baranski and her husband, Paul, live modestly. She drives a 2006 Subaru, her husband a six-year-old Saab. Their children attend public school, and vacations tend to be modest affairs centered on visiting family.

Ms. Baranski cares little for clothes or jewelry. They have a swimming pool, but only because Ms. Baranski pressed hard for one, a dream of hers growing up in Southern California.

Like most of her neighbors, Ms. Baranski splurged most on a house in a community studded with some of the most expensive real estate in the country. Early in 2001, when Ms. Baranski seemed richer than she was, they paid $1.95 million for a dilapidated house in Menlo Park, knowing they would tear it down. They spent $1 million over the next few years building their dream house.

Ms. Baranski recognizes, of course, that she is far better off than many of her neighbors. Even well-paid college administrators, professors and other white-collar professionals struggle to pay their bills in this expensive redoubt 30 miles south of San Francisco.

“I don’t know how people live here on just a normal salary,” said Ms. Baranski.

Her nanny rents an apartment in Palo Alto, Ms. Baranski said. She pays her what she described as a generous salary and gave her the keys to her old Saab when she bought the newer one. But “basically I have no idea how she survives here.”

Mr. Hettig, the estate planning lawyer, sums it up for many: “We’re in such a rarefied environment,” he said, “people here lose perspective on what the rest of the world looks like.”

‘A Dime a Dozen’

David Koblas, a computer programmer with a net worth of $5 million to $10 million, imagines what his life would be like if he left Silicon Valley. He could move to a small town like Elko, Nev., he says, and be a ski bum. Or he could move his family to the middle of the country and live like a prince in a spacious McMansion in the nicest neighborhood in town.

But Mr. Koblas, 39, lives with his wife, Michelle, and their two children in Los Altos, south of Palo Alto, where the schools are highly regarded and the housing prices are inflated accordingly. So instead of a luxury home, the family lives in a relatively modest 2,000-square-foot house — not much bigger than the average American home — and he puts in long hours at Wink, a search engine start-up founded in 2005.

“I’d be rich in Kansas City,” he said. “People would seek me out for boards. But here I’m a dime a dozen.”

No one knows for certain how many single-digit millionaires live in Silicon Valley. Certainly their numbers reach into the tens of thousands, say those who work with the area’s engineers and entrepreneurs. Yet nearly all of them still have all-consuming jobs, not only because the work gives them a sense of achievement and satisfaction but also because they think they must work so much to afford their gilded neighborhoods.

That certainly describes Tony Barbagallo, 44, who over the last two decades has collected around $3.6 million in stock and options from companies he has worked for. Despite his good fortune, though, he is surprised to find that he worries like most other Americans about matters as varied as the soaring cost of health care, the high price of college and the pressure to sock away more money for retirement.

Taxes have devoured about 40 percent of his stash, Mr. Barbagallo said, knocking that figure down to $2.2 million. Over the years, he has tried to live off his salary, but not always successfully. To limit their monthly expenses, he and his wife Catherine bought a ranch house far from Silicon Valley, in the town of Moraga, for $750,000 — by Valley standards a modest sum.

But they spent $350,000 on extensive remodeling — causing them, not for the first time, to dip deeply into their nest egg.

Today, he has roughly $1.2 million left in savings and another several hundred thousand dollars’ worth of home equity, Mr. Barbagallo said, with one child in college and a second on her way.

So he works as hard as ever, logging more than 70 hours a week at a San Francisco start-up.

“Poor Tony, he’ll never be able to retire,” Catherine Barbagallo said.

Chasing the Top 0.1 Percent

Many of these millionaires have options, of course, beyond working hard to earn another $5 million to $10 million. A few even choose to jump off the golden treadmill.

That is what Mark Gage, 51, an engineer, and his wife, Meredith, did when they left the Bay Area in 2005 with $3 million or so in assets. They bought a house in Bend, Ore. — “a bigger, much nicer home with dramatic views” — and now Mr. Gage works only when the perfect consulting job presents itself.

Yet the same drive that earned so many of the engineers and entrepreneurs who live here their fortunes keeps them tied to the Valley, which resembles nothing so much as a sprawling post-war suburb, though one whose roadways are thick with cars costing in the six figures.

Umberto Milletti has fantasized about downsizing his life to ease the financial pressures he feels despite a net worth around $5 million. In 2000, when his stake in DigitalThink, the online learning company he co-founded in 1996, was worth around $50 million, he bought his family of four a five-bedroom house in Hillsborough, an upscale suburb south of San Francisco. After his net worth fell 90 percent, though, he found the house more of an albatross than a dream.

“We could move,” Mr. Milletti said. “But if you do that, then you’re admitting defeat. No one wants to go backwards.”

So he works 60 to 70 hours a week at InsideView, an online sales intelligence company he co-founded in 2005, in part to prove that his first success was not a fluke — but also to meet his monthly nut, which includes payments on a seven-figure mortgage.

Silicon Valley offers an unusual twist on keeping up with the Joneses. The venture capitalist two doors down might own a Cessna Citation X private jet. The father of your 8-year-old’s best friend, who has not worked for two years, drives a bright yellow Ferrari. Temptations loom everywhere.

“You see how much money you have in the bank,” Mr. Koblas, the computer programmer, said, “and your eyes get really big.” He described it as “upsizing your life to your cash flow.”

Then there are the additional burdens on this digital elite, said Ms. Holland, the psychologist — demands they are typically not prepared to handle.

“There are all these people who come to you for money,” Ms. Holland said. “Siblings, parents, other relatives. Organizations seeking charitable contributions. There’s this assumption you have all this money — so why don’t you write a big check to the school or to this other charity?”

Other pressures can come from within the social circle. Mr. Barbagallo, for instance, remembers when several couples tried cajoling his wife and him — unsuccessfully — to fly to Las Vegas for a charity event featuring Andre Agassi.

“You look around,” Mr. Barbagallo said, “and the pressures to spend more are everywhere.” Children want the latest fashions their peers are wearing and the most popular high-ticket toys. Furniture does not seem up to snuff once you move into a multimillion-dollar home. Spouses talk, and now that resort in Mexico the family enjoyed so much last winter is not good enough when looking ahead to next year. Summer camp, a full-time housekeeper, vintage wines, country clubs: the cost of living bloats.

To Mr. Milletti, it all looks like a marathon with no finish line.

“Here, the top 1 percent chases the top one-tenth of 1 percent, and the top one-tenth of 1 percent chases the top one-one-hundredth of 1 percent,” he said.

“You try not to get caught up in it,” he added, “but it’s hard not to.”

The Richest of the Rich, Proud of a New Gilded Age

August 5, 2007 by riajulhaque

The tributes to Sanford I. Weill line the walls of the carpeted hallway that leads to his skyscraper office, with its panoramic view of Central Park. A dozen framed magazine covers, their colors as vivid as an Andy Warhol painting, are the most arresting. Each heralds Mr. Weill’s genius in assembling Citigroup into the most powerful financial institution since the House of Morgan a century ago.

Damon Winter/The New York Times

Sanford I. Weill, chairman of Carnegie Hall, sees similarities between his life and that of the hall’s first patron.

Age of Riches

The .01 Percent

Articles in this series are examining the effects of the growing concentration of wealth.

Damon Winter/The New York Times

Name Leo J. Hindery, Jr. Age 59 Assets $150 Million Source Cable TV Current Job Manager, Private Equity Fund Philosophy “I think there are people, including myself at certain times in my career, who because of their uniqueness warrant whatever the market will bear.”

His achievement required political clout, and that, too, is on display. Soon after he formed Citigroup, Congress repealed a Depression-era law that prohibited goliaths like the one Mr. Weill had just put together anyway, combining commercial and investment banking, insurance and stock brokerage operations. A trophy from the victory — a pen that President Bill Clinton used to sign the repeal — hangs, framed, near the magazine covers.

These days, Mr. Weill and many of the nation’s very wealthy chief executives, entrepreneurs and financiers echo an earlier era — the Gilded Age before World War I — when powerful enterprises, dominated by men who grew immensely rich, ushered in the industrialization of the United States. The new titans often see themselves as pillars of a similarly prosperous and expansive age, one in which their successes and their philanthropy have made government less important than it once was.

“People can look at the last 25 years and say this is an incredibly unique period of time,” Mr. Weill said. “We didn’t rely on somebody else to build what we built, and we shouldn’t rely on somebody else to provide all the services our society needs.”

Those earlier barons disappeared by the 1920s and, constrained by the Depression and by the greater government oversight and high income tax rates that followed, no one really took their place. Then, starting in the late 1970s, as the constraints receded, new tycoons gradually emerged, and now their concentrated wealth has made the early years of the 21st century truly another Gilded Age.

Only twice before over the last century has 5 percent of the national income gone to families in the upper one-one-hundredth of a percent of the income distribution — currently, the almost 15,000 families with incomes of $9.5 million or more a year, according to an analysis of tax returns by the economists Emmanuel Saez at the University of California, Berkeley and Thomas Piketty at the Paris School of Economics.

Such concentration at the very top occurred in 1915 and 1916, as the Gilded Age was ending, and again briefly in the late 1920s, before the stock market crash. Now it is back, and Mr. Weill is prominent among the new titans. His net worth exceeds $1 billion, not counting the $500 million he says he has already given away, in the open-handed style of Andrew Carnegie and the other great philanthropists of the earlier age.

At 74, just over a year into retirement as Citigroup chairman, Mr. Weill sees in Carnegie’s life aspects of his own. Andrew Carnegie, an impoverished Scottish immigrant, built a steel empire in Pittsburgh, taking risks that others shunned, just as the demand for steel was skyrocketing. He then gave away his fortune, reasoning that he was lucky to have been in the right spot at the right moment and he owed the community for his good luck — not in higher wages for his workers, but in philanthropic distribution of his wealth.

Mr. Weill’s beginnings were similarly inauspicious. A son of immigrants from Poland, raised in Brooklyn, a so-so college student, he landed on Wall Street in a low-level job in the 1950s. Harnessing entrepreneurial energy, deftness as a deal maker and an appetite for risk, with a rising stock market pulling him along, he built a financial empire that, in his view, successfully broke through the stultifying constraints that flowed from the New Deal. They were constraints not just on what business could or could not do, but on every high earner’s take-home pay.

“I once thought how lucky the Carnegies and the Rockefellers were because they made their money before there was an income tax,” Mr. Weill said, never believing in his younger days that deregulation and tax cuts, starting in the late 1970s, would bring back many of the easier conditions of the Gilded Age. “I felt that everything of any great consequence was really all made in the past,” he said. “That turned out not to be true and it is not true today.”

The Question of Talent

Other very wealthy men in the new Gilded Age talk of themselves as having a flair for business not unlike Derek Jeter’s “unique talent” for baseball, as Leo J. Hindery Jr. put it. “I think there are people, including myself at certain times in my career,” Mr. Hindery said, “who because of their uniqueness warrant whatever the market will bear.”

He counts himself as a talented entrepreneur, having assembled from scratch a cable television sports network, the YES Network. “Jeter makes an unbelievable amount of money,” said Mr. Hindery, who now manages a private equity fund, “but you look at him and you say, ‘Wow, I cannot find another ballplayer with that same set of skills.’ ”

A handful of critics among the new elite, or close to it, are scornful of such self-appraisal. “I don’t see a relationship between the extremes of income now and the performance of the economy,” Paul A. Volcker, a former Federal Reserve Board chairman, said in an interview, challenging the contentions of the very rich that they are, more than others, the driving force of a robust economy.

The great fortunes today are largely a result of the long bull market in stocks, Mr. Volcker said. Without rising stock prices, stock options would not have become a major source of riches for financiers and chief executives. Stock prices rise for a lot of reasons, Mr. Volcker said, including ones that have nothing to do with the actions of these people.

Damon Winter/The New York Times

Name Robert Crandall Age 71 Assets Under $100 Million Source Airline Industry Current Job Retired Philosophy “The way our society equalizes incomes is through much higher taxes than we have today. There is no other way.”

Age of Riches

The .01 Percent

Articles in this series are examining the effects of the growing concentration of wealth.

The Wealthiest Americans

“The market did not go up because businessmen got so much smarter,” he said, adding that the 1950s and 1960s, which the new tycoons denigrate as bureaucratic and uninspiring, “were very good economic times and no one was making what they are making now.”

James D. Sinegal, chief executive of Costco, the discount retailer, echoes that sentiment. “Obscene salaries send the wrong message through a company,” he said. “The message is that all brilliance emanates from the top; that the worker on the floor of the store or the factory is insignificant.”

A legendary chief executive from an earlier era is similarly critical. He is Robert L. Crandall, 71, who as president and then chairman and chief executive, led American Airlines through the early years of deregulation and pioneered the development of the hub-and-spoke system for managing airline routes. He retired in 1997, never having made more than $5 million a year, in the days before upper-end incomes really took off.

He is speaking out now, he said, because he no longer has to worry that his “radical views” might damage the reputation of American or that of the companies he served until recently as a director. The nation’s corporate chiefs would be living far less affluent lives, Mr. Crandall said, if fate had put them in, say, Uzbekistan instead of the United States, “where they are the beneficiaries of a market system that rewards a few people in extraordinary ways and leaves others behind.”

“The way our society equalizes incomes,” he argued, “is through much higher taxes than we have today. There is no other way.”

The New Tycoons

The new Gilded Age has created only one fortune as large as those of the Rockefellers, the Carnegies and the Vanderbilts — that of Bill Gates, according to various compilations. His net worth, measured as a share of the economy’s output, ranks him fifth among the 30 all-time wealthiest American families, just ahead of Carnegie. Only one other living billionaire makes the cut: Warren E. Buffett, in 16th place.

Individual fortunes nearly a century ago were so large that just 30 tycoons — Rockefeller was by far the wealthiest — had accumulated net worth equal to 5 percent of the national income. Their wealth flowed mainly from the empires they built in manufacturing, railroads, oil, coal, urban transit and mass retailing as the United States grew into the world’s largest industrial economy.

Today the fortunes of the very wealthiest are spread more widely. In addition to stock and stock options, low-interest credit has brought wealth to more families — by, for example, facilitating the sale of individual businesses for much greater sums than in the past. The fortunes amassed in hedge funds and in private equity often stem from deals involving huge amounts of easy credit and vast pools of capital available for investment.

The high-tech boom and the Internet unfolded against this backdrop. The rising stock market multiplied the wealth of Bill Gates as his software became the industry standard. It did the same for numerous others who financed start-ups on a shoestring and then went public at enormous gain.

Over a longer period, the market lifted the value of Mr. Buffett’s judicious investments and timely acquisitions, and he emerged as the extraordinarily wealthy Sage of Omaha, in effect, a baron of the new Gilded Age whose views are strikingly similar to those of Carnegie and Mr. Weill.

Like them, Mr. Buffett, 78, sees himself as lucky, having had the good fortune, as he put it, to have been born in America, white and male, and “wired for asset allocation” just when all four really paid off. He dwelt on his good fortune in a recent appearance at a fund-raiser for Hillary Rodham Clinton, who is vying for Mr. Buffett’s support of her presidential candidacy.

“This is a significantly richer country than 10, 20, 30, 40, 50 years ago,” he declared, backing his assertion with a favorite statistic. The national income, divided by the population, is a very abundant $45,000 per capita, he said, a number that reflects an affluent nation but also obscures the lopsided income distribution intertwined with the prosperity.

“Society should place an initial emphasis on abundance,” Mr. Buffett argued, but “then should continuously strive” to redistribute the abundance more equitably.

No income tax existed in Carnegie’s day to do this, and neither Mr. Buffett nor Mr. Weill push for sharply higher income tax rates now, although Mr. Buffett criticizes the present tax code as unfairly skewed in his favor. Like Carnegie, philanthropy is their preference. “I want to give away my money rather than have somebody take it away,” Mr. Weill said.

Mr. Buffett is already well down that path. Most of his wealth is in the stock of his company, Berkshire Hathaway, and he is transferring the majority of that stock to the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation so the Gateses can “materially expand” their giving.

“In my will,” he has written, echoing Carnegie’s last wishes, “I’ve stipulated that the proceeds from all Berkshire shares I still own at death are to be used for philanthropic purposes.”

The new tycoons describe a history that gives them a heroic role. The American economy, they acknowledge, did grow more rapidly on average in the decades immediately after World War II than it is growing today. Incomes rose faster than inflation for most Americans and the spread between rich and poor was much less. But the United States was far and away the dominant economy, and government played a strong supporting role. In such a world, the new tycoons argue, business leaders needed only to be good managers.

Age of Riches

The .01 Percent

Articles in this series are examining the effects of the growing concentration of wealth.

The Wealthiest Americans

Then, with globalization, with America competing once again for first place as strenuously as it had in the first Gilded Age, the need grew for a different type of business leader — one more entrepreneurial, more daring, more willing to take risks, more like the rough and tumble tycoons of the first Gilded Age. Lew Frankfort, chairman and chief executive of Coach, the manufacturer and retailer of trendy upscale handbags, who was among the nation’s highest paid chief executives last year, recaps the argument.

“The professional class that developed in business in the ’50s and ’60s,” he said, “was able as America grew at very steady rates to become industry leaders and move their organizations forward in most categories: steel, autos, housing, roads.”

That changed with the arrival of “the technological age,” in Mr. Frankfort’s view. Innovation became a requirement, in addition to good management skills — and innovation has played a role in Coach’s marketing success. “To be successful,” Mr. Frankfort said, “you now needed vision, lateral thinking, courage and an ability to see things, not the way they were but how they might be.”

Mr. Weill’s vision was to create a financial institution in the style of those that flourished in the last Gilded Age. Although insurance is gone, Citigroup still houses commercial and investment banking and stock brokerage.

The Glass-Steagall Act of 1933 outlawed the mix, blaming conflicts of interest inherent in such a combination for helping to bring on the 1929 crash and the Depression. The pen displayed in Mr. Weill’s hallway is one of those Mr. Clinton used to revoke Glass-Steagall in 1999. He did so partly to accommodate the newly formed Citigroup, whose heft was necessary, Mr. Weill said, if the United States was to be a powerhouse in global financial markets.

“The whole world is moving to the American model of free enterprise and capital markets,” Mr. Weill said, arguing that Wall Street cannot be a big player in China or India without giants like Citigroup. “Not having American financial institutions that really are at the fulcrum of how these countries are converting to a free-enterprise system,” he said, “would really be a shame.”

Such talk alarms Arthur Levitt Jr., a former chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission, who started on Wall Street years ago as a partner with Mr. Weill in a stock brokerage firm. Mr. Levitt has publicly lamented the end of Glass-Steagall, but Mr. Weill argues that its repeal “created the opportunities to keep people still moving forward.”

Mr. Levitt is skeptical. “I view a gilded age as an age in which warning flags are flying and are seen by very few people,” he said, referring to the potential for a Wall Street firm to fail or markets to crash in a world of too much deregulation. “I think this is a time of great prosperity and a time of great danger.”

It’s Not the Money, or Is It?

Not that money is the only goal. Mr. Hindery, the cable television entrepreneur, said he would have worked just as hard for a much smaller payoff, and others among the very wealthy agreed. “I worked because I loved what I was doing,” Mr. Weill said, insisting that not until he retired did “I have a chance to sit back and count up what was on the table.” And Kenneth C. Griffin, who received more than $1 billion last year as chairman of a hedge fund, the Citadel Investment Group, declared: “The money is a byproduct of a passionate endeavor.”

Mr. Griffin, 38, argued that those who focus on the money — and there is always a get-rich crowd — “soon discover that wealth is not a particularly satisfying outcome.” His own team at Citadel, he said, “loves the problems they work on and the challenges inherent to their business.”

Mr. Griffin maintained that he has created wealth not just for himself but for many others. “We have helped to create real social value in the U.S. economy,” he said. “We have invested money in countless companies over the years and they have helped countless people.”

The new tycoons oppose raising taxes on their fortunes. Unlike Mr. Crandall, neither Mr. Weill nor Mr. Griffin nor most of the dozen others who were interviewed favor tax rates higher than they are today, although a few would go along with a return to the levels of the Clinton administration. The marginal tax on income then was 39.6 percent, and on capital gains, 20 percent. That was still far below the 70 percent and 39 percent in the late 1970s. Those top rates, in the Bush years, are now 35 percent and 15 percent, respectively.

“The income distribution has to stand,” Mr. Griffin said, adding that by trying to alter it with a more progressive income tax, “you end up in problematic circumstances. In the current world, there will be people who will move from one tax area to another. I am proud to be an American. But if the tax became too high, as a matter of principle I would not be working this hard.”

Creating Wealth

Some chief executives of publicly traded companies acknowledge that their fortunes are indeed large — but that it reflects only a small share of the corporate value created on their watch.

Mr. Frankfort, the 61-year-old Coach chief, took home $44.4 million last year. His net worth is in the high nine figures. Yet his pay and net worth, he notes, are small compared with the gain to shareholders since Coach went public six years ago, with Mr. Frankfort at the helm. The market capitalization, the value of all the shares, is nearly $18 billion, up from an initial $700 million.

“I don’t think it is unreasonable,” he said, “for the C.E.O. of a company to realize 3 to 5 percent of the wealth accumulation that shareholders realize.”

That strikes Robert C. Pozen as a reasonable standard. He made a name for himself — and a fortune — overseeing the investment department at Fidelity.

Mr. Weill makes a similar point. Escorting a visitor down his hall of tributes, he lingers at framed charts with multicolored lines tracking Citigroup’s stock price. Two of the lines compare the price in the five years of Mr. Weill’s active management with that of Mr. Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway during the same period. Citigroup went up at six times the pace of Berkshire.

“I think that the results our company had, which is where the great majority of my wealth came from, justified what I got,” Mr. Weill said.

New Technologies

Others among the very rich argue that their wealth helps them develop new technologies that benefit society. Steve Perlman, a Silicon Valley innovator, uses his fortune from breakthrough inventions to help finance his next attempt at a new technology so far out, he says, that even venture capitalists approach with caution. He and his partners, co-founders of WebTV Networks, which developed a way to surf the Web using a television set, sold that still profitable system to Microsoft in 1997 for $503 million.

Mr. Perlman’s share went into the next venture, he says, and the next. One of his goals with his latest enterprise, a private company called Rearden L.L.C., is to develop over several years a technology that will make film animation seem like real-life movies. “There was no one who would invest,” Mr. Perlman said. So he used his own money.

In an earlier era, big corporations and government were the major sources of money for cutting-edge research with an uncertain outcome. Bell Labs in New Jersey was one of those research centers, and Mr. Perlman, now a 46-year-old computer engineer with 71 patents to his name, said that, in an earlier era, he could easily have gone to Bell as a salaried inventor.

In the 1950s, for example, he might have been on the team that built the first transistor, a famous Bell Labs breakthrough. Instead, after graduating from Columbia University, he went to Apple in Silicon Valley, then to Microsoft and finally out on his own.

“I would have been happy as a clam to participate in the development of the transistor,” Mr. Perlman said. “The path I took was the path that was necessary to do what I was doing.”

Carnegie’s Philanthropy

In contrast to many of his peers in corporate America, Mr. Sinegal, 70, the Costco chief executive, argues that the nation’s business leaders would exercise their “unique skills” just as vigorously for “$10 million instead of $200 million, if that were the standard.”

As a co-founder of Costco, which now has 132,000 employees, Mr. Sinegal still holds $150 million in company stock. He is certainly wealthy. But he distinguishes between a founder’s wealth and the current practice of paying a chief executive’s salary in stock options that balloon into enormous amounts. His own salary as chief executive was $349,000 last year, incredibly modest by current standards.

“I think that most of the people running companies today are motivated and pay is a small portion of the motivation,” Mr. Sinegal said. So why so much pressure for ever higher pay?

“Because everyone else is getting it,” he said. “It is as simple as that. If somehow a proclamation were made that C.E.O.’s could only make a maximum of $300,000 a year, you would not have any shortage of very qualified men and women seeking the jobs.”

Looking back, none of the nation’s legendary tycoons was more aware of his good luck than Andrew Carnegie.

“Carnegie made it abundantly clear that the centerpiece of his gospel of wealth philosophy was that individuals do not create wealth by themselves,” said David Nasaw, a historian at City University of New York and the author of “Andrew Carnegie” (Penguin Press). “The creator of wealth in his view was the community, and individuals like himself were trustees of that wealth.”

Repaying the community did not mean for Carnegie raising the wages of his steelworkers. Quite the contrary, he sometimes cut wages and, in doing so, presided over violent antiunion actions.

Carnegie did not concern himself with income inequality. His whole focus was philanthropy. He favored a confiscatory estate tax for those who failed to arrange to return, before their deaths, the fortunes the community had made possible. And today dozens of libraries, cultural centers, museums and foundations bear Carnegie’s name.

“Confiscatory” does not appear in Mr. Weill’s public comments on the estate tax, or in those of Mr. Gates. They note that the estate tax, now being phased out at the urging of President Bush, will return in full in 2010, unless Congress acts otherwise.

They publicly favor retaining an estate tax but focus their attention on philanthropy.

Mr. Weill ticks off a list of gifts that he and his wife, Joan, have made. Some bear their names, and will for years to come. With each bequest, one or the other joins the board. Appropriately, Carnegie Hall has been a big beneficiary, and Mr. Weill as chairman was honored at a huge fund-raising party that Carnegie Hall gave on his 70th birthday.

The Weills — matching what everyone else pledged — gave $30 million to enhance the concert hall that Andrew Carnegie built in 1890 in pursuit of returning his fortune to the community, establishing a standard that today’s tycoons embrace.

“We have that in common,” Mr. Weill said.

Bollywood star Sanjay Dutt jailed for six years

August 1, 2007 by riajulhaque

He broke down as soon as the judge had sentenced him to six years in jail. At that moment, Sanjay Dutt looked nothing like the movie star that he is. “I made a mistake 14 years back,” he said. “Please grant me time to surrender.”

Dutt’s lawyer Farhana Shah said the actor would move the Supreme Court, asking for Judge Kode’s order to be set aside, and plead for bail till the petition is disposed of.Fourteen years ago, Dutt bought a 9-mm pistol and an AK-56 rifle from people who a month later unleashed the 1993 Mumbai blasts that killed 257 people. On Tuesday, in the central Mumbai court that had been set up to try those people, the past came back to haunt Dutt. “Everyone makes mistakes,” Judge Pramod Kode told him, “but the element of criminality in you is incurable.”

Towards evening, Dutt was taken away to Arthur Road Jail. He had asked for three things: that he be allowed to call his daughter Trishaala in New York; that he be imprisoned in Arthur Road Jail; and that the police do not hustle him. All three requests were granted.

Bollywood reacts

Actress Saira Bano: My God… what a punishment! We are totally heartbroken.

Actress Kirron Kher: I am shocked and saddened. He has suffered enough for 14 years (and) he has been exemplary in behaviour.

Producer-director Mahesh Bhatt: It’s a body blow. I cannot say the sentence was not fair… (but) six years is too strong.

Actor Suniel Shetty: He has the prayers of the entire film fraternity with him. We believe him completely. 

(Courtesy: Agencies)

Actor to move apex court

Dutt’s lawyer Farhana Shah said the actor would move the Supreme Court, asking for Judge Kode’s order to be set aside, and plead for bail till the petition is disposed of.

Tuesday’s sentencing brought the curtains down on the longest running trial in India’s judicial history. Twelve convicts have been given death; 20 have been sentenced to life imprisonment.

A little earlier, as Russi Mulla — who had disposed of the pistol that Dutt had bought was let off on probation — things had not looked so grim for the star. Soon after, Judge Kode ruled out probation for Dutt. From then on, the actor hung on to the judge’s every word.

When the sentence was announced, Dutt looked dazed and bewildered. “I had thought my probation application would be accepted, so I did not sort out my personal and family matters,” he said.

The judge was in no mood to relent. He said he saw a pattern in Dutt’s conduct at the time and that even if he had bought the guns for self-protection, he had committed a crime by buying them illegally. “Everybody commits an offence but involving others in the crime is a serious offence.”

Dutt was fined Rs 25,000. Kersi Adejania, who had melted the AK-56 at Dutt’s request, was sentenced to two years in prison but was later released on bail. Yusuf Nulwalla, an old friend of Dutt’s, and the man who had carried the guns away from the actor’s home and helped in their melting, was sentenced to five years in jail and fined Rs 25,000.

Dutt’s lawyer Farhana Shah said the actor would move the Supreme Court, asking for Judge Kode’s order to be set aside, and plead for bail till the petition is disposed of.

That fateful day

August 1, 2007 by riajulhaque

The 1993 bombings were a series of thirteen bomb blasts that took place in Bombay (now Mumbai) on March 12, 1993. The coordinated attacks were the most destructive bomb explosions in the history of India. The single-day attacks resulted in over 250 civilian deaths and 700 injuries. The attacks are suspected to have been coordinated by notorious underworld don Dawood Ibrahim. It is believed that the attacks were carried out in retaliation for the destruction of the historic Babri Masjid on December 6, 1992, which resulted in nationwide riots that led to the deaths of hundreds of Muslims and Hindus.

U.S. Set to Offer Huge Arms Deal to Saudi Arabia

July 29, 2007 by riajulhaque

WASHINGTON, July 27 — The Bush administration is preparing to ask Congress to approve an arms sale package for Saudi Arabia and its neighbors that is expected to eventually total $20 billion at a time when some United States officials contend that the Saudis are playing a counterproductive role in Iraq.

The proposed package of advanced weaponry for Saudi Arabia, which includes advanced satellite-guided bombs, upgrades to its fighters and new naval vessels, has made Israel and some of its supporters in Congress nervous. Senior officials who described the package on Friday said they believed that the administration had resolved those concerns, in part by promising Israel $30.4 billion in military aid over the next decade, a significant increase over what Israel has received in the past 10 years.

But administration officials remained concerned that the size of the package and the advanced weaponry it contains, as well as broader concerns about Saudi Arabia’s role in Iraq, could prompt Saudi critics in Congress to oppose the package when Congress is formally notified about the deal this fall.

In talks about the package, the administration has not sought specific assurances from Saudi Arabia that it would be more supportive of the American effort in Iraq as a condition of receiving the arms package, the officials said.

The officials said the plan to bolster the militaries of Persian Gulf countries is part of an American strategy to contain the growing power of Iran in the region and to demonstrate that, no matter what happens in Iraq, Washington remains committed to its longtime Arab allies. Officials from the State Department and the Pentagon agreed to outline the terms of the deal after some details emerged from closed briefings this week on Capitol Hill.

The officials said Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates, who are to make a joint visit to Saudi Arabia next week, still intended to use the trip to press the Saudis to do more to help Iraq’s Shiite-dominated government.

“The role of the Sunni Arab neighbors is to send a positive, affirmative message to moderates in Iraq in government that the neighbors are with you,” a senior State Department official told reporters in a conference call on Friday. More specifically, the official said, the United States wants the gulf states to make clear to Sunnis engaged in violence in Iraq that such actions are “killing your future.”

In addition to promising an increase in American military aid to Israel, the Pentagon is seeking to ease Israel’s concerns over the proposed weapons sales to Saudi Arabia by asking the Saudis to accept restrictions on the range, size and location of the satellite-guided bombs, including a commitment not to store the weapons at air bases close to Israeli territory, the officials said.

The package and the possible steps to allay Israel’s concerns were described to Congress this week, in an effort by the administration to test the reaction on Capitol Hill before entering into final negotiations on the package with Saudi officials. The Saudis had requested that Congress be told about the planned sale, the officials said, in an effort to avoid the kind of bruising fight on Capitol Hill that occurred in the 1980s over proposed arms sales to the kingdom.

In his visit with King Abdullah and other Saudi officials next week, Mr. Gates plans to describe “what the administration is willing to go forward with” in the arms package and “what we would recommend to the Hill and others,” according to a senior Pentagon official, who conducted a background briefing on the upcoming trip with reporters on Friday.

The official added that Mr. Gates would also reassure the Saudis that “regardless of what happens in the near term in Iraq that our commitment in the region remains firm, remains steadfast and that, in fact, we are looking to enhance and develop it.”

The $20 billion price tag on the package is more than double what officials originally estimated when details became public this spring. Even the higher figure is a rough estimate that could fluctuate depending on the final package, which would be carried out over a number of years, officials said.

Worried about the impression that the United States was starting an arms race in the region, State and Defense Department officials stressed that the arms deal was being proposed largely in response to improvements in Iran’s military capabilities and to counter the threat posed by its nuclear program, which the Bush administration contends is aimed at building nuclear weapons. 

Along with Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates are likely to receive equipment and weaponry from the arms sales under consideration, officials said. In general, the United States is interested in upgrading the countries’ air and missile defense systems, improving their navies and making modest improvements in their air forces, administration officials said, though not all the packages would be the same.  

Ms. Rice is expected to announce Monday that the administration will open formal discussions with each country about the proposed packages, in hopes of reaching agreements by the fall.

Along with the announcement of formal talks with Persian Gulf allies on the arms package, Ms. Rice is planning to outline the new agreement to provide military aid to Israel, as well as a similar accord with Egypt.

The $30.4 billion being promised to Israel is $9.1 billion more than Israel has received over the past decade, an increase of nearly 43 percent.

A senior administration official said the sizable increase was a result of Israel’s need to replace equipment expended in its war against Hezbollah in Lebanon last summer, as well as to maintain its advantage in advanced weaponry as other countries in the region modernize their forces.

In defending the proposed sale to Saudi Arabia and other gulf states, the officials noted that the Saudis and several of the other countries were in talks with suppliers other than the United States. If the packages offered to them by the United States are blocked or come with too many conditions, the officials said, the Persian Gulf countries could turn elsewhere for similar equipment, reducing American influence in the region.

The United States has made few, if any, sales of satellite-guided munitions to Arab countries in the past, though Israel has received them since the mid-1990s as part of a United States policy of ensuring that Israel has a military edge over its regional rivals.

Israeli officials have made specific requests aimed at eliminating concerns that satellite-guided bombs sold to the Saudis could be used against its territory, administration officials said.

Their major concern is not a full-scale Saudi attack, but the possibility that a rogue pilot armed with one of the bombs could attack on his own or that the Saudi government could one day be overthrown and the weapons could fall into the hands of a more radical regime, officials said.

Victor & inventories of 9/11

July 24, 2007 by riajulhaque

Viktor Bout is still at large and dealing arms. Bout only became a high priority for international authorities when his African arms dealings became very prominent. His criminal profile in the public eye reached a high-water mark with the September 11, 2001, attacks on the World Trade Center and Pentagon. Bout supplied weapons to the Taliban, which has close ties to al-Qaeda. This placed Bout on a top-priority list for U.S. officials.

Years of dealing in arms, however, has allowed Bout to build a large network of business and political contacts. The Arab Emirates eventually caved in to co-operate on capturing Bout. Bout’s business dealings were careful and complicated, making it hard for authorities to assess, for instance, which airplanes are his and which are operating illegally. Constantly moving the locations of himself and his companies, not to mention frequent re-registering—often illegally—his aircraft has made it hard for US and Interpol authorities to build a case against him. He was finally charged prior to 9/11, he now lives in Moscow openly, though his warrant for arrest by Interpol has not been taken seriously by Russia.

In 2002 both Belgium and Interpol issued warrants for his arrest. When the heat was turned up, Bout fled to Russia, where he remains protected by corrupt officials and businessmen. The UN has banned Bout from international travel and frozen his foreign bank accounts.

Bout is said to have at least five passports and several aliases. He resides in Russia with his wife, Alla, and her father, “Zuiguin”. According to a UN report, “information from the United States suggests that his wife’s father, “Zuiguin”, at one point held a high position in the KGB, perhaps even as high as a Deputy Chairman.”

It is unclear whether Bout is still involved in dealing arms to Africa, as he is thought to have extensive contact with many of the most powerful war lords on the continent.

Viktor Bout

July 24, 2007 by riajulhaque

Viktor Anatolyevich Bout (born January 13, 1967 in Dushanbe, USSR. now Tajikistan, according to his official passport. However, Bout stated in a 2002 radio interview that he was born near what is now Ashgabat, Turkmenistan, and a 2001 South African intelligence file listed him as Ukrainian in origin) is a Russian arms dealer. He is nicknamed “the Merchant of Death.”

Recent reports suggest he is also operating in Iraq using front companies and Cargo Airlifts (Airline Transport, Air West, Aerocom and TransAvia Export). Bout came to officials’ attention in the 1990s, when he was accused of supplying arms to rebels in West Africa after a cease-fire agreement had been brokered. At that time he owned or was using many airlines, including Air Cess and Centrafrican, which were later forced to shut down by authorities. He was also the official arms supplier and dealer to the deposed regime of Charles Taylor in Liberia.

In May 2006, when 200,000 AK-47 assault rifles went missing in transit from Bosnia to Iraq, one of Bout’s airlines was the carrier.[1]

Yuri Orlov, Nicolas Cage’s character in the 2005 film Lord of War is said to be partially based on Viktor Bout.

Viktor Bout was a former Soviet military officer who has turned his military knowledge into a lucrative illegal arms trade. Often referred to as the Embargo Buster, Bout made a significant amount of money selling illegal arms to countries that the UN has placed arms embargoes on. He first appeared on the radar when he sold weapons to African nations in civil wars under such embargoes.

Little is known about Bout before his military career, other than he was born to two Russian parents in 1967. After military training, he worked at a Russian military base in Vitebsk as a navigator. His duties expanded, eventually including the training of commando troops of the Russian Air Force.[2] He graduated from Moscow’s Military Institute in 1991 for foreign languages and is said to be fluent in 6 languages, including Russian, Uzbek, English, French and Portuguese. After this he became a translator for the Soviet Army in Angola. In the same year the military base he was serving at was dissolved due to the collapse of the Soviet Union and Bout and his colleagues found themselves highly trained, but without jobs. He then started the Transavia Export Cargo company, which aided Belgian soldiers in Somalia in 1993. Russian sources have claimed that, in return for a cut of the profits, Bout was staked three Antonovs by the GRU of which he may well have been a member, given his association with the GRU school of foreign languages. Another of his early clients was the Islamic State of Afghanistan (later it was known by the name the Northern Alliance). Between 1992 and 1995, Bout made an alleged $50 million from supplying several Afghan groups.[3] This helped him grow his empire.

In 1995 Bout established the Trans Aviation Network Group in the Belgian city of Oostende. The company delivered weapons to the Islamic State of Afghanistan, but this relationship came to an end when the Taliban drove that government out of Kabul and reduced its control to just a few northern provinces. In May 1995 one of his shipments for the Afghan government was intercepted by the Taliban. In August 1995 the crew of this shipment escaped (or was released) from Afghanistan and soon after that Bout had a new customer: the Taliban.[4]

During this period Bout lived in Belgium, even purchasing a mansion and several luxury cars, as well as an apartment in Moscow. But in 1997 newspaper reports revealed his shady business, prompting Belgian authorities to investigate.[5] Bout moved to the United Arab Emirates; here he founded his United Arab Emirates company, which would become his main base of operations. In 1995 he found another company that would become synonymous with his dealings. Air Cess was based in Equatorial Guinea and registered in Liberia and was Bout’s main way of supplying arms to African conflicts. Bout seems to have sold to any group that could pay him for his weapons. US and UN officials say that Bout smuggled thousands upon thousands of assault rifles, grenade launchers, bullets and other weapons to African conflicts in Angola, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Democratic Republic of Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Kenya, Liberia, Libya, Congo-Brazzaville, Rwanda, Sierra Leone, South Africa, Sudan, Swaziland and Uganda.[6]

Most weapons smuggled into Africa came via Bulgaria, which Bout visited frequently between 1995 and 2000. From July 1997 to September 1998 Bout reportedly smuggled an estimated $14 million of weapons into Africa. In 2000 Bout also delivered helicopters, anti-aircraft guns and armored vehicles to Liberia. Bout also established Air Cess in Miami, Florida, in 1997. The company operated until September 2001, when it was dissolved. [7]

Viktor has essentially done business with anyone irrespective of ideaology, often times contracted on both sides of a war. As well as some of the more controversial customers such as the Taliban or Charles G. Taylor, the UN and the US have also paid for his services.

His nicknames, namely the ‘Embargo Buster’ and ‘Merchant of Death’, were coined by former British Foreign Office minister, Peter Hain. Upon reading the 2003 UN report on Bout’s activities, Hain said: “Bout is the leading merchant of death who is the principal conduit for planes and supply routes that take arms, including heavy military equipment, from east Europe, principally Bulgaria, Moldova, and Ukraine, to Liberia and Angola. The UN has exposed Bout as the center of a spider’s web of shady arms dealers, diamond brokers, and other operatives, sustaining the wars. Without someone like him we would be much, much, closer to ending the conflicts.” [8]

Lord of War

July 24, 2007 by riajulhaque

Lord of War is a 2005 film written and directed by Andrew Niccol and starring Nicolas Cage. It was released in the United States on September 16, 2005, with the DVD following on January 17, 2006 and the Blu-ray Disc on July 27, 2006.

Cage plays the antiheroic protagonist, an illegal arms dealer with a similarity to Russian arms dealer Viktor Bout.

The movie begins with Yuri Orlov (Nicolas Cage) standing in a sea of spent shell casings matter-of-factly stating, “There are over 550 million firearms in worldwide circulation. That’s one firearm for every twelve people on the planet. The only question is: How do you arm the other eleven?” The opening credits follow the life of an AK-47 cartridge: from a munitions assembly line in Odessa, Ukraine, to various arms dealing intermediaries, and ending in the head of a small African boy.

The rest of the movie is told in flashback, starting in the 1980s and ending in the completion of the opening scene.

Through voiceover, Yuri Orlov describes how he first became an arms dealer. Yuri and his family came to United States from Ukraine when he was a young boy. They live in Little Odessa, a Russian community in Brighton Beach in New York City. His family pretends to be Jewish for favorable immigration conditions. His family owns a restaurant, which is useful, “because people are always going to have to eat.” After Yuri sees a Russian Mafia boss kill his two would-be assassins, he decides to provide another necessity: guns.

Before beginning his career in earnest, he approaches Simeon Weisz (Ian Holm), a seasoned arms dealer, at an arms convention with a business proposal. Weisz turns him down, dismissing him as an amateur. Yuri then partners up with his brother Vitaly (Jared Leto) and begins selling arms. Yuri keeps his multiple identities and paperwork in a security container. He starts small and begins selling Israeli Uzis and M-16 rifles that the US Army left behind from the 1982 Lebanon War.

As he grows, Yuri (through voiceover) tells of his first incident with Jack Valentine (Ethan Hawke), a dogged Interpol agent who cannot be bought with money. Their first encounter in the movie is when Yuri is on the ship Kristol smuggling a shipment of weapons, including M-16s. He gets a call stating that the authorities have been tipped off; Yuri changes the ship name to the Kono and uses a French flag turned sideways to seem like a Dutch flag, and the first encounter with Jack Valentine smoothly plays out in Yuri’s favor.

During his latest business deal with a Bolivian drug lord, Yuri is paid in cocaine instead of cash. Yuri objects and is shot in the heated exchange. He hastily agrees to the deal and leaves in a taxi with the load of cocaine. Vitaly is unsure of what to do next and asks Yuri what to do. Yuri answers by saying “We celebrate.” They both end up snorting cocaine, but Vitaly becomes addicted, and Yuri takes him to a rehabilitation center. From then on, Yuri’s business is a one man show. Shortly after this episode, he begins to court Ava Fontaine (Bridget Moynahan), a successful model who came from the same neighborhood. After booking a fake photo shoot and the entire hotel for $32,000, they marry, move into an apartment in Central Park West, Manhattan and later have a son. Ava pursues several other careers afterwards, but they do not succeed well.

His business is still relatively small, but Yuri gets his big break when the Soviet Union dissolves. Yuri rushes to Ukraine after watching Gorbachev’s Christmas Day 1991 resignation speech on television. He contacts his uncle, Dimitri, (“He was almost permanently shitfaced” Yuri says) a general of the former Soviet Army, and begins buying his tanks and AK-47s to expand his inventory. However, Yuri is not the only dealer trying to cash in. Weisz, falling on hard times now that the Soviet Union has fallen, tries to strike a deal with Yuri and Dimitri, but is rejected by both men. Soon afterwards, Yuri has another experience with Agent Valentine while trying to export a military helicopter (Soviet made Hind-D). Fortunately, a young Soviet Army mechanic is able to remove the Hind’s rockets just before Valentine arrives and he is forced to let Yuri go again (because of a loophole that weapons and helicopter, when shipped separately, comply with Interpol’s trade standards and practices).

Shortly after this, Dimitri is assassinated by a car bomb, compliments of Weisz. Yuri moves on to selling arms to the West African dictator of Liberia, André Baptiste. Baptiste, pleased with the relationship, proclaims that Yuri is a “Lord of War” (a mistaken translation of warlord). Meanwhile, Jack Valentine continues his pursuit of Yuri, confident that he will eventually slip up. He doggedly searches the garbage of the Orlov household. After painstakingly reconstructing a dumpster full of Yuri’s shredded documents, Valentine discovers that Yuri will soon be making a cargo run to Sierra Leone.

Valentine intercepts Yuri’s cargo plane. Yuri instructs the pilot to land the plane on a dirt road, knowing the fighter jet purusing him will not be able to land there. The plane lands safely and to destroy the evidence, he gives the entire arms shipment away to passers-by. When Jack Valentine finally arrives, Yuri (through voiceover) states, “You could find more guns on a plane full of Quakers”. Jack deliberately keeps Yuri detained for twenty-four hours (the longest detention allowed without charge), before he is forced to release him. Yuri is left unguarded outside the plane with handcuffs on and watches as the locals strip the plane down to pieces.

By now, Yuri has established a very good relationship with André Baptiste, but is horrified when Baptiste captures Weisz as a “gift.” Baptiste invites Yuri to kill Weisz. When Yuri refuses, Baptiste puts the gun in his hand while slowly pulling the trigger himself. Yuri is invited to say “stop” at any time, but only says it after the shot.

After Yuri does not prevent the death of Weisz, he goes to a hotel and bar, courtesy of Baptiste, and talks with the bartender. The bartender offers Yuri a sniff of brown-brown, a combination of gunpowder and cocaine. After sniffing the brown-brown, Yuri goes through the town, obviously delusional. He is confronted by a one-armed girl, a hallucination of Weisz, and two guards.

Jack keeps Yuri under surveillance, and one day he reveals to Ava that Yuri is an arms dealer. At first, she does not believe him, but eventually realizes the truth. Ava confronts him about his business; he promises that he will stop. He makes more legal deals to exploit the resources of poor nations, but complains that the margins are low and competition is high. Six months later, Baptiste and his son come over and visit Yuri (on their way to United Nations headquarters for peace talks) with another arms deal offer. Yuri initially refuses, but when Baptiste indicates that he will be much more generous than usual(He hands Yuri a large diamond), Yuri relents.

He takes Vitaly along to the deal, which turns out to be in Sierra Leone, where Baptiste hopes to assist the violent rebels of the Revolutionary United Front. However, during the deal, Vitaly becomes distressed: he sees men kill a mother and child in a nearby village of unarmed civilians and tells Yuri that their customers will kill all the villagers as soon as Yuri sells the weapons. He pleads with Yuri to cancel the shipment. Yuri, who goes by the slogan, “It’s not our fight,” tries to convince him that someone else will sell the weapons if they do not; he also argues that both of them will be killed if they try to cancel the deal. Vitaly pretends to agree. However, he then takes two grenades, destroys half of Yuri’s shipments, and kills Baptiste’s son before nearby guards kill him. Yuri only receives half of the payment due to the destruction of the weapons. Of the incident, Yuri says that it was true that the village dwellers were massacred after he handed the weapons over, but, “There were half a dozen other massacres that week. You can’t stop them all. In my experience, you can’t stop any of them.” He then delivers one of the film’s most notable lines, “They say that ‘evil prevails when good men fail to act.’ They ought to say ‘evil prevails.’”

Yuri ships his brother’s remains back to the United States. He pays a Monrovian doctor 20 dollars to remove the bullets from Vitaly’s body and forge a death certificate, but one bullet remains, and Yuri is stopped by customs. Meanwhile, while being followed by Jack Valentine, Ava finds Yuri’s security container, finally establishing the definitive proof of Yuri’s guilt. Ava takes their son and leaves him. When Yuri calls his parents, his mother says, “Both my sons are dead.” Valentine detains Yuri and tells him that he has a long jail sentence ahead of him, but Yuri abruptly brings him back to reality. He then proclaims himself as a “necessary evil,” as he does transactions that the United States federal government is afraid to do. Yuri also explains that the U.S sells more guns in a day than he does in a year, and that a trial would reveal these embarrassing truths. Yuri is released as a result by a high ranking US officer.

A free man again, and without his family and friends, he returns to selling arms without guilt. The movie ends by proclaiming on-screen that it is “based on actual events” and that, while arms traders like Yuri Orlov continue to thrive, the U.S., the UK, France, Russia and China (the five permanent members of the UN Security Council) are the world’s leading arms suppliers.

Shouldn’t Akter Hamid Khan be awarded for Nobel Peace Prize?

July 23, 2007 by riajulhaque

Dr Muhammad Younis was awarded Nobel peace prize for the contribution of poverty alleviation. His micro credit program and empowerment of women pleased the jurists. However, this prize was controversial as it was politically considered. In an article, writer Badruddin Omar wrote in an article ‘Next election in Bangladesh and Nobel peace prize’ in his ‘Poverty business of Younis’ book , “ Those who influenced for choosing Nobel peace prize was impossible to anticipate .Because the decision was taken quickly and for the need of American imperialism ..” Nagib Mahfuz, Egyptian Nobel laureate was also chosen from the political point of view. As he was secular he could have been used to divide among the Muslims. In Pakistan Mr Abdus Samad, Nobel Laureate was also chosen as he was Kadiani; again he was chosen to divide the Muslim Society. There is another perception: to make a familiar face for the use of political gain. All this presumption can no longer be over looked. Interestingly, the man who was the initiator of poverty alleviation in Bangladesh , Dr. Abdul Hamid Khan was not chosen for Nobel Peace Prize anymore. A few knows about him. Akter Hamid Khan born in Agra , India in 1914 .He completed his MA degree from Agra University in 1934 and joined Indian Civil Service (ICS). As an apprentice he studied literature and history in Chambridge University . As an ICS officer, he spent most of his life time in the then East Bengal.During Great famine in 1943 ,he was so shocked with the inhumane role of the Government he resigned from the post and started as a day laborer and locksmith in avillage near Aligor . In 1947 he started the teaching profession in Jameia Milia in Delhi and passed three yars in the institution .After the liberation in 1947, he migrated in Karachi and came to Comilla Victoria College as a teacher .he stayed there till 1958.In the village he was interested about the rural development and his revolutionary thinking sparked from there. In 1958, he went to Michigan State University in the USA for the training of rural development.Returning from there he set up BIRD in Comilla and became the first Director of it. He worked as a Director till 1971. After liberation war he moved to Pakistan and worked in Agriculture University from 1972 to 1973. He came back to Michigan University in 1973 and stayed there till 1973. 1978-79 he worked as an adviser to the Rural Development Authority .In 1980 he established ‘Orangi Pilot project’ (OPP) in Karachi .Since then OPP was taken as the biggest ‘Area Development Project’ in Asia .Akter Hamid Khan was recognized for his unprecedented project .He was an intellectual had vast knowledge in Bengali, English ,Arabic, Urdu and Hindi. Furthermore, he contributed avist number of articles, reports, books .Most of them were dedicated to the rural development issue.
Bird accumulated his idea under ‘The works of Akter hamid Khan’ (1982) in three parts .For the contribution of rural development the then Pakistani ruler awarded him ‘Sitara-e-Pakistan’ in 1961 and Magsesi Award.
Michigan University awarded him Doctor of Law in 1964.
So no doubt about his poverty alleviation theme .He was the first man in the area should have been awarded for Nobel Peace Prize since poverty played a vigorous role to form a different political culture. To sum, Akter Hamid Khan should have been called for the prize. Then what was the cause to select other than Akter Hamid Khan. The answer was clear .Since he was a devoted Muslim, he avoided usury as Mr.Younis was selected for his contribution to introduce usury of 34% for the eradication of Muslim Identity. I think any nation can adopt the Model of Akter Hamid Khan. Source :BANGLAPEDIA

Roots of corruption, burglary and terrorism in the sub-continent

July 23, 2007 by riajulhaque

Corruption is widely discussed in Bangladesh as it is mentioned the main hindrance for the Bangladeshi development. In the last years, mainly with report of Transparency International of Bangladesh, a European organization, the corruption became the hard topic .Since the poverty was not reducing, on the other hand, wealth circuited among the wealthy persons, the concerned group in Bangladesh started to think about the cause of the problem.. In part of that effort, I tried to extract the fact why the corruption widely spreaded in the subcontinent basically in present Bangladesh .
Since the legacy of history is responsible for the corruption it can be divided few periods to weigh up the level of corruption.
There are: 1.      Mughal Period . 2.      English Period. 3.      Pakistan Period. 4.      Bangladesh period 1. Mughal Period: While the English gained their power to influence the politics in this region, Shaista Khan ruled Bengal area; he was the maternal uncle of Aurongzeb. He was very intelligent and resisted the English conspiracy commonly conducted through Business and commerce channel. He had to arrange war against English in order to halt their conspiracy; even he smashed the backbone of terrorist of Firingi and Mog who conducted slave trade in the region. They abducted the innocent male female and children and tortured, sold and terrorized the region. Shaista Khan with the aid of Aurongzeb punished them with the military and the region was fred from their heinous activities. Later when he went and replaced by the son of Aurongzeb Muhammad Azam, a record of corruption painted in the history of Bengal . And who introduced: that was English. After many crossroads, the English attained the permission to do business in Bengal area at the second half of the 16 th century. The English set up khuti in 1668 in Dhaka and 1698 in Kolkata .That permission was called ‘Dastak’ in history .Misusing with the Dastak the English introduced many types of corruption in the area which made a great impact over the local Economy. The main l;ocal aide of the corruption was Hindu community which was mentioned in the MN Roy quoted in Dr.Qazi Abdul Mannan (1969) pp. 28 , “ It is a historical fact that a very large section of the Hindu Community welcomed the advent of the English Power .” According to N.K Sinha quoted in Mannan (1969) pp. 28 : Umi Chand, Gopinath Sheth, Ramkrisna Sheth, Shovaram Bosak, Lokhikantha became famous for the collaboration with the Company. According to Abbas Ali Khan (1994) it is mentioned that: “After Shaista Khan Fida Khan and the son of Emperor Aurogzeb, Prince Muhammad Azam became the subadar of Bengal . In 1678, when Azam appointed as the Subadar the English bribed him twenty one thousand taka to attain the vested interest .”The conspiracy with the aid of English was welcomed by a vested business class who was basically Hindu and who was greed of wealth and ultimately power as the political power maximizes the wealth if the state mechanism is handled properly. In part of that mission, in the court of Murshid kuli khan the Hindus became the factor with the covert aid of the English .The Historical sources said that in 1727, after the death of Murshidkuli Khan the Hindus power elite resisted Sharfarz Khan, since in that situation he was not considered as the favorable person to them .They enthroned his father Sujauddin and during that time the palace – conspiracy roared in a peak. The legacy crippled up to the fall of Sirazudaullah. During that time the corruption in the palace rocketed, even the mother of Sirajudaullah began opium trade with English. According to Khan (1994) pp. 87 the East Indian Company Commander Lord Clive bribed the Chief Of Army of Sirajudaullah Nando Kumar ten to twelve thousand taka as set out the condition that if the English attacked Chandonnagar then it was to assist French .In the same way, if French attacked the English they had to assist the English. Clive grasped head of the Intelligence under his claw paying bribe/inducement. The ancient Bramin Pundit Chanakka suggested controlling the opponent by paying bribe which he mentioned Dum. Lack of commitment to people’s welfare, corruption to the beauracracy and military ,besides , Hindu power elite’s corruption and conspiracy assisted to mislay the independence of Bengal . 2. English Era: The English era fully plugged up the Islamic values which assisted the pulse of the region in a slower bit during the last phase of pre English era. To drag out the wealth from the region the English began to introduce the era of ‘terrorism, corruption and nepotism’ In 1757, on the palashi field the then Nabab Sirajudaullah was defeated with the conspiracy of the collaborator and conspirators who was organized for the time being with the assistance of the English traders East India Company. In the field of Palashi the majority Military was silent and acted in favor of British was vanished after conquering the power. Basically in that time the power was vested to the power elite in the palace of Murshidabad . Any organized social force viz. Ulema or common Muslims were not nourished by the power elite which helped to fall the Siraz era. The establishments by the rule of English are as follows: •  The inception of the bribe culture in the politics. •  Massive divide among the citizens in the country. •  The inception of politics of robbery, burglary, poverty, disease, feminine, exploitation with the introduction of Roman law. •  The inception of the bribe culture in the politics:After the fall of Bengal in the hand of East India Company , bribe culture became widespread .To pacify the new ruling elite , the local greedy interest group had to pay huge amount of bribe in order to make place in the politics . Between 1757 to 1765 the company and its local employees earned 62, 61,165 pounds which was clearly bribe or inducement. According to Misra quoted in Khan (1994) pp. 95 there was three crore eighty lac pounds (Sixty crore taka) (equivalent to 1900 the amount was 300 crore taka) was smuggled to England by the British .This taka was gathered through bribe, tricks and in different ways. According to N.K.Sinha quoted in Dr.Kazi Abdul Mannan (1969) it was mentioned , between 1757 to 1766 the English collected inducement /bribe from the local pepole which was equivalent to five crore taka. According to Brijen k. Gupta cited in Sirajul Islam(1984) pp. 32 the politics to rapid change of Nabab between 1758-65, the company employees acted as the lobby / middle man / channel /Tadbirkari and received bribe / inducement from the Nabab which was 14502566 pounds/ thirteen crore taka.

Is ‘mystery man’ behind political changes?

July 23, 2007 by riajulhaque

Known as the “mystery man of Bangladesh politics”, Sirajul Alam Khan (former Chhatra League leader and a founder of the JSD) has returned to Bangladesh in early January. He told his close associates that the election scheduled for January 22 would not be held. After that emergency was declared on January 11 and the election was cancelled.Previously when Sirajul Alam Khan would come to the country, he would be seen in the lobby of Hotel Sheraton. He would spend hours there, engrossed in adda with his friends, followers and associates. But his hangout has changed this time. He now hangs out in the evenings at Oxford International School on Road 27, Dhanmondi. He comes there around seven in the evening and stays until around 10 at night or even later. The school belongs to the wife of a former JSD activist.It is a motley crowd that comes to meet Sirajul Alam Khan – politicians, NGO leaders, labor leaders, former civil and military bureaucrats, writers, intellectuals, big names of the civil society, former comrades and many others. However, he is seen to be avoiding media totally. He refuses to give interviews or come into direct contact with the media, says a close associate and former JSD leader.
Sirajul Alam Khan is known to his followers as ‘Dada’. This Mystery Man of politics, the so-called theoretician, has always acted behind the scenes. He is a silent player and has been away from open and active politics for quite some time now.
In 1996-97 Sirajul Alam Khan joined the University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh as a Professor of Political Science. So for the last 10 years he’s been a resident of the US. During this decade he has visited the country off and on, sometimes secretly and sometimes openly.Dada’s close associates say, this time he is on a vital political mission. He is doing the ground work on this over the past couple of years. In fact, it is said that it is Sirajul Alam Khan who was behind the first meeting of the ‘honest and able candidate movement’ initiated by CPD, Prothom Alo and Daily Star. He was reportedly behind the Bengal studies Conference organized by Stamford University. And he is also said to have worked for the Unity for Political Reforms of A S M Abdur Rab and Mizanur Rahman Shelley. In fact, his close associates claim that he has been encouraging Prof. Yunus to from the very outset of the honest candidates movement.Radical changesDada also has a nod for the steps being taken by Dr. Fakhruddin Ahmed’s government against crime and corruption. He has long been cherishing a dream of a ’21st century Bangladesh through radical changes in the country’s politics, government and Constitution. Khan has even written a book on the matter. A documentary, based on this book, has been made and was available on VCD and DVD at the Bangla Academy Ekushey book fair. It depicts the history of Bengal and Bengalis, of the actual indigenous people of the land, of how they were driven away, how the boundaries of Bengal were changed, how post-independent Bengalis are building a modern lifestyle, are progressing in science, technology and more. The film also contains statements of Dr. Yunus. The film was made in 2006.There are many who claim that Dr. Yunus’ present plan is the brainchild of Sirajul Alam Khan. Dr. Yunus has announced that he will be floating a political party – Nagorik Shakti (Citizens’ Power). Dada has full support for the party.Dada’s liaison is not limited to Dr. Yunus alone. He held a meeting with senior leaders of JSD (Rab) till 1:00 on the night of February 16 and held a secret meeting with Rab himself on the next day, February 17. He reportedly plans to revive JSD. It would not be surprising if Hasanul Huq Inu joins in the process too.Many personalities now seen in various forums, seminars, roundtables, TV talk shows and in the columns of newspapers, have been in close contact with Dada for the last two to three years. Reports suggest, labor organizations, student organizations and other professional bodies are also being mobilized at Dada’s behest.Sources from the evening repartee at Oxford International School say that Sirajul Alam Khan is of the opinion that if things go as per plan, a political platform will emerge in the future. This will include Yunus’ party and JSD, as well as honest but deprived leaders of Awami League and BNP in name of Awami League and BNP respectively. Other allies will join the platform too, but all on the basis of consensus. And Yunus will remain at the top.Dada, Ynus, Rab linkWhy Yunus? It is because, analysts say, Dada is aware that outside of the two major political parties, no other party has the strength to create a third force. For this a well-known popular personality is needed, someone who commands everyone’s respect. And that is Nobel Laureate Prof. Yunus.If the outside forces, that are backing Yunus, simply put him on the pedestal of power, then Bangladesh is likely to be compared with Afghanistan and Yunus will be seen as a Karzai. In that case, Sirajul Alam Khan will probably not be in favor of Yunus. All these matters have been mulled over at Dada’s meetings.Dada has drawn up a 14-point program for a ‘new trend of politics’. These 14 points have been publicized since last year through A S M Abdur Rab’s Unity for Political Reforms. He has given support to Yunus’ seven points too along with these 14 and has published an election manifesto. Actually, almost all of Yunus’ seven points are in Sirajul Alam Khan’s 14. This manifesto is not for any particular party; it was published in January for all political parties, professional groups, civil society, the political reforms movement, the human rights movement, the labour force and NGOs.In the manifesto he states, “It was in 1972 that political unrest and apathy as well as lack of confidence in leadership emerged.. Two major parties have been ruling the country in turns for quite some time. The whole country was held hostage when these two parties, with their respective alliances, took up confrontational stands.” He questions, ‘Will these two parties or alliances change in any way after the election?’In his manifesto, Sirajul Alam Khan writes about Dr. Yunus, “Prof. Yunus’ winning of the Nobel Prize for Peace. His catchwords “new leadership” and “new political structure” indicate a new trend quite opposed to present politics. His call for “able and honest candidates” for the election may well be the slogan for a movement. Sirajul Alam Khan also says, “I believe Dr. Muhammed Yunus’ seven-point peace deal and my 14-point proposal will help unite those who look for a new trend in politics.”
   
Manifesto
The manifesto is written in light of the political model drawn up by Sirajul Alam Khan. He speaks of a two-House parliament in which, alongside the area-wise representation, there will be representation based in labor, employment and professional bodies. There will be a federal system of government. An autonomous local government will be established at an upazila level. All these are components appropriate for an independent country, according to the manifesto.
The manifesto also mentions recognition for the minority ethnic groups. He speaks of National Economic Council, a Judicial Council, a Constitutional Court, a National Security Council, a metropolitan government, a mega seaport and a sub-regional economic forum. Sirajul Alam Khan has also spoken in support of Dr. Yunus’ micro-credit banking system and social business. The manifesto contains detailed organ grams of the Government, Parliament and National Economic Council.
   In the coming election, Sirajul Alam Khan hopes, all the parties and alliances will include his reforms program in their manifestos.
 Various quarters are quite eager to have Dada’s programs implemented. Some of Dada’s close associates even claim to see similitude between his programs and of the present government.After winning the Nobel peace prize, Dr. Yunus has been quite vocal about Chittagong Port. He has been quite explicit in his assertion that the port can be handed over to the private sector or foreign investors. In his 14 points, Sirajul Alam Khan speaks of constructing a mega seaport at Chittagong. Many feel that Yunus will deliver this.There are, of course, many who are eyeing Sirajul Alam Khan’s activities with suspicion. They feel that his mission is closely entwined with the interests of multinational companies and those whose aim is to establish their hold politically, economically and militarily in the region. They apprehend that Dada’s vision of a new trend in politics will lead to the handover of the country’s mineral resources, seaport and transit facility to outside powers at the cost of national interests.

The Day You Became A Better Writer

July 19, 2007 by riajulhaque

I went from being a bad writer to a good writer after taking a one-day course in “business writing.” I couldn’t believe how simple it was. I’ll tell you the main tricks here so you don’t have to waste a day in class.

Business writing is about clarity and persuasion. The main technique is keeping things simple. Simple writing is persuasive. A good argument in five sentences will sway more people than a brilliant argument in a hundred sentences. Don’t fight it.

Simple means getting rid of extra words. Don’t write, “He was very happy” when you can write “He was happy.” You think the word “very” adds something. It doesn’t. Prune your sentences.

Humor writing is a lot like business writing. It needs to be simple. The main difference is in the choice of words. For humor, don’t say “drink” when you can say “swill.”

Your first sentence needs to grab the reader. Go back and read my first sentence to this post. I rewrote it a dozen times. It makes you curious. That’s the key.

Write short sentences. Avoid putting multiple thoughts in one sentence. Readers aren’t as smart as you’d think.

Learn how brains organize ideas. Readers comprehend “the boy hit the ball” quicker than “the ball was hit by the boy.” Both sentences mean the same, but it’s easier to imagine the object (the boy) before the action (the hitting). All brains work that way. (Notice I didn’t say, “That is the way all brains work”?)

That’s it. You just learned 80% of the rules of good writing. You’re welcome.

KISS excess words goodbye

July 19, 2007 by riajulhaque

Keep It Simple (Stupid) – the KISS acronym – is a really useful mantra to hold onto when you’re writing.  (Not that I’m suggesting my readers are stupid, of course, just that KISS will stick in your mind.)

Scott Adams, the creator of Dilbert and enthusiastic blog writer at the Dilbert Blog, has written a really clear (and simple) introduction to the principles of good business writing.  In The Day You Became A Better Writer he highlights the value of simplicity:

The main technique is keeping things simple. Simple writing is persuasive. A good argument in five sentences will sway more people than a brilliant argument in a hundred sentences. Don’t fight it.

He also suggests that you:

  • Write a powerful first sentence
  • Use plain English words
  • Keep your sentences short
  • Use the active not passive voice
  • Strip out excess words

The last one is key to keeping it simple.

“Simple means getting rid of extra words. Don’t write, “He was very happy” when you can write “He was happy.” You think the word “very” adds something. It doesn’t. Prune your sentences.”

These principles don’t just apply to business writing.  Scott Adams is using them in his blog – and in his humour writing.  The context for your writing doesn’t matter.  What counts is the commitment to stripping out the excess words.  As long as is necessary – but not a word more.

Keep it simple.

The ingredients of a credible writing style

July 19, 2007 by riajulhaque

Honesty, trustworthiness and credibility are all vital to a good business reputation.  You may be used to reflecting these values in what you do and say at work, but what can you do to inject them into the written word?

I started thinking about this on the back of a piece by Rosa Say on keeping your promises in business.  There’s something about the focus of Rosa’s work on values, of breathing those values of aloha in everything you do, that starts me wondering about how we might manifest this approach in our writing too.

Of course there’s no getting away from honesty of purpose and intention – but if we take that as read what else might we identify as the ingredients of credibility and honesty in the way that we write? 

Use plain language.  You’re trying to reduce the distance, the gap, between the words you use and the thing that you’re describing in the real world.  The plainer the language the easier it is for your reader to make sense of it in their own terms, and to make their own judgements.

Use short sentences.  You don’t have to write staccato style but shorter sentences help readers to follow what you’re saying.  It allows them to keep up.  To form their own opinions.  Not to get lost (or worry about being misled) in your breathless prose.

Avoid jargon.  Jargon throws readers because they don’t know exactly what it means.  It leaves the writer with ‘wriggle room’ to define the words the way they choose.

Don’t over-hype.  Readers will be (naturally) suspicious of what sounds like exaggerated promises and over-blown claims.  Try and find the words that are as close to what you’re describing as possible.

Cut out excess words.  Too many superfluous words can look like a smokescreen.  A camouflage.  Readers might wonder what you’re trying to hide.   Cutting out excess words will help you get to the point, and help your readers form a clear picture of the point you’re trying to make.

Be specific.  Again this is about giving your reader the power to form a judgement on what you’re saying.  Cut the waffle.  Be specific.  What specifically should your readers expect from the service, the product, the event, the training, the occasion that you’re writing about?

Follow through.  There’s no point working on your writing style if your actions don’t match your words.  Apologise if you break a promise.  Follow through on your commitments.  Explain if you can’t.   

Changing your writing style won’t allow you to ‘fake’ honesty – but paying attention to your words will help your credibility and authenticity to shine through.  Keep cutting away at the flannel, the waffle, the sales pitch, the jargon – and reveal, with confidence, a closer picture of the truth that lies within.

Twenty20 title-fight worries Symonds

July 19, 2007 by riajulhaque

July 19, 2007

Andrew Symonds believes it is a shame that Twenty20 is being legitimised to the point of staging a World Championship and says Australia would prefer to keep having fun with the concept. Symonds said his team-mates had viewed previous Twenty20 internationals as “a bit of a spectacle” but they would need to take their must-win attitude to South Africa in September.

“The thing people love about Twenty20 is that it’s fun and fresh, but it’s also not played that often,” Symonds told the Daily Telegraph. “It’s a good thing as long as it’s not taken that seriously. Now there’s a World Cup it’s obviously going to be taken seriously. That might be a bit of a shame.”

Symonds’ comments have come a week after Nathan Bracken also expressed his concerns about the World Championship and said Australia should not get too stressed over the tournament. Symonds said the players, like the fans, enjoyed the laid-back nature of Twenty20 matches.

“The best part is having the captains wired up for TV and being able to play with the kids on the boundaries,” he said. “We’ll lose all that because everyone will take it seriously.”

So far Symonds has enjoyed his Twenty20 international experience – he has played four matches and made 125 runs from 63 balls at an average of 62.50. Australia’s World Championship begins with group matches against Zimbabwe and England in Cape Town but to win the 12-team competition they will need to play a further five games.