Monday, May 30, 2022

Aging with Objectivism

 

In a humorous story, Great Marathi Author P L Deshpande’ s imaginary middle-class protagonist D B Joshi, makes one statement that no one needs to do anything special to keep this world going. He wonders how his employer's company functions without anyone doing any significant work. This statement can be interpreted as totally sarcastic. The sarcasm of PL is inherited from his role model PG Wodehouse who was accused to be totally elitist while instead, he ridiculed the castles and lords of Victorian England.    But in reality, as we see, the world survives on the hard work of a few. No one in literature has described it as strongly as Ayn Rand and her objectivism philosophy. Ayn Rand has influenced many generations as they read her early in life and while as people age they realize the realities of life which contradict her binary world of romanticism. You discard many of the processes as immature. But as a verdict after aging, objectivism leaves a good residual impact and helps you ease out a few things in life situations.  

 

As happens with many, Ayn Rand entered my thought process as a teenager. That’s a great influence that has impacted many lives. Life never remains the same again. I have read a few responses from young adults who say that her writing has freed them and they taught them to rely on no one but themselves. Ayn Rand book sales still number in hundreds of thousands annually and incidentally tripled since the 2008 economic meltdown. The core of Rand’s philosophy is that unfettered self-interest is good.   This, she believed, is the ultimate expression of human existence, the basic principle by which one ought to live one’s life.   She claims that humans start their lives with a zero slate, and pro-social tendencies, particularly altruism, are restrictions imposed on us by society, deceitful lies that cause us to betray biological reality. The protagonist of her most popular novel, “Atlas Shrugged,” symbolizes this: John Galt is a ruthless captain of industry who struggles against stifling government regulations that stand in the way of commerce and profit. In a revolt, he and other captains of the industry each close down the production of their factories, bringing the world economy to its knees. “You need us more than we need you” is their message. In ‘Fountainhead’, the hero is Howard Roark who believes in only his own expression and excellence in architecture versus collective guidelines or customer expectations. All individuals should be motivated by the individual zeal to achieve their own satisfaction and professional excellence and be uncompromisingly adamant to accept anything driven by the interest of the common good.  

 

My own career was shaped based on this. But I realized later in my life that Ayn Rand’s Philosophy had many flaws. Same books sound immature if read at this stage of life. Humans have a tendency to cooperate and to look out for each other, as noted by many anthropologists who study hunter-gatherers. Those who believed totally in Objectivism never grew out of the usual "the world is persecuting me and doesn't see my true genius" phase as a teenager. As a paradox, some people claim to adore the free-market glorification of Ayn Rand," pretentiously imagine themselves as individualists like Howard Roark and John Galt, tell themselves that their greed is beneficial, and thus demonize government and taxation. They are more than happy to (among other things) drive on taxpayer-funded roads; to have their assets defended by government-funded police and firefighters; to have their property rights protected by a law enforcement collective known as the judiciary. These collective realities things are inevitable and unbridled individualism out of social context is nothing. It takes years of life experience to get you away from Rand’s romanticism. There are few real-world flaws of Objectivism which you realize as you grow. Laissez-Faire capitalism is a utopian fantasy. And like all utopias, it cannot actually exist. Reason has real-world limitations. Facts do not trump feelings, wishes, hopes, and fears. Every man does NOT exist for his own sake or own self-interest.   

 

My own Objectivism started diluting as I aged. I was driven by slightly unfashionable motivation and was slightly intangible in form of the nature of work that I liked in those years. And I had to pay price for that un-conventionalism sometimes. But ultimately objectivism is what mattered and triumphed in the end as per my own standards and not to be judged by anyone. That is the biggest learning I have got from books of objectivism. And it acts like strength during moments of doubt. 

Thus I firmly believe, contrary to the imaginary D B Joshi, that it takes a few good hardworking men to keep the system running. Imagine honest IAS/IPS officers taking on the system. Imagine well-meaning employees in corrupt governance systems. Imagine a few key Project Managers and techies managing the whole project amidst loads of good for nothing and pampered project teams. Every organization has those. These people are driven by a sense of ownership, excellence, and achievement and not by external drivers. Search around you in your workplace, you will find them whichever might be your domain.  But then do all get recognition, some do. Most of these ‘first handers’ as defined by Ayn Rand go unsung.  We have many examples of that. If anyone has seen movies like ‘The pirates of silicon valley’ or ‘social network’, or Infosys saga fact still gets underlined. Not that all these great people were not ‘first-handers’, but life lessons teach you that apart from professional excellence or objectivism, you need some special skill sets to get recognized and make it big as beautifully explained by Malcolm Gladwell in Outliers. And mostly world has a tendency to worship false heroes. But those driven by real-world objectivism don’t care and they march on. 

Sci-fis and thrillers are rendered irrelevant with time. Some books like Atlas Shrugged or Fountainhead render different experiences in different stages of life, unlike timeless classics.  

 

 

Sunday, May 22, 2022

Midsummer Night’s Cricket Dream

 

It’s that time of the year in the Indian Subcontinent when searing heat takes the center stage in the cities and across the rusty hinterland. Here in the US, we look forward to rainy and slightly chilled spring turning into summer. Back home in the olden days, we used to have vacations for school after a long academic year. Down the memory lane, I can our generation of friends riding cycles, swimming, playing cards, eating Mangoes, and visiting/staying with relatives. Later as we turned into parents, our kids had Holidays. We had to keep them busy with hobbies, camps, and books. It was time for Ice-cream and other chilled summer beverages of your liking. One more dimension to Indian summer was added in 2008. IPL made it into the ritual of the typical landscape of the summer lifestyle.  

 

Every night 7 30 pm is the time to switch on, see the best of international cricketers in a mix with the new Indian talent hitting "Maximums", Fours, getting wickets, catching, and getting run-outs. There are parties aligned in drawing rooms, restaurants apart from the big parties at the stadiums. There are distractions like cheerleaders, gossip, celebrities and owners, showbiz, advertisements, brandings. But for a true cricket fan, these are irrelevant.  

 

The young Indian team won the 2007 T20 WC without seniors and the Indian cricket business setup found a gold mine. But for a true fan, it was some different diet than s/he was excited about. Initially, when it all began in 2008, there was MonkeyGate looming after the landmark Indian tour down under. IPL came in at the right time. IPL diffused tensions and made cricket a gentleman's game again. But that doesn't mean the aggression died down on the field. In 2008, the magic of Late Shane Warne’s captainship led unfancied Royals to the inaugural title. Next year bottom ranker of 2008, Deccan chargers won the title thanks to the Brilliance of Adam Gilchrist. Those were days of Aussie dominance. Lalit Modi kind of took on the Indian Government by hosting the event in South Africa when there were security concerns raised by the home ministry due to the 09 General elections. Finally captain cool prevailed in 2010 in a tense final against Sachin’s Mumbai Indians. 2011 Dhoni repeated the winning streak. Gambhir led KKR to Jeetbo in 2012. Mumbai Indians started their odd year-winning trend under a new captain Rohit in 2013. Finally, Sachin won the IPL title as a player completing an ideal career. 2014 IPL was partly held in UAE and we saw a new style of cricket (Maxwell-Miller) by Punjab doused by KKR in the final.  Mumbai won in style in 2015 while David warner made his mark in 2016 leading a new team Sunrisers Hyderabad to the title. CSK and Royal were banned in 2015 due to a fixing scandal that rocked IPL and created the biggest doubts. Rohit's Mumbai beat Pune under Dhoni in the final by 1 run in 17. Chennai retained the title after revamp in 2018. Mumbai again reigned against Chennai by 1 run in 19. The pandemic hit in 2020.  In 2020 Mumbai was undoubtedly the winner when IPL was played in empty stadiums in Dubai. Many Mumbai players made the mark. In 2021 IPL was interrupted due to a severe delta wave in India. IPL was cursed as Nero was playing the fiddle. Chennai won in 2021. In 2022 we now see new teams coming in and games have begun.   

  

 There are many naysayers who feel IPL is a circus, fixed, corrupt, overrated, and an overkill of cricket.   And add to that wham-bam non-classical nature of t20 cricket over the longer formats. But for someone like me who has grown up watching cricket and being a diehard fan (self-proclaimed), any ball getting a wicket, or any stroke getting run is cherished. Add to that the drama of asking rates, match situations, brilliant performances, wrong decisions, and on-the-field tensions. They may say that only foolish watch IPL where players, officials, broadcasters, advertisers, all those who matter make money while we spend it as well as time and effort. But watching IPL has been fun for the last 14 years or so. It's more fun than watching unending serials, talk shows, and stereotype movies. Aren't these cliché as well?  

 

It's been one experience watching in the comforts of living rooms but also another to watch it in a stadium. It's a big pain, crowd, heat, queues, traffic, etc, but still, the atmosphere compensates for all this. Uncertainty of results adds the intrigue. Any bottom finisher team can upset board leaders on any given day.  

 

There have been issues, controversies, scams, owners' problems, accusations, even murders. But then watching Gayle hitting sixes, AB playing those incredible shots, Virat's skills, Malinga's yorkers, Dhoni's finishing, Sunil Narain's big hitting, Gayle's records, Bumrah bowling, Pandya’s hitting, Jadeja’s fielding young players showing off their talent, incredible catches, incredible fielding all makes these issues irrelevant for someone who is focused on cricket. As far as the T20 format is concerned it's the only way cricket can be globalized. Cricket is followed by at least 25% of the world population so it means something and cannot be ignored. 

 

Staring with McCullum's innings, Warne's leadership,  Sachins century innings in losing cause, Unusual fielding position for Pollard, Gilchrist final innings, Dhoni's sixes in last over, Gayle double century, Pollards hitting, hattricks, Maxwell miller hitting, KKR's turnaround, Mumbai’s two 1 run wins in finals, Dhoni’s comeback, Pollard hitting, Warner’s innings,  there are many memories. Add to that the personal memory of get-togethers, parties, public viewing events, those seen at exotic places while on vacation around important memorable matches. It's been an enjoyable experience 

   

Please note I am not on BCCI payrolls or of any stakeholder but a plain simple cricket fan. But it's been fun all the while. It's now a part of Indian Summer just like Alphonso Mango: Delicious. And it all seems a fairy tale-like Midsummer Nights’ Dream  

 

 

Sunday, May 15, 2022

Winners and Losers

 

There is a war going on in distant Ukraine which is fought by conventional weapons. One side termed as an aggressor is taking on a challenger who was backed by other Nations. The other Nations are showing restrain or are unwilling to get involved in a full-blown crisis with nuclear implications. While there seems to be destruction and deaths on both sides’ real winners are yet to emerge. Effects of war are visible and losers are public on the streets of Ukraine and Russia. Some coffers are getting filled with the war efforts on both sides. The winners remain anonymous. There is a war going on the biological front for the last two years since the days when we first went into lockdown thanks to a Virus with dubious origins.  We lost near ones. We suffered economic hardships thanks to lockdowns. But again some winners were winning trade wars. Some were winning on tech consolidation. Some coffers were getting filled somewhere. Winners remained anonymous. There were elections in five states. Four states were won by the incumbents while one state was one by the newbie party with no clear visible agenda. Only time will tell if the path this state has chosen will resolve or aggravate the problems. Hope this turns out really beneficial for the people of Punjab. In the case of the other four states including UP, there is an alignment with a central plan. But then again this path again may be filled with potholes and sudden speed breakers due to idiosyncrasies of politics which have led to compromises on the path of reforms. We have seen the reforms in agriculture withdrawn due to electoral politics. The winners in these elections seem to be still visible but losers were rightfully shown the door by this dance of democracy. One trend here is very clear: the impact of youth and women voters. Their choice really made an impact across fault lines of caste and religion.  The war of words between left and right is fought daily and relentlessly on the social media front with no clear winner but losers are the ones who lose friends over these wars of words.    

The film titled The Kashmir Files has created a great impact. The plight of Kashmiri Pandits and the blackout of this chapter in the Indian Collective conscience were really numbing. The whole ecosystem of governance, media, and intelligentsia in cohorts with separatists and outside forces had won the info war till the release of this film. This film has really changed the way we look at the plight of India since external aggressors from central Asia or Europe started attacking, plundering, and ruling India for around a thousand years. It is not polarizing and a propaganda film as mentioned by critics of this movie. Saner voices within the democratic society should acknowledge the real elephant in the room. Then only it will be possible to even plan the reforms in the intolerant doctrines which give no right for divergent religious beliefs to coexist. These reforms would create equality and justice and allow everyone to coexist. This movie really highlights how these religious expansion doctrines make people suffer and this is not a chapter we would like to emulate. But this is not enough. We need to educate our second generations who unknowingly have formed opinions against the Indian state in the Kashmir context especially here in the western world of media and academics. The complete silence of the real issues and history in the western media has left many in the west with wrong opinions about these issues. We need to win more battles there.  Another film titled Pawankhind is making waves in Maharashtrian circles in the US. This Marathi film is based on a historical battle fought by the Maratha army led by Shivaji Maharaj at the Pawankhind near Kolhapur against the Adilshahi army.  Imagine the sacrifice of Fighters like Bajiprabhu Deshpande who along with very few soldiers blocked the large army in pursuit to capture Chatrapati Shivaji who escaped from fort Panhala which was besieged by the same Adilshahi army. There was a red herring provided for the army in pursuit by the supreme sacrifice of Shiva Kashid who resembled Shivaji Maharaj. Imagine you voluntarily take up impersonation to be captured and killed. Our Indian army officers fighting for a cause versus terrorist and disguised Pak army have given supreme sacrifices during the last 32 years after that black night in Kashmir.     

Wars are also fought in courts where simple issue pertaining to the rule of uniform has been twisted with wrongful religious identity. But court decisions have also been criticized by the losing side.  The   Maharashtra Government fights its daily war to remain relevant as a rule of the coalition, having gone against the public mandate. There was a cricket series fought versus Sri Lanka. Indian team seems to have found mojo with Rohit at the helm but his real challenge is to make it to WTC and win T20 WC.  There is a women’s world cup and amidst all this and Team India has an uphill task to qualify for semis. And as summer approaches in India, there will be IPL played.   

We the common people fight our daily war of survival and fight different battles we have chosen in our life path. What are the qualities that help us win our battles? When you read famous philosophical quotes which define winners and their qualities which differentiates them from the losers you find few common traits. Winners are willing to go longer, work harder, and give more than anyone else. Winners don’t wait for chances, they take them.  Winners are those that convert problems into opportunities. Winners are not people who never fail, but people who never quit. Winners focus on winning. Losers focus on winners.  Losers live in the past. Winners learn from the past and enjoy working in the present toward the future.  Wishing you all the best for winning your wars.    

 

 

 

Sunday, May 8, 2022

War of the Words

 

I read an interesting story:  It was over 80 years ago when Orson Welles broadcasted the incredible ‘War of the Worlds’ about an alien invasion. Many people heard and totally believed the world was being invaded! This broadcast presented to the world a true mass hysteria. But 80 years ago, when panic ensued over this fictitious account of alien invasion, there were fewer media outlets. There was no news at your fingertips and no instant commentary from others who were part of the hysteria. Obviously, this was a case for not jumping to conclusions even if it seemed like the sky was falling! I wonder what would happen today if Orson Welles was broadcasting about everything going on in the world. Media outlets all over the world generally race to have people jump to conclusions as quickly as possible. They don’t check facts and then report but rather get the headline first as breaking news and clarify later. And we the people and the warriors on social media formulate our opinions based on half-baked facts. Based on our lines of ideology we have sided, we begin an unlimited War of Words on Social Media platforms. And these wars of words turn into abrasive discussions and influence many aspects of our social behaviors.  

 

Currently, there is a war in distant Ukraine with the destiny of Indian students stuck there in the war is the nearest possible involvement of India. Yet the position taken by India to abstain and not take any side looking into its own interest was evaluated, opposed, and derided by media here and our own experts.  People here of Indian Origin based on their positions in the context of Indian and US politics have gone ballistics on criticizing India for not taking side with the rest of the world. Humanity means the west which has its own interests. India is dependent on Russia for defense procurement. Russia has its own ambitions. China with all its intentions is lying low. Just as we spent bytes and bytes over the origin of Virus and the pandemic conspiracies, we have now shifted our focus on the war. Opinions here in the war of words remain divided between warring nations.  There is also lip service paid to the humanitarian angle of dying people on streets and soldiers. Warriors continue to stride further across various topics of their interest. UP and other state elections have their own set of warriors. Maharashtra politics generate bytes locally.  The people in responsible positions and those behind them are acting crazy and war or words have seen a new low.   Celebrity fans have their own war of words. Cricket camps have their own loyalties. Strong words are used. Semantics and logic are the weapons used by the warriors. Victory is celebrated while those hurt exit one group to join the group of like-minded. Mainstream media and social media remain engaged in generating bytes which in the actual sense are meaningless and are apparently harmless. But then these words actually have impact. 

 

When words are able to be tossed out arbitrarily and without any responsibility, minds can be controlled casually and if the intent is added they can be effective tools. Words can be harmful if they are demeaning and insulting but if they are simply used as an opinion or an expression of a belief the only harm is when you censor them so no one can hear them, read them, or think about them. Social Media and Big Tech are calling the shots and crying hoarse about the Freedom of Expression whether you realize it or not and it really is very much like Orson Welles but at a higher level. When you control access to various opinions or beliefs, you control a bit of someone’s mind. It is dangerous, sleazy, repulsive, and unbelievable but it is real and happening all around you. 

 

Freedom of speech is essentialA human being doesn’t have to believe what he sees or hears, but he surely should not be denied the opportunity to access it. It’s very alarming. It may be happening in small bits of denial and large amounts of control by those in control. There is a great danger lurking ahead of us. Social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter and Instagram, news outlets, and even radio and TV broadcasts are going down a slippery slope when they feel they have the power to tell people WHO to believe, WHAT to believe and HOW to believe. As long as we the people permit them to do that and allow ourselves to support it, we are also complicit in agreeing with their philosophy. 

If we have learned anything these past few months, we should have learned how NOT to trust those who give us information; journalists, reporters, announcers, and a variety of Social Media platforms. We should think of ourselves with a rational state of mind and observe it from our line of philosophy and opposing. We should question everything now This really helps.  Social Media has helped many people reach out and connect in ways we may have never dreamed of. Social media has also assisted those who own businesses in expanding their outlets to be able to market beyond their own backyards. But Social Media also has become invasive, insensitive, and irresponsible. The Big Tech companies want to track where we go, advertise to us constantly, and invade our privacy in ways that seem a bit uncomfortable and downright creepy.  But then social media is just a modern tool, in past, we had wars of words at tea stalls, canteens, libraries, gardens, drawing rooms. When you are face to face, there are some basic civic senses which govern the concourse which is acceptable to all the parties but with an unregulated digital wall and behind the privacy of anonymous trolling there are no limits.  



Have we let Social Media go beyond what we would have accepted back in 1938 when Orson chose to broadcast his infamous tale?