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HindustanTimes Fri,24 May 2013
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Barkha Dutt

Their lives on the line

Tragedy-driven rhetoric comes easy to us; it's far tougher to create and sustain genuine respect for our soldiers, writes Barkha Dutt.

No angst to spare

The State has destroyed the lives of many young men by implicating them in false terror cases. But there is no policy to help them restart their lives. Barkha Dutt writes.

To each his own

Social media is not above the law. Nevertheless, a draconian IT law can't have the last word over what we write and how we think. Barkha Dutt writes.

A sense of exclusion

The middle classes are angry with politicians but don't want to take part in politics. This aversion towards politics is bad news for Arvind Kejriwal - as well as India. Barkha Dutt writes.

From crisis to crisis

Negotiation is one thing, surrender is another. But, above all, politicians must stop politicising the Maoist problem. A long-term solution is needed, writes Barkha Dutt.

Writes of passage

We must overcome class-based discrimination to end the politics over quotas. The best way to do so would be to open the gates of private schools to poor children, writes Barkha Dutt.

House of mirrors

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh needs to engage with Parliament much more. The House needs to respect itself before people do the same. Barkha Dutt writes.

Why this Kolaveri Di?

India is slipping into a quicksand of anger and intolerance. This is making people express their disagreement of thought in a way that crosses the bounds of civility, Barkha Dutt writes.

Digging its own grave

The UPA’s wounds are entirely self-inflicted. The absurd political mismanagement over the lokpal bill has led to this impasse. Barkha Dutt writes.

A haunted House

India's mood is negative today because of the ossification of politics. If our politicians don't reclaim their constitutional space, interlopers will take over. Barkha Dutt writes.

Caught in a pincer

The hard truth is that Pakistan’s problem today is not India and the Kashmir conflict but the ‘many Pakistans’ that exist within it. Barkha Dutt writes. 

Not Maggi noodles

‘It is a general popular error to suppose the loudest complainers for the public to be the most anxious for its welfare,” wrote political theorist and philosopher Edmund Burke. Barkha Dutt writes.

A sweetly timed shot

‘Serious sport has nothing do to with fairplay,’ wrote George Orwell in 1945, sweepingly dismissing the primal emotion that defined international sporting events as ‘orgies of hatred’. Barkha Dutt writes.

Dangerous politics

The BJP must abandon its Tiranga Yatra to Jammu and Kashmir. The fragile peace in the state must be given a chance, writes Barkha Dutt.

 

Beyond the anger

Despite years of liberalisation, India still doesn't have an auto-pilot model for economic reforms. Along with nailing the 2G scam guilty, we must also tackle this endemic problem, writes Barkha Dutt.
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