I am a little stunned that the EU should continue to define India as an open society.
Power wielders give out labels as required for the purposes of furthering the objectives of power.
I am a little stunned that the EU should continue to define India as an open society.
We talked about it before, how a fundamental restructuring of the human both biologically and psychologically would be required to overcome the tribalism and predisposition to violence
Haven't watched the video yet. Who won?During a long drive recently, I listened to this podcast and found it quite contextual to our discussion....well worth a listen/watch when you (and any others interested in the subject) have some time for it:
India is still considered a very important partner in Europe, though, many politicians, experts and newspapers don't see New Delhi as equally democratic. The mutually shared foundation of democratic values and legitimacy is gone - at least with the current administration in New Delhi. The Europeans have adopted a very pragmatic view of India.
Haven't watched the video yet. Who won?
For Britain India is the most important country in Asia.
It is better that way. As pragmatic as possible.
When Europe and the US (by way of its "many politicians, experts and newspapers") fully introspect and come clean about such things as:
- the holocaust (something that will not happen in India though it is far poorer + less developed even today)
-operation paperclip (and its consequences from its root hypocrisy allowed to stand unchallenged/unrectified to this day)
- cold war geopolitical extreme hypocrisy and consequences impacted on the victims of this
- their role in colonialism predating a lot of this.....
relative to their relative developed asserted enlightenment and economic standing at these times....and how that came about...
....all of it impacting on how countries like India had and have the basic wherewithal to develop and strengthen sociopolitically and economically earlier and today...
When they do that (because they have only gone into all of that in a fraction of a percentage needed)...they can then be taken somewhat commensurately seriously on their credibility to go past "pragmatic".
Given there is massive economic exchange and reliance built on by Europe with a country that has developed a large network of concentration camps (that can be seen from space) to hold what is estimated to be 1 million people of an ethnic minority.
Something unparalleled in the current affairs of the world.
Till then India's problems are commented and addressed on far more credibly by Indians.
UK is also arguably also the most important country in Europe for India.
Yeah I would say Russia in number I and then Britain.UK is also arguably also the most important country in Europe for India.
Some good points raised here. I have a different perspective on UK. I think the UK would love all those arms exports to India and Technology transfers, but we can't do any of that because unlike the French we control none of our naval or air assets, the Americans do, or we are in partnerships with other European countries. I would like to see Britain export the Astute class and QE class, but we can't do it because the Americans don't want us to.This Europe tour has 2 main points:
> There is evidence of diplomatic rapprochement with Germany now that Merkel is gone. Relations with Schmidt & Kohl were warm, strategic even. Things went cold since Merkel came to power (~2005) for reasons that aren't completely clear to me (Chinese pressure?). From what I've gathered from this visit, at the very least, relations seem to have been "normalized". So there's good stuff to look forward to - like the $10bn investments in green energy projects.
> Building on existing strategic partnership with France. Modi has just landed in Paris so remains to be seen if any major announcements are made - but without doubt this is the most important leg of the trip.
The rest of the trip is filler and diplomatic "nice to have" stuff like onboarding Denmark as a source of investment for green/hydrogen manufacturing, the summit with Nordic PMs etc.
Well put.
It's naivete to imagine that anybody in the West would wantonly put a country that isn't completely subservient to Western interests (like Japan, SK) at the same 'democratic' level as them. Because if you do, you forfeit the possible usage of those tools against said country if and when that country were to act against your interests.
From a civilian, economic & cultural perspective, undoubtedly.
Europe map according to the largest foreign nationality residing within:
However, from a military or strategic point of view, the most important country simply has to be France. Because from a security perspective (keeping the Indo-Pacific region in mind) the UK can always lean on the US/other Anglophone states, whereas France lacks large countries/former colonies in the region which implicitly share its world-view - this makes them more susceptible to work with a country like India in several areas where cooperation would otherwise be strictly limited to the most trusted of allies i.e. nuclear submarines.
Yeah I would say Russia in number I and then Britain.
However, from a military or strategic point of view, the most important country simply has to be France. Because from a security perspective (keeping the Indo-Pacific region in mind) the UK can always lean on the US/other Anglophone states, whereas France lacks large countries/former colonies in the region which implicitly share its world-view - this makes them more susceptible to work with a country like India in several areas where cooperation would otherwise be strictly limited to the most trusted of allies i.e. nuclear submarines.
In the last century, the deadliest problems were usually based on an ideological basis and a political decision to go to war. There was little in the way of an acute need to survive as a nation or as a people and fighting over the most fundamental requirements that a human needs to live, outside the various genocides perpetrated, even though those were also usually politically motivated.It is progress definitely, as we overall unlock more truth and gain more experience as a (so called intelligent) species. There will be fits and starts....and maybe some reversals inevitably I feel....but I am quite optimistic overall.
Ian Morris book was a very good read.
The challenges are immense and daunting as always this century, but if anything we are an extremely adaptable species....even to the problems we self-inflict and often realise only later.
Our dawn and our spring is over....we have woken up in sufficient capacity (to truth, enlightenment and what the nature of infinity means).
I personally think our Summer will be quite a long one....we have a long way to go.....there will be storms during summer too.
It will be interesting to know (if possible) how humanity looks back at thse 500 odd years or so..... a millennia or more from now.
Anti-Americanism is strong throughout europe, west and east, don't have any illusions about that, it's a strong and potent force and has been for the entire cold war and even before that.It happens. People are often nostalgic or have some sense of stockholm syndrome persisting....without even realising it.
There is a heavy anti US sentiment in (some) parts/sections of Europe overall that I have perceived spread all around in some propensity....and concentrated some times too.
The cold war was not always sunshine and roses for (long term inbuilt) perception of the US....much like the USSR as well.
There was a foreboding psyche that set an overhang for lot of people long term....Armageddon being somewhat artificially prevented yet never too far away....borrowed time etc....and out of even their collective national hands. Do you trust so few people in the end, with so much destructive power....given the world wars just before.
Even here on this side of the pond, it has never really totally been grappled with. Rather the passage of time slowly erodes at it effect. Then we see the renewed and resurfacing of the root psyche for war again. It paints a very uncomfortable spectre for so many....why do we keep circling to the same thing after we know it solves nothing?
Indeed a good podcast well worth a listen, though I do feel like the interview was dumbed down too much oftentimes, though that's just my view.During a long drive recently, I listened to this podcast and found it quite contextual to our discussion....well worth a listen/watch when you (and any others interested in the subject) have some time for it:
In the last century, the deadliest problems were usually based on an ideological basis and a political decision to go to war. There was little in the way of an acute need to survive as a nation or as a people and fighting over the most fundamental requirements that a human needs to live, outside the various genocides perpetrated, even though those were also usually politically motivated.
But this century, with the way things are going, our wars will quite likely be based around exactly these fundamental needs. I'm going to coin a term here to refer to those wars, namely "WATER", or "Wars About The Essential Resource", and you can guess what resource that is.
Indian members on the forum can probably write a book about this particular issue, but it's just the most pressing problem that needs to be addressed. What about energy needs and carbon emissions? Because fossil fuels aren't going to go away for decades, and this constant yapping from the west about clean and green energy won't change anything, increases the use of oil and coal if anything.
Urban population across Africa is expected to double until 2050, and how do you supply 1.2 billion people living in cities with energy and water? You're going to need coal, oil and gas to get it done, there's no way around that. Add to that the effects of climate change and the degradation of available farmland, this probably will make it rise even faster, and the political instability and extremism resulting from that on top of it all.
What is the origin of this forum , i mean why was started amd when was this started ?
Iam just curious
@Nilgiri can best answer that question.