Saturday, April 17, 2010
Monday, April 12, 2010
All say ‘aye’ to the captain - Article in Times of India on Sunday, 11th April 2010
All say ‘aye’ to the captain
Justice and power must be brought together, so that whatever is just may be powerful, and whatever is powerful may be just—Blaise Pascal, French mathematician
There is evidence that toxic leadership is responsible for more human suffering than ever
before. Toxicity is created when someone responsible for a group of people or an organization
leaves it worse off after the engagement. Hitler is a powerful — and evil —example of toxic leadership. Millions of examples abound through history. Almost everyone will be familiar
with the toxicity introduced in the work, home or community environment by destructive guardians, inept, insecure bosses, corrupt politicians and even sexually perverse religious
leaders.
Can the poison created by toxic leadership be contained? It is widely acknowledged that most medical ailments are rooted in enduring psychological distress but there is not quite as much recognition of the debilitating effects of toxic leadership. People are generally accepting of the wilful abuse of power and do little to challenge their environment.
Often, toxic leaders are people who rise to positions of high authority but are unabashedly consumed by their need for personal glory. They are characterized by low levels of self awareness, which allow them to ignore niggling matters of ethics and moral fairplay.
Money and power become their primary motivators. Toxic leaders can be spotted a mile away: these are the people who exercise complete control by rewarding sycophants and edging colleagues with talent and the facility for critical thought to the bottom of the pile. Toxic leaders are threatened by intelligence, character and creativity in the people around them and they will generally do anything to eliminate such individuals from the game.
The classic example of toxic leadership and the small-mindedness that goes with it is the retiring chief executive. Upon retirement, a toxic leader will carefully pick a mediocre buffoon as successor. This ensures a continuous legacy of toxicity and a higher level of mediocrity in the successor. In turn, this ensures that people make unfavourable comparisons about the change of guard.
Those with low self-worth (this is a characteristic of toxic leaders) generally over-compensate by pursuing material accomplishment at any cost. Why does the toxic leader flourish? It is a puzzling issue considering that large numbers of people in the workforce end up deeply, often permanently psychologically scarred because of the leader’s toxic behaviour.
Sometimes, the relationship between oppressor and oppressed becomes almost an unholy bond, a behavioural pattern that cannot end without external help.
This can take the form of spiritual and psychological counselling for the victim. Often, the oppressor is equally doomed to his cycle of unfair, dysfunctional behaviour, though this may be less obvious. One cannot simply condone victims of unjust toxic leadership. Being a victim does not mean one can never take control of the situation and break the cycle of injustice. Oppressors get free reign when their victims see no reason to change the situation in the foolish belief they actually benefit from their corrupt ways. The more enlightened worker prefers not to become either victim or beneficiary, choosing instead to stay away and not ‘get their hands dirty’.
Toxic leadership is not new. It is a societal affliction that is as old as time. Even an institution of great antiquity such as the church is reluctant to clean up, to weed out the toxic leadership that controversially looked the other way when ‘celibate’ priests became serial paedophiles.
Inevitably, toxic leadership creates great demand for fixers, hustlers and pimps to fill positions of authority. This is arguably an important factor in the rising incidence of women and child abuse and trafficking around the world.
This, because the toxic leader sits at the top of the pile, profiting from unsavoury criminal activity while fixers, hustlers and pimps work overtime to keep the empire going.
Needless to say the leader’s hands remain notionally clean. Financial fraud is also on the rise and this too indicates toxic leadership.
The recent global financial meltdown offered the clearest sign possible of the extent to which toxic leaders can distort an entire system, turning questioning colleagues into passive, mute victims.
In the corporate sector, toxic leaders do by bullying their team and ensuring that only the woefully inadequate are rewarded in order to buy their unquestioning loyalty.
What can companies do about this? Intelligent inquiry will reveal the decline in a company’s productivity because the toxic leader has perpetrated the deliberate murder of enthusiasm. There might also be an increase in attrition as genuine talent starts to haemorrhage from the company. The recent meltdown illustrated the way organizational rot can go deep to the point of sudden corporate collapse.
Everyone gets the leader he or she deserves. There is no reason to suffer a toxic leader. Effective leadership is about celebrating human uniqueness. We can invoke positive leadership by abandoning passivity and challenging ourselves as well as the people around us.
Mahatma Gandhi freed India from foreign rule but political liberation is meaningless if we continue to suffer tyranny. Those who continue to be enslaved by passivity deny themselves the possibility of attaining their true potential.
The change must come from within. As Roman philosopher Seneca said: “He is most powerful who has power over himself.”
Friday, April 9, 2010
Let your Dreams rise and fly
“Higher, ever higher,
Let thy dreams and wishes rise,
Let them mount like flame of fire,
Upwards to the skies.
Higher , ever higher,
And when thy heaven is overcast,
May thy star of faith aspire
Till all is bright at last."
-
Friday, January 1, 2010
My India 2020
An interesting and motivational article in Economic Times on 1st Jan 2010.
DHAN TEN NAN! 2020
India will be the toast of the world by the end of the next decade — overtaking China as the fastest-growing economy, while imposing nuclear sanctions on others. It is written.
Swaminathan S Anklesaria Aiyar
IN PAST decades, India has been world number one in starvation deaths, foreign aid and bribery. In the 2000s, it was transformed from a chronic under-performer to a potential superpower. Here are eight predictions of what it will look like in 2020.
1. India will overtake China as the fastest-growing economy in the world. China will start ageing and suffering from a declining workforce, and will be forced to revalue its currency. So its growth will decelerate, just as Japan decelerated in the 1990s after looking unstoppable in the 1980s. Having become the world’s second-biggest economy, China’s export-oriented model will erode sharply — the world will no longer be able to absorb its exports at the earlier pace. Meanwhile, India will gain demographically with a growing workforce that is more literate than ever before. The poorer Indian states will start catching up with the richer ones. This will take India’s GDP growth to 10% by 2020, while China’s growth will dip to 7-8%.
2. India will become the largest English speaking nation in the world, overtaking the US. So, the global publishing industry will shift in a big way to India. Rupert Murdoch’s heirs will sell his collapsing media empire to Indian buyers. The New York Times will become a subsidiary of an Indian publishing giant.
3. In the 2000s, India finally gained entry into the nuclear club, and sanctions against it were lifted. By 2020, Indian companies will be major exporters of nuclear equipment, a vital link in the global supply chain. So, India will be in a position to impose nuclear sanctions on others.
4. India, along with the US and Canada, will develop new technology to extract natural gas from gas hydrates — a solidified form of gas lying on ocean floors. India has the largest gas hydrate deposits in the world, and so will become the biggest global producer. This will enable India to substitute gas for coal in power generation, hugely reducing carbon emissions and making Jairam Ramesh look saintly.
5. India will also discover enormous deposits of shale gas in its vast shale formations running through the Gangetic plain, Assam, Rajasthan and Gujarat. New technology has made the extraction of shale gas economic, so India will become a major gas producer and exporter. Meanwhile Iran’s mullahs will be overthrown, and a new democratic regime will usher in rapid economic growth that creates a shortage of gas in Iran by 2020. So, the Iran-India pipeline will be recast but in reverse form: India will now export gas to Iran.
6. More and more regions of India will demand separate statehood. By 2020, India will have 50 states instead of the current 28. The new states will not exactly be small. With 50 states and a population of almost 1.5 billion, India will average 30 million people per state, far higher than the current US average of 6 million per state.
7. China, alarmed at India’s rise, will raise tensions along the Himalayan border. China will threaten to divert the waters of the Brahmaputra from Tibet to water-scare northern China. India will threaten to bomb any such project. The issue will go to the Security Council.
8. Islamic fundamentalists will take over in Afghanistan and Pakistan. The US will withdraw from the region, leaving India to bear the brunt of consequences. Terrorism will rise in India, but the economy will still keep growing. How so? Well, 3000 people die every year falling off Mumbai suburban trains, and that does not stop Mumbai’s growth. Terrorism will bruise India but not halt its growth.
DHAN TEN NAN! 2020
India will be the toast of the world by the end of the next decade — overtaking China as the fastest-growing economy, while imposing nuclear sanctions on others. It is written.
Swaminathan S Anklesaria Aiyar
IN PAST decades, India has been world number one in starvation deaths, foreign aid and bribery. In the 2000s, it was transformed from a chronic under-performer to a potential superpower. Here are eight predictions of what it will look like in 2020.
1. India will overtake China as the fastest-growing economy in the world. China will start ageing and suffering from a declining workforce, and will be forced to revalue its currency. So its growth will decelerate, just as Japan decelerated in the 1990s after looking unstoppable in the 1980s. Having become the world’s second-biggest economy, China’s export-oriented model will erode sharply — the world will no longer be able to absorb its exports at the earlier pace. Meanwhile, India will gain demographically with a growing workforce that is more literate than ever before. The poorer Indian states will start catching up with the richer ones. This will take India’s GDP growth to 10% by 2020, while China’s growth will dip to 7-8%.
2. India will become the largest English speaking nation in the world, overtaking the US. So, the global publishing industry will shift in a big way to India. Rupert Murdoch’s heirs will sell his collapsing media empire to Indian buyers. The New York Times will become a subsidiary of an Indian publishing giant.
3. In the 2000s, India finally gained entry into the nuclear club, and sanctions against it were lifted. By 2020, Indian companies will be major exporters of nuclear equipment, a vital link in the global supply chain. So, India will be in a position to impose nuclear sanctions on others.
4. India, along with the US and Canada, will develop new technology to extract natural gas from gas hydrates — a solidified form of gas lying on ocean floors. India has the largest gas hydrate deposits in the world, and so will become the biggest global producer. This will enable India to substitute gas for coal in power generation, hugely reducing carbon emissions and making Jairam Ramesh look saintly.
5. India will also discover enormous deposits of shale gas in its vast shale formations running through the Gangetic plain, Assam, Rajasthan and Gujarat. New technology has made the extraction of shale gas economic, so India will become a major gas producer and exporter. Meanwhile Iran’s mullahs will be overthrown, and a new democratic regime will usher in rapid economic growth that creates a shortage of gas in Iran by 2020. So, the Iran-India pipeline will be recast but in reverse form: India will now export gas to Iran.
6. More and more regions of India will demand separate statehood. By 2020, India will have 50 states instead of the current 28. The new states will not exactly be small. With 50 states and a population of almost 1.5 billion, India will average 30 million people per state, far higher than the current US average of 6 million per state.
7. China, alarmed at India’s rise, will raise tensions along the Himalayan border. China will threaten to divert the waters of the Brahmaputra from Tibet to water-scare northern China. India will threaten to bomb any such project. The issue will go to the Security Council.
8. Islamic fundamentalists will take over in Afghanistan and Pakistan. The US will withdraw from the region, leaving India to bear the brunt of consequences. Terrorism will rise in India, but the economy will still keep growing. How so? Well, 3000 people die every year falling off Mumbai suburban trains, and that does not stop Mumbai’s growth. Terrorism will bruise India but not halt its growth.
Thursday, November 26, 2009
I saw tomorrow today
Yesterday I had opportunity to see this Video. Such a simple manner Pranav explains the new concepts, which would be reality tomorrow.
More than anything, I loved the way he says this technology would be part of open source in next month. I am sure that these kind of individuals would change the world. Happy viewing ....MUST WATCH

THERE ARE NO HANDBOOKS FOR FACING TRAGEDY. THERE ARE NO CHOOLS FOR LEARNING TO LIVE WITH LOSS, BUT WITH EVERY CHALLENGE THERE IS AN OPPORTUNITY FOR DISCOVERY. WITH EVERY SADNESS THERE IS A CHANCE FOR INNER GROWTH. THESE LESSONS WERE BROUGHT HOME THIS PAST YEAR WHEN SO MANY REACHED OUT TO US IN SO MANY WAYS. TO OUR LOYAL GUESTS AND MANY FRIENDS AROUND THE WORLD; TO THE COURAGEOUS STAFF OF THE TAJ, SOME OF WHOM WE HAVE LOST; TO THE SECURITY FORCES, POLICE, AND FIRMEN; TO THE CITY OF MUMBAI, WE OFFER OUR HEARTFELT GRATITUDE. TODAY WE TAKE A STEP FORWARD TOMORROW WE'LL TAKE MANY MORE.
-Ad released by Taj Hotels on 26.11.09. I thought you all should read it...
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)