Showing posts with label Politics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Politics. Show all posts

22 March 2026

Fifteen Minutes from China Gate: Colonial Memory and Cold War Mythmaking

 This motion picture is dedicated to France. More than 300 years ago, French missionaries were sent to Indochina to teach love of God and love of fellow man. Gradually, French influence took shape in the Vietnamese land. Despite many hardships, they advanced their way of living, and the thriving nation became the rice bowl of Asia. Vast riches were developed under French guidance until 1941, when Japanese troops moved in and made the rice bowl red with the blood of the defenders. In 1945, when the Japanese surrender was announced, a Moscow-trained Indo-Chinese revolutionist who called himself Ho Chi Minh began the drive to make his own country another target for Chinese Communists. Headquartered in the North, he called the new party Viet Minh. With the end of the Korean War, France was left alone to hold the hottest front in the world and became the barrier between communism and the rape of Asia. Members of the Foreign Legion imported from North Africa fought valiantly under the French flag, but the ammunition pipeline from Moscow could not be found. Bombs and shells made in Russia were stocked in secret tunnels along the mountain range of the China Gate. This arsenal was winning the war for the Communists.

These are the opening lines of the narrator in China Gate (1957). This is not an ironic suffering from white man syndrome narrator, but an actual dedication of the film. Truth be told, I had no intention of watching western pro imperial cold war propaganda a day before my NBHM interview (and in case I only watched the first 15 minutes, for DD keeps scolding me to go back to studying for the interview, she is out on lunch when I am typing it), I was trying to watch the Bollywood China Gate (1998)but me being me made an mistake and this happened. Not the first time I made such a mistake, it happened before with The Flight of the Emperor. 

Whatever the circumstances, the black and white film has declared the White colonists to be perfectly white in their actions in Viet Nam. It was perhaps not enough, the director Samuel Fuller writes in his book, which WP paraphrases as: 


Before China Gate was to be released, Fuller received a call from Romain Gary, the French Consul-General in Los Angeles, inviting him to lunch. Gary said the film's prologue was too harsh towards France and asked Fuller to change it. Fuller refused, but the two became firm friends with similar interests. The film was never released in France. 

Even this level of praising France for allegedly advancing the locals' "way of living " is seen as too harsh. I don't know how to make it seem better to colonial sympathisers, but they did think it had to be. This is the level of propaganda in the 'first world' just a few decades before, and people will call Dhurandhar 2 as propaganda. 

In the little I watched, one thing is clear, the filmmakers are not racists. In fact, academic consensus seems to be these types of war films actually were pioneers in racial unity by pitting Americans as a whole against 'the enemy' or 'the Reds'. In fact, a paper goes on to say:

One thing that did adhere to Fuller’s career in its entirety was a persistent interest in race and racism in the US. Issues of racism against Asians, Asian-Americans and African Americans are brought to the fore in films like The Steel Helmet, China Gate, The Crimson Kimono, Shock Corridor and White Dog, not to mention his script for The Klansman (1974); against Native Americans in Run of the Arrow; and against Jews in the invocations of the Holocaust in Verboten! and The Big Red One.

Still, I found one of the opening scenes to be a bit problematic.  The narrator notes the lack of food in a southern hamlet isolated by the freedom fighters of the Viet Cong. All animals are being eaten up, save for a puppy named Pierre, hidden by a boy we later learn is a main character. 



A man finds the puppy sticking out from the child's clothes and chases him with a knife with hunger in his eyes. Whether it was an attack on dog meat consumption of the Vietnamese people or just a way to show the extent of hunger that an animal so dear to American sensibilities can be eaten is not clear. But I will have to lean towards the latter now that I have read the academic consensus. It will make sense, as The Making of Global International Relations: Origins and Evolution of IR at its Centenary notes that WW2 was just a victory against so-called scientific racism. Another example, 'his only cross to bear is that of eyes' referring to a part Asian child, is maybe just dated language rather than racism, when the film actually does challenge the discrimination against asian americans, as a review notes about the mother of the child:

Lucky Legs occupies the center of Fuller’s preposterous sex fantasy / melodramatic tangle. She has a son by (who else) Sgt. Brock, the ex-husband who abandoned her the moment he saw his child’s Chinese features. Brock is not bothered that Lucky Legs (this is really buried in context) is a prostitute and party girl — but gets freaked out by the thought of having a bi-racial child.

Clearly at attack on the still persisting double game of American morality. Anyway, writing more would not be fair game at this stage, and I will return and complete the review later after finishing.

28 February 2026

On Nuclear Apartheid, First Reactions on Iran vs US and Co and a conditional Iran Zindabad

 I was in a state between panicking over the Operator Theory exam tommorow and imposter-syndroming cum fleeing over CSIR NET and NBHM results this morning when I came across this tweet:



This no name handle broke to me the news of war which have since spiraled into a full regional conflict with Uncle Sam involved. Modi just came back from Israel when they stokes Iran. Deals would have been made and given the lack of commendations yet, I assume it have been a green light from our side. I know that Saam, daam, dand, bhed all are fair and I do congratulate the Indian government for painting that. Still this makes my blood boil. Wrap and wrap it all you want in layers of protests and civil rights, the main issue is the imposition of the Nuclear Appertheid. The haves have decided Revolutionary Iran is no good and must be denied the benefit for such power. India have espaced from the clutches of this Appertheid but have never supported others in doing so. Realism over idealism is my personal motto too, the government have no business standing for a nuclear Iran, but I as a private citizen can. All this comes in background of this tweet from Oman's monsiter today itself:

Never trust the western governments. In a rare moment UK seems to be keeping it's promise of partial (it will still be on a 99 year lease) decolonozation of Chagos Islands this time. Despite having a bit of complicated relationship with Indian Goverment, Ro Khanna have taken a principled stand.


Where it is purely on technical US Congress vs Presidential Powers debate or more fundemental US have no business here remains to be seen. I haven't seen any Pro Iran stance by any government save for Russia, which have been driven into a Pariah status itself and is ironically doing much worse to Ukraine than is happening in Iran. The next closest seems to be the Indonesian offer of mediation. The grifter and self styled Shah in exile is once again back to his grifting. One may, and I most certainly, have problems with domestic policies of Iran but this is not way to treat of sovereign nation. This is just the regular bullying of Global South. So just for today, Iran Zindabad. One can do nothing, I will just plug in Iran's powerful statment knowing that the worst case that Irani administration is replaced by some western puppet is not really a fantasy at this point. 


21 February 2026

Departmental Picnics, Operator Algebras and why Calrson wins over Calculus at this stage

 Next week will hopefully be the last mid sems of my life, soon after will be the last end sems and in the months following that will be my Comprehensive exams, marking the end of my exam-taking career. This looks so exciting, much life before the class 12 boards, which marked the end of my school career, but exactly like the last time my mind has raced ahead and my motivation to study for these exams is zero. Haven't yet even tried to open the textbooks. I usually spend my time reading for my research or for pleasure these days. Some Wizards of Waverly Place thrown in between, or recommendation (see balckmal) of DD, for good measure.

This is just as the post exam phrase I had previously described. Mind is a poet, and as they say, "जहाँ न पहुँचे रवि, वहाँ पहुँचे कवि. And indeed, the Sun is bound by the laws of time and is scheduled to rise about 200 times to meet the temporal place my mind has occupied as of present, 

I think despite all the warnings from seniors, Algebraic Topology is easier than expected. Currently, we are following Munkres for the Homotopy part, and after middsems another text will be followed for the Homology part. Perhaps it is so because we learnt a lot more than required stuff about fundamental groups in our first topology course. Anyway, one subject being easier is good. As for Operator Theory, while the syllabus for the course looks like this:

Compact operators on Hilbert Spaces. (a) Fredholm Theory (b) Index, C*-algebras - noncommutative states and representations, Gelfand-Neumark representation theorem, Von-Neumann Algebras; Projections, Double Commutant theorem, L∞ functionalCalculus, Toeplitz operators
In reality, due to a combination of department politics and egos of people involved, the course has morphed into some combination of Operator Algebra and von Neumann Algebra and Harmonic Analysis course following the legacy of VS Sundar, being mostly taught from Stratila & Zsido's Lectures on von Neumann Algebras and Javier's Fourier Analysis. This feels like a betrayal. The same politics have led to WCNH attendee list looking like a family picnic of certain academicians. The Douglas clan is evidently not invited. The ugly departmental politics aside, I have been a bad picker of electives anyway. 

On a side note, I had to cancel the prospective Sampablpur trip due to clashing with the exams. Now looking at the Mini workshop: Cantor set & Brownian motion at IISER Berhampur at the end of March. Anyway, ranting over, I do need to look at those vNA notes, but only after a few more hours with Carleson (1962) whose end is now in sight. 


08 January 2026

To Modi, Via Office of Oppression Olympics, From Mr Nijhawan

Your Highness Mr. Narendra Modi, 
You are the prime minister of India, one of the world's largest democracies. They say you 
This is the words of Deenu a semi literate teenage orphan who have apparently been forced by circumstances to become a pickpocketer for an organized criminal organization in Anil Nijhawan's The Pickpocket's Letter which I am currently reading. Why I say apparently is for I am on just page 32 of the book, and it's the ARC epub file so it's counting the title and copyright and all that stuff too. Why I needed to stop and write a post here I will tell in a moment but I think the fact that Deenu used Yours Highness rather than the correct style Honorable tells us that he indeed is semi literate in universe as well as the Political leanings of the author in the real world. Remember the 'No Kings' in the west?

But back to India and back to the book. In just the few pages I have left we have already encountered:
  1. Caste Oppression 
  2. Child Trafficking 
  3. Ingrained victimization 
  4. Trivialisation of Hindu rituals 
  5. Caricature of Pandits ("as if she needed blessings by the potbellied men of God who chewed pan and gutka while chanting Shlokas")
  6. Child Abuse
  7. Child abandonment 
  8. Child sexual abuse
  9. Child Sexual abuse (but the offender and victim are both female this time)
  10. RSS ki Sazish "It is not you [Modi] but the RSS who are in charge." 
  11. Animal abuse
  12. Sociopathic behaviour 
  13. Sadism
  14. Body mutilation 
  15. Schizophrenia 
  16. Other mental health disorders
  17. Loneliness epidemic 
  18. Acceptance of hierarchy, of मात्स्यन्याय
  19. RSS is actually Taliban ("It's a rightwing Hindu organisation. It wants to turn India into a Hindu Rashtra, a bit like the Taliban, who wants to create a Muslim state.")
This may not be complete for I started reading this as a fiction and not keeping track of all the categories of which categories of Oppression Olympics the author wanted the book to compete it. Liberal (pun intended) does of variants of "Now, Mr Modiji" is sprinkled throughout the text. 

There is a story which upto this point is how Deenu lived in an orphanage and wants to escape from it and later works as a pickpocket but it drowns down while meeting the criterias for the Oppression Olympics. Sadly it makes not for an intresting read. 

I know I am not the most humane and compassionate man and the blog is witness to my shortcomings  but still I can tolerate, even appreciate, social messaging in fiction. I think most good fiction (and not the trashy quick stress busters which I confessed to have stared reading) gives some kind of message even if the author didn't actually intend it to have one at the start. Even if it has a social message, it can be very powerful. Bitter Virgin the manga bought even me to tears. I have never looked at rape victims the same before. It also awakened a love for the art of Manga. 

This work however does nothing of that sort. It's a political rant wrapped in a story. The accumulation of suffering feels less like insight and more like a checklist, and the narrative is repeatedly sacrificed at the altar of ideological urgency. Suffering is piled upon suffering without allowing any one of them the narrative space to breathe, reflect, or transform the characters meaningfully. It's just the Operation Olympics version of Club 99 from Krish, Trish and Baltiboy. Had this not been an ARC copy, I would have dropped the book here. But I must keep my word and read on, even if only to see whether the story ever manages to reclaim the space it has surrendered.

20 December 2025

Pythagoras, Baudhayana or Meera Nanda?

 I recently started reading Meera Nanda's Science in Saffron: Skeptical Essays on History of Science. This is about some pseudoscientific claims made routinely by people on the Hindutva side. While our side is indeed suffering from many quacks, something which I myself have noted previously, but still the publisher 'Three essays collective' is a known leftist publisher. Also the book is dedicated to her "comrades". Predictably the preface starts with bashing the Sangh. 

However, while ideologically opposite to us, Nanda is still a scholar. She is not a a humanities type trying to weasel her way into the debates of sciences. She is a PhD in Biotechnology from IITD who have later branched into history of sciences. She is a someone no responsible person should ignore, for निंदक नेड़ा राखिये. Her sharp tounge and witty-to-her comments are more than countered my her scholarship and research. One can disagree with her philosophy that harmonizing science with traditional worldview is not conductive to reasearch (while I agree that radical decolonized relativist "science" say as taught in New Zealand is, but disagree with Nanda on the very thought being wrong), still, her footnotes does not care about our feelings. We can't attack the thesis unless we learn the facts. Perhaps she is not actually anti Hindu and writes against Hindutva side exclusively only for it is now rightfully and joyfully the dominant force politically. Still even in the first 50 or so pages she did give a much softer rapt to African scholars claiming more than their share of mathematical discoveries. This is much relevant when now there have been attempts to portray Yoga as an African practice.

I have read till the end of first chapter only and I did change my views. I read a rejoinder to it ( more accurately a earlier version published as an article) but it is mostly rhetorical and trying to catch her in a gotcha moment when there are none. As facts stand now (or at least in 2016 when the book was written) the first statement as well as proof to what we call the Pythagoras theorem are chinese in origin. Nothing can be done about this fact. It does not make us inferior. She rightly acknowledge that the Suvlasutras tackle a very challenging problem and can be appreciated even if it were not the source of Pythagoras theorem. There is a very nice article in Bhavana (excellent magazine) exploring this. The author however uses the term Baudhāyana-Pythagoras Theorem. To Meera Nanda the mere act of naming is just a childish act of one-upmanship and turing science into a zero sum olympics fought by civilizations. 


A altar that needs to a made with very specific ratios.


Her exposition is very clear, it would be a delight to read a textbook written by her. The citations check out. One has to concede this chapter to Nanda. 

02 November 2025

Initial Thoughts on Makers of Modern Dalit History

 Many many years ago, I used to watch Caravaka Podcast religiously. Originally, during the pandemic and just afterwards. It was from here that I first came to know of Guru Prakash Paswan. He was a fresh voice in the Dalit discourse, BJP leader and dyed in Hindutva. Like something Badri Narayan talks about in his Fascinating Hindutva: Saffron Politics and Dalit Mobilisation (My GR Review here, the book should be read despite the low rating). It was from this podcast that I came to know of Guru Paswan's books, which I started yesterday. Only recently I have started to look into myself from a caste angle (which is OBC in some states, SC in some, but GEN is what I use on forms).


But the book doesn't really hold up as of now to my impression of the author (No offence to Ramabadran but I don't have much knowledge of or opinions about him and will sometimes use the author to refer to Guru Prakash only). And to be fair, I have just read the introduction and a small first chapter, my opinion may or may not change as I progress with the book. 

This book is no academic tome, sharp criticism or groundbreaking research and makes such explicit in the introduction itself. At the end of the day it is but to familiarise a general audience with these great figures. But still, the book is amassing citations on Google Scholar. I can only hope that the derived works' authors are aware of the book's scope and citing in keeping that in mind. But I have seen worse, and will expect such.

Before proceeding, I would justify why I should write a review (critque?) at this stage when I do plan to cpmplete the book. I think a GR review puts it best:

पुस्तक से परिचय कराते हुए लेखक ने एक लम्बी भूमिका तैयार की हुई है, जहाँ आपको पू:री पुस्तक का परिचय हो जाता है। यदि आप आगे न भी पढ़ें तब भी आप पुस्तक के बारे में ठीक ठीक जानकारी प्राप्त कर लेते हैं।

The 30+ page introduction is the longest and most important part of the book, dare I say, Bahujan of the Book. So lets get started. 

On page (viii), it clearly states that

we would like to state that profiles that the reader will find in the book are a combination of historical facts, stories that people have told about them over generations

So yeah, not an academic tract. Which, by itself, should be no problem. But then they go on and cite people like Suraj "Afro-dalitism" Yedge. No thank you. I prefer not to cut copy paste critical studies from halfway across the globe to study my own society. To be fair, some Subaltren Studies language has been adopted too. But given the political background of the author, I find the omission of  Badri Narayan intresting. The introduction tries to paint a broad painting as well as supplement it iwth data. But it didn't really gel well here. On the data front, the fact that during land the biggest, most glaring injustice to us have been that less than 0.5% of land redistributed agricultural land was given to SCSTs. In an land obsessed, non georgist society where agriculture is a mollycoddled tax free activity where the supposedly divine "Annadatas" (Only type of producers that the Nehruvian morality can tolerate) are showered upon my honest taxpayers' money, this means that this chunk of society prettty much lost on this part of the social welfare schemes. Combine this is what next to non existent land market, means that these misdeeds comitted 70 years ago can't be corrected now. This leads be to wonder if my own views on laws that restrict sales of land like those in Jharkhand needs updation? I am all for free market treating land as any other commodity, but quite evidently one side lacks market power here and a case for government intervention can be made. But that is another issue, and I don't know much about it at hand so let's drop that. 

The passages on Dalit litrature, expression and capaltilism where intresting and I did learn a lot from them, and had to add even more references to my TBR. Eleanor Zelliot is mentioned but thankfully the misconception that she was the first to do a PhD on Ambedkar is not repeated. I really disliked that the author couldn't decide if every Dalit is severely oppressed, fearful even to walk on the road (Knowing Guru Prakash, he himself is an exception to this rule and must be self aware of this fact) or an increasingly being accepted into the mainstream society. There is no need for hyperbole in the oppression olympics commentary when the reality itself will appear hyperbolic. This is just not done. You push away people like this. 

Finally moving to the first chapter. It's about Ayyankali from Kerala. Never heard of him, so yeah, great. Will actually learn something. But the writing is like of generic biography, there is no "voice". I needed to reread it to finally gasp that he was born in 1863, one can skip that line and willm never know what time period are we talking of. He is from the Pulayar castes, which were basically in a system of chattel slavery. They were porbabited from using "I" is conversation with so called forward castes. Casteism errors the very shelf of the depressed. They are made to belive they are less than human. This is not something I ever heard of. While there is a decent refrence section, I found the actual writing of the chapter amateurish and in need of editing. I double checked that it's a Penguin book and still can't belive noone flagged writing of the chapter. Events and even sentences are repeated in 2 or 3 paragraphs. Thrice is Ayyankali nominated to the Sree Moolam Popular Assembly (while its powers and structure are never even hinted at) for the first time across four paragraphs. And we never find out how he actually broke the shackles of slavery cum casteism. But there is all the time for quating Mandela and even a paragraph about  Y.B. Satyanarayana's memoir about casteism being present in India. What a shocker! And the author that the audacity to preface that with 
To understand the significance of his contribution, it is vital that one understands the circumstances under which Ayyankali fought for the rights of the oppressed. (Pg 3)

 This comes exactly a page after saying that status of the Pulayars were literally that of slaves. But yeah we need a vague sentance from a memoir set in Hyderabad about placement of houses to understand the circumstances. 

These things somehow diminished the seriousness that could have been there. Especially when the chapters are short, this one beging 6 and a half pages excepting the refences.

I will continue with the book, it is not a heavy read anyway but don't have much high expectations. But perhaps I am being more critical than I need to be, afterall this did lead to me writing this post, I am debating by priors on the caste based restriction on land sales as well the how-in-the-world-did-I-even-not-know of Pulayars' condition. Anyways, will read it. 

Also happy birthday to me I guess. 

30 May 2024

Voted for First Time

On 25th I went to vote for first time. Reached at the booth before it opened and was done within an hour. Double Padma. 





Voting for Aparijita Sarangi the sitting BJP MP was no brainer. For Jatani AC seat, I was torn between BJD and BJP till last moment. In 2019, the seat was won by Sura "ମାଡି ଚାଲ" Routray. Sura Bhai by the way have given us this masterpiece: 





Last time he won by about 5% of the votes and talking to locals he appeared to be quite strong a candidate. But the six time MLA decided it was time to pass the seat to his sons. I am not aware of what happened but in the end his younger son ended up on a BJD ticket for Bhubaneswar LS and he was later thrown out of INC for "anti party activities." There was no Congress appreciation after that, so rather than a tactical vote to keep INC out, I pressed on the Lotus. 


Anyway lets vote for results, and hope I actually posting once in a while here. 

10 December 2023

Rethinking Nillansh Rastogi’s Criticism Of India’s New Parliament

 Originally published at YouthKiAwaaz.com on 11th June, 2023

Months after the inauguration of the new parliament, the controversy surrounding it continues to persist.  In this response to Opinion: Will India’s New Parliament Strengthen Democracy Or Ruin It?” by Nillansh Rastogi, published on this very platform, it becomes evident that many critics lack substantive arguments.

“So-Called” Hindu Rituals 

Inclusion of Hindu Rituals during the inauguration has been a common point of attack on the Building, though the rather curious quantifier “so-called” seems to be an invention of Nillansh, and one is left to wonder what it may been as it has not been expounded upon in the original article. 

Still, one is left wondering how come so many people miss the Sarv-Dharam prayer held during the function, which have been norm for government activities. Or if they did not miss, do they have no problems with the Islamic rituals, or those of other faith, with their disdain being reserved only for “So Called” Hindu Rituals?  

And if one is talking of Sengol, which is the symbol that sovereignty now rests with the preamble People of India, enough have already been written on the matter that most people have made up their minds. It would only be a waste of time and space to reproduce those arguments here, but I would recommend Ria Pillai’s analysis of the narrative surround it on how it relates to our notions on caste. 

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 Revealing the Controversy-Free Origin Story

Another aspect that deserves attention is the claim that the new parliament project was mired in controversy from its inception. Keeping in mind the great Indian babudom,it is evident that such an ambitious undertaking would not have been conceived overnight. In fact it was the Lok Sabha Speaker Meira Kumar from UPA who first suggested building of a new parliament. More recently when both the houses of parliament officially requested for a new parliament, not a single MP opposed the demand. Clearly showing how much of the criticism from political parties have been a post hoc justification for achieving political brownie points rather than genuine opposition. It is crucial to scrutinize the motives behind the criticisms and separate them from the actual merits of the project itself.

 But Why during Pandemic? 

Another criticism, which in my opinion seems to be mist genuine, has been that while a new parliament may have been required, government could have postponed it due to the Pandemic. First we have to remember that the final master plan for Central Vista project was done in 2019, months before the pandemic. Also the new parliament costs ₹ 862 crore. Or a measly 6 rupees per capita, how this amount could meaningfully contribute to the health sector in face of ₹ 82,928 crore budget with the Health ministry in 2020-21 alone is beyond me. Another comparison is that Government of Delhi spend  ₹ 1,100 crore on just advertisement in last three years. 

While it is true that healthcare spending is often inadequate, the solution does not lie in being frugal in other areas.

Another way to look at the issue it that the entire project generated about 37 lakh man-days of labour during the pandemic, at a time when people were facing an unprecedented unemployment crisis, it surely helped. And stimulus in form of infrastructure spending have been a well known remedy during economic slowdown ever since the times of Keynes. When we couple in the cost that delays in project result into and well as the impressive savings of  ₹ 1,000 crores that the project will result in, it becomes clear that there is a good enough case for continuing with the project. 

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Conclusion 

While issues raised against the delamination of Lok Sabha seats are complex and emotive one, making it a case against the New Parliament is rather childish – “We will stop increasing the number of MPs by making it physically impossible for them to sit.” I confess not having done a deep study of the problem but I am generally in favour of delamination happening considering how freezing of the constituencies have resulted into the overrepresentation of people of states like Tamil Nadu, Himachal Pradesh and Odisha while people of states like UP, Bihar and Maharashtra are underrepresented. (I use the phrase “people of states” knowingly and deliberately to distinguish myself from people who talk of representation of states.) 

(Image courtesy India’s Emerging Crisis of Representation by Milan Vaishnav and Jamie Hintson via ThePrint)

Similarly childish is the worry about being “shown undemocratic in world media”, it is not for desk editors of foreign papers to say, when crores of vote are voting and electing the government we seek. As one commentator said, Row over Parliament building shows politics in India never stops, national symbol or not.” I would end by quoting former PM Deve Gowda, one among the “South Indian opposition leaders” who are often evoked in these debates regarding the new parliament: 

I have many reasons to oppose BJP politically. But, I don’t want to bring politics in the matter of inauguration of Sansad Bhavan. I have been elected to both the Houses of the parliament. I have rendered my duties in the constitutional framework. I can’t bring politics into the matter of the constitution.

– HD Deve Gowda, 26 May 2023

References

  • Gupta, Moushumi Das. “Row Over Parliament Building Shows Politics in India Never Stops, National Symbol or Not.” ThePrint, 27 May 2023, theprint.in/opinion/newsmaker-of-the-week/row-over-parliament-building-shows-politics-in-india-never-stops-national-symbol-or-not/1597210
  • Pillai, Ria. “Opinion: Is India’s Caste Discourse a ‘Dialogue’ or a ‘Narrative’?” Youth Ki Awaaz, July 2023, www.youthkiawaaz.com/2023/07/indias-caste-discourse-dialogue-or-narrative
  • PTI. “New Parliament Building Necessity, No MP Objected When Both Houses Requested for It: Om Birla.” The Times of India, 18 June 2021, timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/new-parliament-building-necessity-no-mp-objected-when-both-houses-requested-for-it-om-birla/articleshow/83639783.cms. 
  • Rastogi, Nillansh. “Opinion: Will India’S New Parliament Strengthen Democracy or Ruin It?” Youth Ki Awaaz, July 2023, www.youthkiawaaz.com/2023/07/indias-new-parliament-will-strengthen-democracy-or-ruin-it
  • “New Parliament Bhavan Isn’t…: Former PM HD Deve Gowda’s Big Statement Amid Row Over Inauguration.” DNA India, www.dnaindia.com/india/report-new-parliament-bhavan-isn-t-former-pm-hd-deve-gowda-s-big-statement-amid-row-over-inauguration-3044562. 
  • Lahiri, Ishadrita. “How Census-based Delimitation for Lok Sabha Seats Could Shake up Politics and Disadvantage South.” ThePrint, 29 Dec. 2022, theprint.in/india/governance/how-census-based-delimitation-for-lok-sabha-seats-could-shake-up-politics-disadvantage-south/1287536
  • Sinha, Bhadra. “New Central Vista Will Save Rs 1,000 Crore Spent Annually on Rent Expenditure, Govt Tells SC.” ThePrint, 3 Nov. 2020, theprint.in/judiciary/new-central-vista-will-save-rs-1000-crore-spent-annually-on-rent-expenditure-govt-tells-sc/536402. 
  • Seth, Dilasha. “Infra Project Delays Causing Cost Spikes | Mint.” Mint, 9 Jan. 2023, www.livemint.com/news/india/infra-project-delays-causing-cost-spikes-11673287148446.html. 
  • Vagliasindi, Maria, and Nisan Gorgulu. “What have we learned about the effectiveness of infrastructure investment as a fiscal stimulus? A literature review.” (2021).
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