@Cerberus I don't think the tastes are that close, just that the species are in the same genus or family, whereas basil and mint are in another genus together.
uh oh...I only have this thing called 'Italian herb mix' with: thyme and rosemary and oregano etc.
It's going to take me awhile to separate
@Cerberus I like it a lot. it's hard scifi where accuracy/realism is important, but also the plots are all about interna-...sorry, interplanetary relations.
@Cerberus I only got to about the start of season 3 of Enterprise. It was OK. not terrible. I liked how the did the 'explanation' of the development of some technologies: the transporter, the universal translator, no replicator at all.
1) toilet coverage - I find this entirely unbelievable. 100% is hardly the case in Europe/US. and going from less than 50% to above 90% is insane. I'm going to be ungracious and say that someone is doctoring the numbers.
What you're trying to say isn't real is your direct experience of self, and the unreal nature you want to ascribe to it is no more than a bunch of thougts.
No thoughts match real direct experience. We are what we are.
@FaheemMitha No the one where the boy was locked in a toilet and had to jump in the shit hole to be able to reach this actor and ask him for an autograph.
There might be some truth to it? And it doesn't say that anyone who didn't have toilets in their homes didn't use toilets. Maybe they used shared ones.
can't find the quote. Thought it was by Quetelet something like "you can set up your experiment, your data features, and methodology with the precision of an eye surgeon, but something something relies on the whim of a petty lowlevel government official"
@Færd And I have various userscripts and bookmarklets so that I can view all images in full size on the same page if I want. Otherwise, you have to click on each image and wait for it to load.
> Compared to other countries, income inequality in India is relatively small as measured by Gini coefficient. India had a Gini coefficient of 32.5 in the year 1999- 2000;[9] India's nominal Gini index rose to 36.8 in 2005, while real Gini after tax remained nearly flat at 32.6.[10]
@FaheemMitha I've been reading things about how social mobility in the US is much less than the other OECD countries (can't remember how it compared to India or China)
Any developing country that isn't, like, torn by civil war will experience an increase in median income if average income rises rapidly, even if the former rise is much slower than the latter.
@FaheemMitha If those studies reported their results accompanied with valid estimation of error margins then I tend to trust them more than the feeling an individual gets from their limited experience.
In other words, even though the rich profit more from economic growth than the poor, and income inaequality rises, the poor generally still profit to some degree.
In a place rather different from India, namely the United States, it's well established that wages for much of the population have been stagnant for decades.
Frontline is a fortnightly English language magazine published by The Hindu Group of publications from Chennai, India. R Vijaya Sankar is the editor-in-chief of the magazine. As a current affairs magazine, it covers domestic and International news. Frontline gives a prominent place to various issues of development and hindrances in the Indian states. Apart from topics of politics and political economy, it also covers a wide range of topics including Arts, books, cinema, Science and English language.
== History ==
Frontline was first published in December 1984. It was originally intended to be a...
One of the few serious Indian periodicals. I was thinking of subscribing, but haven't yet.
It's pretty bad, not only for privacy, but also for the general functioning of government, food stamps and other stuff in villages not getting distributed.
@Cerberus Among other things. But my point was about attitude.This isn't the behavior of people who care about the poor. This is the behavior of people who care about coercion and control.
Anyway, things in a place like India don't just happen by themselves. They happen via determined effort. And if the govt isn't going to do anything, it's down to social movements.
I think Faheem is abandoning objective evaluation here by pronouncing it impossible.
He doesn't even say how impossible it is.
If I wanted to evaluate the current situation in my country and the direction it's headed based on the way I felt about it, then I would describe it no more than an earthly hell where everyone's doomed to eternal damnation.
But.. that's not true. Notwithstanding the way I feel about it.
@Cerberus I don't possess those Godlike powers that enables me to detach from all this chaos and sit back and take averages that smooths any troubles out.
The far right is growing somewhat stronger, partly from an indigenous tradition, partly in a European current, and partly influences by Americanisation.