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Showing posts from March 10, 2018

UPDATE REGARDING THE ISSUES FACING FOR DICTIONARY

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Hello My Friends, We are trying to bring up an inapp dictionary which is under process of building. it may take sometime. before we update the app with inapp dictionary i have come up with a solution 💥 https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.yaki.wordsplash  install the above app and follow the instructions inorder to setup the dictionary by yourself not only in our HINDU EDITORIAL APP but it can be used while reading on anyother app which i found useful. Its not a promotion its necessity on my part as your wellwisher to comeup with a solution to your problem 👉 STEPS FOR INSTALLING AND USING THE APP WERE PROVIDEDE BELOW Install News Dictionary To begin, head to the Google Play Store, then search for and install  News Dictionary . Alternatively, you can skip straight to the install page by using  this link . Step 2 Enable the News Dictionary Service To enable the News Dictionary service, simply launch the app, then tap the toggle switch in the

Death with dignity: on SC's verdict on euthanasia and living wills

💥The court has laid down a much-needed legal framework for enforcing living wills The core philosophy underlying the Supreme Court’s verdict allowing passive euthanasia and giving legal status to ‘advance directives’ is that the right to a dignified life extends up to the point of having a dignified death. In four concurring opinions, the five-member Constitution Bench grappled with a question that involved, in the words of Justice D.Y. Chandrachud, “finding substance and balance in the relationship between life, morality and the experience of dying”. The outcome of the exercise is a progressive and humane verdict that lays down a broad legal framework for protecting the dignity of a terminally ill patient or one in a persistent vegetative state (PVS) with no hope of cure or recovery. For, in such circumstances, “accelerating the process of death for reducing the period of suffering constitutes a right to live with dignity”. The core message is that all adults with the capacity to

Trade goes on: on U.S and free trade

💥The revival of the Trans-Pacific Partnership, sans U.S., must buttress the free trade debate The United States under Donald Trump may not be a huge fan of free trade across borders, but that’s not stopping other countries from embracing it. On Thursday, 11 Asia-Pacific countries, including Japan, Australia and Canada, signed the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership in Chile. The CPTPP is, in effect, the original Trans-Pacific Partnership struck during the Barack Obama presidency minus the U.S. On the campaign trail, Mr. Trump had promised to pull the U.S. out of the TPP, and went on to do precisely that within weeks of assuming office. Interestingly, the CPTPP comes soon after the U.S. had made clear its plan to impose tariffs on the import of aluminium and steel in an attempt to protect domestic manufacturers. The countries signing the agreement, which account for more than 13% of the world economy, have agreed to bring down tariffs on cross-bo

Adversity to advantage: on BJP's strategy

💥The BJP has silenced its critics with a stunning electoral show. But can strategy substitute for delivery on the ground? Tripura, until recently unused to anyone fussing over it, has suddenly transformed into a fortune-teller of India’s politics and politicians. The Narendra Modi-led Bharatiya Janata Party’s superlative victory in the election to the Tripura Assembly has, overnight as if, shifted the spotlight from the failings of the National Democratic Alliance Government to the Modi-Amit Shah team’s strategic brilliance and recurring ability to come out on top. On the other hand, the Congress, which had appeared to be in revival mode, has begun to be written off once again. With its vote base shifting almost en masse to the BJP, the Congress won no seats in Tripura, which was in fact why the Manik Sarkar-led Left Front government was defeated. This setback, in turn, has pushed the Congress out of the reckoning for leading a united opposition. Congress president Rahul Gan

An architecture for India: Balkrishna Doshi

💥Balkrishna Doshi’s buildings draw the user into a thoughtful collusion with space In 1955, a young Indian was often pictured in group photos taken in Le Corbusier’s studio in Paris. Hovering behind Le Corbusier or at a drawing table discussion, it was hard to predict that half a century later, this young man would be as influential and dominant as the French master himself, if not on the world stage, at least in India. Balkrishna Doshi, along with Mumbai’s Charles Correa and Delhi’s Raj Rewal, has without a doubt been a remarkable force in Indian architecture since Independence. In a career that has spanned almost seven decades, the slight man in the Paris studio used his international associations, working later with Louis Kahn at the Indian Institute of Management at Ahmedabad, to cement a career in architecture after he returned to India in the 1950s. Obviously Mr. Doshi’s link to Le Corbusier was in itself sufficient to establish his place in Indian architectural histor

Should the Left align with the Congress?

👍YES 💥Despite our differences, we are both committed to a democratic, inclusive India Rajeev Gowda Recently, the Congress’s offer to support Sitaram Yechury instead of its own candidate for election to the Rajya Sabha was spurned unwisely by the Marxists. The party offered to sacrifice its seat because Mr. Yechury is a respected parliamentarian who adds firepower to the opposition benches and an articulate voice that counters the falsehoods of the Modi sarkar. The Congress demonstrated how some sacrifices are worth making at the strategic-national level. The larger cause involves the national interest of holding the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and its governments accountable to the people. Thus, while analysing this question, one must look at both the strategic-national and tactical-regional perspectives. 👉Commonalities and differences Strategically, both agree that the forces of Hindutva are opposed to the idea of a plural, inclusive India and our constitut