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Jayalalitha: The photograph 'ruling' an Indian state

The interview with SIMI GAREWAL is pretty great too. She was very candid in that interview. Also a very eloquent speaker !! Never knew she could articulate herself this well in English..

Church park convent alumnus which probably explains her command of the language. Was apparently a school topper before she dropped out due to her mother (who was an actress herself) forced her into films.
 

This was the most epic interview given by her in her career. Karan Thapar is used to grilling so many guests in his "hard talk" BBC show including guys like Modi, Advani, Chidambaram, etc. This was probably the only instance I saw him getting roasted by a guest. [MENTION=137677]Thivagar[/MENTION], check this out mate. Gets hilarious at the end:ashwin

Watch old Tamil movies from 40s and 50s, when they speak English, they actually articulate very well and use much more richer synonym. It may had to do with British being there. Verbal English went downhill afterwards. Saw an Indian Malayalee international student ask one of my prof a question and even the professor couldn't understand as his vocabulary was too rich.
 
Watch old Tamil movies from 40s and 50s, when they speak English, they actually articulate very well and use much more richer synonym. It may had to do with British being there. Verbal English went downhill afterwards. Saw an Indian Malayalee international student ask one of my prof a question and even the professor couldn't understand as his vocabulary was too rich.

There is a lot of emphasis on using proper grammar and vocabulary in Kerala's education system , even in Government run schools. So you'd find on average people from Kerala somewhat good with grammar and vocabulary. But that hinders free speaking and communication skills . So you'll find Keralites a bit reluctant to talk in English compared to other states, as people always seem more worried about making mistakes that they speak very less !!:D
 
There is a lot of emphasis on using proper grammar and vocabulary in Kerala's education system , even in Government run schools. So you'd find on average people from Kerala somewhat good with grammar and vocabulary. But that hinders free speaking and communication skills . So you'll find Keralites a bit reluctant to talk in English compared to other states, as people always seem more worried about making mistakes that they speak very less !!:D

I'm happy to see more and more South Indians entering Canada. It is good to show a good representation of from everywhere India. Everyone thinks Turbanators and Gujus are the only types of Indians. Gujus behave like the flag barriers and it gets to every other Indian and non-Indian desis. No disrespect to Guju girls though, they are great. Is Kerala still the number 1 state at everything as usual again ?
 
why didnt she go for national politics ever

was she member of lok sabha ever>
 

This was the most epic interview given by her in her career. Karan Thapar is used to grilling so many guests in his "hard talk" BBC show including guys like Modi, Advani, Chidambaram, etc. This was probably the only instance I saw him getting roasted by a guest. [MENTION=137677]Thivagar[/MENTION], check this out mate. Gets hilarious at the end:ashwin

Respect to her. She is not some one who backs down in a debate.

A very powerful woman who know what she is talking. Compare her to someone like Mayawati or Mamata Bandarjee. It's like day and night.
 
The AIADMK, Jayalalitha's party, are going all North Korea on us by building up the hype behind their dear leader and making up fictitous stories.

470 died of shock over Jaya’s demise: AIADMK

The ruling AIADMK today said 470 persons had died of “shock” after the demise of party supremo and former Chief Minister J. Jayalalithaa on December 5, and announced a relief of Rs. 3 lakhs each to the families.

The party released a list of 190 persons, who had died of shock, and said the toll of such persons stood at 470.

Condoling their death, the party announced a welfare fund of Rs. 3 lakh each to the families of the deceased.

Further, a total of six persons had attempted suicide so far, it said, releasing the details of four such persons.

The party had already named one person who had allegedly attempted suicide and another who had severed his finger after coming to know of Jayalalithaa’s death, and announced Rs. 50,000 for them.

The party also announced Rs. 50,000 today for the four persons towards their medical treatment.

Having had hospitalised since September 22, 68-year-old Jayalalithaa suffered a cardiac arrest on December 4, and passed away the next day.

http://www.thehindu.com/news/nation...mise-AIADMK/article16793182.ece?homepage=true
 
why didnt she go for national politics ever

was she member of lok sabha ever>

She belongs to the ADMK, which is one of the Dravidian parties which are regional ones unlike the BJP and Congress which are national ones.
 
470 died due to shock over Jaya's death? :)))

lol at AIADMK who think anyone is gonna believe that.

Random deaths aint due to Jaya.

Deaths to get money from AIADMK doesn't count.

Morons. But then it was always like this even with Jaya.
 
470 died due to shock over Jaya's death? :)))

lol at AIADMK who think anyone is gonna believe that.

Random deaths aint due to Jaya.

Deaths to get money from AIADMK doesn't count.

Morons. But then it was always like this even with Jaya.

They clearly need a media manager.
 
Why do you say it's not true?

It's not like this hasn't happened before

Well they are making the claim so the onus is on them to back up their statement which they haven't done.

What they've probably done is found the family members of those who have died of a heart attack, stroke etc in recent days (Tamil Nadu has a population greater than the UK and double that of Canada so this shouldn't be difficult) and offered them money in return for saying their loved ones died out of 'shock' at Jayalalitha's death.

The families get their money and the party get to present their leader as some kind of demi-god.
 
I'm happy to see more and more South Indians entering Canada. It is good to show a good representation of from everywhere India. Everyone thinks Turbanators and Gujus are the only types of Indians. Gujus behave like the flag barriers and it gets to every other Indian and non-Indian desis.

A huge number of Keralites are moving to Australia , NZ and Canada these days. The Arabs are cutting down on jobs BIGLY in the Gulf . And we are being affected the max. So the educated & skilled ones are looking more into migration now.

Unlike the Sikhs /Gujjus, Keralites are very less likely to flaunt their Indianness in public. Prefer more of a low key subdued approach. We prefer our smooth survival over unnecessary displays of "Desh Bhakthi" in a foreign land that draws unnecessary attention. A


Is Kerala still the number 1 state at everything as usual again ?

Ha ha. Still leading in most human /social development indicators (Female-Male sex ratio,Literacy, Healthcare..etc etc) .. The "Gujarat Model" comes nowhere close.:quote: But Tamil Nadu has made huge progress in the recent past as well, even though they are a much bigger populace (78 million to our 33 ) and had a caste system just as bad as us or even worse.. . TN is progressing a lot for a big state.

We also lead in per capita Alcohol consumption:sree(Yeah better than the Punjabis !:harby) and are pretty much top three is first world diseases like Diabetes & Cancer. :125: Need to work on those.:13:

But the lack of development of any industry at home and the cutting of jobs in middle east has led to huge unemployment levels among the educated here. The State government depends on tourism & Alcohol sales to generate income. This could lead to a messy situation in the near future. Our "Welfare State" based model may crumble soon.
 
If she was alive today she'd be in jail.

Jayalalithaa Verdict Shows A Criminal Ran A State

The Raman Effect, which won Sir CV Raman the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1930, held that when light is refracted through another medium, it gets scattered into a spectrum of different coloured lights. The Raman Effect appears to have overtaken the AIADMK, which has seen the effulgence of Jayalalithaa passing through Sasikala and scattering into several different colours as AIADMK leaders vie with each other to claim that they alone represent the original light of Amma.

Sasikala's excesses have caught up with her and the Supreme Court has effectively ended her independent political career before it even started. Before she starts to fade from public memory, E Palaniswami (EP) has taken the banner from her hands. Had this happened when Sasikala took over as the General Secretary of the party, the party might have faced the future united. But she initially chose to endorse the decision taken by Jayalalithaa that an AIADMK government should be led by O Panneerselvam (OPS) rather than the alternative senior leader available, EP; then, within days of the party making that unanimous decision, Sasikala snatched the position from OPS to install herself. The party split.


This is not a new experience for the AIADMK. When MGR passed away in December 1987, the allegiance of the majority of AIADMK legislators was clearly to his lawfully wedded wife, Janaki. Her supporters in and outside the legislature resorted to the most filthy language to denigrate the challenger, Jayalalithaa. Rajiv Gandhi, then Prime Minister, was approached and, in consultation with the Tamil Nadu Congress Committee leadership, decided that when it came to the floor test, the not inconsiderable number of Congress MLAs would support Janaki. But Janaki then made the mistake of directly approaching Congress MLAs to induce them, with the usual blandishments, to pledge their support separately to her. An infuriated Rajiv decided that if Janaki would not trust him to deliver, he could not trust her. The Congress would, therefore, abstain.

That, in effect, ended the life of that Assembly. The state was put under President's rule, and Janaki left for the US never to return. The field was thus cleared for Jayalalithaa to establish her supremacy. Droves of the very AIADMK leaders and cadre who had abused her returned to the fold, their tails between their legs and remained for 25 years till her death abjectly beholden to their Amma.

Does that set the precedent for what is now to follow? Unless the hemorrhage from the EP camp to the OPS camp, or possibly the other way round, is stanched, the Janaki/Jayalalithaa divide is likely to be reflected in the EP/OPS divide. But once one or the other is sworn in as Chief Minister, there could be a narrowing. Such a projected narrowing presupposes the virtual isolation of the loser. However, unlike Janaki, neither contender is going to simply vacate the scene. Therefore, the fragmenting of the AIADMK will persist, with much hostility between the factions.

If, in the floor test in the assembly that must follow the swearing in of the new Chief Minister, the rump faction of the AIADMK votes against the Chief Minister to be sworn in, while the Opposition, as the Opposition, does its duty to oppose the AIADMK, whoever might be the AIADMK's Leader of the House, the government would fall and a period of President's Rule would follow. In the run-up to the next polls, to be held probably within this calendar year, the DMK would throw its all into profiting from this unexpected turn of events, and several of the smaller parties would be given the lip-smacking opportunity of being able to choose between the DMK and one of the two AIADMK factions. The only certainty is that the Congress and the BJP would not allow themselves to be in the same alliance. In any case, neither is capable of overtaking the main Dravidian parties.

Would the balance be tilted by Rajinikanth entering the fray? First, it is unlikely that Rajini would wish to leap into the midst of this swirling whirlpool of contradictions. Second, for reasons outlined in this space a few days ago, even if he did, his move is unlikely to be decisive. Certainly the faction or party he aligns with would get some electoral advantage, but not one that could be called decisive. When, in 1996, Rajini lent his full-throated support to the DMK-Tamil Maanila Congress alliance, he was supporting the side that would have won anyway, so disgusted were the people with Jayalalithaa's excesses that they defeated her even in her own assembly segment. It is those excesses that now stand proven by the tedious processes of our justice system delivering judgment all of 21 years after the electorate decided the charges were true.

As of today, the DMK is well ahead, because the AIADMK has lost its charismatic leader, while the leader of the rival party is still in the saddle, notwithstanding his frail health. In any case, 'Kalaignar' Karunanidhi has arranged a smooth succession. Stalin has been put in charge substantively even while the patriarch rules. There might be a challenge within the family as Alagiri is seething. But matters have been so arranged that an outbreak of internecine warfare in the DMK camp is not anticipated.

If the AIADMK legislature party survives its present crisis - a big If - the new leadership might stabilize. But the more probable scenario is that the split will persist. So, it matters little whether the Governor takes a day or a week to swear in a new government. Chances are that whoever is made Chief Minister, the other faction is likely to express its lack of confidence in any vote on the future of that CM. The Opposition will, of course, vote against the CM, whoever that CM will be. Hence, if the loser has lost his chance in Raj Bhavan, it won't be very long before the winner loses his in the state Assembly.

The more haunting question is that of the law's delays. The charges in the Supreme Court against Jayalalithaa and her collaborators in crime relate to her first term as Chief Minister: 1991-96. It has taken 21 years for the judicial process to wind its way to a conclusion. Meanwhile, the first accused, Jayalalithaa, has had two full terms as Chief Minister and was into her third when she died. The Supreme Court now says, in effect, that a convicted criminal ran the state government for two full terms, won a third, and along the way, brought down a central government. The law's delays have thus impugned the credibility and integrity of our democracy. Either charges should be summarily dismissed or the judicial process made far more rapid. Else, mud-slinging will continue as the bane of our politics. What matters now is less the fate of the AIADMK - which appears, in any case, to have committed political suicide - than whether this case will provoke the authorities concerned to reconsider the entire process of justice - for, to reprise an old and much worn adage, justice delayed is justice denied.

https://www.google.co.uk/amp/m.ndtv...in-1659243?amp=1&akamai-rum=off?client=safari
 
If she was alive today she'd be in jail.

Yet she is revered by people in madras. Would be an interesting case study in human stupidity, what makes otherwise sane people lose their sanity and pay obeisance to a corrupt greedy person as if she was a god.
 
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