fubar
Junior Member
Posts: 16
|
Post by fubar on Apr 3, 2015 13:27:57 GMT 5.5
|
|
Deleted
Deleted Member
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Apr 3, 2015 14:17:00 GMT 5.5
1. What are the technical issues in the Iran-P5 Plus 1 nuclear talks? 2. How does the FTP 2015-2020 take forward the NDA government's flagship initiatives? Give three examples to amplify.
|
|
fubar
Junior Member
Posts: 16
|
Post by fubar on Apr 4, 2015 17:42:11 GMT 5.5
today's news items : essenceias.blogspot.in/2015/04/4-apr.html it contains 2 articles, one about iran nuclear deal and another about extension of deadline for implementation of NFSA, 2013. Hope you'll find it useful.
|
|
Deleted
Deleted Member
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Apr 5, 2015 22:08:22 GMT 5.5
1. "Condition of small farmer in the country needs improvement." Comment. 2. What is unprecedented about the Land ordinance promulgated now? 1. " Beef was eaten in ancient( Vedic) India because of its sanctity." Elaborate. 2. Calamity relief funding in India.
|
|
|
Post by Lisbeth Salander on Apr 5, 2015 23:48:08 GMT 5.5
|
|
Deleted
Deleted Member
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Apr 6, 2015 10:10:16 GMT 5.5
no need of thanks...i just post the things verbatim. my view on this issue sacrifice should not be equated with eating. eating we do three times a day but sacrifices, in any religion, are confined to some specific occasion n ceremony only. Those are in favour of beef n other non-veg food items want it to be available anytime without any restrictions. Which is not same as ceremonial occasions. so eating for the sake of eating should not be confused with sacrifices. What Mr. D.N. Jha is telling is not sth which wasn't known before. But to say that beef was eaten, the way we eat pizzas n burgers in Dominos n McDs today is sth baseless. Having said that I must also clarify that I don't ascribe to the ideology of RSS n VHP. I'm not a Hindu fundamentalist. Though in my personal life I espouse the teachings laid down in Gita. I'm a total nonviolent person. n I don't advocate in favour of any such animal sacrifices. They all should be banned altogether. Why to take a life just to gratify our tongue n bellies?? Imagine being in a queue just waiting for ur throat to be slit off!! watch one of those ISIS videos to know what i mean!!
|
|
|
Post by Lisbeth Salander on Apr 6, 2015 20:38:13 GMT 5.5
I'm a total nonviolent person. n I don't advocate in favour of any such animal sacrifices. They all should be banned altogether. Why to take a life just to gratify our tongue n bellies?? Imagine being in a queue just waiting for ur throat to be slit off!! watch one of those ISIS videos to know what i mean!! Well, I'm a non-vegetarian, so I'm not the right person to comment on this issue
|
|
Deleted
Deleted Member
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Apr 8, 2015 20:02:21 GMT 5.5
1. Dastangoi 2. How can we make housing more affordable? 1. Impact of rising dollar on Indian economy. 2. Precision agriculture in India.
1. Do you think commercialisation of sport is desirable? 2. "Launching of Air Quality Index is a beginning." Comment
|
|
|
Post by Mr. S on Apr 11, 2015 10:29:44 GMT 5.5
@nkit Dr. Yatri Thor Lisbeth Salander i was not present in the city.therefore, i could not post my answers on your daily quest..dese are very nice set of questions. i have written my answers ..soon i upload my scanned answers...plz review dem..and and lets promote the habit of discussion ..
|
|
color
New Member
Posts: 6
|
Post by color on Apr 11, 2015 14:06:32 GMT 5.5
Hello all, Check this out abcdofupsc.wordpress.comPS: I have been banned in forumias just coz i pasted this link... A friend is contributing on this blog.He says he will post it regularly after 15th april. I sometimes fail to read the newspaper. So, I found it useful. You may check it out too. Please Yatri dont ban me for this post.
|
|
|
Post by Mr. S on Apr 11, 2015 16:16:34 GMT 5.5
Judges must be judged by the rightness of their rulings not by the cases they hear??examine.
|
|
Deleted
Deleted Member
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Apr 13, 2015 11:32:37 GMT 5.5
1."Non-dom" rule in UK. 2. Encounter deaths and criminal justice system in India. 3. Should defamation continue as a criminal offence? 4. Is veganism the remedy for climate change? 5. Reasons for USA and Cuba to reestablish good ties. 6. Innovative schemes to monetise gold in India.
|
|
Deleted
Deleted Member
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Apr 17, 2015 21:18:07 GMT 5.5
1. What is the "midway" in the debate on net neutrality between the demands of netizens and the telcos? 2. Dr.BR.Ambedkar and Hinduism- his vidws and response.
|
|
|
Post by avinashagrawal on Apr 20, 2015 11:33:37 GMT 5.5
IAS MAINS 2015 - Predictable Question
Question: Why Bengal had been central point or focal point of socio-economic reforms/revolts ?
or
Why Bengal had been focal point of socio-political development ?
|
|
|
Post by CHANGEZ on Jun 25, 2015 10:03:48 GMT 5.5
@nkit Mr. S Dr. Yatri Thor Lisbeth SalanderLets get this thread started again! I would like to focus on the common reason for the schemes that are to be launched today - AMRUT, smart city, housing for all and previously launched Make in India. My guess is the JOBS and economic activity that this public investment can generate! Consider this: Make in India – giving impetus to 25 focus areas of manufacturing, putting the FDI policy on website and addressing investors concerns on priority basis. Make in India is especially important for the reason of demographic bulge that we are witnessing. We need to generate 1 million jobs each month and manufacturing is the only sector that can generate low skilled jobs in such large number. Affordable housing is again with this logic – construction is again a sector that has capacity to employ large low skilled labour. In recent years construction sector has seen a dip and Housing for all may give a fillip to the sector and new job opportunities that it will generate. But the downside of construction is that productivity is low like agriculture and commodity is not tradeable. Hence it can generate a spurt of economic activity, but not sustainable on its own! Then comes AMRUT (500 cities to improve basis infra) and smart city initiative - This is like direct effects of construction sector plus indirect effects of better infra like cost savings, more dd, more income, more diversification of economic activity and so and so. So i feel that these are the basic scheme of things over which this government wants to build future of India
|
|
|
Post by priya1 on Feb 19, 2016 18:26:24 GMT 5.5
Hello, May be I am that Bhala Maanus to answer this 1st point. You can also attend daily quiz given by Chanakya IAS Academy. It is also very helpful in increasing your knowledge base. United Kingdom Independence Party (UKIP), Farage, Nigel; United Kingdom Independence Party, British political party founded in 1993. It espouses a populist libertarian philosophy centred on the withdrawal of the United Kingdom from the European Union.
The party has its roots in the Anti-Federalist League, a group led by London School of Economics professor Alan Sked that campaigned against the 1991 Maastricht Treaty on European Union. Sked founded UKIP in 1993, following Britain’s ratification of the Maastricht Treaty, the document that established the European Union. UKIP fielded nearly 200 candidates in the 1997 general election, but the party fared poorly, averaging only about 1 percent of the vote. UKIP fared better in the elections to the European Parliament in 1999, when it won three seats. Capitalizing on an increase in anti-immigration sentiment, UKIP candidates won 12 seats in the European Parliament in 2004, and it posted a respectable showing in local elections that year. This momentum failed to translate into success in the national Parliament, however, as not one of the nearly 500 candidates the party fielded in the 2005 general election won a seat in the House of Commons. The party had an impressive electoral showing in 2009, however, when it won 13 seats in the European Parliament, surpassing the Liberal Democrats and pulling even with Labour.
The party improved on that performance in spectacular fashion in May 2013, winning almost a quarter of the votes in English wards that it contested and gaining more than 100 local council seats. UKIP carried that momentum into the following year, winning more than 160 council seats in local elections in May 2014. Those elections were held concurrently with polls for the European Parliament, and UKIP rode a wave of Euroskeptic sentiment to a historic first-place finish, capturing more than 27 percent of the popular vote. That result marked the first time in modern British history that a party other than Labour or the Conservatives had won a national election. UKIP built on that success in October 2014, when it won its first elected seat in Parliament in a by-election in Clacton.
In the May 2015 general election, UKIP received nearly four million votes. Although that represented 13 percent of the total votes cast, it translated into just one parliamentary seat because of Britain’s first-past-the-post electoral methodology. Farage cited the result as evidence of a “bankrupt” voting system and called for a reform of the process. Having failed to win a seat in the Thanet South constituency, Farage announced that he would resign as party leader. UKIP’s executive committee refused to accept his resignation, however, and Farage continued in his role as head of the party.
|
|