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"The dosti lies in a shambles," says P Chidambaram in an opinion piece for The Indian Express, speaking about the dent in India-US ties following President Donald Trump's claim in May that he mediated a ceasefire between India and Pakistan.
Chidambaram says that PM Modi has truly been "stumped" by the behaviour of President Trump, and that the Indian government needs to go back to the drawing board to "re-draw" its American policy.
Speaking about the possible reason that led Trump to claim credit, the former finance minister says:
"The unravelling of the Hindutva majoritarian dispensation is underway," says Parakala Prabhakar in an article for The Telegraph. The basis of this strong statement, he says, lies in the fact that the Union government finally accepted the demand for a caste census.
Prabhakar states that Hindutva's votaries view the caste census as inimical to their mission of "homogenising" Hindu society as they fear that it would foreground divisions among Hindus.
He goes on to say that full-blooded Hindutva never found purchase in India's electoral democracy. Hence, acceding to the demand for a caste census is akin to the BJP's earlier retreats in order to become "acceptable" to the Indian electorate.
In an article for The Indian Express, Leher Kala speaks about a recent viral video in which French President Emmanuel Macron was purportedly "smacked" in the face by First Lady Brigitte Macron before disembarking an aircraft.
Explaining how one may perceive the French president getting "slapped" by his wife, Kala says that all of us have a particular set of values from an "abstract, messy space" in our heads based on how we grew up, past regrets, future plans and pointless rumination.
"Watching others’ lives play out is one way of understanding our own," she says, adding:
In an article for Deccan Chronicle, Shashi Warrier explains a key aspect of the debate over Rohingya and Bangladeshi immigrants in India through the visit of a couple to his home.
"There are jobs no one is willing to do,” said Mrs Raghavan, one of the guests. "I think we should find a way to get Bangladeshi immigrants to do some of these things. That way, we all benefit, and I’m sure it’s easier than trying to throw them all out.”
However, her husband, Mr Raghavan, says that it would be foolish to do that as many of them have been committing crimes in India and that their loyalties are suspect.
His wife rebuts him, saying, "There’s no evidence that Rohingyas or Bangladeshi immigrants have any more criminal tendencies than the rest of us."
The couple goes on arguing, without coming to a common ground.
Ashraf Zainabi, in an article for Greater Kashmir, speaks about the need for a domestic film industry in Jammu and Kashmir.
"You’d think a place like Kashmir — wrapped in poetry, brushed with snow, and humming with ancient stories — would have birthed a thriving film culture by now. Not just as a pretty backdrop for someone else’s movie, but as a place with its own cinematic heartbeat, its own voice behind the camera."
Alas, he says, that has not been the case.
Zainabi says that even the smallest towns and villages are producing short films, documentaries, web series — anything to tell their stories. However, Kashmir, a place overflowing with texture and emotion, remains largely silent on the cinematic front.
"When you have been trolled on social media as often as I have, you learn to ignore the garbage that is flung at you," says Tavleen Singh in her weekly column for The Indian Express.
She says that recently, the BJP's "army of trolls" accused her of being a Pakistani agent and "having an agenda".
This came after she posted a video on X of Donald Trump mocking the Indian Air Force with a rider that if this was not fake, "then we should realise that Trump is not on our side".
"I did this because I truly was not sure that it was a fake. And because it has angered me that instead of supporting our war against terrorism, the American President has equivocated and made India and Pakistan sound like juvenile, querulous neighbours," she said, adding:
Tushar Gore, in an opinion piece for The Economic Times, says that "perceived value" has been alluring to human beings for as long as the species has existed: Things are coveted for the single and simple reason that they are coveted by others.
While this "covetousness" was limited to precious metals and stones, he says, it has now been extended to brands.
In an article for The Times of India, Pranay Kotasthane speaks about the recent developments that have taken place regarding Centre-state relations, including the Tamil Nadu government suing the Centre in the Supreme Court for allegedly withholding Rs 2,000 crore under the Samagra Shiksha Scheme.
For greater cooperation and cohesion between the Centre and states, Kotasthane speaks about four possible ideas.
First, An ‘umpire’ for bargaining: The National Development Council, created for this purpose, is defunct, he says.
Second, More funds with less strings: As long as there are centrally sponsored schemes, which are designed by Union ministries and only implemented by states, the Centre is within its rights to change the scheme’s design.
Third, All-party delegations to states: Kotasthane asserts the need for a domestic mechanism where states send delegations to other states explaining their visions for development.
And fourth, Union-state sub-groups:
"Manchester United had the likes of Ryan Giggs, Wayne Rooney and Michael Owen, but the current lot of fans wonder why they have to keep supporting a club that’s not winning anything," writes Tushar Bhaduri in an article for The Financial Express.
Bhaduri says that the once-great club faces an identity crisis, on and off the pitch: Whether one considers this sojourn a pre-season or post-season, it showed the fall the 20-time English champions have suffered over the last dozen years since Alex Ferguson stepped down as the man in charge.
Bhaduri says that while several pedigreed managers have tried their hand since the days of Ferguson, expectations around Old Trafford have gone down to such an extent that Ruben Amorim, their manager, considers the second place the club finished at during his stint among his finest achievements.
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