Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Rendezvous with Exchange in France :)

2 Presentations
3 Projects
7 Examinations
10 Days of Travelling
10000 kms flight back to India
and lot more ....

COULD IT GET BIGGER ??

Monday, November 23, 2009

I am also waiting for sunrise......

Its been again long time since I have posted anything here, neither is this one going to do any good. My life is passing through a period of vigorous internal turmoils, too many decisions pending to be made, lot to study for exams ahead (in french), and a lingering wait for better times to come soon. But these times have given me a lot to learn, a lot to improve and a lot to change around me. So I promise to feel fit, soon enough to spill my inside out here.

Sunday, November 1, 2009

Some Clicks from France



A enthralling scene of dusk sky padded with clouds captured by me in the paradisal gardens of Palace of Versailles


Here are some more sunset views from my room.

Saturday, October 31, 2009

My recent visit to Paris and aftermath....

Well, Though these toussaint holidays could have been planned much more hectic and buzzing, had some factors and luck got into the equations nicely, but still, these were one of the best times and trips I ever had. The reasons for all the fun I had were many, but the most evident being the city itself, the paradise PARIS. Its doubtless that this is a city of dreams and beauty and one can fall in love with it without any risk of treachery, which otherwise this cruel world remains always ready to play upon you. I had some of the best experiences of art, architecture, paintings, imagination, illusion, riches, jugaads, shopping, car rides, cooking and testing the strength of my body. Also I again confronted with various facets of my life, analyzed and recognized my SWOTs and again got confused with my future options. I think now I am creating a lot of suspense without clearing what all am I referring to and where in regard to my Paris visit and its aftermath. So I should stop creating a mystery and STOP.

Right now I would like to enjoy the moments a bit more, think a lot more, and come to equilibrium. Then may be I shall write a blog post about my experiences, and thoughts that popped out of me during the last week.

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

It's not that I am superstitious but....

Finally after a month or so, I overcome my growing lazy attitude, and try to recollect one of the most thrilling experiences I had in my life. And not hard to guess, such a thing had to happen during the same old saga of French Exchange which has really become a highly populous region in graph of my life, when plotted for erratic and original experiences.
So this is about our trip to the city of Marseilles, second largest city of France and one of the most populated one’s, with some very nice cathedrals, Notre Dame and Beaches. Now the most important part associated with this trip was the lots of advices given to us by various people, both Indians and French and known for their French experience about the city of Marseilles. The city being one amongst the few in France known for its disorder in terms of law and some ordeals during nights like robbing, street fighting, eve-teasing and similar anti-social activities by some anti-social elements. So though it was not advisable to have a night stay in Marseilles, that we had already planned, it was strictly suggested not to loiter out in streets out of the hotel room after the sun sets, and avoid contacting strangers, who in Marseilles are famous for taking adventures in harassing people. But one after the other the advices came only after we had booked out hostel in Marseille and tickets for the next morning, so that nothing could be changed. But still trying to be brave heart we decided to continue our plans sticking to some extra caution.
So with bags packed, six of us get up early morning of 26 September, the day of Ashtami in India. Previous day, my mother had called me up and said to pray to Mata Ji in my mind after taking a bath and before eating anything. But that day as soon as I took bath, my brain oblivious to my mother’s command and my stomach not used to be stirred at such hour of the day (4:30 am) started having cramps and I immediately munched some bread with butter for the breakfast. Just before leaving our apartment for the station when we were just checking our tickets etc., our dearest fellow pinak remembers that he would like to have some milk. He pours some in his glass, with we all making fuss over him making everyone late, and swoosh he just slips the bottle (he always admits that his motor cells are not well developed) to spill the holy liquid over the floor. It’s not that I am superstitious, but later when I recollect the events to come, such a start doesn’t appear to be a very hilarious one indeed.
Hence we leave for our destination, reach there to meet 3 more of our buddies, as planned. We have a look into the city churches and cathedrals. While we were walking along the old port of the city, Bipul finds two neat 20 euro notes lying on the road side. After trying to look half-heartedly for the owner, we start celebrating our luck immediately. Though Akriti was a bit nervous about finding such large amount of money like this (40 euro = Rs 3000), we had already started planning for a party. But the black clouds had already started casting their shadow. Very soon we were almost thrown out of an Indian restaurant, Varun just saved himself after tripping while mounting a very steep staircase to notre dame, I get lucky enough not to be unlucky when at notre dame I saved my jacket which was finding its corner in the flame of candles in front of Mary, and while going to our last destination of the day, the beach, our map master bipul confuses over the map and makes us walk through the wound up roads of the city almost twice than that was needed and many of us have hard time at beach when the water made our muscles to cramp, giving us excruciating pains. But such things never bothered much to the travelers’ minds.
It was during one of our usual photo shoot sessions (Courtesy: Cameraman- Rohit and Model:Bhalla) on the beach rocks, that we noticed a distant pinak talking to some one (a stranger) and giving him something from one of our bags. This was high time for quickly applying our safety senses of not talking to strangers and we all scuttered towards him. So this stranger guy, who seemed to be an Indian, was offering help to pinak in case of need, and also asked us that we could stay at his place or his friend's, which we humbly and suspiciously declined as we had our bookings at the youth hostel. He also gave us some free passes for a disco in the city centre. Pinak, always eager to make contacts, got into detailed discussion with the guy, exchanged numbers and then after nudging from one of us, bade him a bye. Tired from the day's travel and beach fun, we decided to first go to our rooms and then plan the later things. After changing, we leave from the beach at a beautiful moment of sun kissing earth at the horizons, preparing to rise in other world.
Taking a tram, a metro and then a bus, we reach with quite a difficulty our hostel, which happened to be in very obscured suburbs of the city. With a sigh of relief we bang the reception windows for keys of our booked room just to receive the bolt from the blue, that due to some reason we would be unable to stay there. Such a situation being nowhere in our plans, we immediately find ourself stranded on a quite street of sub urban Marseille in front of the hostel gate, just with an added company of three californians who were also sailing in a parallel boat to ours. It was already past 10 in the night, and all the stories and cautions about Marseilles had started creeping in our minds. The only good feeling we had was that we were 9+3, and the three being Americans, who ought to be more brave and capable than us. We quickly decide to take some night bus and reach the main city to find some lodging there. So we start walking towards the bus stop. That stride too wasn't peaceful, as twice the pet dogs chained in the roadside houses barked the crap out of us. A pitch black cat just crossed the road in front of us. It's not that I am superstitious, but I let the American to lead, and cross the Lakshman Rekha first. Soon with hopeful spirits we reached the bus stop, which was merely a Lamp post marked with a bus sign. But things were written not to go right. The crazy French system of stopping all services at some fixed hour of night was much advanced in this blessed place, and there was no bus till 4 in the morning. Hark!!
Now we were right in guessing one thing. The americans are braver and more adventurous. But they are also hyper in there actions. Without a second thought, one of them stopped a passing by car asked, for a lift, and three of them zoomed away. On the other hand, we had been trying hard since last half an hour to avoid looking at any night bikist or car driver. As a result here we were back to a strength of 9, 9 iitians who had never thought it worthy to give some time to body building or learning fighting tactics. Very soon we were back to the front and sat near the gates of the same crooked youth hostel. Now unable to come up with plan- B we were completely awestruck. With every approaching bike or car, some of which even slowed down near us, our hearts pounded like hammers. And Akriti had already staring murmuring about the consequences of not giving her ear, when she had warned against picking those doomed 40 euros!!! She also stucked her passport and some cash in her stockings, just in case they had to run. On the other hand Isha was convincing her that according to her kundli she was going to reach India back safely, so they shall be all right.
We sat there for an hour and a half, knowing well that it was almost impossible to stay here for the whole night, without one or two fainting with fear, but we couldn't even set out with nowhere to go. The Californians also called us to tell that they had reached the main city with no accomodation in hotels, so they would be spending their night at the beach (I think the cat got it over them too). Thus they called of wishing us GOOD LUCK. It was then that the same Indian guy (Pramod) we met on beach struck our brains like church bells, and we contacted him (thanks to pinak for taking his phone number). He readily accepted to give us shelter and we took a sigh of relief. The black magic still on its high, road was not easy ahead too. With every radio taxi saying a no for a drive, we were in a fix again. But by God's grace we were finally able to hire taxis, and again after an hour or so of jumbling with the roads of Marseilles, we landed at Pramod's doorsteps. We adjusted ourself in his small room, but could hardly take a wink. The day's happenings and all previous descriptions had etched us so much, that we couldn't completely get rid of the feeling that Pramod also could be a terrorist or something, and mastermind behind our ordeal today!!! It was only when we safely left his place and had seated ourselves for a train to our next destination Montpellier that I was sure that I would live to write this story.


Sunday, October 11, 2009

Where there is a will there is a way...

I think our government should also try to initiate and motivate such educational programmes for the underprivileged and poor but enthusiastic students, instead of increasing reservation in IITs to fill their vote banks.




Friday, October 9, 2009

I know this weekend is again going to be tough for me..

Today is Thursday, and unlike other Thursdays, today was quite packed with classes. I got free at 4 pm and had soon to report in salle de dance for practising some dance steps for the forthcoming International Student Week here. Then their was also some INSA club demonstrations going on, and I had some nice talks with a few new faces, and also got to know about a robotics community of my department who were present at le trou with a very sophisticated robot. Then I tasted the famous french cuisine 'crepe' at a stall nearby, and a few moments chit-chat here and there came back to my room at around 6pm. Then I hung up on skype for some minutes with my family in India, and by the time I was done, it had started raining outside. Last few days had been really sun's pick and it was really hot. But the feeling of cold gust of winds with some droplets of water in it, directly on face was quite refreshing. Soon I realised that it was time for dinner, and now here I am after having a filling dinner.

Overall today was quite eventful. I am a bit tired and feeling sleepy. However I dont't want to sleep so early. But its strange that I am not even having envie to do anything else. Though there is still a Friday to go with around 4 hours of classes, its smelling quite like the beginning of a weekend. And without any tour planned for this weekend, I am feeling similarly lazy like it did few weekend back in the time. (Refer to my post- I solemnly swear that I am upto no good).

And more importantly, the events around are also turning out to be similar. With temperature dropping, and weather forecast still pointing to a rainy weekend, I have my Things to do list full upto the end of the page, and I am lacking spice and energy to do any of them. The only difference is that I can this time foresee a bit what might happen if I continue with this state of mind, hence I am trying to be prepared with a alternative plan B.

Thursday, October 8, 2009

The Best of Worlds


This article was written by Sandipan Deb for Outlook India.com

Contrary to popular belief, the vast majority of IITians do nothing of note in their lives. Indeed, many of them became IITians because their parents told them that’s what they should mug their butts off for, and aim to hit the US of A, so that’s what they did. They attended classes, took notes, passed exams, took the gre, applied to a dozen American universities, and disappeared into that country’s vast technological underbelly, to reappear only in the matrimonial columns of Indian papers with a dollar salary multiplied diligently by the day’s exchange rate. Or they stayed in India, working at unexceptionable jobs, doing reasonably well. In either case, they got beautiful brides (often from rich families) and presumably lived happily ever after, meeting classmates once a month and chatting about their IIT days, and how Hippo has just changed jobs, and Zap is three rungs away from the top in Cisco Systems. Each of them had intelligence well above the average, and most, exceptional academic tenacity.

A decade and a half out of IIT, I wonder how many of us IITians achieved our potential? How many went to seed in remote dusty townships, tending massive pipelines and drinking in the township club? How many wilfully walked away from their natural talents in favour of safe MNC jobs selling diapers and hire-purchase schemes? How many, trained to think rationally and without bias, never managed to figure out the nuances of Indian office politics, and were relegated to obscure corridors in huge buildings? How many, obsessed with the American dream, settled for second-rate US universities, hung in for a green card, and today work at unfulfilling jobs in Idaho?

There’s another angle too to this. How many IITians, determined to stay engineers and in India, ignored the siren songs of the USA and the IIMs, and joined Indian industry, only to find that all the technical designs came from abroad, that you couldn’t change them even if you knew they were flawed, that all the engineering you got to do was maintenance, and knowing all that, they either settled into mediocrity, or went off to the US or the iims?

What was my IIT education all about? It was about IITians: 400 academically exceptional boys (and 12 girls) on a campus, which, in the case of Kharagpur, where I went, was far enough from civilisation to have very interesting effects on our coming of age. Many of us were truly extraordinary. There were boys from village schools who were leagues ahead in knowledge of the urban convent-educated type. There were those who mugged night and day, or simpered at professors from first benches, and there were those who also had a vibrant and busy life outside academics. I’ve found that the latter did better in life, even in fields like pure research. I also had friends who never needed to study, they had been apparently born with engineering wisdom in their genes. There were guys who spent most of the semester in a drug haze, but sobered up a few days before the exams, cracked them, and went back to their pharmaceuticals. Others did not have such control. Like Allen Ginsberg, I too saw some of the best minds of my generation destroyed by madness. A few dropped out (I met one of them years later in Shillong, a stridently devout convert to Catholicism, and a lowly government clerk, but he seemed happy), a few killed themselves. But, most of us survived. I suppose we became tougher, more mature, more knowing, and more aware of our dark sides.

We lived and ate together, and shared our joys and heartbreaks and good times and bad times, in competition and camaraderie. We compared our philosophies and, bit by stumbling bit, developed our value systems. Never were stronger bonds forged between young people. Years from now, if I meet an IIT wingmate on the road, I know we will carry on as if nothing had changed, and nothing actually would have. A couple of years ago, there was a small visual trick on an Outlook cover, which was my idea. A close IIT friend, whom I had not been in touch with for years, called up from Singapore: "Some other name is mentioned in the cover credits, but it was your idea, right? I know the way you think." No one knows me better than these mates of mine from IIT.

IIT was also a whole insular world in itself, complex and complete, and it sucked us in. As The Chosen, we lived a full life with no necessity of any contact with the outside world. Totally cut off from politics and "the bigger issues", our delights remained in competing fiercely on the field or the stage with other hostels or other colleges. There were few material pleasures. Lifestyles were spartan, the food abysmal. The vast majority of males were totally deprived of female company. The girls lived a strange life-on the one hand, they were hounded by dozens of would-be suitors; on the other, they faced the petulant hostility of the majority which saw them as undeserving of so much adulation and so many free lunches.

When we graduated, we went out into the world with a rare confidence and strong tribal loyalties. The confidence eroded a bit over the years, and we learnt some humility when we discovered non-IITians as smart as we were, and also people who could outwit us because they were intelligent in a different way-in a sly political way-an acumen we had not developed in our isolated environment which, above all, inculcated a sense of fairness and a respect for ability. We came to terms with a world that compared poorly with our beloved campus, and some of us even went ahead and conquered it. Others didn’t do well, but knew that the ties between them and the masters-of-the-universe classmates would never change. They were ties born of the pride of being an IITian. That pride would never diminish.

It never can.

The author, Deputy Editor of Outlook, is an Electronics Engineer from IIT Kharagpur. He also met his wife at IIT.

Strike or Terror Strike?


A hunger strike is a method of non-violent resistance or pressure in which participants fast as an act of political protest, or to provoke feelings of guilt in others, usually with the objective to achieve a specific goal, such as a policy change.
Fasting is a very ancient method of protesting against injustice or trying to attract attention of authorities. In India also, this practice is vey ancient and dates back to around 500 BC with even a mention of a similar attempt by Bharata in Ramayana, to stop Rama from going to exile. However, this method of protest saw its peak in early 20th century, when Gandhiji’s famous doctrine of non-violence had to be made a strong enough blow to atrocities of British without actually bruising the principle of non-violence. Owing to the stature Gandhiji held internationally and in hearts of Indians, this method of strikes and fasting proved quite successful. Other faces like Bhagat Singh also used hunger strike to mobilise people and shook the foundations of British Raj to prove the importance of their demands.
That was an epoch, which India would never like to see again. It was the time when we were being ruled by a bunch of foreigners, against our will, in our own nation, in our own home. And to make sure that the hard earned fruit of combined efforts of frontiers of Indian nationalist movement is not wasted, we framed a constitution, constitution that ensured a government of the people, by the people and for the people.
Recently, there was a strike staged out by the professors of the most elite Institution of India- IIT. This was an attempt to get their demands for a pay-hike for the professors, and giving autonomous power for the promotion procedure of professors to IIT. The HRD ministry turned a defiant face towards the demands condemning the strike as irresponsible on part of laureates of IITs. After this there was again a declaration of strike, this time a hunger strike. There was quite a hustle about this in media to which Mr Kapil Sibal marked the ministry's policy quite firm and well decided. However the day came, and very soon Govt. lied with its knees bend, ready to conform to IIT professors’ demands. There are numerous other examples to a similar turn outs.
So the fact lies within is that strikes, or indefinite fasts come out to be one of the most successful weapons today in making government or institutions agree to one’s demands. Now here I take my pick, and come to the point for which this article was meant.
What is the difference between one who goes on a strike and a terrorist?”
When a common man strikes there is an instantaneous disruption in whole working machinery of a city, state or nation. Similar are the effects of a terror strike. When a banker strikes, the whole economy goes in danger, there is a loss of lots of funds and interest on money. Bank strike makes public run hither and thither for money, and many companies loose important business deals due to inaccessibility to their accounts. When there is a transport strike, the whole mobility of public gets checked, making life a real hell. When doctor strikes, life of many comes under danger as diseases and emergencies don’t seek an appointment. Quite a similar is the scenario when terrorists attack a building, blast underground railways, kill and wound people and rob bank accounts through cyber-acts of physical bank bangs. Hijack of Air India flight IC 814 was a most dreadful terrorist attack on India. Hundreds of lives were kept hostages and there were demands of releasing dangerous terrorists and lots of money in return. It had really crippled the defence of our nation. But I ask this question, that how was that different from the hunger strike by IIT professors (I am not at all debating the reason of IIT professors strike or if the demands were just or not) recently or any other such fasting, except that the hostages here are none other than the demanders themselves. Attack on Parliament on 13th December 2001 was a direct attack on our democracy. But even such give away by govt. to the demands of strike proves that strikes are attack of no lesser intensity on parliament. When we alone have chosen a government on written directives of Constitution adopted by all, why don’t we let it work on its own? I urge all the readers to ponder upon that is our democracy still flawed? Are we showing a loss of faith in the system by using such methods of protest?
No doubt that the strikes were justified at the time of freedom movement. Because then we were slaves, and had no say otherwise. But today, India is a free republic and democratic nation. The government is made out of us and works for us. If the aim of Constituent assembly that drafted our constitution is still on accomplishment, it stands justified for the government to use its prerogatives for framing out laws, after a proper discussion and scrutiny by 552 elected and (hopefully) educated representatives. Once we elect our representatives, there lies no reason in interfering in its working by using a cheap way of strikes. If one doubts the integrity of the government, then apply your candidature in next elections, and be the part of the government. Or if you still feel outnumbered, suggest changes in the constitution itself. Still if that does not seem feasible, then one can always put forth its point in front of nation by holding peaceful processions that do not hinder working of any department. One can win the support of whole nation by justifying himself in media, newspapers. No doubt government shall feel the pressure, and decide justly, if whole nation raises its voice for a common purpose. But in no way should strikes be tolerated and I think that the system must devise ways to fortify itself against them.

Monday, October 5, 2009

France jusqu'à maintenant

Its been a bit more than a month in France now and these are the places that I have already visited.

Toulouse
  • INSA Toulouse
  • Airbus Visit A380
  • Place du Capitole
  • Basilique St. Sernin
  • Cathedral St. Etienne
  • Le Grand Rond
  • Le jardin des plantes
  • Pont Neuf
  • La Garonne
  • Dome de la grave
  • Bazacle
  • Hopital de la grave
  • Musée des Augustins
  • Musée de les Histoire Naturelle
Bordeaux
  • Chateau du Taillan - Vineyard
  • Mirreur de l'eau
La Rochelle
  • Atlantic Ocean
  • Port Vieux
  • Plage de la concurrence
  • Port des Minimes
  • Plage de la Minimes
Marseilles
  • Cathedral de Sainte Marie-Majeure
  • Basilique Notre-Dame de la garde
  • Mediterranean Sea
Montpellier
  • Place de la Comédie
  • Hérault le Arc de Triumph
  • Jardin du Peyrou
  • Chateau d'eau
  • Aqueduct Saint Clément
  • Cathedrale St. Pierre
  • Jardin des Plantes
  • Palavas Beach
  • Avignon
Carcassonne
  • Rempart de Carcassonne
  • Basilica St. Nazaire
Narbonne
  • Musées, Cathedrals and Eglises

Wednesday, September 30, 2009

The Disadvantages of an Elite Education

It didn’t dawn on me that there might be a few holes in my education until I was about 35. I’d just bought a house, the pipes needed fixing, and the plumber was standing in my kitchen. There he was, a short, beefy guy with a goatee and a Red Sox cap and a thick Boston accent, and I suddenly learned that I didn’t have the slightest idea what to say to someone like him. So alien was his experience to me, so unguessable his values, so mysterious his very language, that I couldn’t succeed in engaging him in a few minutes of small talk before he got down to work. Fourteen years of higher education and a handful of Ivy League degrees, and there I was, stiff and stupid, struck dumb by my own dumbness. “Ivy retardation,” a friend of mine calls this. I could carry on conversations with people from other countries, in other languages, but I couldn’t talk to the man who was standing in my own house.
It’s not surprising that it took me so long to discover the extent of my miseducation, because the last thing an elite education will teach you is its own inadequacy. As two dozen years at Yale and Columbia have shown me, elite colleges relentlessly encourage their students to flatter themselves for being there, and for what being there can do for them. The advantages of an elite education are indeed undeniable. You learn to think, at least in certain ways, and you make the contacts needed to launch yourself into a life rich in all of society’s most cherished rewards. To consider that while some opportunities are being created, others are being cancelled and that while some abilities are being developed, others are being crippled is, within this context, not only outrageous, but inconceivable.
I’m not talking about curricula or the culture wars, the closing or opening of the American mind, political correctness, canon formation, or what have you. I’m talking about the whole system in which these skirmishes play out. Not just the Ivy League and its peer institutions, but also the mechanisms that get you there in the first place: the private and affluent public “feeder” schools, the ever-growing parastructure of tutors and test-prep courses and enrichment programs, the whole admissions frenzy and everything that leads up to and away from it. The message, as always, is the medium. Before, after, and around the elite college classroom, a constellation of values is ceaselessly inculcated. As globalization sharpens economic insecurity, we are increasingly committing ourselves—as students, as parents, as a society—to a vast apparatus of educational advantage. With so many resources devoted to the business of elite academics and so many people scrambling for the limited space at the top of the ladder, it is worth asking what exactly it is you get in the end—what it is we all get, because the elite students of today, as their institutions never tire of reminding them, are the leaders of tomorrow.
The first disadvantage of an elite education, as I learned in my kitchen that day, is that it makes you incapable of talking to people who aren’t like you. Elite schools pride themselves on their diversity, but that diversity is almost entirely a matter of ethnicity and race. With respect to class, these schools are largely—indeed increasingly—homogeneous. Visit any elite campus in our great nation and you can thrill to the heartwarming spectacle of the children of white businesspeople and professionals studying and playing alongside the children of black, Asian, and Latino businesspeople and professionals. At the same time, because these schools tend to cultivate liberal attitudes, they leave their students in the paradoxical position of wanting to advocate on behalf of the working class while being unable to hold a simple conversation with anyone in it. Witness the last two Democratic presidential nominees, Al Gore and John Kerry: one each from Harvard and Yale, both earnest, decent, intelligent men, both utterly incapable of communicating with the larger electorate.
But it isn’t just a matter of class. My education taught me to believe that people who didn’t go to an Ivy League or equivalent school weren’t worth talking to, regardless of their class. I was given the unmistakable message that such people were beneath me. We were “the best and the brightest,” as these places love to say, and everyone else was, well, something else: less good, less bright. I learned to give that little nod of understanding, that slightly sympathetic “Oh,” when people told me they went to a less prestigious college. (If I’d gone to Harvard, I would have learned to say “in Boston” when I was asked where I went to school—the Cambridge version of noblesse oblige.) I never learned that there are smart people who don’t go to elite colleges, often precisely for reasons of class. I never learned that there are smart people who don’t go to college at all.
I also never learned that there are smart people who aren’t “smart.” The existence of multiple forms of intelligence has become a commonplace, but however much elite universities like to sprinkle their incoming classes with a few actors or violinists, they select for and develop one form of intelligence: the analytic. While this is broadly true of all universities, elite schools, precisely because their students (and faculty, and administrators) possess this one form of intelligence to such a high degree, are more apt to ignore the value of others. One naturally prizes what one most possesses and what most makes for one’s advantages. But social intelligence and emotional intelligence and creative ability, to name just three other forms, are not distributed preferentially among the educational elite. The “best” are the brightest only in one narrow sense. One needs to wander away from the educational elite to begin to discover this.
What about people who aren’t bright in any sense? I have a friend who went to an Ivy League college after graduating from a typically mediocre public high school. One of the values of going to such a school, she once said, is that it teaches you to relate to stupid people. Some people are smart in the elite-college way, some are smart in other ways, and some aren’t smart at all. It should be embarrassing not to know how to talk to any of them, if only because talking to people is the only real way of knowing them. Elite institutions are supposed to provide a humanistic education, but the first principle of humanism is Terence’s: “nothing human is alien to me.” The first disadvantage of an elite education is how very much of the human it alienates you from.
The second disadvantage, implicit in what I’ve been saying, is that an elite education inculcates a false sense of self-worth. Getting to an elite college, being at an elite college, and going on from an elite college—all involve numerical rankings: SAT, GPA, GRE. You learn to think of yourself in terms of those numbers. They come to signify not only your fate, but your identity; not only your identity, but your value. It’s been said that what those tests really measure is your ability to take tests, but even if they measure something real, it is only a small slice of the real. The problem begins when students are encouraged to forget this truth, when academic excellence becomes excellence in some absolute sense, when “better at X” becomes simply “better.”
There is nothing wrong with taking pride in one’s intellect or knowledge. There is something wrong with the smugness and self-congratulation that elite schools connive at from the moment the fat envelopes come in the mail. From orientation to graduation, the message is implicit in every tone of voice and tilt of the head, every old-school tradition, every article in the student paper, every speech from the dean. The message is: You have arrived. Welcome to the club. And the corollary is equally clear: You deserve everything your presence here is going to enable you to get. When people say that students at elite schools have a strong sense of entitlement, they mean that those students think they deserve more than other people because their SAT scores are higher.
At Yale, and no doubt at other places, the message is reinforced in embarrassingly literal terms. The physical form of the university—its quads and residential colleges, with their Gothic stone façades and wrought-iron portals—is constituted by the locked gate set into the encircling wall. Everyone carries around an ID card that determines which gates they can enter. The gate, in other words, is a kind of governing metaphor—because the social form of the university, as is true of every elite school, is constituted the same way. Elite colleges are walled domains guarded by locked gates, with admission granted only to the elect. The aptitude with which students absorb this lesson is demonstrated by the avidity with which they erect still more gates within those gates, special realms of ever-greater exclusivity—at Yale, the famous secret societies, or as they should probably be called, the open-secret societies, since true secrecy would defeat their purpose. There’s no point in excluding people unless they know they’ve been excluded.
One of the great errors of an elite education, then, is that it teaches you to think that measures of intelligence and academic achievement are measures of value in some moral or metaphysical sense. But they’re not. Graduates of elite schools are not more valuable than stupid people, or talentless people, or even lazy people. Their pain does not hurt more. Their souls do not weigh more. If I were religious, I would say, God does not love them more. The political implications should be clear. As John Ruskin told an older elite, grabbing what you can get isn’t any less wicked when you grab it with the power of your brains than with the power of your fists. “Work must always be,” Ruskin says, “and captains of work must always be….[But] there is a wide difference between being captains…of work, and taking the profits of it.”
The political implications don’t stop there. An elite education not only ushers you into the upper classes; it trains you for the life you will lead once you get there. I didn’t understand this until I began comparing my experience, and even more, my students’ experience, with the experience of a friend of mine who went to Cleveland State. There are due dates and attendance requirements at places like Yale, but no one takes them very seriously. Extensions are available for the asking; threats to deduct credit for missed classes are rarely, if ever, carried out. In other words, students at places like Yale get an endless string of second chances. Not so at places like Cleveland State. My friend once got a D in a class in which she’d been running an A because she was coming off a waitressing shift and had to hand in her term paper an hour late.
That may be an extreme example, but it is unthinkable at an elite school. Just as unthinkably, she had no one to appeal to. Students at places like Cleveland State, unlike those at places like Yale, don’t have a platoon of advisers and tutors and deans to write out excuses for late work, give them extra help when they need it, pick them up when they fall down. They get their education wholesale, from an indifferent bureaucracy; it’s not handed to them in individually wrapped packages by smiling clerks. There are few, if any, opportunities for the kind of contacts I saw my students get routinely—classes with visiting power brokers, dinners with foreign dignitaries. There are also few, if any, of the kind of special funds that, at places like Yale, are available in profusion: travel stipends, research fellowships, performance grants. Each year, my department at Yale awards dozens of cash prizes for everything from freshman essays to senior projects. This year, those awards came to more than $90,000—in just one department.
Students at places like Cleveland State also don’t get A-’s just for doing the work. There’s been a lot of handwringing lately over grade inflation, and it is a scandal, but the most scandalous thing about it is how uneven it’s been. Forty years ago, the average GPA at both public and private universities was about 2.6, still close to the traditional B-/C+ curve. Since then, it’s gone up everywhere, but not by anything like the same amount. The average gpa at public universities is now about 3.0, a B; at private universities it’s about 3.3, just short of a B+. And at most Ivy League schools, it’s closer to 3.4. But there are always students who don’t do the work, or who are taking a class far outside their field (for fun or to fulfill a requirement), or who aren’t up to standard to begin with (athletes, legacies). At a school like Yale, students who come to class and work hard expect nothing less than an A-. And most of the time, they get it.
In short, the way students are treated in college trains them for the social position they will occupy once they get out. At schools like Cleveland State, they’re being trained for positions somewhere in the middle of the class system, in the depths of one bureaucracy or another. They’re being conditioned for lives with few second chances, no extensions, little support, narrow opportunity—lives of subordination, supervision, and control, lives of deadlines, not guidelines. At places like Yale, of course, it’s the reverse. The elite like to think of themselves as belonging to a meritocracy, but that’s true only up to a point. Getting through the gate is very difficult, but once you’re in, there’s almost nothing you can do to get kicked out. Not the most abject academic failure, not the most heinous act of plagiarism, not even threatening a fellow student with bodily harm—I’ve heard of all three—will get you expelled. The feeling is that, by gosh, it just wouldn’t be fair—in other words, the self-protectiveness of the old-boy network, even if it now includes girls. Elite schools nurture excellence, but they also nurture what a former Yale graduate student I know calls “entitled mediocrity.” A is the mark of excellence; A- is the mark of entitled mediocrity. It’s another one of those metaphors, not so much a grade as a promise. It means, don’t worry, we’ll take care of you. You may not be all that good, but you’re good enough.
Here, too, college reflects the way things work in the adult world (unless it’s the other way around). For the elite, there’s always another extension—a bailout, a pardon, a stint in rehab—always plenty of contacts and special stipends—the country club, the conference, the year-end bonus, the dividend. If Al Gore and John Kerry represent one of the characteristic products of an elite education, George W. Bush represents another. It’s no coincidence that our current president, the apotheosis of entitled mediocrity, went to Yale. Entitled mediocrity is indeed the operating principle of his administration, but as Enron and WorldCom and the other scandals of the dot-com meltdown demonstrated, it’s also the operating principle of corporate America. The fat salaries paid to underperforming CEOs are an adult version of the A-. Anyone who remembers the injured sanctimony with which Kenneth Lay greeted the notion that he should be held accountable for his actions will understand the mentality in question—the belief that once you’re in the club, you’ve got a God-given right to stay in the club. But you don’t need to remember Ken Lay, because the whole dynamic played out again last year in the case of Scooter Libby, another Yale man.
If one of the disadvantages of an elite education is the temptation it offers to mediocrity, another is the temptation it offers to security. When parents explain why they work so hard to give their children the best possible education, they invariably say it is because of the opportunities it opens up. But what of the opportunities it shuts down? An elite education gives you the chance to be rich—which is, after all, what we’re talking about—but it takes away the chance not to be. Yet the opportunity not to be rich is one of the greatest opportunities with which young Americans have been blessed. We live in a society that is itself so wealthy that it can afford to provide a decent living to whole classes of people who in other countries exist (or in earlier times existed) on the brink of poverty or, at least, of indignity. You can live comfortably in the United States as a schoolteacher, or a community organizer, or a civil rights lawyer, or an artist—that is, by any reasonable definition of comfort. You have to live in an ordinary house instead of an apartment in Manhattan or a mansion in L.A.; you have to drive a Honda instead of a BMW or a Hummer; you have to vacation in Florida instead of Barbados or Paris, but what are such losses when set against the opportunity to do work you believe in, work you’re suited for, work you love, every day of your life?
Yet it is precisely that opportunity that an elite education takes away. How can I be a schoolteacher—wouldn’t that be a waste of my expensive education? Wouldn’t I be squandering the opportunities my parents worked so hard to provide? What will my friends think? How will I face my classmates at our 20th reunion, when they’re all rich lawyers or important people in New York? And the question that lies behind all these: Isn’t it beneath me? So a whole universe of possibility closes, and you miss your true calling.
This is not to say that students from elite colleges never pursue a riskier or less lucrative course after graduation, but even when they do, they tend to give up more quickly than others. (Let’s not even talk about the possibility of kids from privileged backgrounds not going to college at all, or delaying matriculation for several years, because however appropriate such choices might sometimes be, our rigid educational mentality places them outside the universe of possibility—the reason so many kids go sleepwalking off to college with no idea what they’re doing there.) This doesn’t seem to make sense, especially since students from elite schools tend to graduate with less debt and are more likely to be able to float by on family money for a while. I wasn’t aware of the phenomenon myself until I heard about it from a couple of graduate students in my department, one from Yale, one from Harvard. They were talking about trying to write poetry, how friends of theirs from college called it quits within a year or two while people they know from less prestigious schools are still at it. Why should this be? Because students from elite schools expect success, and expect it now. They have, by definition, never experienced anything else, and their sense of self has been built around their ability to succeed. The idea of not being successful terrifies them, disorients them, defeats them. They’ve been driven their whole lives by a fear of failure—often, in the first instance, by their parents’ fear of failure. The first time I blew a test, I walked out of the room feeling like I no longer knew who I was. The second time, it was easier; I had started to learn that failure isn’t the end of the world.
But if you’re afraid to fail, you’re afraid to take risks, which begins to explain the final and most damning disadvantage of an elite education: that it is profoundly anti-intellectual. This will seem counterintuitive. Aren’t kids at elite schools the smartest ones around, at least in the narrow academic sense? Don’t they work harder than anyone else—indeed, harder than any previous generation? They are. They do. But being an intellectual is not the same as being smart. Being an intellectual means more than doing your homework.
If so few kids come to college understanding this, it is no wonder. They are products of a system that rarely asked them to think about something bigger than the next assignment. The system forgot to teach them, along the way to the prestige admissions and the lucrative jobs, that the most important achievements can’t be measured by a letter or a number or a name. It forgot that the true purpose of education is to make minds, not careers.
Being an intellectual means, first of all, being passionate about ideas—and not just for the duration of a semester, for the sake of pleasing the teacher, or for getting a good grade. A friend who teaches at the University of Connecticut once complained to me that his students don’t think for themselves. Well, I said, Yale students think for themselves, but only because they know we want them to. I’ve had many wonderful students at Yale and Columbia, bright, thoughtful, creative kids whom it’s been a pleasure to talk with and learn from. But most of them have seemed content to color within the lines that their education had marked out for them. Only a small minority have seen their education as part of a larger intellectual journey, have approached the work of the mind with a pilgrim soul. These few have tended to feel like freaks, not least because they get so little support from the university itself. Places like Yale, as one of them put it to me, are not conducive to searchers.
Places like Yale are simply not set up to help students ask the big questions. I don’t think there ever was a golden age of intellectualism in the American university, but in the 19th century students might at least have had a chance to hear such questions raised in chapel or in the literary societies and debating clubs that flourished on campus. Throughout much of the 20th century, with the growth of the humanistic ideal in American colleges, students might have encountered the big questions in the classrooms of professors possessed of a strong sense of pedagogic mission. Teachers like that still exist in this country, but the increasingly dire exigencies of academic professionalization have made them all but extinct at elite universities. Professors at top research institutions are valued exclusively for the quality of their scholarly work; time spent on teaching is time lost. If students want a conversion experience, they’re better off at a liberal arts college.
When elite universities boast that they teach their students how to think, they mean that they teach them the analytic and rhetorical skills necessary for success in law or medicine or science or business. But a humanistic education is supposed to mean something more than that, as universities still dimly feel. So when students get to college, they hear a couple of speeches telling them to ask the big questions, and when they graduate, they hear a couple more speeches telling them to ask the big questions. And in between, they spend four years taking courses that train them to ask the little questions—specialized courses, taught by specialized professors, aimed at specialized students. Although the notion of breadth is implicit in the very idea of a liberal arts education, the admissions process increasingly selects for kids who have already begun to think of themselves in specialized terms—the junior journalist, the budding astronomer, the language prodigy. We are slouching, even at elite schools, toward a glorified form of vocational training.
Indeed, that seems to be exactly what those schools want. There’s a reason elite schools speak of training leaders, not thinkers—holders of power, not its critics. An independent mind is independent of all allegiances, and elite schools, which get a large percentage of their budget from alumni giving, are strongly invested in fostering institutional loyalty. As another friend, a third-generation Yalie, says, the purpose of Yale College is to manufacture Yale alumni. Of course, for the system to work, those alumni need money. At Yale, the long-term drift of students away from majors in the humanities and basic sciences toward more practical ones like computer science and economics has been abetted by administrative indifference. The college career office has little to say to students not interested in law, medicine, or business, and elite universities are not going to do anything to discourage the large percentage of their graduates who take their degrees to Wall Street. In fact, they’re showing them the way. The liberal arts university is becoming the corporate university, its center of gravity shifting to technical fields where scholarly expertise can be parlayed into lucrative business opportunities.
It’s no wonder that the few students who are passionate about ideas find themselves feeling isolated and confused. I was talking with one of them last year about his interest in the German Romantic idea of bildung, the upbuilding of the soul. But, he said—he was a senior at the time—it’s hard to build your soul when everyone around you is trying to sell theirs.
Yet there is a dimension of the intellectual life that lies above the passion for ideas, though so thoroughly has our culture been sanitized of it that it is hardly surprising if it was beyond the reach of even my most alert students. Since the idea of the intellectual emerged in the 18th century, it has had, at its core, a commitment to social transformation. Being an intellectual means thinking your way toward a vision of the good society and then trying to realize that vision by speaking truth to power. It means going into spiritual exile. It means foreswearing your allegiance, in lonely freedom, to God, to country, and to Yale. It takes more than just intellect; it takes imagination and courage. “I am not afraid to make a mistake,” Stephen Dedalus says, “even a great mistake, a lifelong mistake, and perhaps as long as eternity, too.”
Being an intellectual begins with thinking your way outside of your assumptions and the system that enforces them. But students who get into elite schools are precisely the ones who have best learned to work within the system, so it’s almost impossible for them to see outside it, to see that it’s even there. Long before they got to college, they turned themselves into world-class hoop-jumpers and teacher-pleasers, getting A’s in every class no matter how boring they found the teacher or how pointless the subject, racking up eight or 10 extracurricular activities no matter what else they wanted to do with their time. Paradoxically, the situation may be better at second-tier schools and, in particular, again, at liberal arts colleges than at the most prestigious universities. Some students end up at second-tier schools because they’re exactly like students at Harvard or Yale, only less gifted or driven. But others end up there because they have a more independent spirit. They didn’t get straight A’s because they couldn’t be bothered to give everything in every class. They concentrated on the ones that meant the most to them or on a single strong extracurricular passion or on projects that had nothing to do with school or even with looking good on a college application. Maybe they just sat in their room, reading a lot and writing in their journal. These are the kinds of kids who are likely, once they get to college, to be more interested in the human spirit than in school spirit, and to think about leaving college bearing questions, not resumés.
I’ve been struck, during my time at Yale, by how similar everyone looks. You hardly see any hippies or punks or art-school types, and at a college that was known in the ’80s as the Gay Ivy, few out lesbians and no gender queers. The geeks don’t look all that geeky; the fashionable kids go in for understated elegance. Thirty-two flavors, all of them vanilla. The most elite schools have become places of a narrow and suffocating normalcy. Everyone feels pressure to maintain the kind of appearance—and affect—that go with achievement. (Dress for success, medicate for success.) I know from long experience as an adviser that not every Yale student is appropriate and well-adjusted, which is exactly why it worries me that so many of them act that way. The tyranny of the normal must be very heavy in their lives. One consequence is that those who can’t get with the program (and they tend to be students from poorer backgrounds) often polarize in the opposite direction, flying off into extremes of disaffection and self-destruction. But another consequence has to do with the large majority who can get with the program.
I taught a class several years ago on the literature of friendship. One day we were discussing Virginia Woolf’s novel The Waves, which follows a group of friends from childhood to middle age. In high school, one of them falls in love with another boy. He thinks, “To whom can I expose the urgency of my own passion?…There is nobody—here among these grey arches, and moaning pigeons, and cheerful games and tradition and emulation, all so skilfully organised to prevent feeling alone.” A pretty good description of an elite college campus, including the part about never being allowed to feel alone. What did my students think of this, I wanted to know? What does it mean to go to school at a place where you’re never alone? Well, one of them said, I do feel uncomfortable sitting in my room by myself. Even when I have to write a paper, I do it at a friend’s. That same day, as it happened, another student gave a presentation on Emerson’s essay on friendship. Emerson says, he reported, that one of the purposes of friendship is to equip you for solitude. As I was asking my students what they thought that meant, one of them interrupted to say, wait a second, why do you need solitude in the first place? What can you do by yourself that you can’t do with a friend?
So there they were: one young person who had lost the capacity for solitude and another who couldn’t see the point of it. There’s been much talk of late about the loss of privacy, but equally calamitous is its corollary, the loss of solitude. It used to be that you couldn’t always get together with your friends even when you wanted to. Now that students are in constant electronic contact, they never have trouble finding each other. But it’s not as if their compulsive sociability is enabling them to develop deep friendships. “To whom can I expose the urgency of my own passion?”: my student was in her friend’s room writing a paper, not having a heart-to-heart. She probably didn’t have the time; indeed, other students told me they found their peers too busy for intimacy.
What happens when busyness and sociability leave no room for solitude? The ability to engage in introspection, I put it to my students that day, is the essential precondition for living an intellectual life, and the essential precondition for introspection is solitude. They took this in for a second, and then one of them said, with a dawning sense of self-awareness, “So are you saying that we’re all just, like, really excellent sheep?” Well, I don’t know. But I do know that the life of the mind is lived one mind at a time: one solitary, skeptical, resistant mind at a time. The best place to cultivate it is not within an educational system whose real purpose is to reproduce the class system.
The world that produced John Kerry and George Bush is indeed giving us our next generation of leaders. The kid who’s loading up on AP courses junior year or editing three campus publications while double-majoring, the kid whom everyone wants at their college or law school but no one wants in their classroom, the kid who doesn’t have a minute to breathe, let alone think, will soon be running a corporation or an institution or a government. She will have many achievements but little experience, great success but no vision. The disadvantage of an elite education is that it’s given us the elite we have, and the elite we’re going to have.


Monday, September 28, 2009

Benefits & Downsides in embracing "Green Technology"


What are the benefits & downsides in embracing "Green Technology"? As a responsible citizen of this planet what should be your contribution & message to society, humanity & posterity when it comes to choosing appropriate technologies for a specific aspect of life.
Entry for Honda YES Award-2009 (Shortlisted)
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The 21st century has been called as the “century of the environment”. With mankind developing exponentially in each and every sphere of science, technology, industry, commerce, agriculture, entertainment and security, in an endeavor to make human life better, comfortable, more safer and in satisfying its natural thirst and zeal for gaining more, we have knowingly and unknowingly lost track of the ecological balance placed very finely by nature on our planet Earth. Assigning a monetary value to every possible object, lately which has come to include all forms of natural resources and environmental goods, is taking its toll on the planet. Today nobody can avoid the fact that the climate is changing, earth is warming and various species are going extinct. Now, there is overwhelming scientific consensus that this is happening, and human-induced. Neither Governments nor individuals can any longer assume that challenges like pollution, climatic changes and dwindling natural resources can be set aside for future generations. And the most viable solution surfacing out across the world to this problem is applying environmental science in accord with the pattern of sustainable development, i.e. embracing Green Technology.
Green Technology consists of various evolving methods and material to conserve natural environment and resources including techniques to generate energy and non-toxic products. With alarming rates of ecological changes and consumption of fossil fuels, reserves of which may not last for more than 50 years from now, it has become very important for us to quickly adopt these methods to save natural resources and flora and fauna. The benefits, though coupled with some downsides, are numerous. If the technologies are used sense fully, earth can definitely become a more habitable planet and these technologies can also prove to be a boon for all in many other aspects.

Firstly, talking about the benefits of green technology, the first and foremost advantage which is most evident is the safety and betterment of environment. As the nomenclature suggests; ‘Green’ this very initiative has been devised in order to check the rapid maligning of our biosphere.  All the basic applications like “Cradle to Cradle Design” or Recycling, Water Purification, Sewage Treatment, Solid Management, exploiting various sources of renewable energies and generating cleaner power will directly affect our climate and the environment by reducing the rate of cutting of trees, using natural resources, minerals  and addition of toxic chemicals to the earth, water and air. Recycling helps to reduce raw material consumption and waste dumping problem is also reduced. Introduction of technologies that use solar energy as power source will not only meet the daily energy requirements without using the limited sources like petroleum, gas or coal but also reduce the running cost of the equipments. Bio- Gas from organic wastes is not only a quick alternative of cooking gas, but also is a way to keep the surroundings clean. Cars running on electricity or other fuels like Hydrogen, compressed air etc. have practically zero emission. Wind energy harnessing projects by companies like Suzlon foresee a clean energy concept without any disturbance to the nature around. This method of energy construction is both cheaper and safer than other alternatives like nuclear energy plants, which are very costly and have dangerous radioactive chemicals as their waste products. Building dams for hydroelectric generation have twofold benefits. First is to generate free and clean electricity, and secondly they help channelizing water for agricultural irrigation, flood control, recreation and inland navigation. Treating the industrial solid and liquid wastes check health hazards to life which otherwise pollute underground water, drinking and using which causes thousands of deadly diseases like cancer, lung diseases, respiratory disorders, infertility and deformations of body. The electric filters of the fume exhausts can check entry of harmful solid ash particles to the air, and acidic gases like NO2, CO2, SO2 and SO3 which lead to acid rains and destroy agricultural plantations, and are also potential green house gases. Realising the harmful effects of these wastes, many countries are adopting Kyoto Protocol to earn carbon credits by reducing their green house gases emission. The research on bio-degradable plastics is also being done. All these technologies if put up in their lives by all, in a proper manner, will certainly lead to a better habitat in future. With rejuvenation of flora and fauna, the prophecies of end of life on earth in a few years shall prove false. In totality, green technologies promise nature conservation and biodiversity, so that all species can live in mutual co-existence with each other.

However as a by-product of introduction of these green technologies or environment technologies, it is being felt that there are also prospects of growth in business opportunities that also endorse sustainability. Embracing Green Technology also boosts up companies’ economy and is good for the bottom line. In an Interview by CNN the spokesperson for General Electric said:
"It's both great business and a good business -- great in that it is generating real orders and revenue ... and good in the burnishing effect our initiatives have had on both our brand and our business."
Companies have made manifold increase in their budget for research and development of technologies to reduce energy consumption and waste products as a way to bolster their brand name and consumer confidence in their product. Many new companies are coming up, setting up industries and research labs for this new field of development. This is not only opening up portals of an altogether new area for researchers, but also is serving a source of employment for number of engineers, scientists and workers. To meet up the moral expectations, low energy consuming products are being developed and installed. But they as an effect help decreasing a lot of power and fuel consumption of this installations and industries, with usage of free solar, wind energy or energy efficient devices. Then Recycling reduces the raw material costs to company which utilises just the trash. Recycling is a global industry accounting for more than 1.5 million jobs and $100 billion in annual revenue. As a whole, the industry currently processes more than 600 million metric tons of material annually, growing with the expansion of the global, green economy. So it is vastly helping in generating employment and catering to the needs of the people. Waste disposal for hazardous nuclear reactive substances and toxic chemicals was a headache and highly expensive affair for the companies, but the use of non-toxic materials can cut the costs to a large extent. More funds are being mobilised for boosting up green technologies, NGOs being setup, bank loans being provided, and the returns to these investments are quite prominent.

The reason because of which many people try to avoid adopting Green Technologies is that switching over to new products and technology will be very costly. But they view the scenario very wrongly. Adopting Green ways in life will also save the costs for the common man, if they start saving energy and resort to more energy efficient methods. There will be a high cost cutting in payment of energy bills, taxes and also they will breathe cleaner air. Due to depletion of many natural elements, the cost of traditional energy and commodities has increased a lot. For example Traditional construction materials have gone up by 25% in the last three years. Green Technology promises better, renewable and recyclable alternatives which shall be cheaper. Even governments are providing incentives and subsidies for such products.
Despite of all bright sides of Green technology, some scientists have debated on the use of Green Technology for good of Earth. There are question being raised on the geo- engineering that whether we are talented enough to start this task of keeping earth in a homeostasis. There are statement like that man is inventing green technology which though apparently from surface are for correcting the environment, but perhaps we are falling behind our own correction. For example according to a research, installing too many wind mills to harness wind energy may overall decrease the wind speed up to 5-6 kmph. Hence a ripple effect will occur resulting into interference with natural wind and storm pattern. Similarly, setting up hydroelectric projects also causes a lot of disturbance in fish habitat, and natural flora and fauna have to be dislocated. Even natural fertile soil basins get destroyed. Attempts to neutralise these effects by setting up wild-life parks and sanctuaries are anything but natural.  Implementing Green Technology takes its toll, as in we spend more money and energy on making these technologies than we do on ecologically ‘harmful’ ones. Moreover our actions may soon prove to be harmful, as while making these environment friendly technologies, in lust of saving environment, we spend the resources without any limit.

Now the question that arises is that what sort of skills, training, education and occupations are needed for making these initiatives successful. Perhaps the most urgent issue of green technology includes the development of alternative fuels, new means of generating energy and using this energy efficiently. This idea is very synonymous with Green technologies and hence environment. I myself being a student of electrical engineering and technology and a responsible habitant of Earth wish to contribute my best in this effect. I have a vision for developing devices which can generate electrical energy very efficiently from abundant sources like solar power and nuclear power, and making them both safe and easy to implement. I also wish to research on electrical and electronic devices that use energy with high output per input. In this effect I have already worked on a case study as a part of a project, to tap high amounts of heat energy dissipated in high speed calculation circuits and processors used in computers and super computers. I hope to continue this project, which if successful may result to high amount of energy saving in our daily life.

My ideology says: “A penny saved is a penny earned”. Similarly ‘energy saved is energy generated’. However it is required that we proceed with a joint effort from each and everyone, not just one or two. Hence I wish to share my point of view for ways of saving environment in different aspects of life, with the society and through them to generations to come. After analysing thoroughly the pros and cons of Green Technology it can be deduced that, undoubtedly it is wiser to adapt green ways of life, but it is more important to be wise enough to chose the appropriate way in different aspects of life. Technology is beneficial for our life, but we must not become over dependent on them. Agrarian ways can also be adapted in some parts, leading to a balanced lifestyle between excess of industrialization and totally rural ways. This will benefit our health, and bring us closer to the environment without inculcating any monetary losses. We must try to retrace some of the primitive ways of living whenever possible. As it is still unclear, after researches by some scientists, that how reliable are green technologies to save the environment, it is important to break this process into small levels i.e. at household or small organisation level. A good way to save energy is by not wasting things. One must try to save energy by for example using more daylight, switching on lights only when needed, trying to be simpler and enduring and using air conditioners, coolers etc. as less as possible. We can decrease the use of use and throw plates, cups, packaging etc. as they lead to a lot of wastage. We should reuse and recycle bottles, cans, paper, glass and every other thing that can still be utilised. Today, people feel it shame to use things that have become a bit old or outdated. But we must change our attitude or nature shall throw us too off track terming as outdated. One must save fuel and gasoline by using public transport and walking on foot or bicycle for small distances. The transport sector is considered responsible for 14% of global emissions. Throughout the world a lot of energy is being wasted in heating houses and water. We must use warm clothing and blankets to keep ourselves warm and take care of not allowing heat to dissipate when heaters are on. While bathing, water should be used judiciously. We must not waste food as growing edible food and cooking it uses a lot of energy. The things we do in our daily life makes a lot of difference. If everyone saves a little energy, it adds up to a lot and saving energy is also saving money.

Even the present day technologies can be used in a wise manner to save environment. Studies say that every year millions of dollars are spent by business tycoons and entrepreneurs for travelling on their private jets for business meetings. However, they can use Internet and can settle their deals online through video conferencing, hence saving a lot of energy and time. 300,000 tons of paper could be avoided if an estimated 25% of printed directories printing were moved online. This corresponds approximately to a reduction in emissions of 0.9 Mt CO2. A doubling in e-commerce over a ten year period, estimated a total reduction in greenhouse gases emissions of 206.3m tons (187 Mln metric tons) per decade.

Every year, wars amongst nations, firing, explosions, lead to a heavy loss of both energy and money. It has been recognised as a potential global warming factor. So it is the necessity of the hour to understand that we must kill our personal egos and stop hatred, or else this hatred shall reciprocate.
As the Cree Prophecy of the American Tribe says:

“Only after the last tree has been cut down. Only after the last river has been poisoned. Only after the last fish has been caught. Only then will you find that money cannot be eaten”.

Though an exaggeration, it very precisely provides the message to the society. In this quest for securing your today, don't ruin your future. Because your child's future, is connected to yours.

Man is the most intelligent creature, and it is by use of that intelligence has he created this situation of global emergency. But if he, rather I must say we, decide to be creative enough to fight against this issue, we can once again turn this withering green planet into a place heavenly.