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POSTED BY Buzz
ON Apr 08, 2013 AT 23:23 IST
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Edited At: Apr 08, 2013 23:23 IST

The Iron Lady managed to remain divisive in her death as well, just as she was in her prime during her primeministership when her privatisation policy, leading to confrontation with striking miners, and free-market politics transformed Britain in the 1980s. While tributes poured in from various quarters, including from heads of states and even British Labour party members, there were enough voices of dissent too on Twitter:
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POSTED BY Buzz
ON Apr 08, 2013 AT 23:23 IST, Edited At: Apr 08, 2013 23:23 IST
POSTED BY Sundeep
ON Dec 03, 2011 AT 02:07 IST
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Edited At: Dec 03, 2011 02:07 IST
via @tunkuv on Twitter
Rare footage and audio of King George VI speaking in public. His stammer becomes quite pronounced midway through.
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POSTED BY Sundeep
ON Dec 03, 2011 AT 02:07 IST, Edited At: Dec 03, 2011 02:07 IST
POSTED BY Sundeep
ON Aug 09, 2011 AT 23:41 IST
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Edited At: Aug 09, 2011 23:41 IST
Amitava Kumar points to a youtube that has been doing the rounds since yesterday on Facebook, a video they say "the BBC will never replay":
Quickly, the question is asked "Do you condone the violence?" 
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POSTED BY Sundeep
ON Aug 09, 2011 AT 23:41 IST, Edited At: Aug 09, 2011 23:41 IST
POSTED BY Sundeep
ON Mar 26, 2009 AT 06:23 IST
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Edited At: Mar 27, 2009 06:24 IST
What blew me about this speech was not the words but the silence with which the European Parliament heard Conservative MEP Daniel Hannan out, as he went about roasting Gordon Brown. Imagine our netas keeping so quiet.
And the fact that the press ignored it entirely.
But then there is the internet, youtube and the US media.
On the other hand, the likes of Varun Gandhi (or even MMS and LKA, going by recent evidence) might wonder what's all this fuss about tame stuff like a prime minister being described 'the devalued Prime Minister of a devalued Government.' or 'Brezhnev era apparatchik'
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POSTED BY Sundeep
ON Mar 26, 2009 AT 06:23 IST, Edited At: Mar 27, 2009 06:24 IST
POSTED BY Sundeep
ON Feb 17, 2009 AT 19:00 IST
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Edited At: Feb 17, 2009 19:00 IST
Johann Hari in the Huffington Post on l'affaire The Statesman:
... Every word I wrote was true. I believe the right to openly discuss religion, and follow the facts wherever they lead us, is one of the most precious on earth -- especially in a democracy of a billion people riven with streaks of fanaticism from a minority of Muslims, Hindus and Sikhs. So I cannot and will not apologize.
...The protesters said I deliberately set out to "offend" them, and I am supposed to say that, no, no offence was intended. But the honest truth is more complicated. Offending fundamentalists isn't my goal -- but if it is an inevitable side-effect of defending human rights, so be it. If fanatics who believe Muslim women should be imprisoned in their homes and gay people should be killed are insulted by my arguments, I don't resile from it. Nothing worth saying is inoffensive to everyone.
...The argument that I was "asking for it" seems a little like saying a woman wearing a short skirt is "asking" to be raped. Or, as Salman Rushdie wrote when he received far, far worse threats simply for writing a novel (and a masterpiece at that): "When Osip Mandelstam wrote his poem against Stalin, did he 'know what he was doing' and so deserve his death? When the students filled Tiananmen Square to ask for freedom, were they not also, and knowingly, asking for the murderous repression that resulted? When Terry Waite was taken hostage, hadn't he been 'asking for it'?" When fanatics threaten violence against people who simply use words, you should not blame the victim.
The solution to the problems of free speech -- that sometimes people will say terrible things -- are always and irreducibly more free speech. If you don't like what a person says, argue back. Make a better case. Persuade people. The best way to discredit a bad argument is to let people hear it. I recently interviewed the pseudo-historian David Irving, and simply quoting his crazy arguments did far more harm to him than any Austrian jail sentence for Holocaust Denial.
More of this must-read piece here
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POSTED BY Sundeep
ON Feb 17, 2009 AT 19:00 IST, Edited At: Feb 17, 2009 19:00 IST
POSTED BY Sundeep
ON Feb 14, 2009 AT 00:31 IST
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Edited At: Feb 14, 2009 03:43 IST
Are bans, deportations, arrests etc the answer to perceived slurs on religion and revered figures? When does sharp criticsm become "incitement to racial/religious hatred"?
If we thought it is only in India that something like the outrage in Kolkata involving the Statesman editor and publisher's arrest and bail could take place only in India, here's a reminder from Bitain where "acontroversial Dutch politician has been sent back to Holland after trying to enter Britain to show his anti-Muslim film in the House of Lords," as the Telegraph, UK reports:
Geert Wilders had been invited to Westminster to show his 17-minute film Fitna, which criticises the Koran as a "fascist book", by a member of the House of Lords.
But on Tuesday Jacqui Smith, the Home Secretary refused Mr Wilders entry because his opinions "would threaten community security and therefore public security" in the UK.
Mr Wilders went ahead with his trip anyway, and flew from Amsterdam to London on a British Midland flight.
When he arrived at Heathrow airport he was met by two plain clothed officers from the UK Border Agency.
As he was being led away, Mr Wilders said: "I am not nervous but is this how Great Britain welcomes a democrat?"
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POSTED BY Sundeep
ON Feb 14, 2009 AT 00:31 IST, Edited At: Feb 14, 2009 03:43 IST
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