Skip to main content

Posts

Why do post-retirement jobs influence current judicial decisions?

Post-retirement jobs influence current judicial decisions in the Supreme Court of India through a quid pro quo dynamic, where the prospect of future employment creates a strategic incsoucentive for judges to rule in favour of the government. This influence is driven by several institutional and personal factors outlined in the sources: 1. The Government as a Primary Employer Supreme Court justices in India face a mandatory retirement age of 65 and are constitutionally barred from practicing law in any Indian court after they step down. This makes the union government the largest and most prestigious employer for retired judges, offering desirable roles in various commissions and tribunals. 2. Desire for Continued Power and Influence The attraction of these jobs is often not purely financial. Instead, these roles allow retired judges to continue influencing policy matters and remain active in public life. This desire for continued relevance makes government-appointed position...
Recent posts

Nuclear Bombast! Is there a method in the MADness?

MOHAN GURUSWAMY: Soon after the attack on Kiev stalled, President Putin sent the western alliance (NATO +EU) into a tizzy by announcing that Russia has put its nuclear defences on alert. What he was ambiguously stating was that the entire panoply of Russian air and space defences will be of a heightened alert status. These defences are meant to largely neutralise an incoming nuclear assault leaving enough Russian “first strike” nuclear forces of land based and highly accurate nuclear missiles standing to be able launch a devastating counter strike. But what he was doing was to introduce nuclear calculus into the security equation. He was telling the west that any attempt to impose a ‘no-fly’ zone over Ukraine will entail a war with Russia. Biden sensibly baulked and blinked!  The threat of an implicit nuclear escalation is not uncommon. Many declared and undeclared nuclear countries constantly resort to it. Several times in the past senior Pakistani officials have warned that dispu...

Jobs for justice: The "quid pro quo" in India’s Supreme Court

The Big Picture: A landmark study reveals that Supreme Court of India judges are significantly more likely to rule in favor of the government when they have the incentive of securing prestigious post-retirement jobs. Why it matters: The findings suggest a form of "institutional corruption" that undermines judicial independence, as the executive branch uses future employment as a "carrot" to influence current legal decisions. Driving the news: Researchers analyzed 15 years of data (1999–2014) to determine if career concerns—specifically the desire for government-appointed roles after the mandatory retirement age of 65—swayed judicial outcomes. How it works: ·        The 47-Week Rule: Incentives to pander are strongest for judges who retire at least 47 weeks before a general election . At this point, the current government is likely to still be in power to reward them. ·        Strategic Authorship: Pandering is...

The Aryan Illusion: 5 Provocative Truths About History, Identity, and the Myth of Superiority

To live within the "Veil of Illusion"—or  Maayai —is to inhabit a reality where the migrant is mistaken for the indigenous, and the ritual is prioritized over the truth. For centuries, the South Asian consciousness has been clouded by a meticulously constructed narrative of Aryan superiority, a myth that has functioned as a tool of sociopolitical subjugation. In his radical indictment,  Aariya Maayai , C.N. Annadurai (Arignar Anna) does not merely offer a history lesson; he exposes a buried crime. By peeling back this veil, we find that the "superiority" of the Aryan was never a mark of cultural excellence, but the debris of a shattered myth, sustained through the psychological and legal enslavement of the Dravidian people. The Outsider’s Stotra: Abbe Dubois and the 1807 Revelations In 1807, the French missionary Abbe J.A. Dubois published  Hindu Manners, Customs and Ceremonies , a work that remains a scathing rebuttal to idealized Brahminical narratives. Anna, ...

Dravidian Identity and the Deconstruction of the 'Aryan Illusion'

1. Introduction: The Ideological Genesis of the 'Aryan Maayai' The work of C.N. Annadurai (Arignar Anna), specifically his seminal treatise  Aariya Maayai  (The Aryan Illusion), constitutes a sophisticated strategic intervention designed to dismantle the intellectual hegemony of the mid-20th century. Writing as a counter-intelligence operative in the realm of ideas, Annadurai identified the "Aryan Illusion" not as an ethnic polemic, but as a manufactured social mirage—a reification of myths by Western orientalists and local elites to justify a hierarchy of subjugation. His preface establishes the text as a "handbook" for reformers, a strategic tool intended to clear the "intellectual fog" and systemic doubts that had permitted Dravidian marginalization. By utilizing historical evidence to deconstruct the "Aryan" construct, Annadurai aimed to provide the Dravidian movement with an actionable framework for institutional reform and regio...

If BCs Have No Share in the Budget… That's Not Governance, It's Betrayal!

By T. Chiranjeevulu, IAS (Ret) Today, wherever you look in Telangana, one demand rings out loud and clear: Do justice to BCs in the budget, release the allocated funds in full, and implement the Kamareddy Declaration. Protests and hunger strikes are being held with these demands. This is no coincidence — it is a reflection of the growing discontent within the BC community. "A budget is not merely a collection of numbers… it is a political document that mirrors the aspirations of the people." In truth, a budget is not just a statement of income and expenditure. It is a socio-economic roadmap that reveals which direction a state is heading and whose development it prioritizes. That is why a budget must be viewed not as arithmetic — but as a reflection of justice, priorities, and the will to govern. A Growing Budget… Shrinking Justice When the state of Telangana was formed, the slogan "Water, Funds, Appointments" kindled hope among the people. Its deeper m...

బిలియనీర్లు డబ్బు ఎలా ఖర్చు చేయరో ఐదు ముఖ్యమైన విషయాలు

ధనవంతులైన యూదు కుటుంబాలు, బిలియనీర్లు డబ్బు ఎలా ఖర్చు చేయరో ఐదు ముఖ్యమైన విషయాలు: కేవలం షోకు కోసం ఖరీదైన సామాన్లు కొనరు కొత్త ఖరీదైన కారు, గడియారం, బ్రాండ్ బట్టలు – ఇవి త్వరగా విలువ తగ్గిపోతాయి. ఇలాంటివి కొనడం వల్ల డబ్బు వృథా అవుతుంది. బదులు ఆ డబ్బును మంచి పెట్టుబడిలో పెడితే ఎక్కువ డబ్బు వస్తుంది. ఎవరినైనా సులభంగా భాగస్వామిగా తీసుకోరు వ్యాపారంలో భాగస్వామి అంటే చాలా పెద్ద విషయం. ముందు బాగా తెలుసుకోవాలి – వాళ్ల గతం, మాటలు, నమ్మకం అన్నీ చెక్ చేస్తారు. తప్పు భాగస్వామి తీసుకుంటే చాలా నష్టం వస్తుంది. భావోద్వేగంతో (ఫీలింగ్స్‌తో) డబ్బు ఖర్చు చేయరు ఒత్తిడిలో, సంతోషంలో, భయంతో ఒక్కసారిగా కొనరు. $1000 (సుమారు ₹80,000) పైన ఏదైనా కొనాలంటే కనీసం 3 రోజులు ఆగి, ఆలోచించి, సరైనదేనా అని చూస్తారు. చిన్న చిన్న పనులు తామే చేయరు తమ సమయం చాలా విలువైనది. గంటకు ₹800 విలువ ఉన్న పనులు కూడా ఇతరులకు ఇచ్చేస్తారు. తాము చేస్తే సమయం వృథా అవుతుంది, డబ్బు రావడం తగ్గుతుంది. ఇప్పుడే డబ్బు సంపాదించాలని ఆలోచించరు ఇప్పుడు కాస్త డబ్బు వచ్చినా పర్వాలేదు –50, 100 సంవత్సరాల తర్వాత కూడా కుటుంబానికి ఉపయోగపడే ఆస్తులు, వి...