The political trajectory of Chintapandu Naveen Kumar—universally recognized by his screen name "Teenmar Mallanna"—represents one of the most jarring arcs in contemporary Indian politics. Long before he walked the halls of power, Mallanna was a fixture in Telangana households, a satirical news presenter on V6 who channeled the raw, unvarnished anger of the Telangana agitation into a microphone. Today, the satirist has become the story, transitioning from mocking the establishment to sitting within it as a member of the Legislative Council (MLC). His victory in the "Graduates' Constituency" is the ultimate political Rorschach test. It raises a definitive question for the educated voter: is Mallanna a vital anti-establishment force born of frustration, or a symptom of a deepening populist anarchy? 1. The "Crime-O-Meter" Paradox: 56 Charges and a Seat in the House Mallanna’s legal profile, as detailed in his MyNeta affidavit, is a study in extremes. In a c...
MOHAN GURUSWAMY: The enduring myth of the Magna Carta, Political Freedom and Economic Development. The world celebrates the Magna Carta or Great Charter as synonymous with the fundamental rights and rule of law that are the cornerstones of modern democracy. We now take our liberties and rights for granted, and the way of life it guarantees us as inherent. But what we now have came after a long process evolution, and many a time they flowed out of something else quite unintended. The Magna Carta is a case in point. Much of the world now believes that the Magna Carta came out of an eruption of a long suppressed yearning among the common people for protection against the caprices of the monarch and the nobility. But it is not so. It came out of an intra-elite struggle between 40 barons and their king. The English King John had emptied the royal treasuries in a fruitless war with France, and the barons were no longer willing to meet his demands for higher taxes. The consequence...