Why would a shoddily-written, poorly-titled hit-piece—targeting a critically endangered bird and its mistreated grassland habitat, both struggling on the fringe of India's conservation consciousness—make it so big across so many news channels?
2/ To begin with, Bloomberg Green fearlessly ran down the Great Indian Bustard, saying that efforts to save this ‘slow’, ‘easily-frightened’ bird with ‘bad eyesight’ held risks for ‘green energy’ projects, God's very own gifts to the ‘wastelands’ of an energy-hungry nation.
3/ Instead of making other news outlets cautious, this piece was syndicated across multiple big business news channels. It was mostly run as-is, but the title was often creatively spun to ensure the bird got a good rap and a bad rep.
4/ National media, regional language dailies, energy news channels, and many others who readily bled green, are all worried sick about an irresponsible bird that was jeopardising our renewable energy dream.
5/ Yet, the timing and synchrony of this outpouring of concern for our renewable energy projects remained unclear until I read this thread by @mohantee, and his excellent piece in the Economic Times.
6/ So, a full gaggle of green energy companies, including all the usual culprits, were planning to appeal a Supreme Court order that supported the conservation and well-being of the critically-endangered bustard over their profits. See full ET piece 👇🏽
8/ How nice it would be to show in the Supreme Court that so many different news outlets had written about the unspeakable injustice being heaped upon a community of environmentally-concerned, green-energy luminaries, on the pretext of conserving an ungainly, half-blind bird.
9/ The same world of wealth that strings and quarters the bustards, and erases their homes, also funds our media. Little wonder then that they’d speak up for their paymasters.
Even if it meant that they had to—without irony or awkwardness—flip the bird at a beleaguered bustard.
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A thread about the new 10m global landcover dataset released by ESRI and Microsoft, a quick look at how it fares for India, and some thoughts on making it better.
2/ Yesterday, @ESRI and @Microsoft, together with @ImpactObserv, released a globally-consistent landcover dataset at 10m resolution, obtained from classifying Sentinel2 imagery.
Foremost, what is fantastic and exemplary is that they released their data under a CC-BY 4.0 license.
3/ The possibilities of a 10m global landcover dataset are tantalising. And expectations high. Especially, when it describes itself by headlining detail and accuracy.
Last week, one of the finest, gentlest humans I've ever known—Suresh Puttaswamy—lost his fight to Covid-19. His loss is devastating, not only to his family, but literally to tens of thousands of people with whom—and for whom—he toiled tirelessly, but quietly, his entire life …1
Although Suresh never received the recognition he truly deserved, he was a leader who cared deeply, both for nature and about people. His contributions to the conservation of Bandipur Tiger Reserve, and to the well-being of its adjoining villages, are, in my view, unrivalled …2
Growing up, Suresh understood two things well: hardship and nature. Dividing time between parents working on a tea-estate in the Nilgiris, and his grandmother living in a fringe village of Bandipur Tiger Reserve, he knew all too well what it was like to live on the edge …3
Two hours in the queue. The time slots given by the stupid CoWIN website don’t mean a thing in the difficult reality of your vaccination centre. Good old jostling is the only way. And oh, if know a shameless bureaucrat, they can always help you jump the queue.
Besides the elderly, the people whose life this registration website/app makes unspeakably worse are the immunisation workers. They have been forced to handle the unrealistic unmet expectations set by this site, and the public anger it precipitates.
And the hours people are forced to spend in close contact will itself multiply transmission risks greatly. And remember, the deluge hasn’t yet been let loose. It will be the cruelest irony that immunisation is itself becoming such a transmission risk.
Geospatial folks in India: given the recent talk of liberalising access to geospatial data, can we, in this thread, list civilian-use geospatial datasets available with governments, that, in your view, must be made freely available to for public use?
I’ll go first… PLEASE ADD
A single authoritative, official and regularly updated GIS-ready dataset of all political and administrative boundaries, from international boundaries down to revenue village/ ULB ward boundary.
Analysis-ready time-series of the NRSC’s 1:250k and 1:50k Land Use Land Cover datasets. (By analysis-ready, I mean GeoTiffs, not via WMS, as currently available).
The unlikely, inspiring and heartwarming story of an online Kannada-English dictionary, Alar/ಅಲರ್, alar.ink:
Every so often, an unfamiliar or difficult Kannada word catches me without a dictionary at hand. Earlier, I visited a website called KannadaKasthuri, with a decent Kannada-English (& KN-KN) dictionary. Its now gone & I’ve disliked the alternatives. Then, I stumbled upon Alar…
Alar/ಅಲರ್, alar.ink, is a brilliant site: exhaustive, simple, fast and ad-free. That’s not all. Its word corpus is completely open. The algorithm that does its phonetic indexing is open source. So is the software that drives it. But its story only gets better…
'@Ram_Guha’s piece in @ttindia on music transcending prejudice and bigotry, emphasising the syncretic nature of art, took me to a time earlier this year when I sought solace in just such a tradition, and went rooting around YouTube for examples. (THREAD)
As Delhi burned, I found succour, even escape, in seeking examples and reminding myself of an (endangered) artistic tradition that routinely went beyond mere tolerance, well into reverence and celebration even, of identities and symbols other than its own.
Yet, even as they sometimes deigned to rise above religion, classical artistic traditions have reproduced and perpetuated other abominations in our society, prominent among which is caste. With this important caveat, it is still instructive to seek a glimpse into its syncretism.