Posts Tagged ‘My Views’

Loud Thinking June 01, 2014 at 11:34PM

HBR Guide to Coaching Your Employees
When you’re swamped with your own work, how can you make time to coach your employees—and do it well? It’s a common problem. But if you don’t help them build their skills, they’ll keep coming to you for answers instead of finding their own solutions. That kind of handholding kills productivity and creativity, and you can’t sustain it. In the long run, it eats up a lot more time and energy than investing in people’s development.

So you really must coach to be an effective manager. Got a star on your team who’s eager to advance? An underperformer who’s dragging the group down? A steady contributor who feels bored and neglected? You’ll need to agree on goals for growth, motivate your people to achieve them, support their efforts, and measure their progress.

Loud Thinking June 01, 2014 at 09:53PM

The proof of poor governance & system failure is that orders are always waited from the top e.g., PM & CM, even if its a murder case.

Why the concerned department immediately comes into action of its own?

What for the the nation is paying for the luxuries of the ministers, Secretaries, MD’s, GM’s IGP’s, DIG’, DG’s etc etc.

Loud Thinking June 01, 2014 at 09:40PM

@nayyarahmad: @PMNawazSharif @MaryamNSharif
Saudi Arabia tests Cadbury chocolates for pork traces. Why Pakistan is sleeping why to wait orders fm the PM?

Loud Thinking June 01, 2014 at 07:09PM

“Don’t fall in love with someone who says the right things, fall in love with someone who does the right things.”

— Robert Tew

Loud Thinking June 01, 2014 at 01:19PM

Mr. Prime Minister Pakistan, why your IT ministry is sleeping..?

“The official Facebook page of the Prime Minister’s Office has crossed a million likes in 4 days of being launched,” the PMO said on Twitter. The PMO’s twitter account also has nearly 1.4 million followers.

Modi has been actively utilizing the social media to connect with people and expects his ministerial colleagues to do the same.

In a recent letter to other ministries, Information and Broadcasting Minister Prakash Javadekar has said that the “Prime Minister expects all his ministerial colleagues to use the social media platform extensively to disseminate new initiatives of the government.”

Loud Thinking June 01, 2014 at 12:28PM

An eye opening article published by The Frontier Post.

Drone memo author should be in jail

Posted on 2014-06-01 05:05:01

Link:- http://thefrontierpost.com/article/175063//

Ted Rall

Conservatives say, and this is one of their more successful memes, that poor people are immoral. The proles have sex and kids out of wedlock and expect us (i.e., upstanding middle- and upper-class patriots) to pay for them. They steal Medicare and cheat on welfare. They don’t follow The Rules (rules written by, let’s just say, not them). Which makes them Bad. This was always hogwash, of course. Though it is true that poverty causes people to do bad things, class and morals are uncorrelated. But who’s worse, the poor thief or the wealthy person who refuses to pay him a living wage?
America’s professional class has traditionally enjoyed a privileged position at the top of middlebrow America’s aspirational hierarchy. At the core of our admiration for doctors, lawyers and bankers was the presumption that these learned men and women adhered to strict codes of ethics. Doctors healed, lawyers respected the law and bankers didn’t steal.
When they did, there’d be hell to pay, not least from their brethren. Evidence abounded that the clay content in the professional class’ metaphorical feet was no lower than anybody else’s. Thanks to recent developments, not least since 2008\’s save-the-banks-not-the-people orgy of featherbedding at taxpayer expense, the fiction that we should look up to the technocracy is dying fast.
Not only are some physicians crapping on their Hippocratic oath by carrying out executions of prisoners and participating in the horrific torture of innocent concentration camp inmates, the associations charged with enforcing professional ethics sit on their old-boys-club hands. Big-time judges, depicted in movies as moral giants to get medieval on evil dirtbags whether in the mafia or the CIA, act like wimps instead, grumbling under their mint-flossed breath as they sign off on the federally funded insertion of needles into innocent men’s penises. Thurgood wept. I got to thinking about the fall of the professional class after hearing that the White House has finally relented in its incessant stonewalling on the drone memo. Finally we peons will get a peek at a legal opinion that the White House uses to justify using drones to blow up anyone, anywhere, including American citizens on American soil, for any reason the president deems fit. When the news broke, I tweeted: “This should be interesting.”
I’m a cartoonist, but I can’t imagine any reading of the US Constitution — left, right, in Swahili — that allows the president to circumvent due process and habeas corpus. I can’t see how Obama can get around Ronald Reagan’s Executive Order 12333, even after Bush amended it. Political assassinations are clearly proscribed: “No person employed by or acting on behalf of the United States Government shall engage in, or conspire to engage in, assassination.” (Yes, even Osama bin Laden.)
I have no doubt that David Barron, who is a professor at the very fancy Harvard Law School and held the impressive title of former acting chief of the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel, and who furthermore is President Barack Obama’s nominee to fill a vacancy on the United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit in Boston, did his very best with his mad legal skills to come up with a “kill ‘em all, let Obama sort ‘em out” memo he could be proud of. Still, this topic prompts two questions:
What kind of human being would accept such an assignment? Did anyone check for a belly button? How badly would such a person have to mangle the English language, logic, constitutional law and legal precedent, in order to extract the justification for mass murder he was asked to produce? I haven’t seen the drone memo, but Sen. Rand Paul has. Whatever legal hocus-pocus Barron deployed didn’t convince Paul. “There is no legal precedent for killing American citizens not directly involved in combat, and any nominee who rubber-stamps and grants such power to a president is not worthy of being placed one step away from the Supreme Court,” Paul said in a statement.
I’ll bet my next couple of paychecks that Paul is correct — and that Barron’s sophistry wouldn’t withstand a serious court challenge, not even before a panel of a dozen Antonin Scalias. After all, we’ve been here before. Shortly after 9/11, Vice President Dick Cheney and his cadre of neocon fanatics ordered the White House Office of Legal Counsel, the same entity behind Barron’s drone memo, to come up with a legal justification to give Bush legal cover for torturing suspected terrorists. When they emerged, the Torture Memos, were roundly derided by legal experts as substandard, twisted and perverse readings of the constitution, treaty obligations and case law. Read them. You’ll see. In 2010, the Justice Department decided not to file charges against torture memo authors John Yoo and Jay Bybee on the grounds that the two men weren’t evil — just dumb. (Can’t they be both?) The torture memos, they ruled, were shoddy. That, I’m as sure as I can be about something I haven’t seen yet, will be the case with the drone memo.
As with Yoo and Bybee, both of whom went on to prosper in the legal profession rather than warm the prison cells they both richly deserve, Barron probably won’t lose anything as the result of his work on the drone memo. He’ll be a federal judge, one step away from the Supreme Court. Yet another heavy stone on the grave of America’s once-vaunted professional class.

The Japan Times.

Loud Thinking June 01, 2014 at 11:15AM

Now, taking a cue from the above mentioned statement of late Mr. Nelson Mandela, it is suggested that Pakistani government should slightly re-phrase it and declare the following as its mission statement: “Sports has the power to change Pakistan…it has the power to inspire. It has the power to unite Pakistani people in a way that little else does. It speaks to the Pakistani youth in a language they understand. Sports can create hope for the entire Pakistani nation where once there was only despair, lawlessness, hunger, poverty, drugs, suicide bombings and alarming increase of suicides, due to the economic hardships. It is more powerful than government in breaking down the menace of terrorism which has blown Pakistan to the smithereens.”

Loud Thinking June 01, 2014 at 11:14AM

Before concluding, I would like to bring to your kind notice that please don’t consider sports as something which should be left as your last priority, on the national agenda. And if any proof was required to substantiate my request, here is the statement for your kind perusal, about the power of the sports, by one of the greatest statesman of the world, late Mr. Nelson Mandela.

“Sport has the power to change the world…it has the power to inspire. It has the power to unite people in a way that little else does. It speaks to youth in a language they understand. Sport can create hope where once there was only despair. It is more powerful than government in breaking down racial barriers.”

Loud Thinking June 01, 2014 at 11:13AM

Again, if I were the PM, for the sake of the name and image of Pakistan, for which our soldiers are almost daily embracing martyrdom, I would have gone across the party lines, to select an advisor for sports, who could turn around all the major sports played in the country, in not more than a years time.

Loud Thinking June 01, 2014 at 11:12AM

If I were the PM, all the sports administrators including the minister in charge, would have been sacked with the orders to refund entire pay and perks waisted on them for abysmally failing, during the last one year of the government, to deliver even 1% positive results.

Visitors
Flag counter, effective from 9th May, 2013
Flag Counter

Archives
Powerd by Smart Logics INC