Monthly Archives: December 2011

is what we call “INDIA” nothing more than a representation of?

Question by SorrY: is what we call “INDIA” nothing more than a representation of?
energy in time/space coordinates: It looks something like this (the white lines are there only for our visual orientation; in reality NOTHING EXISTS!) The white lines are something like the “KOLAM” “connecting the dots” It is represented by a balance circuit that equates light with sound. India was in the place where Africa is now. India is slowly being moved towards the east. The whole “world map” is under a cylindrical printer (projector) that projects it on a flat surface. In reality it is nothing but a black rectangular space.

http://marun2.googlepages.com/20061029A_00710100101.jpg

“Promises are made to be
a) kept
b) broken”
A Promise is like a looking glass.

Best answer:

Answer by over druged
What are you smokin ?

India is a country DA

Know better? Leave your own answer in the comments!

Franchising in India

Franchising in India

With special reference to social and business ambience in India.

Price: $ 35.88

Find More Franchising In India Products

CardScan Personal v8 Card Scanner

CardScan Personal v8 Card Scanner

  • Use drag-and-drop feature to consolidate important business info from email, web sites, and other electronic media
  • Creates digital address book from scanned business cards
  • Categorize contacts, search, sort, print labels, map addresses
  • Synchronizes with most business software including Outlook, Palm, Windows Mobile, iPods, and many smartphones
  • Dimensions 7.1 x 7.4 x 2.5 inches; weight 1.3 pounds

CardScan Personal is the smallest most affordable system from CardScan — ideal for the user on the go. Synchronizes easily with Outlook, PDAs and smart phones. Monochrome scanning in about 5 seconds per card.

List Price: $ 224.00

Price: $ 39.95

could you think of some reasons why women’s representation is so low in INDIA?

Question by Rash: could you think of some reasons why women’s representation is so low in INDIA?

Best answer:

Answer by gramophoneshane
Why do we get so many questions about INDIA in the LGBT section?
Wouldn’t you be better off asking in the INDIA section?

Or are you asking about LESBIAN & BISEXUAL women in India, but haven’t made that clear?

Add your own answer in the comments!

What are you doing to protect Intellectual Property Rights of Business Consultants in your Community?

Question by Michael: What are you doing to protect Intellectual Property Rights of Business Consultants in your Community?
, business consultants-researchers face severe exploitation when participating in team or personal projects. Some employers and other people ignore to acknowledge their name as project members and abuse their work in future projects in oder to generate revenues, without recognising their contribution. Nowdays, what are you doing to protect Intellectual Property Rights of Business Consultants-Researchers in your Community? What measures have to be taken in order to compensate them in case of violation of relative laws?

Best answer:

Answer by Ajax
The only thing more absurd than IPRs are business consultants.

Add your own answer in the comments!

Data Entry Outsourcing Services Provider India?

Question by akshay kmr: Data Entry Outsourcing Services Provider India?
Suggest me Data Entry Outsourcing Services Provider Company in India?

Best answer:

Answer by ?
Hi,

We are one leading Data Entry Outsourcing Services concern in India. We provide following list of data entry services such as

•Numeric data entry
•Text data entry
•Double key entry
•Image data entry
•Online forms
•OCR services
•ICR processing

Give your answer to this question below!

CASE 3: BHOPAL GAS TRAGEDY: REVISITED AFTer Twenty-Five Years?

Question by ana: CASE 3: BHOPAL GAS TRAGEDY: REVISITED AFTer Twenty-Five Years?
December 3, 2009, marked the 25th anniversary of the world’s worst ever industrial disaster – the gas leak that occurred at Union Carbide India Ltd’s (UCIL) pesticide plant in Bhopal (Madhya Pradesh, India). The tragedy that instantly killed more than 3,000 people and left thousands injured and affected for life, occurred when water entered Methyl Isocyanate (MIC) storage tank No. 610 of the plant on December 3, 1984. MIC is one of the deadliest gases produced in the chemical industry and is known to react violently when it comes into contact with water or metal dust. Though the plant was closed down soon, the after-affects of the accident left an estimated 25,000 people dead and around 600,000 people affected due to gas-related disorders. What compounded the tragedy was that the victims failed to get adequate compensation and the generation that followed continued to suffer from health complications. However, the multinational corporation responsible for the disaster still continued to evade responsibility.The US-based Union Carbide Corporation (UCC), the parent company of UCIL, stuck to its outrageous argument that the incident had occured due to an act of sabotage by a disgruntled worker. It, however, failed to name the worker. It downplayed the health effects of MIC and discredited the victims and activists fighting for justice. It tried to evade responsibility by shifting the blame on to the Indian subsidiary and the Indian government UCC claimed that it did not have any say in the operations of its subsidiary. The company engaged in lengthy litigation which led to a delay in compensation being provided to the victims. Even the people who obtained a paltry amount years later, as UCC agreed to pay US$ 470 million, had to continue residing in the surroundings of the plant that had not been cleaned up, exposed to the toxic environment. Contrary to UCC’s assertion, independent experts believed that the disaster had occured due to negligent management practices and that corporate greed had played a role in this. they also did not buy UCC’s argument that the company did not have operational control over its INDIAN subsidiary. In 2001, UCC tried to enter into oblivion by merging with the US- based Dow Chemical Company (Dow). After the merger, Dow too refused to take responsibility for the incident, arguing that it had never operated the plant at Bhopal and that it had insulated itself from UCC’s Bhopal liabilities by virtue of how it had structured the acquisition. Not only did it contend that the compensation claim had been already settled by UCC much before it had acquired the company, but it also continued to lobby the indian government to resolve the issue once and for all in its favor. The Indian government too came in for criticism as it was viewed as siding with the rich multinationals, more concerned about a backlash from foreign investors who had become more important players in the Indian economy following liberalization. A quarter of a century later, toxic chemicals lay in the vicinity and children who played near the site and livestock grazing on the ground were fully exposed to it. In addition to the surroundings, the walls of the plant and the roof remained covered with toxic materials which far exceeded safety standards. Moreover, sacks of chemicals and pesticides lay scattered around the abandoned factory in a state of decomposition. The survivors residing near the plant continued to depend on groundwater sources that were highly contaminated as the heavy metals and solvents had seeped into the ground after rainfall. Survivors and their next generation continued to suffer from a number of ailments and cancers. Children were still being born with birth defects and there was an unusually high incidence of metal handicap nd other ailments.Critics felt that the situation in Bhopal only went to show how multinational corporations had amassed disproportionate power and influence in the global stage and showed contemporary capitalism at its worst. the fact that UCC and then Dow had been able to evade the real costs of compensation and clean-up, was viewed by critics as an example of the power and impunity enjoyedby multinational corporations. The victims’ struggle against UCC, and then Dow, were recognized as the world’s longest running struggle against corporate excesses. Experts felt that the outcome of this struggle would have huge implications for globalization. And as such, the incident at Bhopal was not just an industrial disaster from the past century, but a very important issue of the new millennium of people’s right, government responsibility, and corporate accountability.
3. Understand . Understand why this tragedy and the outcome reflect the dark side of
contemporary capitalism.
4. Understand the transnational aspects of the ethical debate and how
multinational corporations can be held accountable for its malpractices in a
country other th

Best answer:

Answer by NIRUKT
I agree and by the way whats the question?

Give your answer to this question below!