The English conundrum – The Hindu

People of different races and regions have different accents when they speak English.  | Photo Credit: Getty Images ‘Good morning.’ No response. The teacher in me was piqued. When will they learn the English etiquette? ‘Good morning’ is a simple greeting. But ‘goodnight’ is not so simple. It cannot be used just because it is … Read more

Letters to The Editor — May 24, 2025

Top court on ED The beauty of democracy lies in questioning. Sadly, such voices are not heard in India’s State Assemblies and in Parliament. One only has the higher judiciary coming to the rescue (“ED crossed all limits with raids on Tasmac, says SC”, May 23). The Enforcement Directorate (ED) too is not beyond questioning. … Read more

Introspecting counter-terrorism after Operation Sindoor

‘While the externalisation of terrorism through high-impact, war-like response is necessary, the caveat here is that it may end up distracting us from the primary goal — terrorism in J&K’  | Photo Credit: THE HINDU/IMRAN NISSAR The Pahalgam terror strike, on April 22, perpetrated by Pakistan proxies, and India’s retribution through Operation Sindoor, on May … Read more

​Permanent damage: on the Trump administration and Harvard 

Civic life in the United States stands on multiple, strong and independent institutions in different fields. These institutions, whether constitutionality mandated or not, have a continuity, life and standing of their own, beyond particular individuals. They enable diversity and pluralism, and provide protection against arbitrary decisions by those in power. Ironically enough, U.S. President Donald … Read more

A medical oxygen access gap SE Asia must bridge

Oxygen is a life-saving essential medicine with no substitute. Because of the complexity of the industrial production process, there are many challenges in access to medical oxygen such as availability, quality, affordability, management, supply, human resources capacity and safety. Some five billion people around the world lack access to safe, quality, and affordable medical oxygen. … Read more

A day in the life of a data journalist

At 10 a.m., I begin scanning the papers for the day’s news. Exactly 12 hours later, a colleague from the data team and I will need to deliver a 600-word piece with supporting graphs for the ‘Data Point’ section on the oped page. Like a cyclone far out at sea, the deadline feels distant and … Read more

Is establishing the truth a problem during a conflict?

Parallel to the recent escalation of military tensions between India and Pakistan, misinformation and disinformation surged online, making it increasingly difficult for the public to distinguish fact from fiction. Many media outlets published sensational stories riddled with unverified claims, and disseminated fake pictures and videos. Jingoism often drove the public response. Is establishing the truth … Read more

Tariff wars and a reshaping of AI’s global landscape

In the aftermath of the presidential election in the United States in 2024, renewed implementation of substantial tariffs could lead to a fundamental restructuring of global technology supply chains that power artificial intelligence (AI) development. While established players recalibrate, countries such as India are finding themselves in a precarious, yet potentially advantageous, position — as … Read more