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The Big Idea |
South by South Best
A country of India’s size and potential has its own compulsions, not in the least those triggered by the insecurities of its neighbours, writes Manoj Joshi.
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Taken for a ride |
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The India-US nuclear deal is becoming more about symbolism than substance, writes Brahma Chellaney. |
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Death of a game
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What goes as ‘cricket enthusiasm’ is really little more than voyeurism in disguise, writes Rajdeep Sardesai. |
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The Big Idea: Previous Stories |
 |  | An inconvenient truth |  | The humbug of both the quota advocates and the opponents has drowned out all honesty in the debate, writes Barkha Dutt. |  |  |
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 |  | Target practice |  | The Supreme Court has rightly criticised the Centre for indulging in quota politics, writes Dipankar Gupta. |  |
|  |  | Land of the rising sum |  | The UPA needs immediate course correction to meet its own objective of inclusive growth, writes Sitaram Yechury. |  |  |
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 |  | Client-state compulsions |  | With all its institutions of legitimate governance trampled beyond recognition, Pakistan today is a country with a murky past and uncertain future, writes Vikram Sood. |  |
|  |  | From Russia, with ire |  | President Putin is unlikely to be accommodating any longer with homilies on democracy, writes AG Noorani. |  |  |
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 |  | Knight of the living dead |  | We must worry about accepting torture as a tool to elicit information from an accused, writes Slavoj Zizek. |  |
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