Sunday 16 February 2014

super cars


SRT Viper
It is officially Valentine’s Day and that means that quite a few of you are planning some great romantic evening with the man or woman of your dreams. Well we hate to burst your bubble, but unless you are datingElon Musk and he is taking you into space, there are a few cars that will definitely be more exciting than what you have planned tonight.
From supercars to quick convertibles to hot hatches , we have something here that is sure to press your buttons.
We have gathered a list of five cars that are more exciting than your Valentine’s Day plans.
When you get done going through the list, feel free to let us know if we missed your favorite car. If you actually have a Valentine’s Day extravaganza that you thinks beats one of our cars, let us know that too. We will be sure to praise you for coming up with something more amazing than any of us could.

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Wednesday 5 February 2014

AAP's Arvind Kejriwal Battles Age-Old VIP Perks

AAP's Arvind Kejriwal Battles Age-Old VIP Perks

By IndiaTimes | January 11, 2014, 6:00 am IST

For years, India's senior politicians have resided in the capital's most luxurious colonial-era bungalows, protected by gun-toting police and chauffeur-driven cars running red lights with sirens blazing - even if it was for a wife's shopping trip.

A government vehicle with a red light atop is driven along a road in New Delhi January 8, 2014.VIP Culture



This was all shamelessly done dressed in flowing cotton tunics and trousers, the dress code of any official wanting to associate themselves with the founding fathers of independence and the country's frugal Gandhian legacy.

Now, these symbols have come under attack after bespectacled former tax collector Arvind Kejriwal, head of the anti-corruption Common Man's Party, shocked India by becoming chief minister of Delhi in the Assembly elections last month.

Arvind Kejriwal walks past his car as he arrives at the National Cadet Corps (NCC) camp in New Delhi January 8, 2014.Arvind Kejriwal



From eschewing guards, placing his safety in the hands of "God", to dressing in polyester shirts, Kejriwal has rejected these symbols of privilege enjoyed by a tiny minority of judges, civil servants and politicians in this city of 16 million people.

"When God decides otherwise, nobody can save you, whatever the number of bodyguards," he told local media.

Some politicians have begun to replicate him but critics say the renunciations will soon backfire, so deeply ingrained are the privileges. It has already become a media obsession, with reporters following Kejriwal for any sign of slip-ups.

After his election - he travelled to his inauguration by a suburban metro train - Kejriwal refused to move into the bungalow reserved for the capital's chief minister.

But the press has jumped on his accepting a five-room ground-level apartment instead - pretty luxurious by Delhi's standards. His ministers have come under fire for accepting expensive official cars.

When Kejriwal recently attended a Sikh temple, his non-descript car arrived almost imperceptibly. There was no police guard or sirens. He sat in the front seat by his driver, unusual for politicians for whom backseats symbolise status.

The tiny blue and scratched Maruti-Suzuki sedan was parked uneasily next to a huge Ford Endeavour and Toyota Land Cruiser with tinted windows and stickers proclaiming out-of-date VIP parking stickers.

"These symbols are a huge disconnect between politicians and voters," said Shazia Ilmi, one of Kejriwal's senior aides, as he toured the temple. "We have to physically break them."

"It's not just symbolic. They cost a lot of money."

Mindful of angry voters, some politicians now are copying Kejriwal. The chief minister of Rajasthan state, Vasundhara Raje, has refused an official residence and toned down her security detail.

However, Raje is a descendant of one of India's hugely wealthy former royal families and her self-denial may not have the same effect.

Banning sirens on official cars was part of Kejriwal's campaign. For Indians tired of corruption scandals, the sight of cavalcades of white VIP cars with fluttering flags routinely causing traffic chaos had long jarred. Guards have been known to beat up attendants demanding a VIP car pay road tolls.

"I've been driving for the past few days. I stop at all red lights. I don't think my time is wasted," Kejriwal told lawmakers.

While Mahatma Gandhi was famously frugal, VIP culture has since boomed. Queues were unheard of and airport security frisks seen as an insult.

It was the expansion of VIP privilege that helped spark 2011 anti-graft protests that spawned Kejriwal's party.

Critics however say his honeymoon of battling privilege may end as he deals with expensive election promises like free water and cut-price electricity.

By IndiaTimes | January 11, 2014, 6:00 am IST