Law and justice system might touch our lives

British Law and justice system might touch our lives when we have an accident, a wrong is done to us, or we have a family difficulty. They are vast, ancient and cover everything from the personal to the regulation of our government. But to most of us, they are a wen of intimidating institutions and practices. Baroness Hale, after spending a decade writing about England’s justice system, shows us how the law is on our side, by taking us into the complexities of real courts and real decisions, we see that we all have rights: schoolchildren, disabled people, workers, minorities … Continue reading Law and justice system might touch our lives

Porsche’s new CEO

Michael Leiters, who spent 13 years at Porsche before leaving to serces as chief Technology Officer at Ferrari and CEO of McLaren from 2022 to 2025, will be Porsche’s next CEO. Leiters worked for Porsche between 2000 and 2013 as head of both Macan and Cayenne lineups. Leiters will succeed Oliver Blume who has served as CEO for Porsche as well as VW group for  the last 10 years.  Continue reading Porsche’s new CEO

Millions celebrate Diwali around the world

Millions of Hindu, Sikhs and Jains across the world are celebrating Diwali ( Festival of lights) symbolising the spiritual victory of light over darkness, good over evil, and knowledge over ignorance. In Ayodhya, India, a 2.6 million lamps were lit along the Saryu river bansk ahead of the festival, which is a Guinness World for the largest display of oil lamps beating last year’s record of 2.51 million lamps. Diwali in London, on Trafalgar Square which is the largest celebration on Sunday, October 27. Diwali also celebrated in the US, Canada, Australia, Paris, Australia, New Zealand, and Indonesia. Continue reading Millions celebrate Diwali around the world

Annie’s parents’ wordless grief

Annie Ernaux’s investigation into the life of her mysterious older sister, who  died at six, two years before Annie was born. In the summer of 1950, when Annie Ernaus, the French authors was ten, she inadvertently overheard her mother tell an acquaintance that, before Anne’s birth, the family had another daughter who died of diphtheria at the age of six. It was kept a secret from little Anne so as not to upset her. Having believed she was an only child, she learns that she has replaced another daughter- “the little saint,” “the absent one in every conversation,” who lives on … Continue reading Annie’s parents’ wordless grief

Out of this world caught in its rhythms

Jon Fosse, award winning the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2023, in Vaim, in western Norway, begins a trilogy of novels set in a remote Norwegian fishing village. Jatgeir travels from the fishing village of Vaim to the city in search of a needle and thread. Cheated twice, he returns to his boat, where he falls asleep as weaves rock the hull. Soon he is awakened by a voice: a woman is calling his name from the quay. There stands Eline, the secret love of his youth – and the namesake of his boat- with a packed suitcase. Eline pleads … Continue reading Out of this world caught in its rhythms

The Age of the Bomb: Fear of Annihilation

America was responsible for the existence of nuclear age with the explosion of the first atomic bomb in the New Mexico desert on July 16, 1945. The inauguration of this new era was epitomized by the bomb’s principal creator, J. Robert Oppenheimer, quoting the Bhagavad Gita: “Now I am become death, the destroyer of worlds.” Since then, the era of atom has become the age of the bomb? or two bombs, Atomic and Hydrogen. Three weeks latercame the US nuclear strikes on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and with them ending of the second world war, triggering the cold war transforming the … Continue reading The Age of the Bomb: Fear of Annihilation

Ubiquitous car chases….

“One Battle After Another” – how to tease people into reluctant laughter at a very real ongoing situation. Directed, written and produced by Paul Thomas Anderson, this story is adapted from the novel “Vineland” by Thomas Pynchon. Stars and actors include Leo Di Caprio, Sean Penn, Teyana Taylor, Chase Infiniti and Benicio del Toro. The story is inspired by true events and real-life groups such as TheWeathermen – a far left militant organization active from 1969 to the mid 70s who wanted to eradicate racism and imperialism in the USA. Other reviews do remark on the left wing and socialistic … Continue reading Ubiquitous car chases….

Negotiating the network of power and poverty

Award winning Hungarian author Krisztina Tóth’s new novel, Eye of the Monkey, is a delicate tale of human in crisis, a dark humor animate, set in an unnamed dystopian country amid a devastating civil war that led to the formation of the United Regency, an autocry . The ravages of war are sweeping, and the populace has been divided into segregated zones, where the well-off are under mass surveillance and the poor are phantom presences, confined and ghettoize. .  In 1970 an experiment which resulted in the first successful simian head transplant. “The monkey seemed to sense its surroundings, its gaze … Continue reading Negotiating the network of power and poverty

London Packaging Week

London Packaging Week  15 & 16 October 2025, Halls S2 & S3, Excel, London E16 1XL. London Packaging Week connects world’s top luxury, beauty, drinks and FMCG groups with the packaging suppliers, materials and innovative inspiration that will define the future of their brands. Explore the @museumofbrands and see the transformation of iconic packaging history of brands over the years. From @lyonscoffee, Typhoo Tea, Ovaltine, Bournvita, Weetabix, Nesquik, Scott’s Oats, Heinz, Brook Bond, Barber’s Tea, Sailor Boy Custard, Batchelor Soup, Ready Brek, Persil, Robinsons,to Tate & Lyle Golden Syrup, evolution of design, branding and innovation record  at this museum. Continue reading London Packaging Week

“Never limit yourself. Step out of your comfort zone – wonders will happen” Apathy

Dr Arathy Ram, a scientist with middle-class upbringing, from Kollam village in Kerala, south India, won a £26k , United Kingdom Research and innovation (UKRI) fellowship in UK. Her new 4-year project will use simple body movements to – heal broken bones, power medical implant like pacemakers, eliminate the need for batteries, wires or drugs.  Dr Arathy Ram had already won the Marie Curie Fellowship worth £27k and worked with ISRO. Now she is pioneering a new field- piezoelectroceutics- blending physics and medicine.  Dr Arathy Ram said “Never limit yourself. Step out of your comfort zone – wonders will happen”. Two … Continue reading “Never limit yourself. Step out of your comfort zone – wonders will happen” Apathy