Language is a politically charged issue in India. Union govt preferably wants people to learn and speak Hindi in the name of decolonization. While state govts preferably want the language of the respective subcultures in their jurisdictions in the name of cultural preservation.
And yet, English - spoken by probably 10% of the population - remains the language of supreme and high courts, formal contracts, laws, legislations and regulations.
Neither levels of govt really stress the importance of people learning English.
Food for thought.
smalltownrifle
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Ludwig von Mises Speaks: On Money

I love the idea of freedom tech. But why don't people who advocate for it also advocate for removing government involvement in spectrum allocation and telecom licensing and regulation?
Surely, a 'free' internet wouldn't involve getting permission from a bunch of bureaucrats to access. (Free as in freedom, not free beer.)
Seems to me that the most critical layers of the internet stack all over the world is run by various crony-bureaucrat alliances, rather than sound free market principles like property rights, contractual exchanges and homesteading.
π Cheeky Rothbard quote from Ethics of Liberty:
"Furthermore, all the various forms of statism have now been tried, and have failed. At the turn of the twentieth century, businessmen, politicians, and intellectuals throughout the Western world began to turn to a βnewβ system of mixed economy of State rule, to replace the relative laissez faire of the previous century. Such new and seemingly exciting panaceas as socialism, the corporate state, the Welfare-Warfare State, etc., have all been tried and have manifestly failed. The call for socialism or state planning is now a call for an old, tired, and failed system. What is there left to try but freedom?"
