A brief summary of the reasons for my opposition to the introduction of Vedic Mathematics in the school curriculum. (In addition to the points already made in the joint statement with many others). The purpose of the maths curriculum in school education can be spelt out as follows. At the practical level students should learn the basics of arithmetic, algebra and geometry. More conceptually, the students should be able to recognise symmetry and pattern and construct examples of these. They should also learn to analyse constructions made by others logically and critically. When I tell you 6 times 8 is 48 this should bring up a mental image by which you convince yourself that this is correct---it is certainly *not* my authority as a mathematician that should convince you! Does the so-called Vedic Mathematics address any of these issues? In a nutshell---no. The so-called method in Vedic Mathematics is a collection of computational tricks. Moreover, these tricks are not algorithms or recipes since numerous exceptions prevent them from being applied uniformly. The only teaching method mentioned in texts on Vedic Mathematics is the memorisation of some "shlokas". This is quite contrary to getting students to see the symmetry for themselves. Finally, with the emphasis on the "Vedas", there is an appeal to authority which entirely negates the need to learn logic as a tool for critical thinking. But for the name "Vedic Mathematics" no one would have looked at this material even once. The very fact that people from India are in demand in the software industry---very definitely a mathematical-skill based industry, shows that our syllabus is reasonably adequate. It is the "Who? How? Where?" that causes problems in school education. Mathematics (like other school subjects) needs to be taught by better-paid, better-motivated and better-equipped teachers and schools. It is these aspects that the government should be addressing. Syllabus-making bodies naturally feel that their job is to improve the syllabus. However, every such change should be done in consultation with the best people in the discipline not just those in education and government. In this case the oft-published views of eminent mathematicians (such as those in the National Board for Higher Mathematics) have been entirely ignored. Decline in the mathematical skills of the common people will be the *only* consequence of the introduction of Vedic Mathematics.