What's new

A 'Modi'-fication' of Indian politics

BigDaddyWatch

FULL MEMBER
Joined
May 31, 2012
Messages
727
Reaction score
1
Since this forum is cram full with Modi supporters i like to hear your opinion on this article.

A 'Modi'-fication' of Indian politics

The first time the world heard of Narendra Modi was following a 2002 religious pogrom in Gujarat - he was then, as now, the chief minister of the state. It is alleged that he fanned the flames of hatred by permitting the bodies of brutally slain members of a fundamentalist Hindu group to be paraded, and that he told the police to "let the Hindus vent their anger" on Muslims.

Modi had of course taken an oath to uphold the Indian constitution, which includes the principles of protecting life and property.

The next time Indians heard of Modi was in 2010 when he was called in front of the Special Investigation Team (SIT) looking into the riots. He hummed and hawed for some time before presenting himself to the SIT. His mien was that of someone going on a Sunday picnic, the only people who looked a bit uncomfortable were his highly trained security.

Then there were the annual investors summits which drew in investors promising millions of dollars in investments to the state of Gujarat. The scene at such summits was reminiscent of those in Mumbai dance bars where men throw money on their favorite dance girl. Newspapers would announce the many deals swung in by the Gujarat government while Modi would look on benevolently like an omnipresent god.

In the last few years, Modi gained prominence for the much touted economic performance of Gujarat, and for unhinged attacks on Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and the ruling Congress party.

As the man has grown from strength to strength his fan following has followed the same trajectory. Everyone from the top echelons of business to youth are in a state of awe, all hypnotized by his oratory skills which promise a better tomorrow - but make no mention of how. There is no doubt that as an orator he is in a class of his own.

Tall tales and untruths

But that aside, there is a new aspect to Modi - his ability to tell tall tales. The Pinocchio side to Modi is slowly revealing itself both in the case of his economic policies and also the yarns that he has been spinning. The web of deceit spans the current to the past ie from Gujarat's socio-economic health to India's history.

For a state given as a glowing example of good governance, economic growth and openness to industry a recent Comptroller and Auditor General report stating that one out of every three children in Gujarat is underweight leaves one wondering what lies beneath good governance and economic growth. Even Gujarat's Women and Development Minister has stated that at least 600,000 children in 14 districts are malnourished, while data for the remaining districts were "not available".

Christophe Jaffrelot, professor of Indian Politics and Sociology at King's India Institute, London, recently wrote in an article titled "No Model State" that Gujarat's progress is because of the freebies handed to industry at the cost of the state exchequer. It adds the state's progress is fueled by huge debt which has grown from 45 billion rupees (US$8.39 billion) in 2002 to 1.3 trillion rupees today.

Then there is the case of the recent Modi fib that India's first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, did not attend the funeral of India's first home minister, Sardar Patel funeral. This was made at a public speech - and there was nary an apology when he was caught out nor was there any public outrage that a prime ministerial candidate could lie so barefacedly.

The man of the hour moved on nonchalantly to his next move. Modi's penchant to emulate Pinocchio does not seem to have affected his credibility because there have been no consequences - the affliction of a longer nose for every lie.

Maybe people know Modi lives in La La land but they don't seem to mind. The fact that he comes up with tales involving living people too which are actually figments of his imagination seems to indicate this - he recently said that he, the chief minister of Bihar - Nitish Kumar and the prime minister were at a meal together where Nitish refused to eat. Nitish clarified that such an event never occurred.

The business of Modi love

This does not seem to bother even the CEOs. One does not quite understand the love the business world has for Modi given the fact that if there was a scandal of the malevolent and Machiavellian proportions of the 2002 riots it is the CEO who would have to step down - because the buck stops at his desk.

There may be an iota of truth when one says that these scions of business wish that this "Modification" in politics trickles into the business world so that they are absolved of the irregularities and scams which form part of their business repertoire. However, it would be highly presumptuous to think that this is potent enough to sully their clear thinking. There must be something deeper that makes them align themselves to Modi.

Maybe they believe that with him in power there will be ease of doing business. However, this ease of business makes other people in his state uneasy. Though compensation for acquisition of agricultural land for industry is high in the state, farmers not willing to sell of their land are forced to sell at a lower price for not accepting the 'Consent Award' which is first offered. This form of land acquisition by the Gujarat government has got certain sections of farmers up in arms - most recently in the case of Maruti.

The CEOs could be besotted with another fact in Gujarat: the average pay is lower than the rest of India. According to the National Sample Survey Organization average daily wages for men and women in Gujarat are 276.48 rupees and 213.10 rupees respectively. The national average is 332.37 rupees for men and 253.02 rupees for women.

This is why business loves Modi - no demands for better compensation and higher wages. There is not a peep for higher wages - one wonders why? Is this what one means by creating a sound business environment which our business leaders hanker for?

One is not even going into the current spate of bloopers that are emanating from Modi - he recently got the name of Mahatma Gandhi wrong; earlier he got the names of past right-wing ideologues mixed up with those of respected and well known thinkers of a more liberal bent. This goes to show that Modi does not do his home work which seems to be a habit and could have major ramifications if he comes to power.

The common Indian's love for the man

Therein lies the issue - we humans are willing to sidestep issues of social morality to safeguard our future and herald a new personal dawn. Business is one side, there is then the individuals who seem to have made up their minds.

Modi symbolizes the freedom from and irrelevance of morality and personal accountability. This is the philosophy that draws the crowds - you may be a bigot and culpable of various crimes but if you are able to keep a section of people happy then nothing else matters.

This is an attractive proposition because it allows people to be two-faced or be a modern version of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde. They may be vicious rapists or murders or unscrupulous financiers, but if they seemingly maintain a socially accepted facade or observe the law on other small matters, then everything else becomes a non-issue.

Such a social concept is very Bollywoodian in nature - the hero may harass the heroine and even browbeat her but he still remains the hero and she still falls in love with him.

So taken in are the common people by Modi's oratorical skills and bikinied statistics that they transform into frogs of a tiny pond who know nothing of the wider world. Their belief in him does not stem from "there is still good in the man". This fact is easily recognizable because these people don't hold him guilty or even culpable for the Gujarat riots.

They are not concerned about basic socio-economic fundamentals of Gujarat that point to Modi's lies. To them these and the Gujarat pogrom are a non-issue, what is important is what he represents - standing up to authority and thumbing a nose at it; not being accountable even when facts demand otherwise and being able to strip those in positions of authority of all dignity with aplomb.

Worse still, the supporters of this man come up with the specious and wholly indefensible argument that members of other political parties have taken part in riots too; inadvertently giving the game away and pointing to his culpability.

Modi is a personification of what most Indians aspire to - being able to climb out of fetid waters smelling of roses; and having the gumption to mock those in power knowing that they can't reply in kind because of the position they hold.

This is the kind of freedom Indians seem to yearn for after being in servitude of monarchies and colonial powers. Modi represents a kind of freedom that is not guaranteed in the Indian constitution but what some Indians fantasize about - power without responsibility and accountability.

http://www.atimes.com/atimes/South_Asia/SOU-02-271113.html
 
.
Modi is the new Messiah of Indians.

He has good aspects and bad ones.

But main thing is that Indian business community loves him.

We shall soon see little statues of god-Modi.
 
. . .
no1 cares about riots rightnow both partis using 3rd class words for each other like khooni panja and laal kamal. i am living in gujrat and i can say that gujrat's 99.99% population is modi fan. he helped many business he also develop gujrat in vibrant stat but in saurastra religion (70000+ kms) we have 0 projectes u can say modi did nothing for us. but i am modi supporter atlas he will work better than khooni panja. that's my opinion.
 
.
Some time people forget how indian democracy works..... its not like US..... If modi has to become a PM he need to have more than 273 seats in lower house..... even if he is able to get that majority with the help of coalition parties.... then he has to keep those small parties who almost veto all the decisions and those guys doesn't have anything to do with national interest... all they have in their mind is their regional politics and implications........ some time i feel funny the way people support (blindly) modi.... or Raga for that matter.....
 
.
Some time people forget how indian democracy works..... its not like US..... If modi has to become a PM he need to have more than 273 seats in lower house..... even if he is able to get that majority with the help of coalition parties.... then he has to keep those small parties who almost veto all the decisions and those guys doesn't have anything to do with national interest... all they have in their mind is their regional politics and implications........ some time i feel funny the way people support (blindly) modi.... or Raga for that matter.....

True. Everybody in India seem to have forgotten how general elections work. From PDFites to journalists, and everybody else. How many Indians reading this will vote for Modi in the elections? None of you, except the ones who are registered in his constituency, and support him. The rest of you will vote for the representatives from your constituency. In the end, if BJP can get 272 seats, or form an alliance of 272, then Modi will be PM. That's it. I don't know why everybody is going on about being pro-modi or anti-modi. It is about parties and coalitions, people. Not about individual politicians.

I wonder what Modi would do if he wins (most possibly), but BJP doesn't - will he then sit in parliament as an opposition MP, or would he rather remain CM of gujarat? Perhaps they will make him leader of the oppn, in such a scenario.

If I may use my crystal ball to predict, this is going to be one election with a very fractured mandate, with nobody being able to muster a stable coalition. There will be plenty of post election horse trading.

Modi is the new Messiah of Indians.

He has good aspects and bad ones.

But main thing is that Indian business community loves him.

We shall soon see little statues of god-Modi.

You mean like these?

modi_bobblehead_doll.jpg


17494476.cms
 
Last edited:
.
Plus
10 Years of Congress and most are looking for a change, Modi looks to be a good alternative.
Caution
India is not just Gujurat and Modi is a politician.
 
.
You mean like these?

modi_bobblehead_doll.jpg


hahahahah. Thanks for sharing!

Even though I meant to cast modi a bit more holy than seeing bobbleheads.

But this will do for now.

hahahahaah.

Plus
10 Years of Congress and most are looking for a change, Modi looks to be a good alternative.
Caution
India is not just Gujurat and Modi is a politician.


Just to clarify

Did you mean to say


---- 10 years of Italian Gandhi's Congress
and most are looking for a change such as

---- Modi's BJP.


I mean the real competition is among Congress and BJP

And not between Congress and one politician Modi.

correct?
 
.
Christophe Jaffrelot, professor of Indian Politics and Sociology at King's India Institute, London, recently wrote in an article titled "No Model State" that Gujarat's progress is because of the freebies handed to industry at the cost of the state exchequer. It adds the state's progress is fueled by huge debt which has grown from 45 billion rupees (US$8.39 billion) in 2002 to 1.3 trillion rupees today.

what about the Recent US closure.? why we hate ourself and need certificate of westerns. we need to built our own confidence, faith and truth which will tell us how better we asians are.

no1 cares about riots rightnow both partis using 3rd class words for each other like khooni panja and laal kamal. i am living in gujrat and i can say that gujrat's 99.99% population is modi fan. he helped many business he also develop gujrat in vibrant stat but in saurastra religion (70000+ kms) we have 0 projectes u can say modi did nothing for us. but i am modi supporter atlas he will work better than khooni panja. that's my opinion.
ohh ho Gujarati. ek var jo desh ma modi avse, to biji war gujarat ni jem 3 war pm banavanu nakki.
 
.
hahahahah. Thanks for sharing!

Even though I meant to cast modi a bit more holy than seeing bobbleheads.

But this will do for now.

hahahahaah.




Just to clarify

Did you mean to say


---- 10 years of Italian Gandhi's Congress
and most are looking for a change such as

---- Modi's BJP.


I mean the real competition is among Congress and BJP

And not between Congress and one politician Modi.

correct?
Sadly the competition is between the pro Gandhi's and proModi and there is very little to pick and choose and to top it up a lot of regional parties who dont mostly deserve a chair.
 
.
Christophe Jaffrelot, professor of Indian Politics and Sociology at King's India Institute, London, recently wrote in an article titled "No Model State" that Gujarat's progress is because of the freebies handed to industry at the cost of the state exchequer. It adds the state's progress is fueled by huge debt which has grown from 45 billion rupees (US$8.39 billion) in 2002 to 1.3 trillion rupees today.

what about the Recent US closure.? why we hate ourself and need certificate of westerns. we need to built our own confidence, faith and truth which will tell us how better we asians are.


ohh ho Gujarati. ek var jo desh ma modi avse, to biji war gujarat ni jem 3 war pm banavanu nakki.

But if it is true that Modi during his 11 years reign in Gujarat has increase the debt there by almost thirty fold then that should be an issue of concern for the Indians.
 
.
Sadly the competition is between the pro Gandhi's and proModi and there is very little to pick and choose and to top it up a lot of regional parties who dont mostly deserve a chair.


IN some ways it is important to have a good party in the driver seat.

But in other ways parties are just for show-shaw.


Why

Because strength of INdia lies with its hardworking industrial sector, and a pro-global educated class.

These two combined will take INdia to places.
 
.
He is really pathetic and preposterous choice for pm. But oops sorry we will still vote for him.

Remember owaisi said bhago MoDi aa Gaya
 
.
But if it is true that Modi during his 11 years reign in Gujarat has increase the debt there by almost thirty fold then that should be an issue of concern for the Indians.

Note that sentence about the debt again, and observe carefully how the author conceals more than he reveals, and leads people to the wrong conclusion (as he did with you) without saying anything wrong.

When he gives the debt figure for 2002, he does so in rupees as well as in dollars. When he gives the debt figure for 2013, he only gives the rupee figure and not the dollar figure, not mentioning that the rupee has fallen in value a lot since then. Also that Gujarat's (and India's) GDP has also grown dramatically in those years, which means that the debt to GDP ratio is probably not that different. It is debt to GDP that matters - which is why the USA's external debt is several times that of India's, but USA is still a much stronger economy, because their GDP is also several times higher.

Take into account how much the rupee has fallen in value, and how much the GDP has grown, and then look at the debt figures again. The author is very educated, and therefore knows how to blinker people into believing what he wants them to believe, by quoting statistics selectively.

Sadly the competition is between the pro Gandhi's and proModi and there is very little to pick and choose and to top it up a lot of regional parties who dont mostly deserve a chair.

Not this time, I don't think so. I mean, regional parties will have a lot of seats in the LS this time. UP, TN, Bihar, Odissa, WB and a lot of other states are going to send non BJP non congress fellows into parliament. It will be about one coalition v/s another, not about Gandhi family v/s Modi, or even congress v/s BJP. We are still living in the age of coalitions.
 
.
Back
Top Bottom