Now first things first, please dont take this as having a pop at india, I am just asking a query.
There is something that puzzles me a great deal about indians and their democratic and secularist epithet - they dont seem to understand or grasp the notion themselves imo.
I base this on the premise that 90% of the time, whenever india is mentioned in such a way that demonstrates india is not behaving in a secularist/democratic way they always bring pakistan into it and how crap pakistan is in such and such a way (not always unfairly so i should add).
But what on earth have pakistani affairs got to do with indian credentials as a credible and strong secular/democratic nation?
Is pakistan india's benchmark?
Why does pakistan need to be a factor in indian issues?
Then this leads me to my next query, why do indians get so defensive about any criticism.
Do they not understand that to be secularist and democratic is to invite and acknowledge faults in your society?
India has defined itself as a secular and democratic nation, therefore Indians should not become defensive when people discuss the strength of this system in India because that is the standard indians have loudly chosen to define themselves as - in fact indians should welcome genuine criticism because it can serve as a vehicle to improve its society - instead they rarely do, they just get very defensive and vitriolic - to me this screams out insecurity and a gaping lack of understanding about universal democratic/secular principles.
As such I have come to a conclusion that whilst india is still definitely a democracy it as an "immature" one whose people largely do not understand it or worse still they do not wish to fully understand and implement it, instead they use it as just an epithet to bolster its image rather than genuinely act upon and implement its universal principles - this is and can have a very dangerous effect imo.
I welcome your thoughts on this.
There is something that puzzles me a great deal about indians and their democratic and secularist epithet - they dont seem to understand or grasp the notion themselves imo.
I base this on the premise that 90% of the time, whenever india is mentioned in such a way that demonstrates india is not behaving in a secularist/democratic way they always bring pakistan into it and how crap pakistan is in such and such a way (not always unfairly so i should add).
But what on earth have pakistani affairs got to do with indian credentials as a credible and strong secular/democratic nation?
Is pakistan india's benchmark?
Why does pakistan need to be a factor in indian issues?
Then this leads me to my next query, why do indians get so defensive about any criticism.
Do they not understand that to be secularist and democratic is to invite and acknowledge faults in your society?
India has defined itself as a secular and democratic nation, therefore Indians should not become defensive when people discuss the strength of this system in India because that is the standard indians have loudly chosen to define themselves as - in fact indians should welcome genuine criticism because it can serve as a vehicle to improve its society - instead they rarely do, they just get very defensive and vitriolic - to me this screams out insecurity and a gaping lack of understanding about universal democratic/secular principles.
As such I have come to a conclusion that whilst india is still definitely a democracy it as an "immature" one whose people largely do not understand it or worse still they do not wish to fully understand and implement it, instead they use it as just an epithet to bolster its image rather than genuinely act upon and implement its universal principles - this is and can have a very dangerous effect imo.
I welcome your thoughts on this.