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India's elite is blinded by a cultish belief in progress

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Siddhartha Deb
Guardian.co.uk, Sunday 19 February 2012 17.30 GMT

From 2007 to 2009, during the process of gathering material for a non-fiction book on India, I often found myself exposed to the aspirations of its upper and middle classes. These people were part of the 150 or 200 million who had done very well materially from the economic changes of the past two decades, and as a group they believed firmly in India as a superpower on a path of infinite growth. The people I met ranged from extremely wealthy businessmen, part of a super-elite, to the salaried middle classes. When I encountered them as individuals, usually in extended sessions, they often showed themselves capable of nuance and even outright contradiction, from the government official who expressed understanding for ultra-left guerrillas fighting the government and mining corporations in central India to the waitress at an upscale Delhi restaurant who wished, despite her apparent upward mobility, to have her mother's less affluent but stable life as a provincial schoolteacher.

But what was apparent in my long conversations with individuals was hardly ever true in the aggregate. In the public discourse produced by the upper and middle classes in India – in newspapers and talk shows, in tweets and television soaps, in the comments that flood websites should anyone dare make a dissenting note – such contradictions vanish, replaced by an uncomplicated, almost cultish faith in India as a success story. In this version of contemporary India, the material wealth of the upper and middle classes can only keep on increasing. The comfortable will get rich, the rich get richer. As for the poor living on 50 cents a day (perhaps as much as 77% of the entire population, according to one government report), they might see their lot improve. If not, they have only their lack of ability, effort and merit to blame.

In fact, when a series of scandals exploded in 2010, the elite response involved fixating on the corruption of government and politicians. It is true that both government officials and politicians were involved in the scandals, which included the shoddy construction of buildings for the Commonwealth Games and the irregularities involved in auctioning off the mobile phone spectrum that may have cost the public exchequer $39bn. But although corporations and the media were quite complicit in such corruption, as evident from the last of the 2010 scandals, which involved the income tax department's wiretaps on a British-Indian corporate lobbyist called Niira Radia, their role vanished in the anti-corruption movement led by Anna Hazare last year.

Along with the corporations and the media, India's middle and upper classes were particularly eager supporters of Hazare, a former soldier and social reformer whose primary demand was for the creation of a Jan Lokpal, a tribunal that would have policing powers over the government and legislature. When rallying behind Hazare, elite Indians did not raise questions about inequality, in the way their country lags behind other poor countries in many social indicators, including the child mortality rate, underweight children and female youth literacy, or how large sections of the population from Kashmiris in the north to tribal people in the central Indian state of Chhattisgarh feel the state as nothing but an oppressive presence.

Those supporting the Hazare movement seemed unconcerned with such things, instead focusing on government corruption as all that stood between their present wellbeing and future prosperity. If only the corrupt state would step aside in certain areas – obviously not Kashmir, Chhattisgarh or the north-east – the Indian elites could prosper even further.

The Hazare movement has since petered out, but its central idea, of the unique meritoriousness of the middle and upper classes of India, remains. It is an illusion, and it reminds me of the illusion among the middle and upper classes of another society, and that is the US. I live and teach in New York, where I've seen among my students (mostly white, just as elites in India tend to be mostly upper caste) and in the Occupy Wall Street movement an elite that has suddenly been forced to examine its notions of unique meritoriousness and endless prosperity.

The lack of jobs in the US, something that earlier affected only those in manufacturing and the service industry, and therefore had an impact mostly on inner city African Americans, poor immigrants and rural whites, has now worked its way into the lives of the middle and upper classes, towards even people with expensive college degrees.

In the conversations I've had with members of this American middle class, I've been privy to another reality behind their seemingly affluent facades. I teach writing, and so I've read, with surprise, about a student whose past consisted of private school education, a large suburban house, well-paid professional parents, and global travel, but whose parents are now unemployed, their large house caught up in endless mortgage payments, and where, along with attending classes, it is equally important for this student to scrounge for a subway card and food. It's not just the young who are afflicted, either. On New Year's Eve, an old friend of mine showed me around the house he'd fixed up painstakingly over the years. He now plans to sell it off because, in spite of having a steady job, he can no longer keep up with the mortgage payments.

It's painful to see people struggling with such hopelessness. Yet I can't help but note that it's allowed a significant portion of Americans to shed their shell of complacency, their belief that they must continue to prosper because they are deserving and that the world of the marketplace will always deal them a fair hand. In India, the elites shout themselves hoarse about emulating America – in its wealth, its swaggering confidence, its Hummers and parking lots – even as that America ceases to exist. Even in the land of manifest destiny, destiny has run into its limits, and it seems only a matter of time before the same turns out to be true for India's privileged classes.

India's elite is blinded by a cultish belief in progress | Siddhartha Deb | Comment is free | The Guardian
 
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and how is this news?
This Garbage hardly compels us to waste our time reading it.
 
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the one thing any person should realize is that when writing about India . never generalize. what is norm for one , will in all probability not be so for people in the next mohalla. we are as diverse in our thought process as we are in matters of food , dressing or languages.
 
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God save us from these 'Indian' journalists who tend to write articles in UK and US newspapers complaining and whining about the same topic again and again.

Its journalism.. it doesnt have to be accurate.. just interesting.
yet you have no issues saving Pakistan from similar journalists here.
But then again.. who fights fair anyway.
 
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Its journalism.. it doesnt have to be accurate.. just interesting.
yet you have no issues saving Pakistan from similar journalists here.
But then again.. who fights fair anyway.

Oh...first of all i am not saying India does not have the problems mentioned in the article(though i would like to really know what the %age of poverty population is..coz this changes from one journalist to another)
Secondly, i have no problems if these journalists are pointing out different issues facing country. what i am saying is these are nothing new we have heard about..and more importantly these journalists do not give solutions to any of the problem atleast solutions which are viable practically.
 
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Oh...first of all i am not saying India does not have the problems mentioned in the article(though i would like to really know what the %age of poverty population is..coz this changes from one journalist to another)
Secondly, i have no problems if these journalists are pointing out different issues facing country. what i am saying is these are nothing new we have heard about..and more importantly these journalists do not give solutions to any of the problem atleast solutions which are viable practically.

They are journalists.. not analysts.
 
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it is true. most Indians here are part of their elite, because the poor are struggling. it is surprising that the Indians here are still frequently so ineloquent in their arguments, as they're their top 7% elite, and still behave like this.

imagine if in China, only Communist Party members got to see the internet. That would be a national outrage. However, in India, there are far less internet users than China has Communist Party members. As part of their national 7% elite, Indians who get to go online should behave themselves; otherwise, if the elite is like tihs, what is the average person like?
 
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Oh...first of all i am not saying India does not have the problems mentioned in the article(though i would like to really know what the %age of poverty population is..coz this changes from one journalist to another)
Secondly, i have no problems if these journalists are pointing out different issues facing country. what i am saying is these are nothing new we have heard about..and more importantly these journalists do not give solutions to any of the problem atleast solutions which are viable practically.

This is for western audiance who do not know the reality. They need to see shining India as well as slumdog India, because both are true.
 
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it is true. most Indians here are part of their elite, because the poor are struggling. it is surprising that the Indians here are still frequently so ineloquent in their arguments, as they're their top 7% elite, and still behave like this.

imagine if in China, only Communist Party members got to see the internet. That would be a national outrage. However, in India, there are far less internet users than China has Communist Party members. As part of their national 7% elite, Indians who get to go online should behave themselves; otherwise, if the elite is like tihs, what is the average person like?

Depends what you call elite, in India I wouldn't be called an elite. Most Indian might not have internet connections at home, however there are many internet cafe that have popped up so they don't really need to have internet connection for themselves. My parents consider their lives as a success because they are doctors and earn and have studded more than their parents, and want the same for me(pretty hard to do). My family didn't come from any high class society, what we are today is through hard work so all these journalists can just go and suck it.
 
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Very enlightening article. We just became aware of these things after reading this article. No one knew them before. We all should congratulate the OP to share these secrets. How ignorant the world was.
Looks like the criteria to become a "tank" has gone on toss!
 
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it is true. most Indians here are part of their elite, because the poor are struggling. it is surprising that the Indians here are still frequently so ineloquent in their arguments, as they're their top 7% elite, and still behave like this.

imagine if in China, only Communist Party members got to see the Internet. That would be a national outrage. However, in India, there are far less Internet users than China has Communist Party members. As part of their national 7% elite, Indians who get to go online should behave themselves; otherwise, if the elite is like tihs, what is the average person like?

lol elite?
let me tell u about elite.
An English speaking Chinese on a forum like this ...probably from HK or somewhere with free Internet tht has Google..(most probably Abroad) and still managing to act like ultra-nationalist pain in the head...now thats elite.

and to anoter point--does the CCP really have a 100million workers?

cus 100million is the avg subscribers to the Internet ..and there is no official means to calculate the number of people visiting net-cafaes
 
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So the journalist wants every one to stop being optimistic and start being pessimistic. He can shove his leftist bs up his backside. The Guardian has to be the most leftist newspaper out there.

Top rated comment on the article,

It was that "cult" which has created the very internet you used to peddle your ridiculous idea that human progress is a bad thing.

If you want to live in the past well then go right ahead.

But you clearly don't know what is best for everyone else.

Every time people have the chance to grasp freedom, human rights and industrial progress they grasp it with both hands.

Funny that.
 
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lol elite?
let me tell u about elite.
An English speaking Chinese on a forum like this ...probably from HK or somewhere with free Internet tht has Google..(most probably Abroad) and still managing to act like ultra-nationalist pain in the head...now thats elite.

and to anoter point--does the CCP really have a 100million workers?

cus 100million is the avg subscribers to the Internet ..and there is no official means to calculate the number of people visiting net-cafaes

CPC is 87 million members right now. I never hide the fact that I'm in L.A.

China has the most registered internet users in the world. There are more Chinese internet users than the population of all Europe (including Russia) combined. If we counted internet cafes I'm pretty sure 90% of the population in China has internet access.
 
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Siddhartha Deb
Guardian.co.uk, Sunday 19 February 2012 17.30 GMT

From 2007 to 2009, during the process of gathering material for a non-fiction book on India, I often found myself exposed to the aspirations of its upper and middle classes. These people were part of the 150 or 200 million who had done very well materially from the economic changes of the past two decades, and as a group they believed firmly in India as a superpower on a path of infinite growth.

That explains a lot. :lol:

To them, India is the only sure superpower and the rest of the world is just on a bubble.
 
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