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India’s Shame, and the World’s

Because he is a Chinese troll, why do even try to have a serious conversation with him?
Because anyone that disagrees with Indians is automatically a troll and Chinese?
 
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Because anyone that disagrees with Indians is automatically a troll and Chinese?

No because its obvious who is. He used to go by the name of faithfulguy before, created this id after his old one was permanently banned for this very kind of trolling.
 
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India is as natural a nation is as is GB, USA or any other multi cultural nation.

How do you call it unnatural ?

It's stitch together by British railroads. Prior to British conquest, India was ruled by various native kingdoms and empires. The existence of India is a continuation of British imperialism.

Why not China?It was also put together by Mao using his Revolution uniting many states.
All Bharat's languages are derived from Sanskrit.
Even before started dreaming about nation states concept in western nations, we as Bharatiyas knew we are one people belonging to a nation called Bharat.

Just like Europeans know that they are Europeans. But there are French, German or Italians. Which would equivalent of Marati, Tamil or Bangali. And a Western Europe is equivalent to India.
 
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It's stitch together by British railroads. Prior to British conquest, India was ruled by various native kingdoms and empires. The existence of India is a continuation of British imperialism.



Just like Europeans know that they are Europeans. But there are French, German or Italians. Which would equivalent of Marati, Tamil or Bangali. And a Western Europe is equivalent to India.
why not china,why not china,lol
 
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Just like Europeans know that they are Europeans. But there are French, German or Italians. Which would equivalent of Marati, Tamil or Bangali. And a Western Europe is equivalent to India.
You are moron, everyone knew They were people of Bharata and sons of Bharat, All Bharat languages were derived from the same root Sanskrit.You don't know our language, our culture nor what we think of our nation. We don't need a chinese to tell us what we feel about our nation.Now Shooo.
 
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Names of India - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Vishnu Purana"उत्तरं यत्समुद्रस्य हिमाद्रेश्चैव दक्षिणम् ।

वर्षं तद् भारतं नाम भारती यत्र संततिः ।।"
i.e. "The country (varṣam) that lies north of the ocean and south of the snowy mountains is called Bhāratam; there dwell the descendants of Bharata."
(Between 1 St century bce and 4 th century bce)
 
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It's stitch together by British railroads. Prior to British conquest, India was ruled by various native kingdoms and empires. The existence of India is a continuation of British imperialism.

You obviously are Chinese

Every king / empire that ruled India was India & this includes the Muslim ones too . So whats the issue here ?


India sustains a poor class for modern day cheap slave labour. Its a crime against humanity.

Heartbreaking .. coming from a poster from a land where wadehras still call the shots
 
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by MEL GURTOV
A democracy is supposed to have the advantage of affording people of any social class, gender, or religious or ethnic group the opportunity to advance. In contrast with authoritarian political orders, democracies should be superior in their openness to change, to everyone’s participation in politics, and to equality before the law. In a word, democracies are based on the politics of hope and the virtues of transparency. Or so the theory goes.

India defies these expectations. Though it has democratic institutions and vigorous political competition, at least among elites, when it comes to human development and human security, India falls very short—embarrassingly so when compared with China. The United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), which measures human development and reports annually on conditions in nearly all countries documents the comparison. Overall, among 177 countries for which data are available, India ranks 135th (in company with Tajikistan, Bhutan, and Cambodia), whereas China ranks 91st (along with Thailand, Armenia, and Fiji). In fact, there are very few categories of human development in which India does better on average than China, which surely explains why developing countries (and many Indian specialists!) looking for economic models are far more likely to choose China than India.

Statistically, among the most telling indicators of human development are those affecting children and women. Infant mortality is exceptionally high in India (44 percent, compared with China’s 12 percent), and life expectancy for children is lower than in the poorest African country. Poor nutrition and sanitation, and limited access to health care, are the observable reasons. Child labor in India, at 12 percent for ages 5 to 14, is also uncommonly high.

Equally shameful is the low status of India’s women, a fact recently brought home in two very different ways. One is the film (produced in Britain), India’s Daughter, which explores the culture of rape, based on the well publicized incident last December in which a young woman was gang-raped on a public bus in New Delhi. The woman died of her injuries, the rapists were not the least bit repentant, and the government has banned the film on the specious argument that it will encourage more such assaults. The low status of Indian women is also the key factor in their limited access to prenatal and other health care. As a result, they are, as the article puts it, dangerously underweight.

In short, India is one of the worst places in the world to be a woman. Never mind Sonia Gandhi and other successful Indian women. For the overwhelming majority of Indian women, degrading treatment, sexual violence, and last-in-line access to the means of well being are the norm. (China is hardly a model here, but the status of women is certainly higher in China than in India.)

India’s shame is also the world’s. The latest UN report on the status of women presents the first “Platform for Action” since the landmark 1995 international conference in Beijing. The report finds that although women have advanced globally by some measures, such as political office holding and education, violence against women is pervasive everywhere. In the words of the report:

“Recent global estimates show that 35 per cent of women worldwide have experienced either physical and/or sexual intimate partner violence or non-partner sexual violence in their lifetime. While there is some variation across regions, all regions have unacceptably high rates of violence against women.”

In India, according to the UNDP, more women than men (54 percent to 51 percent) believe wife beating is justified. Though few countries can match the depth of violence against women that characterizes Indian society, global and regional averages suggest that violence, and acceptance by men and many women of its legitimacy, cut across income levels.

When it comes to preventing violence against women and girls, the UN ECOSOC report repeats all the well-known reforms that are needed—in law, education, community awareness, and police enforcement—but accepts that cultural norms run deep. Thus the report notes that “although States are increasingly recognizing the importance of prevention, very few have introduced long-term, coordinated and cross-cutting prevention strategies, with the vast majority reporting on short-term piecemeal activities.” This is bad news for women and girls everywhere, and nowhere more so than in India.

Mel Gurtov, syndicated by PeaceVoice, is Professor Emeritus of Political Science at Portland State University, Editor-in-Chief of Asian Perspective, an international affairs quarterly, and blogs at In the Human Interest.

India’s Shame, and the World’s » CounterPunch: Tells the Facts, Names the Names

IMR of 44 is not bad for all the sanitation issues India have
 
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