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Modi has lost his Touch

Ye Dekh, ek aur Bhakt aa gaya! :rofl::rofl: . Pakistan media, Ajit Doval, Hindu Culture etc.

I have said nothing of that sort. You failed to understand the parity I draw between the two. Chalo bhai ham bhakti to kam se kam thik logon ki karte hai. At least we are not fan of those corrupt family.
 
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My family are Chinese Buddhists, I guess that counts as being dharmic.

But I am an Atheist. :P

Well atheism in the east is a little different than west ..... because atheism in the west has been defined as "no man with a beard is judging you and no hell after life"
In Hinduism and Buddhism atheism has a separate existence of itsself ..... but that will be a long post and too off topic ...
 
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shoooooooooooooooooooooo :bunny::bunny::p::p:

Epic!! :D

Is Modi losing his touch? - Rediff.com India News

The logjam in the Rajya Sabha over the issue of re-conversion of Muslims into Hinduism was entirely of Narendra Modi's making.
Yessir, I repeat it (it is now well know that BJP Bhakts will defending his every fart :rofl:) : Narendra Modi's making, not the BJP's because the BJP is no more than the reflection of Modi's persona and echo of his voice.

Not that of the Congress, or any of the parties in the Opposition in the Rajya Sabha, because what they are doing is precisely what is expected of them, especially when they have an opportunity to pay the BJP back in its own coin.
Right from the time he was proclaimed to be the BJP's prime ministerial candidate a year ago, Modi had formulated in his own mind a clear vision of his and the party's goals, and to that end, had conceived of the plot, written the script and directed the play.
In short, Modi is the pre-eminent strategist of his party, the promoter of its prospects and shaper of its destiny.
In short, he is the mover and shaker, moulder and maker, the mascot and the talisman, of the party.
Take away Modi, and we are left with a ragtag bunch of clueless babes in the wood.
Is Modi losing his touch?
Watching him these days, one wonders whether he has decided on the disastrous course of taking after Manmohan Singh, sitting like a Madam Tussaud wax figure, the same expressionless face, eyes unblinkingly staring in front, and making absolutely no difference, and no contribution, to the quality and substance of the House proceedings.
Here was an issue -- religious conversion -- which was a god-send to the BJP, and, indeed, to all those who abhor any kind of forcible conversion.
The Supreme Court, in Reverend Stainislaus v State of Madhya Pradesh (AIR 1977 SC 908, 911) had already firmly declared that the right to propagate religion conferred in Article 25 of the Constitution does not grant the right to convert another person to one's own religion, and any deliberate effort to do so would impinge on the freedom of conscience guaranteed to all citizens.
If only Modi, the moment the so-called secular parties in the Rajya Sabha demanded the clarification of the government's position, stood up and said that he too was against forcible conversions and asked the secular parties point-blank to affirm their support to a strong legislation against forcible conversions of any kind, he would have called their bluff, for all the world to see, then and there.
He would have applied the quietus to the synthetic controversy whipped up by the Opposition and helped the House proceed with its regular business.
Instead, he left the task to second and third rankers in the BJP and in the process, invited on the government and inflicted on the nation, the ugly and costly ruckus that held up proceedings for so many days.
I would earnestly urge Modi to make a deep study of Jawaharlal Nehru's management of Parliament, which I have watched from close quarters. He was his own Parliamentary Affairs minister and except on days when he was out of Delhi, arrived in either of the Houses a few minutes before the starting time every day, regardless of whether or not anything was put down in his name in the day's business.
He was in his seat ahead of the presiding officer, after exchanging pleasantries with those present and made it a point to stand up and bow to the presiding officer when he was announced and took his seat.
He intently followed the question hour and all discussions on matters relating to ministries and very often made impromptu interventions by way of supplementing his ministers' answers to question or replies to debates.
In my four years of avidly watching him in both Houses of Parliament, I do not recall a single occasion when he refused to part with any information asked for by members or avoided a debate on the pretext of some rule, public interest or confidentiality.
Indeed, he was openness and transparency personified: He could not be anything else having been an ardent disciple of Mahatma Gandhi for three decades.
When Dr Ram Manohar Lohia brought an absurd charge of the municipal tax on Nehru's house 'Anand Bhavan' in Allahabad being based on under-valuation, impliedly because of arm-twisting by some Congress busybody, Nehru submitted before Parliament the enire documentation on which the valuation was based.
Nehru never ever had stage fright in facing Parliament and always looked upon the Opposition as an integral part of governance itself.
Having been under the shadow of Nehru, Lal Bahadur Shastri emulated Nehru to a large extent. His successors, though, lacking the self-confidence and respect for Gandhian values that Nehru and Shastri had, adopted the wiles and guiles of realpolitik and the devious hide-and-seek practices of statecraft.
Modi has it in him to rise above all this and bring back the resplendence of Nehru's dealings with Parliament. All he needs is the will.
Images: Top: Members of the Rajya Sabha demand that the prime minister make a statement and assure the House that religious conversions won't take place.
Photograph: PTI photo
Bottom: Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru and Vice-President Dr Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan during US President Dwight 'Ike' Eisenhower's address to Parliament.
MUST READ:

The religious conversion issue was not god-send to BJP, they deliberately created the issue to put opposition in a spot.
 
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Not a fan of Nehru in domestic politics. Nehru never faced a strong opposition and disruptions were rare those days. Comparing these with today's politics is not a good analogy. he had a bad record of dismissing a democratically elected govt in Kerala

Secondly, conversions and administration is a state subject, and it was VHP(not even RSS) involved in it. Why does the opposition want the PM to speak on that, when the opposition agrees, that cabinet rank ministers can also speak reg it?
If anything one should question SP govt for that.

Asking the PM to answer every trifle will lead to more problems in future, with opposition will demand his presence every now and then.

We voted for BJP for development and jobs, not for its MP to make idiotic comments. (BJP should improve in this regard).

Have got no problems with opposition disrupting the house, considering the BJP did the same when it was in opposition. Its the talent of Modi and BJP in finding a way out of it to pass key kills either through executive ordinance or pacifying with the opposition.

My views.
 
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Those who are talking about Modi Jo losing his touch clearly don't think of the bigger picture.
 
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Is Modi losing his touch? - Rediff.com India News

The logjam in the Rajya Sabha over the issue of re-conversion of Muslims into Hinduism was entirely of Narendra Modi's making.
Yessir, I repeat it (it is now well know that BJP Bhakts will defending his every fart :rofl:) : Narendra Modi's making, not the BJP's because the BJP is no more than the reflection of Modi's persona and echo of his voice.

Not that of the Congress, or any of the parties in the Opposition in the Rajya Sabha, because what they are doing is precisely what is expected of them, especially when they have an opportunity to pay the BJP back in its own coin.
Right from the time he was proclaimed to be the BJP's prime ministerial candidate a year ago, Modi had formulated in his own mind a clear vision of his and the party's goals, and to that end, had conceived of the plot, written the script and directed the play.
In short, Modi is the pre-eminent strategist of his party, the promoter of its prospects and shaper of its destiny.
In short, he is the mover and shaker, moulder and maker, the mascot and the talisman, of the party.
Take away Modi, and we are left with a ragtag bunch of clueless babes in the wood.
Is Modi losing his touch?
Watching him these days, one wonders whether he has decided on the disastrous course of taking after Manmohan Singh, sitting like a Madam Tussaud wax figure, the same expressionless face, eyes unblinkingly staring in front, and making absolutely no difference, and no contribution, to the quality and substance of the House proceedings.
Here was an issue -- religious conversion -- which was a god-send to the BJP, and, indeed, to all those who abhor any kind of forcible conversion.
The Supreme Court, in Reverend Stainislaus v State of Madhya Pradesh (AIR 1977 SC 908, 911) had already firmly declared that the right to propagate religion conferred in Article 25 of the Constitution does not grant the right to convert another person to one's own religion, and any deliberate effort to do so would impinge on the freedom of conscience guaranteed to all citizens.
If only Modi, the moment the so-called secular parties in the Rajya Sabha demanded the clarification of the government's position, stood up and said that he too was against forcible conversions and asked the secular parties point-blank to affirm their support to a strong legislation against forcible conversions of any kind, he would have called their bluff, for all the world to see, then and there.
He would have applied the quietus to the synthetic controversy whipped up by the Opposition and helped the House proceed with its regular business.
Instead, he left the task to second and third rankers in the BJP and in the process, invited on the government and inflicted on the nation, the ugly and costly ruckus that held up proceedings for so many days.
I would earnestly urge Modi to make a deep study of Jawaharlal Nehru's management of Parliament, which I have watched from close quarters. He was his own Parliamentary Affairs minister and except on days when he was out of Delhi, arrived in either of the Houses a few minutes before the starting time every day, regardless of whether or not anything was put down in his name in the day's business.
He was in his seat ahead of the presiding officer, after exchanging pleasantries with those present and made it a point to stand up and bow to the presiding officer when he was announced and took his seat.
He intently followed the question hour and all discussions on matters relating to ministries and very often made impromptu interventions by way of supplementing his ministers' answers to question or replies to debates.
In my four years of avidly watching him in both Houses of Parliament, I do not recall a single occasion when he refused to part with any information asked for by members or avoided a debate on the pretext of some rule, public interest or confidentiality.
Indeed, he was openness and transparency personified: He could not be anything else having been an ardent disciple of Mahatma Gandhi for three decades.
When Dr Ram Manohar Lohia brought an absurd charge of the municipal tax on Nehru's house 'Anand Bhavan' in Allahabad being based on under-valuation, impliedly because of arm-twisting by some Congress busybody, Nehru submitted before Parliament the enire documentation on which the valuation was based.
Nehru never ever had stage fright in facing Parliament and always looked upon the Opposition as an integral part of governance itself.
Having been under the shadow of Nehru, Lal Bahadur Shastri emulated Nehru to a large extent. His successors, though, lacking the self-confidence and respect for Gandhian values that Nehru and Shastri had, adopted the wiles and guiles of realpolitik and the devious hide-and-seek practices of statecraft.
Modi has it in him to rise above all this and bring back the resplendence of Nehru's dealings with Parliament. All he needs is the will.
Images: Top: Members of the Rajya Sabha demand that the prime minister make a statement and assure the House that religious conversions won't take place.
Photograph: PTI photo
Bottom: Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru and Vice-President Dr Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan during US President Dwight 'Ike' Eisenhower's address to Parliament.
MUST READ:
3_090214010620.jpg
 
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Those who are talking about Modi Jo losing his touch clearly don't think of the bigger picture.

Indeed & they fail to see how much work the govt has done in 6 months
Just take a look at NE
After infra push, govt plans array of soft sops to woo NE - Hindustan Times
from article
In the six month that the NDA has been in power, it has cleared Rs. 15,000 crore for building roads in the N-E, railway proposals worth Rs. 28,000 crore, another Rs. 5,336 crore for mobile links and optical fibre connectivity and Rs. 5000 crore for power transmission. The government also aims to complete the Asian Trilateral Highway project, linking the region to Thailand through Myanmar by 2016-17.
 
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Confused article ... nothing else

Still not able to understand what he want to say. BJP is in minority in Rajyasabha and that's a fact no one can change it for atleast 3 years.

So these old farts of Indian politics lalu mulayam type and congress with cry for each and every subject. If BJP solve this matter then they will come with another one.

Just throw them out of house for one day and pass all pending bills those required for economy reform, we are with BJP.
 
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wait for 2 state election counting....Modi is not sleeping in his den....he is bringing one great policy every week.
 
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Looks like somebody got p!ssed off with all the non-secular conversion. Who gives a sh!t about what opposition is doing in RS? Govt has enough majority to bulldoze anything and everything it wants...
 
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My family are Chinese Buddhists, I guess that counts as being dharmic.

But I am an Atheist. :P

Its rather unfortunate that countries with descendents of two Dharmic religions has to quarrel and proclaim each other as enemies. As Individuals you and I must have a similar world views than any one from the west.

I am also Atheist btw..
 
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Just because someone is using condom for protection doesn't mean he has lost touch.
 
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