Friday, 14 July 2023

OF TESTIMONIALS, TESTICLES AND TESTING TIMES

   People who have had the debatable good fortune to have met me, and have survived the encounter, will tell you that I have an open mind on most subjects. Somewhat like the RSSwhen it comes to discussing the concept of secularism. For instance, I am willing to see the other/ bhakt point of view in deleting Darwin's theory from textbooks. Readers who were not asleep in their biology classes will recollect that Darwinism postulates survival of the fittest, whereas the zeitgeist of today promotes the survival of the stupidest. The philosophical contradiction is obvious and must be conceded. I can, in all fairness, see where NCERT and its puppeteers are coming from: a dark cave, where time has stood still, whose occupants still go round in animal hides, wielding clubs, singing "Goli maaro saalon ko" and similar stimulating anthems.

   But my broad mindedness is being stretched to the limit these days by the obiter dicta emanating from various quarters of late, especially those founts of wisdom, our courts. Disclaimer-it may be possible that I have misunderstood them, like the young job applicant from Punjab-where else- who, being asked to show his testimonials at an interview, promptly took off his trousers to display the family jewels which the British forgot to take when they made off with the Kohinoor. He later confessed that he mistook testimonials for testicles, and in any case since in his case the latter were superior to the former, he decided to lead with his best, well, foot. But I feel that we cannot put such a generous interpretation on what we read about these days. To do so would require a mind more open than a honky-tonk at midnight on a Saturday, or one broader than the Yamuna in Delhi even as i scribble this piece. Judge for yourself, folks. 

  A court in Karnataka recently held that squeezing a person's testicles does not amount to attempt to murder, and acquitted the accused of that charge. I respectfully disagree. Had the victim's brain been subjected to the same trauma as his unmentionables were, the charge of attempted murder would have stuck, right? So why does the court want us to believe that brains are more important/ vital to a man than testicles ?: this is precisely where the judicial error lies. Homo sapiens has survived these millions of years as a species because of his testicles, not his brains. The former creates life, the latter destroys it, as Messers Biden, Putin, Xi and Kim Jong Un are trying their best to prove every day.

  In any case, ask any female of the species (any species) and she will tell you than a man's brains lie between his legs, and not between his ears. Wasn't it Richard Nixon who famously said: "Once you have them by the balls their hearts and minds will follow"? Something which our lordships would no doubt have found out if they had spent their time watching cricket and not trying to figure out the difference between a habeas and a corpus, or between a corpus delicti and a corpus delicious. For cricket invented the ball guard a hundred years before it did the helmet, proof enough of which is the more important part of the human anatomy. It's simple enough, actually: destroying a man's brains has no effect on the species- AI and ChatGPT  will take over and do a better job. But squeeze a man's testicles and you threaten the very survival of the species: he can no longer multiply (the bhakts can't do that anyway, they can only divide). Which is why, in mho, the judges were wrong- the guy should at least have been convicted of spermicide if not homicide. 

   Reverting now to the testimonials (we shall leave the Punjab variety behind), the Allahabad High Court, which is reverting to the Dark Ages at some speed, last month added the horoscope as an essential legal document in a case which has gone unnoticed. A  lady had filed a rape case against her live-in partner who had promised to marry her but then had a series of second thoughts and resiled. In his defense he claimed, in the best traditions of Hindu obscurantism, that the lady was a "manglik" and so he could not marry her. The court then ordered- hold your breath here if you are into yoga, or light up a cigarette if you are not- the Astrology department of a university to examine her horoscope for the veracity of this claim and submit a report! Presumably, if she did turn out to be a "manglik" she would be fair game for any predatory male, without any strings attached.

  The other implications of this order (which has been stayed by the SC) are astounding. For one, a horoscope now has legal status and can be admitted as evidence under the Indian Evidence Act- never mind that the science behind it is questionable: the alignment of the stars at the time of your birth will determine whether someone can have sex with you- or you with them- under false pretences. Two, whether you are a victim of a crime or not will now be determined by your horoscope, not the law. Three, you now have to carry around another ID document, in addition to PAN, Aadhar, driving licence, CGHS card, Voter ID etc. It will no longer suffice for your next-of-kin to produce your Aadhar at the time of your cremation, they shall now be required to submit your horoscope too, to re-confirm the time at which you were supposed to have kicked the bucket in that document; any mismatch and the corpse may be booked for impersonation. Four, it won't be long before the govt. will ask you to link your horoscope with all these other IDs, for the horoscope is a mine of information about you: it will tell the tax guys whether you are the type of chap who is likely to cheat on your taxes, the banker whether you will live long enough to repay your loans, the prospective father-in-law how many wives you are destined to have, the wife how many kids she can expect to have, and so on. Five, since now everyone shall be required to possess a horoscope, there will finally be some jobs for all those suckers doing the newly introduced Astrology courses in selected colleges. The fault may or may not be in our stars (as Caesar never said) but the future of Indian jurisprudence certainly is.

   And finally, here's some more edification: the Gujarat High Court has identified our very own Brighozhin (of Wagner fame in Ukraine). It's a middle aged lady who has been working for securing the human rights of, and justice for, the persecuted for the last twenty years. But the court has held that she topples and unsettles elected governments as a past -time, has denied her bail and has asked her to surrender to the police immediately. (This order too has been stayed by the Supreme Court). Her name is Teesta Setelvad, and she reportedly received Rs. 30 lakhs to do the job.

  Now, this really tests my powers of comprehension. Is that all it takes to overthrow a government headed by a powerful leader- a diminutive woman with (allegedly) thirty lakhs in her handbag? Brigozhin couldn't do it with 50000 soldiers, tanks and millions of dollars; maybe he should come to India and take lessons from us on how to do it at bargain basement prices. Secondly, one was under the impression that overthrowing governments was our national past- time, a close second to the IPL- the BJP does it all the time but none of its leaders ever get sent to the lock-up; they go instead to the Raj Bhavans, Mantralays and South Block in a fleet of cars. So what has this lady done that is so different ?- if, that is, she has done anything other than fight for justice for a woman who was gang raped and saw her entire family being slaughtered before her eyes? I am reminded of these words from TO KILL A MOCKING BIRD:

"She has committed no crime, she has merely broken a rigid and time-honoured code of our society, a code so severe that whoever breaks it is hounded from our midst as unfit to live with."

These are testing times, indeed, whether or not you have testicles or testimonials. But I sometimes do wonder: to what exactly is this squeeze being applied- to the bollocks or to our collective conscience and intelligence?



21 comments:

  1. Almost died laughing!
    Thank you for highlighting an organ that is normally under wraps.
    You are in the company of good old Winnie who told the British Parliament " the answer is in the plural and they bounce"!!

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  2. 🤣🤣🤣 This is an awesome piece.

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  3. Your natural forte at its best, Avay. Loved it ....

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  4. Therefore, going by the convoluted logic of the venerable HC which has indeed gone back to the dark ages, if one were to be a Christian, a Muslim or, god forbid, a Hindu who does not subscribe to the mumbo-jumbo, one does not exist!

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  5. Hats of to a well researched, hilarious piece and for having the balls to write it

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  6. Occasionally, Mr. Shukla leans on ribald humour and bawdy wit for our edification. Testimony that in those times the gonads are in overdrive and the prostate is performing commendably. Perhaps an outcome of the covetous spouse of the neighbour laughing throatily at his risque' comedies.

    All that withers is not old.

    These are testing times indeed. And the testimonials of those on the political firmament present an unhealthy picture of Naya Bharat in Kartavya Kaal. One that no amount of copious release from the depths of one's reservoirs can invigorate suitably. Release of enthusiasm, of course.

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  7. Chang while fighting always kicked the testicle part to bring down the opponent. Hon'ble lordship never got anyone to squeeze his testimonials to ascertain his pedigree so the taste of the dish lies in eating ,unfortunately lordship never taste the 'squeezing' part.
    May be he had had abdomen pad ie pota pad to save them.
    Wonderful analysis!💐

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    1. The best use of metaphor I have read in a long time! Unfortunate! It will be like water of a Dick's back to the people it was most intended for--- the andhbhakhts

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    2. Correction! DUCK's back. Probably just a Freudian slip!

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  8. All jokes aside, if these stories about High Courts and horoscopes (whatever they are), about universities actually having courses in this mumbo jumbo are true, then we all are screwed aren’t we? I keep hearing this cockamamie about new and shining India on the ascent, and how India has become a developed country, and is the world’s most important democracy. Yet, in the same breath, citizens are locked up (binded down according to the latest jargon) for not standing up for the national anthem, being arrested for staging overthrows of the government, lynched in broad daylight for eating beef and what not have you.
    Soon after 9/11/2001, when the Americans had quite literally gone berserk, bombing a country to stone age, when it was already in the stone age, invading another country because it possessed weapons of mass destruction that never existed, a reader wrote in the New York Times rather sadly, that before God destroys people, he makes them go mad. This certainly seems to be true of many if not most of us. Like the fictional Pied Piper, we are being led down the garden path to the abyss.
    Let us leave it to history to judge our many acts of omission and commission, but if I were to guess, the history of posterity, many years from now, will not even have a byline for these not so funny years.

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  9. U have basically vented u r angst at teesta being punished for falsified evidence...picked laughable tit bits here and there ...pushed u r narrative...good effort....it will not succeed

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    1. The charge against Teesta was as bogus as Modi's red eyed ferocity! Why are all cases against so called anti- nationals only filed in the GUJARAT high court. Because it is stuffed to the gills with NaMo acolytes.

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    2. What will not succeed? At what?

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  10. Hi Avay, one would have died laughing...were it not the bitter truth!
    Joydeb Chakravarty (HOXA '72)

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    1. HOXA - Interesting acronym. Worthy of respect, particularly of that vintage.

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  11. Missed both blogs, don't know how. Lodged complaint & was whatsapped. So,late, but here I am again!
    Thing is though, these last couple of weeks have been intriguing. Sometimes the smell of change wafts, acrid or refreshing.
    The PM's sojourn in the US and in France; the analytics thereby (& I use the word deliberately); the barely perceptible yet unmistakable shift from silence to question among large groups of journalists and officialdom in America & in Europe, expressing concern for the unchanging paradox of a smiling & benign 'Buddha' abroad and his cold eyed, indifferent arrogance at home; the quickfire invitations by Karan Thapar to some of Manipur's best known; their bald statements of hope and despair and not to mention the tantalising growth of an opposition behemoth, are among those that have filled my days somewhat. I am waiting for a blog and for comments thereby; in order to learn and be better organised in thought and deed.
    The Gods do listen. One of Avay's bete noires - 4 laning - has been brought to grief, at least between Kullu & Manali. The Beas is an unrelenting river. The experience of seeing her in spate (and not once but at least three or four times, defying logic) is neither interesting nor aesthetic. It's downright scary.
    Two or more resorts have been washed away in previous years in broad daylight in front of one's eyes. Turgid & roiling on the flatter stretches and voracious at bends like Solang, the message is so so clear - stay away. Perhaps better sense will prevail among bureaucratic and political expedience.
    And without dwelling too much on this blog's alliterative connotations, I must say again that if ever there was a need for public private partnership in HP, it is now, it is now.
    An entire system and process has to be put in place - some of it borrowed from other sensitive and beautiful places in the world saved from endangerment and some of it simply creative common sense. Had drawn out a frame of sorts but it's time to drive the initiative.
    Happy to see such a commentary box of mostlyold but some new sharp eyed statements, each trying to say something worthy of consideration.

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