I don't know what brain supplement Palki Sharma has been taking of late, some kind of Patanjali churan probably, but I would advise her to discontinue it immediately. It is detaching her from reality, causing her to hallucinate and making her colour blind to all hues except saffron. Till now, I had regarded her as an articulate journalist and presenter, who did immaculate research on her subjects, and made her points convincingly. No more, not after her sacerdotal (to the Supreme Leader) speech at the Oxford Union debate. With this one speech she has brought herself down to the level of those despicable prime time anchors of Republic TV, Times Now, Aaj Tak and News 18.
In the year old video which has surfaced again and made to go viral, she proclaims that she is proud of being an Indian in Modi's India, recounted his "achievements" on the economy, defense, social cohesion, federalism, freedom of speech, religion, dissent, independence of institutions and the press etc., and was duly applauded by the Prime Minister himself, who usually reserves such plaudits for lynch mobs, rapists, bigots, and other assorted scoundrels. I hope she is comfortable in such company, because I would certainly not be. All that she said was a leaf from Mr. Amit Malviya's Book of Lies, and it is tragic that someone like her was taken in so easily by these untruths and half truths.
No, Ms Palki Sharma, I am not proud to be an Indian in Modi's India. Of my 73 years the first 63 were spent holding my head high as an Indian because, for all our poverty and other shortcomings, we were at least one united nation. We revelled in our diversity (notwithstanding the occasional riot or two) and our Ganga-Jamuna "tehzeeb"; we held fast to our principles and values, we respected the values and aspirations enshrined in our constitution, and we did make steady progress up the economic ladder. We were a nation respected globally, not because we were just a big market or a counter-point to China, but because we were a genuine democracy which provided a moral compass and hope to the rest of the world. The last ten years of Mr. Modi have undone all this good, painstaking work, just because a vain, semi-literate, narcissistic demagogue thinks he is bigger than all his predecessors put together; indeed, bigger than the nation. I have reason enough not to be proud of being an Indian these days. Because the proof of the pudding lies in the eating, and Ms Palki Sharma's pudding is nauseating and poisonous.
It is difficult, if not impossible, to be proud of a Prime Minister whose bat-like vision does not extend beyond hate for minorities, contempt for science and reason, malice towards the opposition, and whose only goal in life is to stay in office. One cannot be proud of a man utterly lacking in compassion, whose every second word is a lie, who makes a virtue of his profound ignorance and, in the best traditions of all fake God-men with which this country abounds, considers himself a messenger of God. The summum bonum of his life is contained in just one letter- M: Muslim, Mutton, Macchli and Mangalsutra. His language has plumbed depths never seen before of any leader, let alone a Prime Minister. Any civilized society would be ashamed of having a leader like him.
Our economy too, which Palki Sharma extols to high heavens, is nothing to be proud of. Sure, it's growing, but what else would you expect of the most populous nation on earth? Even if our entire population was starving at two dollars a day (like our 220 million BPL families) we would still be a one trillion dollar economy. Every figure released by the govt. regarding the GDP is fudged, surveys which would say otherwise are either not conducted or kept under wraps. The real state of our economy is reflected, not in the GDP or even per capita income, but in other indicators: that 800 million people have to be given free rations, that 83% of our youth are unemployed, that even IITs and IIMs are unable to place 50% of their graduates, that bank deposits are falling and personal loans/debts have shown an increase of 66% since 2021, that more than 250000 MSMEs have had to shut down, that almost 240000 rich and educated Indians have surrendered their citizenship in the last eight years alone, that private investment has been falling every year, that 60 million people have had to return to agriculture because there are no jobs for them, that the share of manufacturing in the economy has declined to an all time low of 13% of GDP, that 1% of the population own 40% of the country's wealth and 10% own 70%, leaving only 6% for the bottom 50%, making India one of the most inequitable countries in the world. In the words of Parakala Prabhakar, Mr. Modi's economic ideology is a simple one: give five kgs of free rice to the people and five airports to his favoured cronies.
GDP growth under Modi, which most respected economists put at about 6.2% and not the 7.4% touted by the govt., continues to lag behind the achievement of both UPA I and UPA II, and is driven, not by the private sector, but by massive state expenditure on infrastructure and capital intensive projects. This too has been on the back of unsustainable borrowings- our external debt has now crossed 150 lakh crores, three times what it was in 2014. The only beneficiaries of this model of economics have been the billionaires and millionaires whose tribe continues to multiply manifold. There is little to be proud of here.
It is no surprise that, in her cloying veneration for the Modi era, Ms Sharma fails to notice the state of our institutions, their steady degeneration to camp followers of the ruling regime. They have become instrumentalities, not of the state, but of the BJP. One had never expected to see the three monkeys of the Mahatma resurrected in this modern era, but they have been reborn again: the CAG is blind to the loot of the exchequer going on all around him, the Election Commission never speaks, the judiciary is deaf to the entreaties of civil society and citizens. One can list out the instances where their silence, biases and helpful interpretations of the law have contributed to the hollowing out of our democracy, but that would require a whole book by itself. As Kapil Sibal has pointed out, history will judge them some day, but by then it may be too late.
The lady is at her absurd best (worst?) when she claims that India is the leader of the global south even as we are completely isolated on the issue of Palestine-Israel conflict; that the world comes to us for advice whereas the fact is that we are a perpetual fence-sitter at the United Nations, never committing our selves to any principles or position; that we have forged close ties with our neighbours, even as in the Modi years we have lost Nepal. Srilanka, the Maldives and now even Bhutan to China; that Kashmir has never been so peaceful as after the abrogation of Article 370, whereas militant related deaths (of citizens, security forces and terrorists) have GONE UP since then. Even our strategic "friends"- the USA, UK, Australia, Canada, Germany- have now begun to have doubts over both the internal repression in India and our gun-for-hire foreign policy. But Palki Sharma will not tell her audience about these uncomfortable home truths.
Every single encomium handed out by her to the Modi govt. is contradicted by global surveys and indexes- Hunger Index, Press Freedom Index, Religious Freedom Index, Inequality Index, Environment Protection Index, Gender Equality Index, Electoral Democracy Index, Human Capital Index; and in all of them we have slid down the rankings since 2014. But Ms Sharma deliberately ignores them in a speech which is more a propaganda handout by the BJP's IT Cell than an address by a hitherto respected journalist.
I doubt if any advice would make Palki Sharma change her mind, but she would do well to remember, in the slightly adapted words of George Orwell, that journalists who support politicians, impostors, thieves and traitors are not victims...but accomplices. They too shall be judged one day.
"that journalists who support politicians, impostors, thieves and traitors are not victims...but accomplices. They too shall be judged one day"
ReplyDelete"Advani wrote that the signs of creeping autocracy were visible even two years earlier, when Jayaprakash Narayan had started his movement. He quotes with approval the last paragraph of the Shah Commission report, “If the administrative machinery in our country is to be rendered safe for our children, the services must give a better account of themselves by standing up for the basic values of an honest and efficient administration.” This is an eternal truth, as relevant today as it was then."
"There could be no better-if that is indeed the right word- indication of the progressive decay of the ethos of our civil services than a Facebook post this week by a very senior IAS officer of the Maharashtra cadre. One Manisha Patankar Mhaiskar, Addl Chief Secretary..."
"The IAS has occupied all the commanding heights of government over the years, but in order to remain there it has had to strike a Faustian bargain with the political executive. It is now the gate-keeper to the political authority, controls all Cabinet Committees and Ministries, policy making and all postings, promotions and appointments, even those of judges and military commanders. No one- but no one- is allowed to breach their hallowed portals...."
"The NITI ( National Institution for Transformation of India) Ayog has recommended to the Prime Minister that “lateral entry” from the private sector should be introduced in the civil services at all levels, from Secretary to Deputy Secretary. The PMO (Prime Minister's Office) is reportedly considering the matter seriously. A bunch of reemployed bureaucrats are seeking to undermine the vision of someone like Sardar Patel who had cautioned the Constituent Assembly that India would disintegrate if it did not have a strong and independent civil service....the IAS needs technically qualified people from the outside. Not true. It already has enough. In the 2017 batch itself out of 264 selected candidates , 118 ( 44.69%) are from an engineering background; if one adds on the Doctors , IT graduates etc. the percentage comes closer to 50. Among the 20 toppers in this batch, 19 are engineers and one is a doctor! There is enough technical expertise in the IAS and this is no reason to get more from the private sector...."
ReplyDeleteSir what's your view about Raveesh, Barkha, Ajeet Anjum, Rajdeep?
ReplyDeleteAnd who do you want as PM instead of Modi? Lalu, Rahul, Mamata, Uddhav, Akhilesh??
It was a debate. You speak for the motion or against it. It's no news report
How is lying ok even if it's a debate?
DeleteExactly!
DeleteWhat lie she told? Talk of facts please
DeleteThese observations are as sweeping as those of Palki Sharma, albeit on the other extreme. Statistics is a very convenient instrument to distort to one’s convenience. Modi is self centered, selfish and myopic, no doubt, but don’t rubbish all his efforts. It would be as partisan an act as that of Palki.
ReplyDeleteThere are 100 things Modi did. 370 removal is enough for me. I'm in Kashmir now and I was here 20 years back. I know what's the change. And I can vouch that no other leader could have removed it. Are you with opposition who says they will bring it back?
DeleteAvay, not only do you have a way with words, you also have a unique talent to lucidly piece together a series of unimaginable and embarrassing disasters that will forever leave their stinking imprints on the soul of this nation.
ReplyDeleteThe writing on the wall is so thick and indelible that to contradict it would be intellectual dishonesty of the highest order. Thank you for articulating what so many of us have known in our hearts. The only piece of good news is that this 10 year party may finally be coming to a most ignominious end at long last.
This blistering attack is totally warranted and the author speaks for many silent sufferers whose voices are muted out of fear which is palpable today... This scathing indictment of the govt is well deserved but they are wearing blinkers and those who join the bhakti bandwagon also go blinker shopping immediately to the saffron store! Emasculating institutions is Crime that has no penalty in the IPC despite affecting not just 1.4 b Indians but also generations to come... Fissures n more fissures each day with the elections Richter in a Coma... Ironical that a song lyrics said, "hum laaye hain toofan se kishti nikal ke, iss desh ko rakhna mere bachon sambhal ke"...RIP
ReplyDeleteYes, totally aghast at Palki's debate. Have no more words left to say after this article..it has fully articulated my emotions too...it's getting difficult to breath here without taking in the nauseating smell of these journalists
ReplyDeleteWho would have thought 10 years back that the poor would have ID cards, bank accounts, health insurance and mobile phones? Not to mention toilets, cooking gas, pucca houses and piped water and electricity supply.
ReplyDeleteIn 2005 some 55% of Indians were considered poor by the UN’s Multidimensional Poverty Index measure. It is now at 16%. The Economist has commented that the lot of India’s poor has continued to improve, thanks to GDP growth and welfare spending by Modi government.
Who says 80 percent of youth is unemployed? Public doesn't need free rations.. but I think it rits in FCI godowns so better give it. Or stop procurement which liberals don't allow.
ReplyDeleteIs religion based reservation desirable,? Do you agree with census and redistribution of wealth?
I agree with the views of the author especially about the worsening economic disparity and social disintegration in India. The environment in India is toxic and extremely polarised. I would also like to point out that the oldest and the largest democracies are going through a similar crisis of their constitutional values being trampled upon by one narrative and countered by the established values.
ReplyDeleteThe saddest issue in all these is that people have taken opposing positions and neither side is willing to sit together and view from the other point of view
We should look at the root cause of this social. Harmony. Reaction or self defence should not be vilified rather encouraged
DeleteAvay is right, day in and night out all that the present government is doing is spewing hatred,lies& venom in their attempt to create a division in the Indian diaspora.Unfortunatly in this they are being abetted by the likes of Ms Palki Sharma and the illustrious spineless members of the Godi media who are no longer fit to be called journalists.The BJP media cell works on the lines of Joseph Goebbles, to help the govt's policy of converting India from a democracy to an autocracy (a polite way of saying dictatorship)
ReplyDeleteIf we don't wake up now and throw them out, if they have their way,then even God will not be able to help us.WAKEUP MY COUNTRYMEN, HELP INDIA BY VOTING RIGHT
Please look at Rohit Vemula case. How Modi and BJP villified
ReplyDeleteOBC reservations. Ha e not kar ataka govt out all muslims in OBC? HAS Congress not given 4 % muslim quota in a state?
ReplyDelete370 is no Political matter . It's finished by elected govt.
DeleteDear sir, I don't know how you could believe that our 83 pc youth is unemployed. May be blind hatred for Modi can do it to intellectuals. On your insistence I looked up ILO report. It DOESN'T say 83 pc youth is unemployed. It says due to rising education, 83 pc of unemployed are youth.
ReplyDeleteAs per report of CMEI, unemployment is at historic low of around 7percent. Youth 20-30 yrs age has unemployment of around 40 percent whereas for 25-30 years it is 14 percent.
I request you to do necessary corrections and reduce pain of the readers
# 83 percent of youth are unemployed; 83 percent of unemployed are youth ...numbers can intimidate, especially 'apex scale' - Additional Chief Secretary, Narishakti
ReplyDelete"The LFPR [labour force participation] in India for individuals aged 15 years and older was 55.2 per cent in 2022, which was lower than the world average of 59.8 per cent (f i g u r e 2 .1). It consistently declined over the past two decades, from 61.6 per cent in 2000 to 50.2 per cent in 2019, before increasing to 55.2 per cent in 2022. The worker population ratio also exhibited a similar trend, declining from 60.2 per cent in 2000 to 47.3 per cent in 2019 before increasing to 52.9 per cent in 2022. The overall open unemployment rate, measured by the usual status criteria, was quite low – a little more than 2 per cent in 2000 and 2012, which sharply increased to 5.8 per cent in 2019, followed by a significant fall to 4.1 per cent in 2022...these upward trends in the labour market can be observed from 2018 onwards, during the economic slowdown, and continuing into the pandemic period
"Fifteen vacancies for peons, drivers and watchmen in Gwalior, Madhya Pradesh State had nearly 11,000 unemployed young people with graduate, post-graduate, engineer and MBA or PhD degrees and even civil judge aspirants applying – and not just from within the state but also the neighbouring state of Uttar Pradesh"
"that even IITs and IIMs are unable to place 50% of their graduates" - the honourable supreme court has laid down that reservations should not exceed 50%. while sarkari educational entities are required to implement reservation, it is evident that employers are not. there should be a statutory requirement for employers to place OBC, and the avarna students, graduates while recruiting from IIT, IIM. failure should attract prosecution, viewed as anti national
ReplyDelete"that almost 240000 rich and educated Indians have surrendered their citizenship in the last eight years alone"
ReplyDeleteit may not be the case that those trudging, husband wife, dragging little children, across the mexican desert, through the forests between kanaada and yankeestan, queueing for student visas granted in dodgy courses such as commercial cooking, social services, aged care specialist, hairdressing and stylist, and similar dead-end vocational training their procurers have assured them will lead to green cards, permanent residence and citizenship, and the spouse can drive taxis, work as cleaners, menials, are either rich or educated indians. these are mostly workshy layabouts at home who are happy to clean lavatories in anglosphere, italy, germany. there are more than enough youtube videos on the exploitation that youth from bharat that is hindustan, aka the fabled demographic dividend, face as stoop labour in italy.
The Oxford Union Society is globally a prestigious institution organising debates from 1823. It culls topics from a wide range of current issues and does not shy from fostering lively discussions, frequently bordering on the controversial. Whether Palki spoke for the motion from her own leanings or whether her’s was a transcript supplied from the corridors of Indian power is unknown. Salient is that someone will speak for the motion and conversely, someone against, insofar as a debate invites posturing. One wonders if those of us accusing her of complicity, are being precipitate in our condemnations on the ground that she favoured the motion. Mr. Vikas Thakur, who appears to single handedly take on himself the task of defending the current government of all its actions, comments appositely that it was a debate; sides were bound to be taken. She had not donned her journalistic hat then…
ReplyDeletePalki’s was more a recitation of blandishments from a government brochure, replete with the usual highlighting of the inefficiencies of past governments, contrasted with the stunning feats of the current one, buttressed with numbers and futuristic extrapolations.
What was inadequately covered by our domestic lapdog media was the contestation of Advocate Prashant Bhushan who rose after Palki and spoke against the motion.
His rebuttal was an intense recount of the religious and divisive malaise the nation is gripped in. The lies that this regime proliferates and the brazenness with which it perpetuates injustice upon minorities. And rebuttals on governance, economics, social indices, and media, juxtaposing Palki’s imagery of dazzling highs with the reality drowned in stygian depths.
The rest of the speakers barring these two went on a tangent frequently, replacing the debate with mockery alternating with stand-up comedy and straining wit. A full year later, Palki received return encomiums from the Prime Minister who leaves no stone unturned to draw mileage in these election times. Prashant Bhushan, out of disaffection by a pliant media, can be heard upon watching the entire debate.
I can't agree more with Avay Shukla. I never watched Ms Palki on TV, having retired from Godi Media channels long while ago. But Avay's piece prompted me to watch her Oxford Union debate. And I did. And what did I see?
ReplyDeleteAs rightly assessed, it is Amit Malviya's toolkit, regurgitated as her own. But onto the more fundamental question: Why, on earth, did she get an invite? Because it's a debate and Oxford folks, democratically, want to hear both sides? Then, knowing very well what's going on in India, shouldn't they have titled it: Myth vs Reality, or Fiction vs Non-Fiction or Vishwa Lies vs Vishwa Truth or Godi India vs Real India? That would've been apt.
Not that she doesn't know (I guess she's well-read!) the goings-on. She (likely) does. It's not that she fails to because she's purblind and deaf and/or suffers from selective amnesia. She's blind and stone (not tone) deaf to all that's happening around her. It's entirely her own choosing. How else can a journalist be so insensitive (not to human suffering - that's too much to ask her) but to official/global data? When Gandhiji's Three Monkeys along with the constitutional pillars fail us repeatedly (EVM-VVPAT being the latest, playing out as if avenging the wrongs wrought on us, poor citizens), I have (paradoxically) only pity and sympathy for Ms Palki (my fingers inadvertently moved on to type Palkhivala before I corrected it!) for her trope. No riffing on Orwell's words would do: Judgement Day can wait but not the hype and hoopla of speaking in the Oxford Union!
Let us look at job creation in one sector – automobiles – in 2023. Each commercial vehicle would require at least 4 jobs (driver, cleaner and two labourers). 9.62 lakh new commercial vehicles sold has generated 38.48lakh jobs. 6.8 lakh three wheelers were sold, which meant 6.8 lakh jobs.
ReplyDeleteIf you take the 41 lakh cars sold in that year, and of that three fourth are self-driven, another 10.25 lakh jobs. 1.7 crore two-wheel vehicles were sold. Enabling and ancillary activities like manufacturing, logistics, finance, insurance, marketing, after sales repair, etc. would have added at least 10 lakh jobs for 2.27 crore new vehicles.
Thus, the automobile sector alone generated about 60 lakh new jobs in one year. Motor vehicles are run for 20 years on average in India. Back then not many vehicles were sold. Let us assume, 20% of the new jobs are connected with replacement vehicle sold during this year. Ignoring these, the new jobs created are 48 lakhs. This sector was growing at 10+% before the pandemic.
Many other sectors are expanding and creating new jobs. The gig economy has been expanding the job market. Creation of 2 crore jobs, which include the self-employed, in a year is a distinct possibility.
She has studied nd presented her view point logically nd forcefully. Salute Mam
ReplyDeleteMr Sahu's arguments are getting desperate, esp that last line. Even the govt, BJP or Modi have not made this claim! This kind of abstraction is disproved by real ( not mathematically imagined) reality on the ground, like unemployment and LPR figures. Or this: the Railways had advertised for 36000 jobs, for which 12 million people applied. Draw your own conclusion about the govt's achievement in this area.
ReplyDelete# the civil services examination of the UPSC draws one million applicants for the 500 positions proposed to be filled. for every position there are 2,000 applicants. for the railways recruitment board's 36,000 positions there are 12 million applicants; viz for every position there are 334 applicants.
ReplyDeleteof the worthies successful in securing appointment to the higher babucracy, there will be not a few who two years after the extended holiday that probation of is, including six months of a grand tour across the country enjoying hospitality that no trainee in any job ever receives [hindustan lever famously sent out their probationary trainees with a few boxes of detergents, soaps, and sundry products to learn the work of the salesforce, viz, throwing them into the deep end of the pool], a further year of actual work experience, and then, hold your breath, with three years of post appointment service, be appointed as district magistrate, deputy commissioner of a revenue district, head of the district administration ranking higher in seniority to all other heads of departments, functions in the district. that ten million realists don't apply to the UPSC every year is the miracle, many who receive the coveted appointment letter would have tried and tried again, failing three, four times, spending hundreds of thousands of rupees on bazaar notes, attending teaching shops.
the attraction is especially great for the risk averse, the security of thirty five years of money, position, power - the three temptations that always ennoble, and all gluttonously together - without any risk, peril of losing it all; ever!
ten million, there should be 100 million.
or is there consensus with one sanjeev sanyal, that these are write-offs.
What does record GST collection every month mean? Job glit is worldwide and AI is mostly responsible for job glut in IIT and IIM
ReplyDeleteReservations - It's a flawed policy. Lallu Yadav's family can get reservation but not a poor general category till PM brought economic reservations. 70 years is more than enough. I have not discriminated against anyone in basis of caste. Why should 8 suffer,? Dalits are new rulers. Stop all reservation. Respect merit
ReplyDeleteAs usual a great piece. I entirely agree with him.
ReplyDeleteWe should look at numbers from independent sources and arrive at the right conclusions without trusting the propoganda.
I applaud you for starting a fascinating debate on India’s economy. My figures are not inconsistent with unemployment or LPR figures. The Economist has been unsparing in criticizing PM Modi and his governance. However, on 24-01-2024 it wrote: “unemployment rate has barely budged during his two terms.(It stood at 8% at the end of Mr Singh’s decade compared with 7.3% in 2022.” Please watch PM Modi’s reply to no-confidence motion before 2019 election. He has covered employment generation in many more sectors.
ReplyDeleteThere is nothing wrong in my extrapolating employment generation figures from real statistics. Unemployment rate of LPR figures are also extrapolated.
You have stated that the Railways had advertised for 36,000 jobs, for which 12 million people applied. According to a ToI report, 3,700 PHDs holders, 50,000 graduates, 28,000 PGs have applied for 62 posts of peons in UP police. The post requires a minimum eligibility of Class V. There is a tremendous charm for a government jobs. Many of the applicants would not be unemployed or they would have got other employment had they tried. In Delhi, non-matriculates from UP and Bihar are running Uber/Ola taxis, earning 40-50K per month. But many educated youth prefer government jobs with lower pay. The number of job applicants for government vacancies don’t mean that unemployment has skyrocketed in recent times. You can consult CMIE (not in good books of the Govt.) yourself in this regard.
You have cited that India’s external debt has jumped threefold since 2014. I would request you to take into account economic growth and inflation. The budget size has grown 3 times during this period. As of April 2, 2024, the World Bank projects India's output growth to reach 7.5% in the 2023-24 fiscal year.
There is no reason to worry about inequality at this stage of India’s development. The World Inequality Lab reports the following percentages of countries’ total wealth owned by top 10% of the population: South Africa – 85.6%, Brazil – 79.7%, USA – 70.7%, India – 64.6%.
Wealth creators increase the size of the economic pie and all including the poor benefit. In India’s context, drastic measures for reducing inequality will adversely impact innovation. Inequality is inevitable when the country develops. Things will change for the better only when the poorest people get educated and skilled, earning more income.
communist ideology will ultimately make all economically equal. Equally poor.
DeleteAjay Shukla, a retd IAS, has penned a blog on a hitherto respected journalist who is no more a journalist now, but an accomplice only. Know why? .... And following the theory, W=F x D, Palki Sharma's journalistic output has now abruptly reduced to zero (0)! Interesting and quite a lesson for all budding journalists!!
ReplyDeleteThis lady was a MUST watch when she was on WION where she would be presenting well researched information.
ReplyDeleteAnd then, surprisingly, she went and painted herself saffron following which, the few times I happened to chance upon some video of her on youtube, had me wanting to puke. With the bullshit rant of hers at Oxford debate, I HAVE thrown up.
One lives at hope that at some point the lady MAY decide to pull her head from out of the cow dung it is currently wallowing in, clean her eyes of that and look around.
In any case Mr Bhushan's rebuttal to the bilge she spewed should have had her cringing.
The question I ask myself now is what level have we, as a nation, been pulled down and dumbed down to?
I’m not sure if the Oxford Union debates aren’t caught up in a downward spiral for the moment, inviting, as they have, a number of speakers whose antecedents fall somewhat short of the greatness of past speakers. That does not mean that their speech would have had to have been impeccable but certainly the processes of thought and analysis would have been of a calibre far ahead of the ordinary, at least in terms of depth and originality of interpretation.
ReplyDeleteAkash Banerjee for all his bluster, was right when he compared his fellow speakers to a class eight school level debate team. Seriously, the presentation, but for a few interesting turns of phrase, sounded like a not very well rote-learnt narration.
I like my India because we fly. There are so many lovely cars. And everyone has a cell phone and a QR code and a bank account. Even going to the extent of quoting the White House suggesting people go to Delhi to see how the country’s getting on. English speaking educated people from English speaking countries (never mind dialects and accents) are able to fool around and play with words and pass tongue in cheek comments that can quite easily fly by night over the heads of those less lettered. For all you know, White House may have suggested going to Delhi to see how the country’s getting on and followed it up with a wink. Especially if it was after the G20 presidential hoo-hah and being driven hurriedly past heavily curtained potty-wala streets and pavements.
I would not have deigned to bring the lady journalist under mention, to the generally dignified pages of this blog. She must have irritated Avay a lot. But the lady has always come across as a bit of a hair pulling, girls’ school type of presenter, full of sarcasm and superciliousness, knowing what no one else would know anything about. She was like that at WION(and it would have been a factor in costing her the job after a seemingly good start); and she is very likely still like that. Even at the debate. Her stats are about as authentic as the PM and FM’s and it’s a measure of a speech, always and every time, that when a speaker hasn’t got into stride by the time of the first bell, she’s not going to get into stride at all by the second. To respond to this very pathetic example of standing up on behalf of one’s country and ‘signifying nothing’ is a waste of time. The staunchly supportive comments above are in support of the person and not much to do with her speech. Being personable otherwise, she may be pleased with the chivalry of her defenders and who can blame them. So, even if examples of 66% and 83% percent or whatever are being thrown about, anyone not blinkered away from failed thunder boxes and the catastrophe of our very own uniquely special cashless economy, the desperately struggling small trader or small everyone whether peon, chowkidar, halwai and landless tenants would hasten to retreat from the rose coloured displays of iniquity. Iniquity that cannot address our despairing lives. Modi’s India is nothing if it is not about callous division deliberately riven between the haves and have-nots. And the pall of gloom that such callousness lets fall over all his world. Ask Jaishankar and Doval and others still following him tamely around. Sentiment on the streets? “Thak giya Sir.”
Avayji,
ReplyDeleteWhen you host a blog, all comments, to your liking or not and which could be way beyond your shallow reasoning skills and vapid humour, should be entertained unless they promote terrorism, death threats or anti-nationalism. Stop playing the Ayatollah by pressing the delete button whimsically. I'm privy to sensitive insider information not you. You're paddling in the pool reserved for kiddies. And don't erase or block replies that show you in a poor light. Grow up. Grow a tiny brain. Regards.
Giving sensitive and secret information on public blog could be danger to your life. Maine pad liya tha aap ke 2 bhag ka sandesh jo delete hue. Be safe.
DeleteYaakov, Why did you openly insult dadaji Avay Shukla? I have been reading many of your comments and you come across as some snooty South Bombay type with an Ivy League education. If you want highly intelligent essays from top intellectuals then go to Richard Dawkins Foundation, David Chalmers, Daniel Goleman or P Z Myers websites etc etc. Avay's blog is for timepass. What Adesh Shrivastava said about a danger to your life by giving out sensitive information is true. Stay safe.
Delete@ Isaacs, Been reading your informed and out of the box views on Avay Shukla's blog and on the international blogs where u write and u have a grip firmly on events around us in India and rest of the world. Avay Shukla give us an ordinary mainstream media view of things with silly statements, personal bias and cheap humour that does not match. When mafia man Shashi Tharoor says Avay Shukla is his favourite blogger and when Avay Shukla with a common degree in English literature and without having expert knowledge about ecology and corporate sponsorship of environmental projects keeps praising the corrupt and criminal Ambanis, it says a lot about his links with Congress party and Ambanis. He could be a paid agent. I know firsthand how highly corrupt IAS is. You write with clarity and without slogans, no cheap personal attacks on Palki or Kangana Ranaut and others, hardly any bias, no supporting tamasha baazi political parties and criminal corporations. You present both sides of a argument and give ground reality with the international dimension pushing it. My question is - No matter who wins LS 2024, will the Indian federation survive for 10 years or will it go the way of the Soviet Union that broke up into 14 free countries? The population of minorities is fast rising to 35% and more and many separatist movements are present in different parts of the country. Whichever political side comes to power In New Delhi they don't have vision, no great leaders and no forward thinking policies. Priyanka Vadra and Rahul Gandhi are not intelligent and bipolar nuts and their family is deep in black money. Modi and his chamchas are very corrupt, murderous and their only aim is to make this country into a big cow and idol worshipping country. I want to hear from you.
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ReplyDeleteExcellent piece Avay. I had high hopes for Palki when she started Firstpost but pretty soon she too went the way of what I called "boosterism" journalism where she tried to buttress India's position by dumping on some other country or something that she thought was contrary to India's interest. Her rampant anti-Americanism was mostly the rantings of an ignoramus and her regular screeds on dedollarization of the world economy only shone more light on her shallow understanding of world economics. The so called debate was really pathetic and the examples of cards and QR codes and nary a mention of the challenges you mentioned just showed her to be another toady cosplaying a journalist.
ReplyDeleteIt is bemusing to observe the direction of the comments following the blog, which by itself is a delayed, reactive stimulus to the laudatory missive of Modi towards a speaker in a debate held a year back! Nobody took note of the Oxford Union debate of 2023 till a fortnight ago, when the Prime Minister who remains gluttonous for praise, shot her an appreciative tweet.
ReplyDeleteConsidering that we are late risers here, are we not past the time to be burning the speaker at the stake? What occluded us from calling out the morphing of her journalism and oratory the entire year...?
Kabir Mustafi’s response is perhaps the only comment that extracts the core from what has transformed into a fetid morass.
Which patshala did you study in? Your English and logic are bad. Go for tuitions.
DeleteEvery bit is true what Mr.Shukla writes
ReplyDeleteBut then you can't preach to the already converted. And to those who see Vikas standing on the road and miss them for bulldozer s!
the people will show on 4 jun. Its >400. Pitroda put another nail in.
ReplyDeleteOye andh bhakt, Ambani aur Adani bhi Modi ki doobti boat ko chod diye hai aur INDIA gatbandhan ko karodo rupye chanda de rahe hai. Yeh sanket hai ki NDA chunav haar rahi hai. In udyogpathiyo ko andhar se khabare milti hai aur unko pata chala hai ki NDA out aur INDIA in hai lok sabha 2024 me. Media me Zee TV jo NDA ka sabse bada supporter hai ab NDA se door hua hai. Zee TV ke owner Subhash Chandra ki tweet pad lena aur zabardast interview dekh lena NDA ke virodh me. Chandra ki bhi pata chala hai ki NDA chunav haar rahi hai.
DeleteThat comment sure didn't age well...LOL
DeleteBJP - 175-180. NDA - 200-220. INDIA - 300-310
ReplyDeleteNeither did this one...LOL
Delete5 days ago, senior BJP leader Dr Subramanian Swamy told the audience on Beer Biceps podcast that China is blackmailing Narendra Modi.
ReplyDeleteI think 2 reasons are possible for China blackmailing Modi sahab -
1.Corruption - this means Modi has secretly received hundreds of crores of rupees as personal bribe
and/or
2. Modi's gay relationships
Modi, Shah, BJP/NDA 👎
Abki baar tadipaar
By the way Avay, I must let you know that this piece is being taken down by Facebook as being against their community standards.
ReplyDeleteThank you for the information, Vistasp. I guess hate speech is more in conformity with their "community standards"!
ReplyDeleteTrue, but that shouldn't stop us from cutting and pasting the entire piece directly on our walls with due credit, which is what I have done. :)
DeleteMr Shukla, has Palki Sharma given any wrong information or data? Every society has two sides like a coin.You are aware as to the platform she was speaking at. Should she continue weeping on negative issues of the country, like our PM Aspirant Rahul Pappu keeps doing at Cambridge or other international fora? Do you think the Europe or US don't have any social issues? Instead of arguing on the pure and abstract data, should you not have a pulse of the empowerment and access to various basic amenities the poor of your definition has got today as compared to the position ten years back? But you will not talk of it because of your own pre-conceived notions that are driven by a thought process of so called liberals and the seculars that see the World around them through a painted spectacle. Undoubtedly the absolute number of poor is still substantial in India but don't close your eyes from what has happened in ten years' time. Don't ever forget the policy paralysis India suffered during ten scam-studded years of UPA.
ReplyDeleteCountering Avay Shukla's Critiques of PM Modi's Leadership
ReplyDeleteA counter to Avay Shukla’s criticisms can be constructed by showcasing India's progress under Prime Minister Modi, highlighting data, international recognition, and alternate perspectives. Below is a rebuttal to some of Shukla’s main points.
1. Decline of Democratic Institutions and Press Freedom
Counterpoint:
Strengthened Governance: Modi’s government has focused on transparency and efficiency, with initiatives like Digital India reducing bureaucratic inefficiencies and curbing corruption.
Judiciary Independence: The Supreme Court continues to demonstrate independence, ruling on critical issues like the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA) and farm laws.
Press Freedom: India’s diverse media landscape allows for widespread dissent, indicating that freedom of expression remains robust.
International Support: Major leaders from countries like the US, Japan, and France continue to engage deeply with India, underscoring confidence in its democratic institutions. Modi’s presence at forums like the UN, G20, and G7 reflects India’s global credibility.
2. Economic Decline and Inequality
Counterpoint:
GDP Growth: India’s economy is rebounding post-COVID, with the World Bank projecting it to be one of the fastest-growing major economies. Issues like unemployment are global, worsened by the pandemic.
Economic Reforms: Reforms like GST and the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC) have streamlined the business environment, attracting investments. PLI schemes have spurred growth in electronics and defense sectors.
Foreign Investments: India’s FDI inflows have reached record highs, with companies like Apple and Tesla expanding operations, signaling confidence in India’s economic prospects.
International Support: Global leaders have endorsed India’s economic resilience, particularly during crises like COVID-19, while India’s role in global vaccine production further illustrates its economic influence.
3. Social Cohesion and Equality
Counterpoint:
Inclusivity: Programs like PM Awas Yojana (housing) and Ayushman Bharat (healthcare) address the needs of the marginalized. Initiatives like PM Mudra Yojana have empowered small businesses.
Minority Welfare: While there are criticisms, the government has enhanced minority welfare schemes. The Triple Talaq ban is seen as a significant step in empowering Muslim women.
International Support: Leaders like President Joe Biden and President Macron have praised India’s inclusive growth model, while Modi’s popularity reflects his administration’s success in social policies.
4. International Isolation
Counterpoint:
Global Diplomacy: India is far from isolated; it plays a pivotal role in global forums like the QUAD and maintains strategic partnerships with major powers.
Neighborly Relations: India has strengthened ties with neighbors like Bangladesh and Sri Lanka, despite tensions with Pakistan. Modi’s government has invested in diplomacy through trade and cultural initiatives.
International Recognition: India’s G20 presidency and Modi’s relationships with global leaders demonstrate India’s growing influence on the world stage.
5. Global Indices and Rankings
Counterpoint:
Methodological Issues: Criticisms of India’s global rankings often ignore the transformative impacts of initiatives like Swachh Bharat and PM Garib Kalyan Yojana, which have had significant effects on health and poverty alleviation.
Positive Rankings: India has improved on global indices related to innovation, ease of doing business, and green energy, becoming a leader in solar power and sustainability.
International Praise: Countries like Germany and Japan have praised India’s strides in green energy and technological innovation.
Conclusion
While Shukla criticizes India’s trajectory, evidence suggests the country is making significant strides in governance, economy, and international standing under Modi’s leadership. India is positioning itself as a global leader, with broad international recognition of its progress.
All excellent points, really. And just so we’re clear, I’m neither a hater nor a bhakt—just someone who likes to glance at data and see where it leads. However, in this particular case, the data alone doesn’t quite cut it, so let’s go deeper. I won’t dignify all your counterpoints with a response, except the one about social cohesion and inclusivity. You’re absolutely right about government schemes being accessible to all. Spot on! But here’s the kicker: the fact that you think this is something we should *credit* the government for? Well, that says it all, doesn’t it? Taxpayer-funded schemes *should* be available to everyone who qualifies—it's not like we should be throwing a parade every time a government remembers it isn’t a medieval monarchy doling out favors to loyal subjects. But hey, here you are, trotting out this gem to prove that “see, the BJP government doesn’t discriminate!” In the process, though, you can’t help but shout the real message: “Look, the BJP *could* discriminate, and maybe *should*—but they’re choosing not to, so let’s all be eternally grateful! Now let's find another beef eater to lynch! Tally ho! Or rather, har har Mahadev!”
DeleteBravo. Truly.
A qualified lead displays strong potential, matching ideal buyer profiles and engaging meaningfully, paving the way for successful sales.
ReplyDeleteDefine Qualified Lead