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In ur opinion a cheap blog post can wash every blot on Gujarat and Gujarat govt's own statistics or reports have no value :o::o:

25,00,00,00 gujarati lives in kucha houses

Over 60% of gujaratis defects in open man women kids

shameful level of malnutrition

shameful level of health infrastructure

shameful level of education


are not to be worried about??
 
Marginalized by Narendra Modi

As the 2014 election approaches us, the rage of the Narendra Modi-fan threatens to swallow those who dare to differ

Those marginalized by Narendra Modi have to keep their voices loud and their criticism sharp, until we have better alternatives than at present. Photo: Mint

If you happen to be someone uncomfortable with the so-called Narendra Modi wave, you are probably familiar with this feeling. You are either patronised by those who think you will eventually see the light, or risk being abused by vehement Modi-fied souls. As the 2014 election approaches us, the rage of the Modi-fan threatens to swallow those who dare to differ. This is the group that I term marginalised by Modi.

So what have been some of the more visible manifestations of this phenomenon on those who have been marginalised?

One, your patriotism is constantly questioned.

Any opposition is termed a conspiracy against India first and then Modi, not strictly in that order (you see how India first is often interpreted by compulsive Modi fans?). Modi and his supporters have successfully resurrected the foreign hand; see how easily they have alleged that the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) is funded by the Central Intelligence Agency.

Second, beyond just the questions on your patriotism, you will be abused constantly and in full public glare.

The abuses flow in online forums, social media, television studios, Whatsapp groups and dinner tables. In a column I had written over seven months back, I had expressed the fear that influenced by the rise of Modi and the accompanying rhetoric, more and more of the neutral sections of the population will move towards radical and intolerant positions in their personal lives.

Over the last year, this is exactly what I have observed; there is indeed a distinct flavour to the newly-emboldened radical.

Third, you are labelled.

Anyone opposing Modi is a Gandhi family stooge; anyone opposing his industrial promotion policies is a communist; anyone not impressed with his supposed tea-selling roots is an elitist; and finally the worst of them all, anyone worried about religious harmony is secular or sickular, one of the favorite words of the venomous online brigade. A recent column on livemint even labelled anyone who opposes Modi as victims of myopic selfishness.

The common thread that runs through all of the above is that of majoritarianism and a kind of George Bush-esque with us or against us sentiment. It is ironic that Modi does not realise that the leader he most closely resembles in his political strong-arming tactics is Hitlar. Or perhaps he does fully realises this and has therefore imitated the brand of personality-driven politics that Hitlar practised. In supporting him, his party has even used liberally the references to the foreign hand. The Congress has reason to be mighty pleased, imitation being the best form of flattery, but Modi forgets that no one can take their popularity for granted. Indira Gandhi certainly tested this out well enough during the Emergency and tasted its consequences in the 1977 elections.

An authoritarian leader is bound to evoke strong passions in a country like ours. Countering a riot with another riot, as this column has repeatedly stressed, is not the solution. A strong administrative record (even a debatable one, as in this case) is no guarantee against the damage that can be caused by an unwillingness to protect the rights of all citizens, irrespective of their identity.

So more than the issues that Modi harps on in his speeches, it is instructive to take note of issues that Modi does not talk about.

Two examples stand out—the recent sedition charge drama on the students in Meerut and on Article 377 and the rights of the LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender) community.


These issues are hardly insignificant and Modi’s silence reveals his priorities. Modi fans have so far tended to deal with these kinds of issues by downplaying their significance in the larger scheme of things, artfully using Modi’s rhetorical India first and by playing up the abysmal track records of his political rivals.

But there is no undoing the charges of personal complicity in an organised pogrom, where both Hindus and Muslims were used to serve politically opportunistic goals. In opposing any further growth of this brand of politics, we have to keep fighting. Those marginalised by Modi have to keep their voices loud and their criticism sharp, until we have better alternatives than at present.

Marginalized by Narendra Modi - Livemint
 
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'Flush' former Congressi - Current Aaptard Bot! :whistle:
People have right to earn their livelihood

In ur opinion a cheap blog post can wash every blot on Gujarat and Gujarat govt's own statistics or reports have no value :o::o:

25,00,00,00 gujarati lives in kucha houses

Over 60% of gujaratis defects in open man women kids

shameful level of malnutrition

shameful level of health infrastructure

shameful level of education


are not to be worried about??

It is not a cheap blog. The facts and figures are from Govt of India data. You keep on posting FB posters in PDF I have shown you the actual indices.

I have lived in Gujarat and have seen it transform in front of me. Now I want India to transform
 
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My dear My hindu defination includes Shikhs, Jains and all who belongs to Indian religion. You see I am not a psudo secular so when I talk of or think of Hindus, I can never think that shikhs< Jains etc are different from Hindus. When I read your post, I got an an idea that it is interpreated otherwise. Shikhism , Jainism . Buddhism are all part of Hinduism. How can they be different? We all are one.
First of all, the word is Sikhism not Shikhism.
Second, you may group Sikhs, Jains, Buddhists as Dharmic but certainly can not call them Hindus. I am saying this as a Hindu.
 
Gujarat leader has communal face, says Mamata
HT Correspondent, Hindustan Times New Delhi, March 12, 2014

Trinamool Congress chief Mamata Banerjee took on Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) prime ministerial candidate Narendra Modi on Wednesday, saying, “Gujarat’s leader has a communal face”.


The West Bengal chief minister, however, did not name her Gujarat counterpart while going on the offensive.

She unveiled her party’s national agenda with a rally at Ramlila Maidan in Delhi, but the much-hyped joint show of strength with social activist Anna Hazare did not materialise. Hazare was not present at the rally.

Unfazed, Banerjee said she did not care who came for the rally and who did not not. "Whether somebody supports us or not, we are going to shake up Delhi."

She added, “We have started from Bengal, but do not forget that Delhi too is my state, so is Punjab, so is Maharashta…” She recited lines from Sare Jahan Se Accha (an enduring patriotic poem) to showcase her inclusive credentials.

“I don’t want individual power. I want people to be empowered. We won’t allow the people to be bulldozed.”

Banerjee, who left the Congress-led United Progressive Alliance (UPA) coalition government in September 2012, added, “Whether it is the BJP, Congress or the CPM, they enjoy and sell the country. We cannot spend money like the rich, but we can fulfil promises.”
 
Just imagine If AAP was in power during Kargil conflict instead of initiating a military operation to kick out infiltrators they would have been busy holding dharna at the foot of Tiger Hill protesting against infiltration and would have planned a night operation under Somnath Bharti where a bunch of AAPtards crawl up the hill led by none other than Ashutosh and start pelting stone and bricks at enemy bunkers. :rofl:
 

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