Monday, April 14, 2014

Ab ki baar...

I still don't feel confident about 'Modi Sarkar'. Saturday night I watched App ki Adalat with Narendra Modi. Of course Rajat Sharma was no Arnab Goswami and perhaps RaGa needs another birth to match the shrewdness of Modi. The chanting of Modi Modi in the programme and the never ending 'Ab ki baar Modi Sarkar' messages in my phone is not enough to make me believe that Modi is becoming CEO of India Inc.

Last one week, I have been watching Ravish Kumar in NDTV prime time. Ravish Kumar is travelling across remote villages in north India to feel the ground reality ‑ talking to villagers, understanding the local issues, attending rallies.  He's understanding the pulse of the nation and finding out why this country still votes for caste, why people worship their leaders like Gods and why there's actually no such things like Modi wave in reality. 

Ravish Kumar is confused and so am I.

I and you, people who are connected to internet live in a different world. We are hooked to internet, busy reading this post or some other because we want to avoid the real world conflicts that's occurring right outside our doorstep. We don't live in villages, we don't attend rallies, we avoid everything including politics that we feel not our cup of tea. But we do enjoy the great Indian Tamasha, keep forwarding 'Ab ki baar Modi Sarkar' and help growing Modi wave in media. We the people who can read and write english, who got a Smartphone, may be having a internet connection roughly counts to some 20 crores. The so called urban middle class that's 15% of the Indian population. 50% of them may be voting this election, that's just 10 Crores of people. Given 80 crore electorates of India, what about the rest 70 Crores? Do they really feel the so called Modi wave?

Indian voters are not fools to be deceived by these new methodical approaches of campaigning. It may work for AAP, may work in an urban land favouring BJP but not in every nook & corner of India. People still vote for Individuals that matter to them. They vote for a guy (or his gang) from whom they can get their work done; can stand for them in trouble; can help bailing out of some odd problem out of one too many they face in their everyday life.

Ravish Kumar was interacting with Yadav people in one village of Mainpuri constituency in Uttar Pradesh. The entire village is willing to vote none other than their own 'Yadav'caste. At one moment, It felt like entire UP is voting for caste. In no way, there was Modi wave to be seen. They complained that no other party people ever approached their village. May be other parties have done their homework that in a UP Yadav village, there's no point investing their time and energy. And unfortunately the one answer on why they are voting to their own caste was unanimous. To get rid of police atrocities! Period.

This applies to every corner of India.

It all boils down to delivery of justice. I feel, that's the root cause of all the problems in India. If we compare India with other western countries, post globalization the only difference that I could figure out is that the speed in which our courts deliver justice. 'Sueing' is one commonly word in western countries. The fear of getting sued/punished makes people to become scrupulous. Law takes its own course always without showing any bias. Everything else falls into place.

We keep saying justice delayed is justice denied. But nothing seems to be happening. Recently a British court slammed Indian judiciary system for its tardy pace of delivering justice. No Modi, No Kejriwal can solve the problems of India unless justice is delivered in a timely manner.

May be for one term, we should stop elections; instead elect/appoint some 10000 judges, spend the money in setting up courts and for next 5 years, keep closing all the pending cases for once and all!!!

Unless a Yadav of Mainpuri can sue a policeman and get justice, he's still going to vote for another Yadav!

Kab ki baar... ?