Friday, May 14, 2010

The Poor and the Furious

Poor people are an abundant commodity in India. Having travelled to all metropolitan cities in India, and having stayed at each place for a prolonged period of time, I have seen them fairly closely.....and I refer not just to the BPL category but also the lower middle class, the ones who do not have an AC at home, those who avoid MacD and KFC, not coz its unhealthy but coz its expensive, those that travel in a public bus to a party they have been invited to, and forgo a few luxuries that month to be able to afford a gift to buy for the person who had invited him to that party.

One of the things that struck me were the differences amongst this section of people...for those who lived in Kolkata and those who lived anywhere else. For this section of people if he belongs to Kolkata, especially if he is Bengali, is a very proud race amongst his own kin...but sadly enough, finds it very difficult to get along with his kith n kin. I think what I mean to say is that the bengali poor, is not a very tolerant race.

The reason I say this is because whenever I am in Kolkata, I see only flayed tempers around me. Its either an obstinate and 'abhodro/ashobbho' passenger on the bus who would not turn to the side to accomodate our protagonist, or some mero/bihari guy in a car who wouldn't stop to let him cross the road when the signal was green, or the shop vendor who is out to fleece him or even the Kolkata summer, my 'hero' is always very very pissed. And more often than not, you'd find him getting together every evening with his friends for 'adda' where all that they do is rant !!

My analysis.....the reason why my bengali brother is so furious with everyone is because of absolute and abject hopelessness, the knowledge that things are not going to get any better. He is educated, knowledgable, and yet makes far less than his 'medo' neighbour who has a shop in burabazar. He cant get a decent job, and even if his job is decent, the pay is not as decent. He is angry because a bengali in bengal has to live like him whereas his friend who left for Mumbai has just brought a new car.

There are so few opportunities in Kolkata, people cant help but feel cheated. Cheated by the Govt which has had 30 years to prove themselves but has let him down, by the non-bengali community who has fared much better than he has, by the rich who has robbed him of his wealth through some slight of hand and tries to keep him poor, by the ladies, who prefer to marry someone from DEL/MUM these days, and indeed by God himself. I havn't ever seen a bus or car being burnt and its owner/driver being beaten up, sometimes even fatally so, for knocking down a pedestrian, never mind whose fault it is. He resents the guy who can afford a car when he cannot. I drive around in a car(my dad's) in Kolkata, and feel guilty about doing so...thats a feeling thats only possible in Kolkata.

The reason for this resentment is well known to all...No industry, no enterprise, no opportunity...that is the bottomline !!! The topline is the bottomline.

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Literary plagiarism embraces cinematic content

I hereby present you with an excerpt from Chetan Bhagat's 'one night@call centre' which I only just read:

'Vroom continued, this time in a firmer voice.

"Thank you. My friends, I am angry. Because every day, I see some of the world’s strongest and smartest people in my country. I see all this potential, yet it is all getting wasted. An entire generation up all night, providing crutches for the white morons to run their lives. And then big companies come and convince us with their advertising to value crap we don’t need, do jobs we hate, so we can buy stuff -- junk food, coloured fizzy water, dumbass credit cards and overpriced shoes. They call it youth culture. Is that what they think youth is about? …." '

And here's a dialouge of Tyler Durden, the character played by Brad Pitt in the movie 'Fight Club' lecturing his fight club buddies:

"I see all this potential -- damn it, an entire generation pumping gas and waiting tables; they're slaves with white collars. Advertisements have them chasing cars and clothes, working jobs we hate so we can buy shit we don't need. We are the middle children of history, man. No purpose or place. We have no Great War, or great depression. Our great war is a spiritual war. Our great depression is our lives. We've all been raised by television to believe that one day we'll all be millionaires and movie gods and rock stars -- but we won't. And we're learning slowly that fact. And we're very, very pissed off."

I wouldn't go so far as to label any of this plagiarism despite the misleading 'Title' of this blog...but then, who are you going to believe, me or your own eyes?

Monday, April 26, 2010

Bharat Bandh

Only in West Bengal...

How ironic. As if the state wants to cling onto its reputation as the last bastion of organized industrial/social unrest. Dividends ? Not worth the effort....decades of practice bears testimony of that !!!

Why then would you ask, is the 'bandh' such a popular tool ?? Political leverage? Is that a reasonable assumtion? Its not a question an educated urbane professional working in private sector in the national capital can answer though...one has to be part of the grassroot BPL population to be able to answer that question. Its how their lives are affected, that decide the outcome of bharat bandh. Its how they benefit, that determines its success.

Never believe people like me who tell you that bandhs are bloody useless !!!!

Friday, April 23, 2010

Where is indian journalism headed...

Apparently downhill....

Today I read an article whose headline screamed 'Praful Patel's daughter pulled out AI flight for IPL'. Really? Is that even possible?

In effect the National daily for the sake of sensationalism, have accused Mr.Patel's daughter of misuse of power?? Power that she doesn't have in the first place...Complete loss of objectivity bordering on assenine reporting.

I am surprised their lawyers didn't advise them that they would open up themselves to defamation suit.