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	<title>Aditya Sanghi Speaks &#187; Politics</title>
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		<title>Can&#8217;t think of a clever headline.</title>
		<link>http://blog.adityasanghi.com/2010/02/cant-think-of-a-clever-headline/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.adityasanghi.com/2010/02/cant-think-of-a-clever-headline/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 15 Feb 2010 10:04:14 +0000</pubDate>
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		<category><![CDATA[Politics]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://adityasanghi.com/?p=96</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[India got it&#8217;s Obama long before US got its. We have a decent man (MMS) at the helm of the nation for last 6 years and by the looks of it 4 more at least. In fact we&#8217;ve even avoided Dubyas for ourselves for a long time. The last time we had a Gandhi as [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>India got it&#8217;s Obama long before US got its. We have a decent man (MMS)  at the helm of the nation for last 6 years and by the looks of it 4 more  at least. In fact we&#8217;ve even avoided Dubyas for ourselves for a long  time. The last time we had a Gandhi as an official head of the nation  was over 21 years ago. We also gave women &#8220;real&#8221; political power long  before the west. We&#8217;ve had presidents which represent the rainbow of our  multi-ethnicity. We&#8217;ve had Sikhs, Muslims, Kannadigas, Telugu,  Maharashtrian and Jats as Prime Ministers. We&#8217;ve had many Chief  Ministers of assorted castes belonging at bottom of the Hindu caste  structure as well as practicing non-Hindus. In short, if Obama is going  to stand for the hope or the unrepresented, he&#8217;s fairly late to the  Indian political soiree.</p>
<p>Hereditary lineage is a small price to pay for better governance. I  agree to a very large extent that Congress is almost family business. In  the Indian context, this concept is not so hard to swallow. It&#8217;s almost  a celebrated tradition to pass on one&#8217;s wealth, power and status down  the generation. It&#8217;s also our &#8220;social security&#8221;. I don&#8217;t see the Indian  populace throwing out the Congress because of their failure to produce a  leader of PM quality without the Gandhi DNA. India has punished Gandhis  for fiddling with its demographic fabric in 1975 and later in 1989 for  corruption stink. Gandhis have not let the country slide into a  Pakistan. Letting go of political power in the hope of getting it back  is not easy to fathom for those who have never had it. A Gandhi was also  the only leader of the national party to have had the forethought of  not electing themselves as the head of the nation twice (1991 and 2004),  shows acute political acumen.</p>
<p>As far as actual leadership qualities go, I agree we probably have more  charismatic and imaginative young leaders than Rahul. Apart from the  obvious positive first impression Rahul made, to me he stood for more  than his last name. He connects with the demographic more than his  opposition which finds itself unable to change fast enough with the  times. Congress has a slew of younger leaders that seem to be under  grooming for the future.</p>
<p>Your example of Nandan Nilkeni goes to confirm my belief that Chanakya  is working for Congress. His predecessor Narayanmurthy got brickbats for  heading the Bangalore Airport Project under the leadership of Gowda in  Karnataka. Shashi Tharoor is another example. Leaders that this  generation will embrace tomorrow. I&#8217;m not sure what your opinion is of  him, but my thoughts about his tweets are more in synch than not. He&#8217;s  put himself up for evaluation and approach to India like never before.  It&#8217;s refreshing to hear a leader&#8217;s thoughts directly and be able to give  him feedback instantaneously. Like Nilkeni, Tharoor too got his  opportunity under the Congress. It&#8217;s also heartening to know that he&#8217;s  not been fired despite ignorant old world media&#8217;s hullabaloo over every  tweet.</p>
<p>There are others in the stable Jyotiraje Scindia, Sachin Pilot, Omar  Abdullah, Jitendra Prasad, Kumari Selja among others. These leaders will  get their chance in due time. It almost gives you hope that for the  right people ( i know someone in my friends list who has serious  ambitions ), the time is better than ever before.</p>
<p>On the other side, there is a vacuum. A vacuum of ideas, hope and  vision. Naked lust for power consumes the opposition. But demographic is  out there for them to connect with.</p>
<p>Perhaps the biggest mistake is to assume the Idiot demographic to be  stupid.</p>
<p>Since the writing of my post above. Shiv Sena got a ONE TIGHT SLAP on  Friday, the slap made Bal Thackeray&#8217;s dentures fly out and fall  somewhere between the 3 and 4th row from the back of the closest  multiplex during the screening of &#8216;My Name is Khan&#8217;. Ram Sene&#8217;s Muthalik  was &#8220;black-faced&#8221; somewhere in Karnataka and this dude from Raj  Thuggery&#8217;s MNS released a Valentine&#8217;s album while others are taking  justice in the own artistic hands (NID student carves a permanent Joker  smile on Chaudhary, the molester police officer).</p>
<p>Jai Ho!</p>
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		<title>Chanakya, 3 Idiots, Rahul and the Signals in the Noise.</title>
		<link>http://blog.adityasanghi.com/2010/02/chanakya-3-idiots-rahul-and-the-signals-in-the-noise/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.adityasanghi.com/2010/02/chanakya-3-idiots-rahul-and-the-signals-in-the-noise/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 15 Feb 2010 10:03:31 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Politics]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://adityasanghi.com/?p=94</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[In 2008, I bumped into Rahul Gandhi at a bookshop in Heathrow. I couldn&#8217;t resist saying Hi. He put his hand forward, shook mine firmly, looked me in the eye and with a winning smile, said &#8220;Hi&#8221; back. I wished him Good Luck for the upcoming elections (which they later swept) and he thanked me [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In 2008, I bumped into Rahul Gandhi at a bookshop in Heathrow. I  couldn&#8217;t resist saying Hi. He put his hand forward, shook mine firmly,  looked me in the eye and with a winning smile, said &#8220;Hi&#8221; back.</p>
<p>I wished him Good Luck for the upcoming elections (which they later  swept) and he thanked me back loud and clear. That was the end of it.  There was an unmistakable connect. I thought, Yes, I could vote for him.  If younger intellectuals (I&#8217;ve stopped being modest about it now) like  me can connect with him, I&#8217;m sure there would be others. If choosing  your leader is going to boil down to picking the lesser evil, let my  poison be mine.</p>
<p>He&#8217;s silently swiftly sweeping the nation. He&#8217;s shaking hands with the  people, who are buying tickets to see 3 Idiots, who are going to come  out and vote again in a few years time. I&#8217;m not yet a fan of Rahul  Gandhi per se, but i certainly prefer him over the rest of them.</p>
<p>The signal in the noise for politicians and parties is clear, do you  connect with the aspirations and desires of those who would buy tickets  for 3 Idiots?</p>
<p>BJP got a jolt in the last 2 elections and their future does not look  bright in the next one as well. I don&#8217;t think they have a connect with  the Idiot generation. The generation that connected with BJP was the  angry young man generation of Zanjeer. Their followers are mellower now.  The chicken legs under the khakhi knickers have arthritis. Also  arthritis 2 inches north of the nose. The assorted bunch of clowns in  VHP, RSS and Bajrang Dal are also unlikely to find a footing or  resonance in modern India. The lust for power of the senior members of  the party choked it, they prevented any fresh blood from entering the  veins. Rahul shakes your hand.</p>
<p>Shiv Sena is a dying brand of a dying hateful old man. It&#8217;s bullying  toothless posturing, irrational and divisive agenda, absence at times of  crisis have distanced themselves from the Idiot generation beyond  repair. Their mandate is going to reduce further in a few years time.  Once Bal Thackeray goes to the grave, his power will vanish however one  hopes he sees that for himself before he meets his maker. Every time a  Thuggery makes a statement, they&#8217;re digging a deeper hole for themselves  and their party. Rahul delivers a winning smile.</p>
<p>Communists are disintegrating among themselves. They don&#8217;t know their  Maoists from their Marxists. With exemplary leaders of the kind  Achutanandan in Kerala and Karats somewhere in the center and no-one out  in the west, it&#8217;s fast reducing into oblivion. Rahul says Hi.</p>
<p>So who is the next opposition? To me, the new opposition is an  assortment of parties that connect with those who cant buy tickets to 3  idiots. Probably BSP and the assortment. There is no denying that  hundreds of years of the caste system has taken its toll. We&#8217;ve given  them reservation in jobs, colleges, civil administration and they&#8217;ve  lapped it up. They&#8217;re also making sure that they&#8217;re getting their moolah  with their power. Corruption is rampant and power will shift towards  the have-now-had-nots. It will take a generation or two of prosperity  for them to catch up. In the forseeable future, they will be the  opposition for the next 20-30 years in India. Rahul gets serious.</p>
<p>Congress has made a firm bet on the future. Their young turks (mostly  netas ka betas for now) under the tutelage of Chanakya, the graduating  class of 2014, 2019, 2024.</p>
<p>I&#8217;m extremely optimistic about our country. The last 60 years were  necessary for the next 60.</p>
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