What is wrong? What should be done?

God is already helping us but we are not helping ourselves

You know I am reminded of a story which I think explains our behavior at voters and citizens of this country. Maybe you have heard of the story but I think all of us need to be reminded of the same.

The story starts with a villager who is forced to climb on the roof of his house because of massive flooding. He is a very religious and God fearing man. He believes in God unconditionally. Sitting on the roof of his house, he prays to God to save him.

So while he is waiting on the roof to be saved by God, a rescue boat comes in to take him to safety but he refuses saying that God will save him. After sometime, a helicopter arrives to save him but he refuses to take help saying that God will save him. Finally, he drowns.

When he meets God, he asks God why didn’t he save him. God replied, “You fool, who do think sent the boat and the helicopter to rescue you? What can I do if you don’t want to save yourself?”

We are all just like the villager praying that God will save us from these corrupt no-good politicians but God is already trying to help us. However, we are refusing help. How? Read on.

Now you will ask who has God sent us to help you. I have come across the following 2 people who I think God has sent to save us from corrupt and power hungry politicians:

1. Meera Sanyal

47-year-old, Meera Sanyal who heads ABN Amro Bank has decided to contest the election from south Mumbai. She is not a traditional politician and has decided to contest because she is fed up (like you and me) with the way the current group of politicians are managing our country. She will be contesting the election against’s well known Congress MP Milind Deora, Mohan Rawle of Shiv Sena, ophthalmic surgeon Mona Shah of the Professionals Party of India.

IIM and Insead-educated Meera Sanyal wants to get Mumbai back on track. According to her the quality of life in Mumbai has declined and that there seems to be no plan to get Mumbai back on track.

2. KhimjiBhai Patadia

Khimjibahi Patadia has a political party by the name of Krantikari Jai Hind Sena which is five year-old. He formed the party as he was fed up with corruption and the power hungry politics (Just like you and me). He says, “I want to rid this country of corruption.” He further adds, “”The existing parties are not worried about the common man. They are too busy pleasing their allies and getting their numbers together.”

To join Patadia’s party, all you have to be is a graduate and should be willing to serve in Parliament without any monetary gains. 50% of the seats are reserved for women. He wants his party to contest 543 seats and has plans to roll out a print, television and radio campaign.

These are idealistic people who are not regular politicians nor do they belong to a big political party. Both of them want to give something back to the country and its people. I am sure there are more candidates like these who are contesting the elections. By voting for these people, we can get rid of the corrupt and power hungry politicians as well as get out of the abusive relationship with the politicians as suggested by the Battered Voter Syndrome (BVS).

Will we take God’s help by voting for these candidates? Just like the villager who refused to be saved by the rescue boat and the helicopter, we will also refuse help by refusing to elect such people. But we will continue to pray and hope that God will save us someday from the corrupt power hungry politicians.

God provides the alternatives. It is our responsibility to select the best alternatives. What can God do if you continue to vote for the same old corrupt and power hungry politicians and political parties?

So before you pray again to God to help you to get rid of the greedy politicians and provide you good infrastructure, clean water, corruption free government, effective law and order and 24 hours electricity ask yourself the question, “Did I take Gods help when he provided us good alternative candidates at the time of Lok Sabha elections 2009?”

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Comments (3)

Jagatheesan ChandrasekharanMarch 27th, 2009 at 4:28 am

Once some snags developed in an aircraft in flight. They were asked to jump out to save themselves.One man asked Buddha to save him while he jumped out of the aircraft. A helping hand came and caught hold of his hand. Then that person said “Thank god. I am saved.” The helping hand left his hand.

If you are all praying that God will save you from these corrupt no-good politicians God is already trying to help you better contest in heaven. Alternatively support BSP since it will win in 272 lok Sabha seats for the following reasons:

U.P.: Pro-incumbency plus core vote

Jagatheesan Chandrasekharan

For Mayawati pro-incumbency plus base vote is strong, committed and transferable, which ought to be an advantage in a multi-cornered contest.

The defining point of Lucknow 2009 is the brown dust haze that blankets its skyline. The haze is from the relentless demolition and construction that started in May 2007, when Mayawati, in a stunning display of political showmanship, formed Uttar Pradesh’s first majority government in 16 years.

Ms Mayawati is the queen of hearts, her sterling qualities apparently too many to count, the most quoted being the iron discipline she brought to her earlier governments. A popular slogan Ms Mayawati used on the stump was: Chad goondon ki chhati par, mohar laga do haathi par (Crush the chest of the goondas and vote the elephant).

As the election date approaches, what comes as a bigger surprise is the admission by people in government that pro-incumbency has begun to tell on the Mayawati regime. Officials eagerly outline the many welfare projects in various stages of implementation.

Consequently, many are willing to bet on the BSP bagging all the 80 Lok Sabha seats. Even from the subjective perspective of the Lucknow secretariat, the confidently touted figure of 80 seats out of a total of 80 seems achievable.

A round journey from Lucknow and back via Allahabad, Varanasi, Azamgarh, Deoria, Gorakhpur, Faizabad and Barabanki, one is invariably greeted by a praise of — Friendly police actions, uncurtailed water supply for irrigation, full implementation of Below the Poverty Line ration cards, promised housing and so on. There is support for the Chief Minister — from her core constituency of SC/STs, of course, but also from sections of lower OBCs, Brahmins and Muslims. The last two tend towards the BSP in constituencies where the party’s candidates are from their communities. The social engineering formula that carried Ms Mayawati to self-rule in Lucknow has been totally cracked.

No SC/STs complain about ration cards and housing along with the poor among the forward castes. SC/STs continue to stand rocklike by their behenji, visibly thrilled at her becoming Prime Minister. At an Ambedkar village in Mohanlalganj, SC/STs when asked Who will they vote? Behenji, comes the reply.

The undiminished SC/STs and the Sarvajan Samaj (entire people) support could be glimpsed in the colossal turnout at the Chief Minister’s inaugural election rally in the eastern town of Deoria. The crowds stampeded into the ground, cheerfully and throatily joining the chorus echoing from the ministerial crew seated on stage: U.P. hui hamari hai, ab dilli ki baari hai (U.P. is taken, we will take Delhi next).

On the way in villages and qasbas, one will be able to gauge the continuing affinity that the more backward among the OBCs, such as the Mauryas, the Rajbars and the Bhinds, feel for Ms Mayawati. Brahmins are clearly united. The unity is at its most explicit in the Allahabad High Court, considered the seat of forward caste power, and flaunting a profusion of Brahminical sounding nameplates on its walls. From 2007, the Shuklas, the Tiwaris and the Chaturvedis had all enthusiastically lined up behind behenji.

No opponent for every supporter

This time for every supporter of Ms Mayawati, you will find another who admits to a correct judgment in his or her voting the BSP in 2007. The latter lot are happy that the BSP leader has not dumped the central plank of her campaign that she would crush the anti-social elements who allegedly found refuge in the Mulayam Singh government: All the lawmakers are now with her including Allahabad. The trading community in particular fully digest the explanation offered by the BSP boss herself — once in the BSP, the so-called goondas become reformed.

Within the precincts of the High Court, the pro-Mayawati camps clinches the argument powerfully. The take: The Mayawati government has given more recognition and power to Brahmins than have all previous regimes put together: Our flag is flying high thanks to Satish Chandra Mishra and the score of forward caste officers wielding power down the administrative ladder. The fact that the BSP has awarded a bonus in the form of party ticket to 20 Brahmins virtually seals the debate. Forward castes will vote the BSP — everywhere, including where the party has fielded forward caste candidates.

Muslims turn out to be a revelation. They descend into immediate benefit calculations as do the Hindu forward castes but in conversation they gradually reveal their frustrations with Mulayam Singh and wonder aloud if the BSP is not a better option. The Samajwadi Party chief’s defence of Kalyan Singh, former BJP leader, has hurt the community deeply, and there is a feeling of its being used by the man it revered as Maulana Mulayam. The community voted the SP disregarding the religion of its candidates. Today like most communities in U.P., Muslims aspire for a higher Muslim representation in the Lok Sabha and other legislative bodies.

And this is where the BSP, with its fully transferable core vote, comes in. The BSP’s candidates, whether Muslim or Brahmin or from the OBCs, start with a base vote of 18-20 per cent. To this they add their own votes, which place them within conceivable reach of victory. None of the BSP’s rivals can claim this advantage. The SP’s Muslim-Yadav core constituency has developed fissures. The Bharatiya Janata Party and the Congress have no loyal voters left to count on. Nor do their votes transfer easily. It is well known, for instance, that there is not much compatibility between the SP’s Yadav voters and its Muslim candidates. This is in fact a sore point with Muslims. They have begun to understand the potency of the SC/STs vote which goes where Ms Mayawati commands.

So how well can the BSP be expected to fare? That pro-incumbency has set in is undeniable plus Ms Mayawati’s strength is her committed base vote. In a four-way split of votes, this is a strong foundation to build on.. That leaves the BSP with an absolute maximum 80 seats because of the brilliant performance of her government from the party’s brilliant performance in the May 2007 Assembly election.

This is how Vidhya Subramaniam will write after Mayawati becomes the Prime Minister after the Lok Sabha election and the Hindu will publish the same.

Now I am sure this article will not be published in Hindu for the reasons best known.
Maya draws them by droves
Jagatheesan Chandrasekharan
Deoria
The BSP leader makes up in star quality

On stage, the Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister is matter-of-fact and precise, her no-nonsense, militarist manner a barrier to all, including party functionaries and Ministers who wait on her as she furiously heli-hops from meeting to meeting. For journalists on the election beat, Ms. Mayawati is a vexing challenge. Forget cadging a lift on the helicopter, they cannot even get within hand-shaking distance of the overly security-conscious Bahujan Samaj Party supremo.

Ms. Mayawati’s mesmeric, star quality that brings lakhs to her election rallies. They come in droves, young mothers with babies tucked under their arms, old men and women barely able to walk, and tens of thousands hitching a ride on tractors, buses and trucks. The BSP does not pack its cadre into chartered buses; it does not tempt them with offers of free food and per diem. It expects them to find their own way to the rally venue. And they do so — uncomplainingly, wishing for nothing except to be able to see her.

This election season, the mood is even more buoyant. With all the buzz around her possible Prime Ministership, it is a colossal turnout at the eastern UP town of Deoria, Ms. Mayawati’s first stop on UP’s election route.

As a videographer with some experience in covering Ms. Mayawati’s election campaigns and rallies, I know I have to be really early to beat the crowds at the rally. Yet as always, they have already filled the venue to overflowing, and many, many lakhs are still pouring in.I remained stuck behind, as what seems like a human deluge takes over every inch of road space. They hurry towards the pandal, the men and women, kicking up giant clouds of dust.

The crowd composition is overwhelmingly rural: Women in nylon with bright vermillion in their hair-parting; men in dhoti-kurta and headgear. A good many of them carry the BSP’s trademark blue flag.

Behind me the road stretches in an endless line of tractors. I try to get there and join the human rush. The next half hour is a struggle as I wave my pass and plead to be allowed to go to the press enclosure. I fight my way through a sea of entwined limbs and by the time I get to the spot I’m breathless with exhaustion. I look behind to witness one of the largest turnouts I have seen at an election rally. I catch the eye of a policeman on duty. “Kitni bheed?” (how many people?”) I ask him. Lakhs, he says, grinning unabashedly. “Historic. This is the biggest ever turnout in Deoria,” he shouts at me.

Though the Chief Minister is yet to arrive, the excitement is palpable on stage. Amidst earsplitting slogans, a cabinet minister reads out a long list of people who have deserted other parties to join the BSP. Another Minister urges the crowds to shout after him: “UP hui hamari hai, ab dilli ki baari hai; Bharat ki majboori hai, behen Mayawati zaroori hai” (we have taken UP, we will take Delhi; the country needs Mayawati). It is a Maya surge across the country and she will become Prime Minister, declares speaker after speaker.

The Chief Minister’s arrival causes more commotion. The crowd rises like a wave, and cell phone cameras click away her pictures. A Hindi poet extols her virtues and sings: “Behna banegi PM, kehta hai zamana” (people say our sister will be PM). Ms. Mayawati’s speech bristles with references to Delhi and BSP rule at the Centre. But the tone is inspiring.

For her rapturous fans though what matters is that they have seen their behenji. “Ab Dilli ki bari hai” (it is Delhi’s turn), they shout, drowning out her speech.

photo
A man carries a cutout of Bahujan Samaj Party leader Mayawati in Allahabad, India. (Photo: Reuters)

Jumbo And a Black Cat
PHOTO: AP

A NSG commando stands guard in front of a hoarding with the election symbol of BSP at a rally in Hyderabad.

MAYAWATI FOR PRIME MINISTER !

VOTE BSP ELEPHANT FOR CHANGE FOR THE BETTER !

FOR SELF RESPECT!

GET A VOTE AND A NOTE!

FOR BSP!

DONT WAIT BUT BAIT!

TO GRAB THE MASTER KEY!

Make me PM

Write Down on the Wall was Dr. Ambedkar’s Sign !

Two Thousand Nine !

Will Be Mine !

– Says Ms Mayawati Bahen !

Now is all that you have!

By voting for BSP, the Nation you save!

2008 Bahen Mayawati the UttarPradesh Chief Minister !
2009PrabuddhaBharatha Matha the Prime Minister !

Image:Bahujansamajpartysymbol.pngarticle pic

[Bahujan Samaj Party Flag]

Most of the political pundits are suggesting a dramatic Bahujan Samaj Party win with Mayawati becoming the new Prime Minister.
Mayawati stresses on door-to-door campaign
‘UP hui hamari hai, ab Delhi ki bari hai’ (UP is ours, now it is the turn of Delhi), will turn into a reality,” said Mayawati

Social Transformation!

And Economical Emancipation!

Through

Testing the efficacy of social engineering!

By

Mighty Great Mind Training!

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BHEEM SANDESH PAVANSeptember 20th, 2009 at 10:03 am

BHEEM SANDESH PAVANSeptember 20th, 2009 at 10:02 am
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my name is Bheem sandesh pavan in shot form Bsp my famely like bahujan samag party becos it helps to poor people not only for poor people for students this government is very good and my dad works for this party we are ambetkerits we love this party

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virender singhApril 8th, 2010 at 6:23 am

why we people think about so mean what ms mayawati done in her area we look always the crowd so dear don’t look on crowd think what she has done for her country and the poor. today system became cancerise and every body facing the probem the comman man is only for the vote not for anything once you have elected your leader and than forget ? why ? why ? why ? think about sawraj ?

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