Welcome to the Friday Loose Bloggers Consortium where Akanksha, Anu, Ashok, Conrad, Delirious, gaelikaa, Grannymar, Magpie11, Nema, Noor,Ordinary Joe, Paul,Maria the Silver Fox, Padmum , Rohit, Will knott, and I write on the same topic. Please do visit the linked blogs to get seventeen different flavours of the same topic. Today’s topic has been chosen by Padmum.
an·i·mos·i·ty (n-ms-t)
n. pl. an·i·mos·i·ties
1. Bitter hostility or open enmity; active hatred.
2. A hostile feeling or act.
That definition explains the current state of mind of most Indians towards the political and bureaucratic class.
Sir Winston Churchill wrote 64 years ago about India :
“Power will go to the hands of rascals, rogues, freebooters; all Indian leaders will be of low caliber & men of straw. They will have sweet tongues & silly hearts. They will fight amongst themselves for power & India will be lost in political squabbles. A day would come when even air & water would be taxed in India.”
To paraphrase another Englishman Sir David Hunt, erstwhile British High Commissioner to Nigeria, “Politicians and bureaucrats as a whole are, not only not averse to cutting off their nose to spite their face; they regard such an operation as a triumph of cosmetic surgery,”
For five decades after independence, this class in collusion often with the criminal class brought the country to its knees with socialism, statism and sheer arrogance of power. Those days were called the License/Permit Raj, or the Inspector Raj and the net result was that India was going down the tube. From the nineties many of such restrictive controls were removed, but the versatile gang of thieves have found ingenious ways of looting the country and its people.
India is in the midst of a major anti corruption movement and my readers will get some idea of what is happening in this article.
For the first time in decades, all members of the establishment are facing animosity instead of fear from the public. The animosity is finding expression and here is a report that augurs well for public finally getting its act together to force change from a feral leadership. Here is another report closer to my home.
Modern communication methods and a vigilant media is enabling the ordinary Indian to express his animosity and when the situtation calls for it, a leader emerges. Anna Hazare is one such leader and the movement inspired by him can only go further to make our country what it can be. Have a look at this report too. The media and concerned citizens have already started to respond to inanity.
One question that one of my loyal readers, Ursula, will ask of me is where I stand on the emotion of animosity. Let me anticipate her and assure her that I can be allergic to people and things, but I have no personal experience so far of “Bitter hostility or open enmity; active hatred; hostile feelings or acts.” either from me towards others or from others towards me. I avoid situations that can lead to animosity and perhaps others do the same to me too.


‘India is in the midst of a major anti corruption movement’
You could say The world is in the midst of a major anti corruption movement! I wonder where it will end.
Grannymar recently posted..The best of plans….
blackwatertown Reply:
August 19th, 2011 at 21:09
Very true. Fingers crossed as to the results.
Rummuser Reply:
August 20th, 2011 at 19:26
Now, it has got the momentum. Things can only improve now. The moneybags have seen the writing on the wall and have joined the hoi polloi!
Rummuser Reply:
August 20th, 2011 at 19:25
Hopefully in a better place for our grandchildren!
Oh to be anticipated, Ramana. Do I have any surprises left?
Mulling over your animosity whilst doing other things I realised that I’d actually been pondering on animosity’s kinder cousin “antipathy” instead. We can’t help antipathy. It happens. Being Mother Theresa’s lovechild I don’t feel antipathy towards anyone. I might think someone stupid (that’s the 10/10 in my chart of undesirable attributes) but I won’t antipathize you. (This is really one for Magpie – how I have taken to make perfectly good nouns into verbs. Stinks to high heaven.)
Yes, Animosity. Well, Ramana, if you have never felt any you are exceptional. And whether anyone has ever felt animosity towards you I am afraid you won’t know unless brought to your attention. One doesn’t always act on impulse or cold calculation. Otherwise contract killers or peddlers of mousetraps and cheese would make a bomb.
I know people prefer to live in bullish times, here is a little bear hug,
U
Ursula recently posted..Back to black
Rummuser Reply:
August 20th, 2011 at 19:27
It is a delightful experience for me to anticipate.
I am actually in a very bullish phase, but a bear hug is very welcome. Thank you. Gives me great pleasure to send it back to you too.
Glad to hear there is increasing animosity towards the Indian establishment. There is rising animosity towards the establishment in the UK too, though unfortunately it’s not causing the complacent politicians, overpaid bankers and undertaxed billionaires to change their ways as yet. Even the recent riots will probably have little effect on the government once they’re confident there won’t be a repetition any time soon.
I’m generally a tolerant person, and the only two people I’ve ever hated were my bully of a father and a particularly despotic former boss.
nick recently posted..Spoil yourself
Rummuser Reply:
August 20th, 2011 at 19:28
I suspect that massive change to global sociology is on its way. I believe that it will be for the better.
Things are a mess here in America too. Good luck in kicking the rascals out and finding better replacements. Does any country have good government?
Cheerful Monk recently posted..Connecting
Rummuser Reply:
August 20th, 2011 at 19:37
CM, you let me down! I expected you to question me about my animosity to Terrorism!
I am afraid that the answer to your question is no. But I think that the upheavals everywhere points towards major changes to the way we will be governed in the future.
Cheerful Monk Reply:
August 21st, 2011 at 00:03
I’m afraid I’ve been listening to The Economist too much. It has too many stories about poor government in so many countries. I thought Bhutan was a notable exception, with its emphasis on Gross National Happiness, but then I read about how it forced out about 1/5 of its population (mostly Nepalese Hindus) in the late 1980′s, early 1990′s, in order to preserve its Tibetan Buddhist culture/identity. Reading that was a bummer.
Cheerful Monk recently posted..Connecting
Rummuser Reply:
August 21st, 2011 at 16:42
I think that for a change, I am more optimistic about the world’s future, primarily due to the significant changes in demographics and communications.
Have just read a lengthy profile of Anna-ji in the London Independent this morning. An amazing man. It explains how he turned around his home village of Ralegan Siddhi from increasing poverty to increasing prosperity. It also mentions his vow of celibacy, so having a family would never distract him from that task. And it details his movement against corruption and his success in getting a right to information law. His dynamism and sheer integrity are astonishing.
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/people/profiles/anna-hazare-in-the-footsteps-of-gandhi-2340759.html
nick recently posted..Spoil yourself
Rummuser Reply:
August 20th, 2011 at 19:31
Now the momentum is too high for any impediments coming on the way of major overhaul to the system. Our money bags have joined the chorus.
“versatile gang of thieves” … Just about sums up our House of Commons. We probably had more honest politicians everywhere in the days of ‘The Raj’.
Big John recently posted..A right royal riot.
Rummuser Reply:
August 21st, 2011 at 16:42
It is amazing how, everywhere, suddenly,the politico is turning out to be the villain!
While I am quite happy to hear about Indians getting upset about corruption, the first article seemed to be a bit problematic. The article equated the protests in India to the ones in the UK. The protests in the UK were simply that of a feral underclass that was deliberately engineered by the elites for the purpose of causing chaos. Most of them have a financial stake in the corruption and are guaranteed to cause riots if any attempt to clean things up is somehow proposed. We have the same thing going on here in the US. I sincerely hope that what is going on in India is nothing like what is happening in the West!
Rummuser Reply:
August 21st, 2011 at 16:28
Looney, I think that the writer simply pointed out the contrasts in the handling of the situation by the two police forces and the contrasting behaviours of the two types of protesters/rioters. All of us in India, that is, what the establishment calls the civil society, (thus accepting themselves to be uncivil) are also hopeful that this will be a turning point in our history. Using the momentum gained, a lot of reforms in the systems can be instituted for the benefit of the country. Many other initiatives from the civil society have started for significant change.