Discover millions of ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more with a free trial

Only $11.99/month after trial. Cancel anytime.

India: Planned Paralysis Process Continues ...
India: Planned Paralysis Process Continues ...
India: Planned Paralysis Process Continues ...
Ebook123 pages1 hour

India: Planned Paralysis Process Continues ...

Rating: 0 out of 5 stars

()

Read preview

About this ebook

Ruling class people in independent India have in their mental core a wish to rule the people forever, for which they sow seeds of beggary in minds of children of common people by providing them freeships of various kinds like Mid-day Meal, Free Books, Free School Uniform, Stipend, etc. Thus, label of poverty and backwardness is permanently pasted on their foreheads which they carry for their whole lives. Such children on growing up seek survival aids from the Government without working and earning their livelihoods on their own. This is the cause of perpetual backwardness of India, as compared to other Nations of the World. People need to change this mindset of the ruling class as well as of their own.
Ruling class people argue that they provide these facilities to children because their parents can’t afford sending their children to schools. My question to them is, “Who has kept the parents mentally and physically so poor that they produce children but can’t afford their schooling?” Surely, it is none other than people of the ruling class of independent India. When I was in School in 50s, there were no freeships except some stipend to backward class students. Those students of Backward classes didn’t cross Matriculation and their later generations are still backward and keep on looking for doles from the Government, while others did much better. This was not to the liking of the Ruling class, hence they introduced multiple freeships to all the students of Government-run Primary and Higher Secondary Schools, ensuring that none would cross boundary of poverty and backwardness. Other children going to private Schools and paying fees for getting education have been performing much better.
In 70 years of independent India, there should have been none in the country to produce a child and unable to take care of needs of the child. Governments should have seriously pursued two-edge strategy of controlling population and providing work for each pair of capable hands to earn enough for upbringing their children well. But this has never been the intention of ruling people of independent India.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherRam Bansal
Release dateSep 30, 2017
ISBN9781370744930
India: Planned Paralysis Process Continues ...
Author

Ram Bansal

An Engineering Graduate from University of Roorkee, India (now an IIT) of 1971 batch, has served Engineering Profession for 35 years, now devoted to Social Engineering, Research into Vaidic Scriptures, and Authorship for changing the humanity - the way it thinks.

Read more from Ram Bansal

Related to India

Related ebooks

Politics For You

View More

Related articles

Reviews for India

Rating: 0 out of 5 stars
0 ratings

0 ratings0 reviews

What did you think?

Tap to rate

Review must be at least 10 words

    Book preview

    India - Ram Bansal

    I N D I A

    Planned Paralysis Process

    C o n t i n u e s . . .

    by

    Ram Bansal

    Copyright Ram Bansal 2017

    Published at Smashwords

    Contents

    Preface – From Heart of a Common Indian

    Tracing Ancient Roots

    Deva People

    Deva Group

    Conflict with Paarthians

    Alexander’s Expedition

    Religious Invasion of India

    Devaasura Confrontations

    Indian Subcontinent, Historically

    Politics of Independent India

    Constitution of India

    Independence and Freedom

    Politics as Business

    Organised Self-Servers in Command

    Indian Society

    Individual and Family

    Public Health

    Education System

    Law and Justice

    Overpopulation and Poverty

    Economy

    Misuse of Tax Revenue

    Urbanization versus Rural Development

    Rural Economy and Health

    Democratic Socialism

    Real Development of Nation India

    Principle and Practice of Governance

    Three Dimensions of Development

    Improving upon Democracy

    Uniform Code of Civil Conduct

    Taxation Policy

    Nullifying Reservations

    Urban versus Rural Life

    Tackling Disparities

    Tackling Corruption

    Health Services

    Law and Order

    Infrastructure Development

    Provision of Electricity

    Improving Rural Economy

    Foundation of Education

    Preface

    From the Heart of a Common Indian

    I am an ordinary powerless Indian, pushed and pulled from multiple directions by government and administration, hampering my possibilities of respectable survival by not leaving any stone unturned for ruining my happiness of living as a human-being. At every step of my journey of life, I find somebody from the government and administration disallowing me to seek some moments of respite for reenergizing myself to step forward to seek some happiness of human life.

    I am educated and productive, produce foods, weave cloth and build shelters for a healthy prosperous India for being prosperous myself. But as soon as I produce something, I find some mechanism created by government and administration to take away everything from me, leaving me poor again, for meeting huge expenditure on governing me through heavy hands of administration. I am not free to sell my produce at rates under control of demand-supply forces, but it is being artificially controlled by vested political interests.

    My perpetual poverty is not poverty of the Nation as a whole, because the prosperity produced by me goes to some others in control of my fate making them more and more prosperous. Thus India gains some prosperity as a Nation but I remain poor. Prosperity of the Nation is being cornered by those in the government and administration in league with each others creating two distinct classes within the Nation of India – the ruling and the ruled.

    With equality in capabilities, income of a person of the ruling class is more than ten times of that of a ruled class person. Things were not so about 35 years back when there was a parity of income of the two classes. An INC-led government suddenly came up with the idea of tripling salaries and perks of government employees.

    Presently, the situation is so much aggravated that no government of State or Center can afford to have sufficient number of regular employees at their current rates of wages. Hence, to get the works done, all governments are resorting to engage either contract employees through labor contractors, or employing people with different names like Shiksha Mitra as substitutes for teachers, Bank Mitra in place of Bank Clerks, Home Guards to replace Police Constables, etc. These substitutes get wages at par with those of the ruled class people. This way, the governments have employees of both types – ruling and the ruled. With this arrangement in many government organizations, actual works are done by low-paid contract employees while regular employees get their high wages for no work or responsibility on them.

    I elect another person like me to be my representative in the government, but on the very first day of being elected, they become super-rich with doles from the government and bills to me. Thus, they no more remain like me, no more represent me, but become member of the ruling class and advance interests of their new class. I find none in the government to represent me, though my Nation is said to be democratically governed.

    I produce a child and educate them with great difficulties for my poverty. Whatever be their merit, their fate remain undecided. Sometimes, I arrange to bribe somebody in the government to take my child into government employment. On getting their first pay-packet from the government containing a huge amount as compared to my own economic level, they become part of the government. Thus I lose my child forever but keep on paying bills to the government for paying the huge salary to my elstwhile child. Fortunately or unfortunately – I am yet undecided, if my child fails to get entry into the government, I retain rights over them with condition of poverty like that of myself.

    My ancestral roots are in rural India, and I like to live in my native village with all members of my family. But I can’t bear to see my children devoid of basic amenities of life for living in the village. Moreover, they find no work in the village for earning their livelihoods, so they go one by one to some city for finding work. A day comes when I remain childless in the village while my children are constrained to lead inhuman life for working in the city. Pain of losing children, and the pain of the children of losing their parents just for survival are unbearable for both of us.

    Disparity in earnings of people of the two classes have been creating problems of adjustments within families, within local residents, within communities, etc. with those belonging to the ruling class not showing any respect to those of the ruled class.

    Ram Bansal

    Khandoi, 9th September 2017

    Tracing Ancient Roots

    Deva People

    About 3,000 years back, Indian subcontinent was a wild forest scattered with human population habitual to wild lifestyle. Food was their main concern for which they used to wander from place to place for wild fruits and animal hunts. There were no permanent human settlements.

    Deva people with their most respected family named Puru lived in Himalayan ranges with no contact with people from the plains. They had scientific outlook and attained perfect health conditions and prosperity for themselves. They lived in fixed human settlements and grew food-grains, fruits and vegetables for their needs. Purity of individual character and social discipline were hallmarks of their happy contented life.

    Puru Family

    Elders of Deva race managed that Shakuntalaa along with her son be accepted in marriage by a Deva Dhritaraashtra of Puru family. Shakuntalaa got married with a new name Kaushalyaa. She delivered four more sons in two twins from the wedlock – Brahmaa and Raama, and Vishnu and Lakshamana. As Bharata grew-up, he developed the disease of Leukoderma, called Paandu in Sanskrita, in which skin gets white patches. For this reason, Bharata was often referred to by word Pandu.

    Brahmaa was an innovator and creator with interest in nothing else. He and his wife Saraswati were the principal architects of Vaidic culture, language, literature and Ayurveda. Raama was a mighty warrior with interest in idealizing politics. Being a thorough gentleman and protector of people, he was the most popular figure among people of the land. His wife Seetaa was an ideal house-wife with interest in kitchen work for preparing food for the whole family. Vishnu was an economist, used to spend most of his time on oceans for collecting gems and jewels for their economic value. Lakshmana was the tallest of all, and was mighty and fiery. He was impressed by generosity and gentlemanship of Raama, hence was dedicated to him for all the time.

    Deva Group

    Deva people

    Enjoying the preview?
    Page 1 of 1