Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Why we do not have an option but to vote for BJP this time



Disclaimer: This is neither a paid news piece nor I am a sycophant of the BJP. My only credentials of writing this article is that I am an informed and an educated electorate who holds interest in Indian politics, aspires for a better India and loves to write. This article is just about the available choices to the normal voter like me and the best possible option among them.

The next elections are not far and going by the current uncertainty might be sooner than later. Despite more than 100 parties in the Indian political system, we as a voter still do not have any major choices. In such a scenario, the only way to vote is by exclusion. Lets look at the available options first. We have only 2 national parties and a plethora of regional parties.

The 2 national parties are Congress (no justification needed for this) and BJP. BJP, apart from Congress is the only political party which has a presence or had a decent presence across the country, be it Karnataka in south, Gujarat in west, Madhya Pradesh in center, UP, delhi, Punjab & Uttarakhand in North and Bihar in West. Its also the only political party apart from Congress who has the potential to reach 3 digit mark in the Indian parliament.

Before we dispute between Congress and BJP, lets look at the regional options and why I dont consider them worthy to vote for.

Firstly, we as a voter should learn to distinguish between local, regional and national issues. I dont mind voting for regional parties in assembly elections, municipal elections or panchayat elections but when it comes to Parliament, my suggestion is that we move beyond our local issues. A clear differentiation is important and needed in our federal structure.

Now the only credible regional parties which are worth mentioning here are SP, BSP, TMC, JD(U), DMK, AIADMK and may be the Senas. The problem with these parties is that almost all these parties are confined to 1 or max 2 states. So a DMK will have no interest in the development of even its neighbour Karnataka, forget the Northern states. Same can be easily said for any of the UP parties like SP or BSP. The point I am making is that they were and will be concerned only about their states or their limited vote banks be it Dalits, Tamils, Muslims, etc.

Secondly, all these parties are one-man (or woman) show. You remove the leader like Mulayam, Mayawati, Karunanidhi, Mamta, Jayalalitha and you have nothing left in there. Third, none of these leaders have any clue on any national issues. Do you forsee any of these leaders speaking about Indian foreign policy on any international platform? The only time you see these leaders in Delhi is when they need something for their state or when they have something to negotiate in return to save the existing government.

Needless to add, none of these leaders are 'clean' or 'strong' enough to warrant any exception to my arguments.

Having excluded the regional parties from my selection process, we are down to only Congress and BJP. With these two options, I suggest BJP. Why do I say that?

Congress has been given sufficient chances. In last 60 years of independence, Congress has ruled for around 50 years including the last 10 years. If we vote Congress back to power, we are effectively sending a message that we are least bothered about the enormous corruption that happened in last 5 years alone. We are immune to one of the most ineffectual PM. No PM in Indian history has faced as much flak including from international press as Manmohan Singh. He lacks leadership skill and he cant make his own decisions. He let his own partymen, his own coalition partner and his own party leader take over his decision making power. Net net, the message we send is that we are happy living in our own cocoon shelf and nothing bothers us anymore.

Having said that I dont advocate everything in BJP or all its policies. But the biggest reason for voting them is CHANGE. We need change. We need to witness a different way of functionining. We need some fresh faces in the government. We need some different policies. Whether they work or not, only the future can tell but a change is necessary to shake the current inertia and to instil confidence back in the minds of normal citizens who would like to vote. For a democracy to function normally, my belief is a churn is needed. If the current party is not performing, give the alternative a chance.

Whenever BJP's name is discussed, media automatically shifts the focus to who will lead. As per me, it doesnt matter if the party is led by Sushma Swaraj, Arun Jaitley, Advani or the current favorite Narendra Modi. All have their own pluses and minuses. All are intelligent, qualified, good administrators and obviously great orators. Whether they are fit to be a PM, I honestly dont know and I bet neither do you. On the media's favorite debate of Narendra vs Rahul, my take is its not just about an inidividual. Whether Rahul is good or bad, he has the same party behind him. If he couldnt change the scenario till now, there is no point in discussing his aspirations of what he might do in future. Most important, he is untested. He has never led any ministry, any state or any team of national importance. At least within Modi and other BJP candidates, you have past experience to give some confidence.

With this, I rest my argument and let you decide. But I would like to state one final note before you make a decision: In an Indian political climate, I believe its important to give one party a clear mandate else we have the numerous issues that get associated with 'coalition dharma' which I am sure you have heard and witnessed enough in last 10-15 years be it bartering, buying/selling of MPs, fake usage of CBIs, begging bowls etc. So while you vote for regional parties during your assembly elections, please think of the nation first when you vote for parliamentary elections. A hung parliament only helps the 'kingmakers' and not the king.

Happy Voting and Let the 'better' party win.

Sunday, April 14, 2013

Winning formula and the bhed chal in Bollywood




With the success of ‘Wanted’ in 2009, it seemed Salman Khan found a hit formula. His immediately family went on to encash the formula by putting in a systematic round robin policy. One member after another got in the queue and started producing movies with amazing pace and similarity. So we had ‘Dabanng’ in 2010 by Arbaaz Khan, ‘Ready’ in 2011 by Sohail Khan, ‘Bodyguard’ in 2011 by Alvira Khan. Arbaaz Khan’s turn came back in 2012 with the sequel of ‘Dabangg’ as ‘Dabangg 2’. Sohail Khan is now making ‘Mental’ for next year and last I heard Atul Agnihotri (Alvira’s husband and Salman’s brother in law) is working on his next film with Salman titled ‘O Teri’. The strength of the formula can be judged simply by the fact that none of these producers had produced a hit film before.

Well Bollywood as we have known has had a “bhed chaal”. They are always in the lookout of one such winning formula. And then all they have to do is create carbon copies. Not to be left behind, other actors quickly got in the line. So we had Ajay Devgn with ‘Singham’, ‘Son of Sardar’ and the latest ‘Himmatwala’, while the original Khiladi Kumar came back from his earlier series of disasters with ‘Rowdy Rathore’ and uniquely and very innovatively titled ‘Khiladi 786’. 

After all they were the original action heroes before Mr. Dabangg Khan took their position away.

The Producers and directors put together an assembly line production.
All movies were openly (and at least this time honestly) inspired by the south Indian movie industry. Needless to say in such assembly line scenarios, the story is the least important part. Mr. Javed and Mr. Gulzar can keep fighting for their royalty rights at the Film Writers Association but who needs a script these days to make money.

At the end of the day aren’t all movies just about good vs evil and in the end the good one triumphs. The importance in this assembly line was to have a strong and vicious evil guy (or a group of them depending upon the budget of producer) and to match the capability of the evilness, create a hero so powerful who with his breath can blow them away. The hero here need not be the all goody goody but just one level better than the evil one. So in the spare time, when he is not kicking or creating holes in the evil guys, he is freely allowed to eve-tease, take bribe, slap his brother or father, and so on.

He obviously is a merry guy and needs to sing and dance. The dance is inspired by day to day activities. So if the buckle of your belt doesn’t fit and you have to adjust it up and down, it can become a classical dance step. If you have itch down there and an itch guard has not been effective, we can still hide it away by declaring it another dance step. An item number was must which can then be sponsored by the likes of Zandus or the Fevicols. After all, Bollywood is an equal opportunity employer and hence an opportunity must be given to other “actresses” in bollywood, sometimes to members of our own family (read Malaika Arora Khan). In all this jamboree, the real actress need not have any role except flutter her eyelashes and be saved by the superhero. Well if you are paid well, I guess the roles can always take a back seat. No wonder we had usually the likes of Sonakshi and Asin as actress in most of these movies, who otherwise might not have even got an item number.

A side kick was irrelevant because we have the all encompassing hero who can fill that gap as well. The dialogues were a mix of one-liners with little relevance in the movie but to be remembered by the audience after they leave the theatre and use it in their colleges or in their next round of eve teasing. So we had some good ones like “Mujh par ek ehsan karna ki mujh par koi ehsan na karna” or “Zindagi mein teen cheez kabhi underestimate mat karna. I, ME & Myself” and some not so good ones like “mein kutta hun or yeh meri kuttiya hai..."

The stunts were so strong and realistic that the likes of Einstein and Newtons might be turning up in their graves wondering about the 2.0 version of their laws on Relativity and gravity. Even our own Rajnikanth was in real danger of his throne of “The Superpower and Almighty” being snatched away. The punch had power which was inspired by Sunny Deol’s “dhai kilo ka haath” and Complan energy drinks (I am still wondering why none of the energy drinks have filed a RTI to know the strength behind such heros). With heros like these, who needs movies like Superman, Spiderman and Batman.

Well the good news is or at least was that all these assembly line movies went on to become major blockbusters, the new so – called “100 crore club”. Well there are so many "zeroes" in this club, who wouldn’t get excited?

Usually such formula movies last till the first flop and hopefully this bhed chaal will break now that we have one flop in Mr. Know It All Sajid Khan’s Himmatwala.

By the way the very fact that this trend lasted for 4 years with so many block busters speaks volumes about the expectation of audience these days from our movies.

Wednesday, April 3, 2013

1 day in Trier – the oldest city in Germany dating back to the Roman era


Having spent a day in Trier, Germany, I thought of putting up this short blog for any prospective travellers. Trier is a small city situated on the beautiful Moselle river and borders Luxembourg. Considered as the oldest city of Germany, Trier has many historical buildings dating back to as early as 2nd century in the Roman era.

Listed below is a simple itinerary to cover the Top 5 tourist attractions in approximately 4-5 hours. The starting point is Trier Hauptbahnhof. Walking out of Trier hbf, take the straight road Theodor-Heusse-Allee. A 5 mins walk will lead you to the biggest tourist attraction – the Porta Nigra.

Porta Nigra is considered as one of the 4 ancient Roman gates and the only one to have survived. It was built in 2nd century and the reason why it survived is because a hermit named Simeon took this place as its home. It was built from white sandstone but over a period of time, either because of pollution or from corrosion by insects, the place looks almost black. There are 3 floors. While most of it is in ruins, the passageways and the chapel still carries a lot of historical carvings to create a great impression. It also gives beautiful photo opportunities. As per wiki, it is today the largest Roman city gate north of the Alps and has been designated a World Heritage Site. The entrance fee is 3 €. Adjacent to this attraction is a museum which we didn’t visit.

The attraction is right opposite Mercure Hotel for those who want to stay overnight. However, there are other cheaper options also available in the city. Behind Porta Nigra, start walking on the Simeonstrasse towards the city center. The hauptmarkt is a beautiful central square which has a nice fountain in the middle. On one side is the St. Gangolf Church which has a really nice rococo based architecture entrance. Take a left from the square and you reach the large Trierer Dom.

Trier cathedral is a Roman Catholic church and is home to the Holy Tunic, a garment with a recorded history back to the 12th century, in Catholic tradition said to be the robe Jesus was wearing when he died. Unfortunately the robe is generally not available for public viewing. The entrance is free. Next to the dom is the Liebfrauenkirche (Church of Our Lady), which is one of the most important early Gothic cathedrals in Germany.
Cross the church of our lady and keep walking on the same street Liebfrauenstrasse and you will reach Konstantinplatz.

Konstantin Basilica might not be the usual tourist paradise as it is not very spectacular to look at. But it carries great historical background as it is the largest surviving single-room structure from Roman times. The entrance is free. If you examine closely, you can also witness the ancient mechanism of floor and wall heating system as initially it was supposed to have two walls with a gap in between.

The Electoral Palace is directly next to the Basilika and is a beautiful rococo palace. However it can only be seen from outside. The garden overlooking though small is quite nice with lot of sculptures.

Follow the garden and go straight to Imperial Baths or Kaiserthermen. The entrance is actually direct opposite but because of lack of signs, most tourists end up taking a circular path all around the baths. If you do that, don’t worry, it will still give you amazing views of the Baths from all angles. The baths are supposed to be 1600 years old and built by Romans. You can see the cold, warm and hot bathing sections. Interestingly a lot was planned as per the info booklet but as the baths were never finished, they were never really used for the intended purpose.  However its fun to walk through the underground rooms. The entrance fee is 3 €.

Rheinisches Landesmuseum is adjacent to the baths. However we decided to give it a miss. You can also take the Olewiger strasse from the baths and within 5 mins reach the old Amphitheater. Again we didn’t have that much time and so had to miss that one as well. From imperial baths, we took the opposite road Ostallee and went towards the Barbarathermen. Barbarathermen are even older than Imperial baths and are closed to the public. However you can see them from an external viewing platform. As the place is mostly in ruins, there is not much that you would be able to make out. From here, you can see the Roman bridge or walk back into the city.

This itinerary should not take you more than 4-5 hours depending upon how much time you spend on each individual attraction. Most eating places are in the main central square.

I hope you find the travelogue useful and enjoy your time in this city which is still holding on to its ancient roots.